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Digital programme: Łukasz Twarkowski / Anka Herbut / Dailes Theatre – ROHTKO

A woman talking with a man in a Chinese restaurant

Welcome to the Barbican

Welcome to the Barbican Theatre for the UK premiere of ROHTKO.

We are thrilled to welcome trailblazing Polish director Łukasz Twarkowski as he makes his Barbican debut with this electrifying large-scale exploration of art and legacy.

As one of the most exciting figures in modern European theatre, bringing Łukasz’s boundary-pushing work to our iconic stage is a proud moment for us and reflects our commitment to showcasing theatre that is daring, expansive, and reflective of the world we live in.

It’s a privilege to host ROHTKO’s UK premiere, welcoming Łukasz back to London following his sold-out production of The Employees at the Southbank Centre earlier this year.

ROHTKO has been making waves throughout its award-winning European tour, fusing event theatre, live cinema, intense choreography and a pulsating techno soundscape that reverberate across a hyper realistic modular set. Produced by Latvia’s Dailes Theatre, the largest professional theatre in the Baltics, this multi-lingual performance features actors from Latvia, Poland and China.

We would also like to thank the kind generosity of the Polish Cultural Institute in London and the Adam Mickiewicz Institute for their support of this production, enabling us to present it at the Barbican. It’s an honour for a Barbican production to be part of this year's UK/Poland season in association with the British Council.

Thank you for joining us and enjoy the show.

Toni Racklin, Barbican Head of Theatre & Dance

 

The Dailes Theatre is located in Riga, the capital of Latvia, yet our productions do not talk about a single point on a map, nor about people of a single origin. They can be experienced by audiences across Europe and beyond.

Together with our partners, we have shown how little geographical location, the origins of artists, or even the language spoken by actors matter in the making of theatre art. We live in an age when an event in one part of the world can unexpectedly touch hearts on the opposite side of the planet. The Dailes Theatre is the largest theatre in the Baltics, yet we work with artists not only from the neighbouring Baltic countries, but also from Poland, Germany, France, the United Kingdom and elsewhere – revealing our shared stories.

The Dailes Theatre has broken down more than a few boundaries, and our collaboration with an international team of artists under the direction of Łukasz Twarkowski has revealed the ability of theatre to rise above traditions, languages and theatrical techniques. 

We are proud that this work by Łukasz Twarkowski – our Dailes Theatre production ROHTKO – can continue its international journey, now appearing at the Barbican. Since the making of ROHTKO, Twarkowski has become a rising star of contemporary theatre, working across Europe while continuing his collaboration with the Dailes Theatre. Most recently, his latest production with the Dailes Theatre, The Oracle, thrilled critics and audiences at the Ruhr Triennale, and its first performances have already graced the stage of our home in Riga.

ROHTKO is a landmark production for the Dailes Theatre. Not only because it speaks of the artist Mark Rothko, who was born in the territory of Latvia. The collaboration model developed in its making revealed to us what it means to create theatre without borders. This is why we are so proud that reviews of the production appeared in the pages of Le Monde, praising ROHTKO as a remarkable theatrical event, while the tenth anniversary issue of Théâtres Magazine recognised it as one of the 50 best productions of the last decade. We are proud that our touring map already includes the Odéon in Paris, the Piccolo Teatro in Milan, Onassis Stegi in Athens, the Wiener Festwochen – and now the Barbican in London. 

Juris Žagars, on behalf of the Dailes Theatre Artistic Board

The Company

Cast

Rohtko Juris Bartkevičs 
Wolt vendor 1/Orion Anastapolou Kaspars Dumburs 
Hai Yan Huang 
Actor Andrzej Jakubczyk 
Ann Freedman Rēzija Kalniņa 
Actress Ilze Ķuzule-Skrastiņa (originally performed by Ērika Eglija-Grāvele)
Destiny Hope, performer and waitress Katarzyna Osipuk 
Wolt vendor 2/Domenico de Sole Artūrs Skrastiņš 
Jack Smith, Muesum Director  Mārtiņš Upenieks 
Mell Rohtko Vita Vārpiņa 
James Vulture, journalist Toms Veličko 
Tao Xiaochen Wang 

 

