Pupuk Daru Purnomo is one of the artists who are very close to me, and whom I have known for years. I have his paintings from when he was still a student until today. Since he was a student, Pupuk has shown his forte in painting faces. The faces he painted at the time are generally those of mothers. Perhaps it was because he was very close to his mother, while with his father he was rather distant. During his journey as a painter, Pupuk never abandoned painting faces, although he would then become very successful with his paintings of urban landscapes and old buildings.
I once invited him and his best friend Nasirun to a journey all across the United States of America, the Netherlands, and to Paris as well, visiting the museums there. The journey proved very beneficial to him. Along the journey, he never stopped making sketches of everything that caught his interest. He took a lot of pictures, too. From this journey, he managed to create good quality paintings, better than the previous ones, about city landscapes with historical and old buildings and their captivating interiors. The paintings were displayed in a solo exhibition at the National Gallery of Indonesia at the end of 2005.
Pupuk learned a lot from the journey as he opened himself and felt that he needed to learn a lot. His first words upon seeing the works in those museums abroad were: “We’re nothing. We feel puny.” He likes to ask me for my opinions about his works, and responds well to my criticism. One of his strong characteristics is his ability to say NO. No exhibition, no auction, no biennale, no other event when he is preparing a solo exhibition. He always says that he requires a certain mood to paint, and he cannot force this to happen. Therefore, during the market boom, no auction house, gallery, or collector came to hunt and bother him, because they knew it would amount to nothing. Pupuk does not lose his head after all the success he has achieved.
One day, when he had been very successful with his city landscapes, I suggested to him to start painting faces of women around us, the results of which would be displayed in my new museum that I was building at the time. He was very interested in the suggestion, as he had started to become bored with painting buildings. Unfortunately, the idea never materialized. He, however, took on the idea and brought it further to create self- portraits—but not the usual self-portraits. These self-portraits bear no resemblance to Pupuk D.P.. Apparently, what he painted was not his face; he only used the faces as metaphors to express his emotions in a variety of situations that he had encountered in his life. Pupuk, with his strong brush strokes, could create faces with strong expressions that bear no resemblance to his own face.