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The exhibition presents a narrowly thematic selection of paintings from recent years, primarily from the series You Told I had Beautiful Hands, which depicts hands on large canvas, enlarged to huge scale, expressively painted, forming various gestures with finger and palm movements. Puklus's paintings, like his earlier photographs, are drawn from highly personal experiences, moving in the realm of the intimacy of private life, relationship conflicts, the emotional and psychological dynamics of the everyday, the experience of existential exposure, the mid-life crisis, sexuality as a constant source of energy, and represent a kind of creative liberation and living of self-reflection.
Another chapter in Puklus's creative practice of experimenting with different techniques is the emergence of the monumental tufted rug as a rather unusual medium, overloaded with cultural and personal experiences. In addition to its numerous cultural-anthropological connotations, such as the striking prevalence of the tufted rugs in the 'petty bourgeois' domestic interior design practices of the 1960s and 1970s, the role of the 'do-it-yourself' visual culture in the practice of interior design of homes, and the impact of all these visual influences of 'vernacular modernism' on the visual imagination of children growing up in this environment, the 'imprinting factor', etc. – for Puklus, the immediate sensory softness of the carpet is also linked to his childhood experiences. The image from his childhood of lying on the tufted-rug next to his father is an evocation of one of Puklus's defining emotional relations, his conflicted relationship with his father, which has already appeared in one of his earlier series of photographs. The monumental wall-hanging tapestry entitled I've been Lying my Whole Life is a disturbed, emotionally overwrought authentic expression of this psychological, introspective submersion, powerfully rendered with painterly gestures.
Barnabás Bencsik