Creative Team

Text and Dramaturgy Anka Herbut  
Director Łukasz Twarkowski   
Set Designer Fabien Lédé  
Costume Designer Svenja Gassen   
Music Designer Lubomir Grzelak   
Video Artist Jakub Lech   
Lighting Designer Eugenijus Sabaliauskas  
Choreographer Pawel Sakowicz  
Assistant Directors Diāna Kaijaka, Adam Zduńczyk, Mārtiņš Gūtmanis 
Assistant Dramaturg Linda Šterna  
Assistant Costume Designer Bastian Stein   
Assistant Video Artist Adam Zduńczyk  
Camera Operators Arturs Gruzdiņš, Jonatāns Goba
AV Technicians Uldis Grass, Kristaps Taburs, Gustavs Smalkais-Francis
Sound Engineer Didzis Herberts Cielava  
Video Engineers Jana Jaunbērziņa, Andrjus Jaņuns 
Props Managers Annika Auziņa, Gunta Sakša 
Lighting Engineers Edgars Brākmanis, Māra Vaļikova
Technical Manager Mārtiņš Vigups   
Stage Crew Dāvis Rābants, Rūdolfs Štrāls, Artis Andersens, Pāvels Busigins
Make-up Ginta Puišele-Anuševica
Wardrobe Ivonna Straume   
Surtitles Operator Ēriks Saksons   
Stage Manager Iveta Boša   
Producer Ginta Tropa   
International production and distribution Vidas Bizunevicius  
Script Translator (into Latvian) Ingmāra Balode   
Script Translators (into English) Ingmāra Balode, Anka Herbut, Linda Šterna
Translators (rehearsals) Diāna Kaijaka, Elza Marta Ruža   

 

Event information

Running time: 
3 hours and 55 minutes, including an interval.

Age guidance: 
14+

Content warning: 
This production contains smoking, very loud and occasionally sudden music, haze, strobe lighting and flashing lights.

Ear plugs will be available upon entry to the auditorium. 

The show is performed in Latvian, English, Chinese and Polish with English surtitles.

Filming 
Audience filming will take place on Thu 2 October. For more information, please speak to a member of Barbican staff.

 

Presented by the Barbican

The Barbican presentation of ROHTKO is supported by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Polish Cultural Institute in London and the British Council under the UK/Poland Season 2025.

Production: Dailes Theatre, Riga, Latvia. In co-production with JK Opole Theatre, Poland and the Adam Mickiewicz Institute.

Co-financed by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Latvia.

‘Un nouveau monde’ by Octave Noire (P&C Yotanka Records) is used in the performance.

Photography: Artūrs Pavlovs

ROHTKO was first premiered on 12 March 2022 at Dailes Theatre, Riga, Latvia

 

ROTHKO, ROTKHO or ROHTKO?

Spelling mistake or intentional statement? The misspellings ROHTKO and ROTKHO play into the production’s central theme: the relationship between the fake and the original, and how famous brands are often imitated with counterfeit names such as Adibas or Dolce & Banana. It draws on Graham Rawlinson’s hypothesis – known as the typoglycaemia effect – which suggests that the human brain can still read text as long as the first and last letters of each word remain in place. So, what do you think: is a ROTKHO or a ROHTKO really any different – or less valuable – than a ROTHKO?

Trailer

Writer’s note

This is not a play about Mark Rothko. This is not even a play about Mark Rohtko. In a 1999 issue of the New Scientist, Graham Rawlinson claimed and demonstrated that written text can be understood no matter what order the letters in a word are in – the only important thing is that the first and last letter are in the right place. However, the spelling error in the title of the show reveals something more. Our intention was not to present a biographical performance, although Rothko’s personality is, indeed, fascinating and his paintings, in the words of American art critic Jerry Saltz, act as ‘Buddhist television sets’. We were more interested in the portrayal of the artist (both male and female), the  unwritten rules of the art market, as well as the self-evidence and assertiveness with which value – either emotional, intellectual, or market – is attributed to art.
 

Can good art be cheap?

What is good art?

What is art?
 

Alternative answers can be sought, for example, in the Chinese shanzhai concept, discussed by philosopher Byung-Chul Han in the book Deconstruction in Chinese Philosophy, where he explores the strict distinction between copy and original. What does this distinction mean in the context of art and beyond? Such division posits that the original is the principal embodiment of truth, value and individuality, while the copy is mere imitation and repetition. Chinese thought leads in a different direction – closer to what, paradoxically, Rothko also explores.

Rothko – the artist who didn’t paint the work bearing his signature, which was sold at the Knoedler Gallery in New York for $8.5 million. The very same artist who insisted that if something is worth doing once, it’s worth doing many times. One of the artists associated with the Fluxus group, Robert Filliou, once said that art is everything an artist calls art. However, nowadays it’s not so simple. Today, art is more defined by what a curator, gallerist, collector, influencer, NFT creator, entrepreneur or buyer labels as art. 

