Questions for Awards Master Showcase.Christine Egnoski, Executive Director Portrait Society of America
interviewing artist Aapo Pukk.
AP: He stands absolutely still. The narrow street is full of tourists. Many just pass by. When someone happens to come close, Voltaire startles him or her with his sudden change of posture and grimace. If possible, he tries to kiss the tourist, leaving a white mark on her cheek.
Suddenly a group of high school students stand in front of him, it is morning and they are playful. Carefree young people perhaps on their first trip to Venice. One mischievous student is trying to show off, pretending to grab the money box. The others laugh. Voltaire does not move a muscle. The showman continues, coming close to the statue, raising his fist and moving it in slow motion under the statue’s nose. The others laugh again.
The actor loses his temper. He steps out of the column. He raises his fist holding it above the bragger’s head. The boy also raises his fist. The statue addresses the Italian schoolboy in English with a Russian accent: “I am an actor and this is my job. It is a job like any other. If you want to fight, I can do it.” The youngster is confused. The others don’t laugh any more. Two men face each other with raised fists.
“What next”, I wonder watching the scene. “You have to say that you are sorry,” I shout from the crowd. The Italian boy doesn’t hear me but the others do and tell him. “I am sorry,” says the boy who started it all. “Well, it’s fine,” the white statue says after a short and dramatic pause, smiling. They shake hands and the group, a bit subdued, moves on.
The statue squats, taking a box of paints out of his bag. He checks his makeup in a small mirror and steps back into the column. His breast of white marble moves slightly and then he is absolutely still once more.
AP: I try to start a project from as clean a sheet as possible. I feel the freshness of a new picture, it is like starting the first picture in my life once again. I bought a new box of pastels. It held so many different shades that I had almost forgotten. The beginning is always dynamic, emotional and more colorful than necessary. The general picture had to leave some space for the details. At the same time one should not lose the general idea in the details. I had to achieve a technical approach that did not make the surface texture and the technique more interesting than the hidden message of the picture. In order to achieve a spatial effect I observed the picture from different angles. From below and from above, from left to right and the other way round. This trick makes it possible to balance the things that are important and those that are not.
AP: I have learned and practiced my whole life. At first out of curiosity, then out of selfishness, wanting to prove myself, now out of curiosity again. My first school was the Children’s Art School in Tartu where my mother was a teacher. Even now, she is 74 and I am 46, we have heated discussions about a half finished painting of mine. Then for 6 years I studied graphic arts in the Art University in Tallinn, Estonia. Then I practiced the sense of composition as a magazine designer. After that I became a freelance portrait painter. I have done it for 18 years. Nowadays practice is not so important for me because I know that I can paint and draw. Finding oneself as an artist is another thing; you may not achieve it by practicing. You may realize what you want by thinking, observing, and by your attitude. At first I did not know the artist I would eventually become. However, I did know exactly the kind of artist I did not wish to be. I knew both what style I did not wish to paint and I knew also what lifestyle I did not wish to live. Now what I have I am content with and I grow with each project.
AP: Capture the finished painting and the painted object in the same frame. Then photograph them together. Then observe the photograph closely. If the painting seems more interesting than the object then one can be pleased. You have surpassed reality. You have managed to put a fragment of your convictions into the picture. It has some compassion and empathy. It has more depth that the present moment.

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