S.B.: Is that a reason why you work with words?
A.PD.: To choose the right word in writing is the same as choosing the right color in art. I like the objectness of words sometimes, e.g. in 'Here' and 'There', by switching a 't' it changes the place, it's like two sides of the same coin and that fascinates me - these kind of little things. Where ideas and thoughts come from is often unexpected. Sometimes there are connections that we make through doing, through physically making things, practical work pushes ideas further then sitting and thinking. The same happens when you are sitting down to write. You are working with one organ, it's just your brain. Painting is not only physical, it is also a very meditative process to be in your studio for hours with music on and you disappear in your own thoughts. All the work I am making right now has no words and I anticipate that being open, to what I call an 'Ohrwurm'. A song, the news I read, someone I overheard talking, a movie I saw or a conversation I had are all potential sources for words that can enter a painting.
S.B.: So you do not specially prepare yourself before entering your studio?
A.DP.: It's a bit how the philosophy comes in, like the big 'Dasein'. Being there, being actively present, it's not what's out there, it's not what was, it's not what can be, it's here and now. That’s really important. You need to be there and see it. That’s why I critique seeing art on the internet, you are just seeing images on the screen or flipping though a magazine, the physicality is missing.
S.B.: You have this work called 'Color Test' which is two American flags on canvas, one in black, one in white. Why do you use these contrasting colors?
A.DP.: I work a lot with dualities in my works, comparable with the saying of 'two sides of one coin'. We have the tendency to put things in categories because it's easier to understand, like left wing and right wing. We frame things, we want things in a nice, easy box and we put them into a drawer, a 'Schublade'. Also in Germany there is this saying of 'schwarz auf weiß', in other words, when it's printed, it's true. And there are multiple truths, there is not always one truth. The contrast of the connection with the flag has a lot to do with what's missing, which are the red and the blue. The red and the blue reflect the two political parties, the blue Democrats and the red Republicans. Obama said before he became president that we are not divided by a red or blue America, we are the United States of America. In America they use the saying of 'Getting out the colors', for the person in the military who is responsible to raise the flag every morning. Color Test is what especially photographers and designers use, which is testing the right color, if it's the proper red, or the correct blue. To me it was testing the colors, also the most obvious thing for some people is to make the connection with a black American and a white American, and that’s also a critique from me to the viewer who is not looking beyond what is only skin deep.
S.B.: What do you want to achieve with this work?
A.PD.: I think it has a lot to do with offering perspectives, hopefully offering a different perspective, if it's a possibility to create a dialogue where the viewer comes in and might see and assume one thing. And the question is: Can I also challenge their assumptions? This work has a lot to do with opinions, because art is an opinion: if you like it or you don’t, if it's good or bad, left or right – all these opinions are not based on facts. Everybody is free to have their own opinion, but when you put them together in different groups they can determine different opinions, and opinions are influenced. That’s where my critique starts – it's not always black and white like in 'Color Test'.
S.B.: Last year you became more figurative, why?
A.DP.: It's again about the obviousness and the opinions like the flags in 'Color Test'. I did a lot with self-portraits and I teach a portrait drawing class. For me it's more about fun and not only about art. I like to draw people, but it's not something that I ever felt driven to pursue in my artwork. And how the color and the words work together is much of a game, too.