There also exists the countercultural concept which suggests that every living body’s encounter with the world, every experience we have, is art. One of the characters in this show, Destiny Hope, speaks about the tears of a performance artist that were supposed to flow while she was standing in front of Rothko’s paintings. However, the tears were unable to flow, remaining in the realm of intention on one hand, and the state of continuous potentiality on the other. Destiny Hope allows the tears to manifest within her own body – the body of an actress. She promises to gift them to the future when people will no longer feel anything when looking at art. For now, she bestows them upon us.

Anka Herbut

Glossary

NFT – non-fungible token
An NFT – non-fungible token – is designed to prove ownership of the immaterial things in virtual reality. When two things have the same function, they are fungible, like for example, money. Two different Euro coins are fungible. Nonfungibility means that you cannot exchange one thing with another, which makes that one thing unique. Through the unique NFTs the digital artists (celebrated in likes) can sign and sell their works (memes, gifs, tweets and any kind of digital works which can still be copied by anyone). They retain the copyright and reproduction rights. To put it in terms of physical art collecting: anyone can buy a Rothko print, but only one person can own the original. 

Blockchain
Blockchain is a system of recording information in a way that makes it difficult or impossible to change, hack or cheat the system. A blockchain is essentially a digital ledger of transactions that is duplicated and distributed across the entire network of computer systems. It is cryptographically secure and decentralised. Blockchain is transparent at the level of data flow, but at the same time allows users to remain anonymous. Blockchain has enabled a proven method of operating a digital currency (cryptocurrency) to appear – independent of central banks and financial institutions.

Provenance
Provenance is a record of ownership of a work of art that traces the history of its ownership, helping to verify its authenticity and value. In the NFTs field provenance appears as a blockchain – it provides tracking and tracing of digital items, their authenticity and source. 

Radical care 
Radical care is an intentional process of producing relationships between humans and non-humans or artificial intelligence that increases compassion, and encourages the sharing of social capital (and any other capital) and level of intersectional awareness. It seeks to empathically demonstrate experiences, needs and desires in order to build a community based on mutual caring. It aims to raise awareness of the interdependence of all of us, it means to care about those who are not us.

Daugavpils
Daugavpils is a state city in south-eastern Latvia, located on the banks of the Daugava River, from which the city gets its name. It is the second-largest city in the country after the capital Riga. Daugavpils is the birth city of the artist Mark Rothko and houses the Mark Rothko Art Centre. Born in Daugavpils in 1903, Mark Rothko emigrated at the age of 10 to the United States. 

Shanzhai
Shanzhai means ‘fake’. It’s a Chinese neologism initially describing forgeries of branded products. But shanzhai adapt very fast to new conditions and exploit their potential to improve. These products are inspired by the original, then depart from it only to mutate into new originals by themselves. Shanzhai undermines the power of the original, the authority and expertise. It deconstructs creation as an act of making things ex nihilo and has a playful, anarchic energy.

Discover more

Biographies

Director
Łukasz Twarkowski (1983, Poland) creates multimedia performances combining theatre and visual arts. He places his projects in the context of extending reality through multimedia. A crucial element of Twarkowski’s creative work is investigating the ability and limitations of theatre as a medium and tool of communication. By permanent deconstruction of narratives, questioning the fixed habits of the audience and by meaningful usage of new media, Twarkowski creates a new, original language of stage performance based on multimedia and, more widely, digital technologies. In using these, Twarkowski analyses and observes increasingly complex relations between the real, the symbolic and the imagined. His projects are programmed at important festivals and stages around the world, among others: Odéon – Théâtre de l’Europe, Ruhrtriennale, Skirball Cultural Center in New York, Piccolo Teatro di Milano, Festival de Otoño in Madrid, Münchner Kammerspiele, Wiener Festwochen, Holland Festival, Southbank Centre in London, Onassis Stegi in Athens, Taiwan Performing Arts Center and Seoul Performing Arts Festival. Recently, he was awarded the Premi Ubu in Italy, The Faust German Theatre Prize and the Distinguished Artist Award by the International Society of Performing Arts. From 2023-2024 he was an associated artist of the Onassis Foundation, and in 2025 became an associated artist of Piccolo Teatro di Milano.

