Russian artist who has eaten a live bat, rats, roadkill shows his extreme art in Hong Kong
- Petr Davydtchenko is sharing his experiences at The Catalyst gallery and also offering unique gastronomic experiences to the public

Russian artist Petr Davydtchenko goes to extremes for his craft. He once made a performance piece that consisted of him eating nothing but roadkill for three whole years.
“Every morning I collected roadkill: a cat, dog, bird, snake,” he says of his 2016-19 work titled Go and Stop Progress, made while he was living in the south of France.
“One time I found a donkey – it took a year to eat it.”
Davydtchenko is the artist-in-residence at Hong Kong’s The Catalyst gallery, an independent art space in Sheung Wan, until September 15, where he is sharing records of his extreme experiences as a multimedia show and offering unique gastronomic experiences in which members of the public can take part.

Challenging conventional norms has long been Davydtchenko’s agenda. His work – mostly installations and performance art that focus on food – explores issues such as waste in capitalist society, human survival and the collapse of civilisation.
The latter has plagued him since he was young, he says. Born in 1986 in a closed military town in Russia called Arzamas-16 – now renamed Sarov – he grew up in St. Petersburg, where he saw first-hand the violence of far-right groups.