Ivan Dujhakov - Muscle Hunks A Russian In Paris Bollettini Memory Ex < HD 2025 >
He is still a hunk. The muscles are softer now, draped in a shroud of skin, but the frame remains—a monument to a time when a Russian in Paris could be feared, desired, and forgotten, all in the same afternoon.
had not looked at the bollettini in thirty years.
The (as his Italian lover, Enzo, used to call them— little bulletins ) were his only archive. A dry cleaner’s ticket from 1995. A handwritten receipt for steroids purchased near Pigalle. A Polaroid: Ivan, flexing his biceps in a tank top, sweat oiling his skin, eyes looking not at the camera, but through it, back toward a Moscow that no longer wanted him. He is still a hunk
The Bollettini of a Lost Russian
Enzo left him in 1999. "You are too heavy, Ivan," he whispered, not meaning the weight. "Not the body. The past." The (as his Italian lover, Enzo, used to
Ex as in exercise . Ex as in exile . Ex as in ex-lover .
The of the city took him in. Not the chic models, but the underground: the Algerian boxers, the Armenian powerlifters, the exiled Czech gymnasts. They called him Le Colosse . He posed for life-drawing classes, not for art, but for the €20—a living statue with veins like rivers and a chest like a cathedral ceiling. A Polaroid: Ivan, flexing his biceps in a
He puts the bollettini back in the tin. Closes the lid. In the dark of his fist, the memory ex pires—and begins again.
Now, alone in a studio apartment under a leaking roof, Ivan Dujhakov—former champion of nothing—runs a thumb over the brittle edge of a bollettino. He remembers the roar of the crowd at Palais des Sports . The smell of liniment. The way his muscles ached like a sweet confession.
They were small, yellowed slips of paper, stuffed inside a cigarette tin he’d bought at a tabac near Montmartre. Each one was a receipt of a life he barely recognized: a ticket to a forgotten wrestling match, a scribbled address of a gym that no longer existed, a stamp from a bathhouse on Rue des Blancs Manteaux.
He had arrived in Paris in the early 90s, a wall of a man with a shaved head and a passport that felt like a lie. The Soviet Union had just exhaled its last breath. But Ivan? Ivan was —a bear in a city of greyhounds. He didn’t speak the language of love; he spoke the language of iron, of grunts, of protein powder and chalk.