Major works

2012 KLINIKEN / Love is colder than…
2013 Akropolis
2015 Black Sun
2017 LOKIS
2019 Es war einmal… das Leben
2020 RESPUBLIKA
2022 ROHTKO
2023 The Employees
2023 WoW
2024 QUANTA
2025 ORACLE

Awards

2016 Golden Cross Stage Award for best video artist (for Heroes’ Square)
2017 Golden Cross Stage Award for directing (for LOKIS)
2021 Golden Cross Stage Award for best ensemble (for RESPUBLIKA)
2023 Spēlmaņu nakts Latvian Theatre Award for director and Grand Prix for best show (for ROHTKO)
2024 Grand Prix for best show at the International Theatre Festival Kontakt (for The Employees)
2024 Premi UBU for best foreign performance presented in Italy (for ROHTKO)
2024 The Faust German Theatre for the best use of multimedia and sound (for WoW)
2025 Golden Cross Stage Award for directing (for QUANTA)

Below, from left to right: Łukasz Twarkowski (photo by Beatrice Borgers), Anka Herbut (by Alicja Kielan) and Fabien Lédé (by Fabien Lédé)

A composite image of Łukasz Twarkowski, Anka Herbut and Fabien Lede

About Dailes Theatre, Latvia
Dailes Theatre is the largest professional theatre in the Baltic States, with a history and traditions stretching back over a century. 

The artistic vision and drive of the theatre were created by its founder, the legendary director Eduards Smiļģis whose dynamic style shaped the theatre for more than 40 years. His aesthetic was based on what was, for his time, a bold and radical style of visual expression. Today that tradition continues, with new innovations and aesthetic challenges driving the artistic direction of the theatre. 

Every season, audiences of more than 200,000 watch a variety of productions staged in the Main Hall and the New Hall. Existing performances are complemented by around eight new performances every year. Productions showcase stage design, props and costumes that have been custom-made in our own on-site workshops.

In spring 2020, a new, ambitious management team took up posts with the theatre. Artistic Director Viesturs Kairišs is considered one of the most prominent contemporary directors of Latvian theatre and cinema, with extensive international experience. General Manager Juris Žagars is an experienced producer of artistic projects such as the Cesis Arts Festival, one of the oldest contemporary art festivals in Latvia, as well as being one of the leading actors of Dailes Theatre until his appointment in 2020.

We want our audiences to experience challenging, entertaining, moving and inspiring theatre. We champion new works from writers all over the world, as well as breathe new life into the classics; we bring critically acclaimed hits from other countries as well as the best from our own Latvian writers.

dailesteatris.lv/lv/
 

About JK Opole Theatre, Poland (co-producer)

JK Opole Theatre was founded in 1975. The building is the largest dramatic theatre in Poland: its main large stage has an auditorium able to accommodate nearly 600, as well as a small stage, the Modelatornia Stage, and the Bunker Stage.

Each season, a minimum of six new premieres appear in the repertoire, and nearly 300 performances are presented. The theatre regularly presents its performances at prestigious national and international festivals, where it has won numerous awards. It is one of the most dynamically developing theatre centres in Poland, as well as a valued partner in the international arena.

JK Opole Theatre organises an international contest called Modelatornia Theater Project Competition. The idea is to create a place where artists from around the world are able to conduct experimental research and creative explorations inspired by the theories of Jerzy Grotowski. We want JK Opole Theatre to become a place of common research free from short-term political trends, and open to artistic development and cooperation with institutions in Poland and abroad. For over 40 years, JK Opole Theatre has run one of the largest Polish theatre festivals, Opole Theatre Confrontations / 'Living Classics'.

JK Opole Theatre is an autonomous institution with its own costume and scenography workrooms and institutional and technical departments.

teatropole.pl

About the Adam Mickiewicz Institute

The Adam Mickiewicz Institute (AMI) brings Polish culture to people around the world. Being a state institution, it creates lasting interest in Polish culture and art through strengthening the presence of Polish artists on the global stage. It initiates innovative projects, supports international cooperation and cultural exchanges. It promotes the work of both established and promising artists, showing the diversity and richness of our culture. The Adam Mickiewicz Institute is also responsible for the culture.pl website, a comprehensive source of knowledge about Polish culture. For more information please visit iam.pl
 

About the Polish Cultural Institute, London

The Institute's focus lies in promoting Polish culture and heritage to British audiences, as well as developing collaborations and building bridges between key cultural and academic institutions in Poland and the UK. Through nurturing these relationships, providing access to essential cultural resources and offering support through funding, PCI London can successfully showcase the best of Polish art, film, theatre, music, literature, science and heritage to culturally diverse residents of the UK. 

instytutpolski.pl | Instagram @polish_culture

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