Meet the American artist who braves Finland's freezing temperatures to paint portraits on giant floating blocks of ice in the Baltic Sea.

David Popa, 29, creates the giant portraits by swimming out to sea in the freezing water and using charcoal and soil in a spray can to paint the surface of huge blocks of ice. Each portrait has to be created in around four hours as the ice floats would invariably either sink or float away.

Popa's Fractured series came with many challenges as he had to create them in the middle of the freezing Finnish winter.

Popa, who is originally from New York but now lives in Espoo, Finland, said: "Initially it was a huge paradigm shift for me to convince myself that it was even possible and safe. I actually practiced for two winters before starting on these, it only works at almost exactly zero degrees."

This past winter the conditions were perfect and he was able to complete his project.

Popa wore a full drysuit to swim through the freezing water to the floats he intended on painting, sometimes swimming for 100 or 130 feet. He also had to pack all his equipment, including a drone, into watertight bags, and carry it through the freezing water.

David Popa, 29, an artist originally from New York, makes incredible realistic frescoes out of charcoal spray paint, all on floating shards of ice perched above freezing water. David Popa, 29, an artist originally from New York, makes incredible realistic frescoes out of charcoal spray paint, all on floating shards of ice perched above freezing water. David Popa, SWNS/Zenger

"The conditions were perfect, because it kept fluctuating between warmer and colder days, the ice kept freezing over and then cracking again," said Popa.

The series became very popular and he sold around 100 prints of images and six video NFTs, with the most expensive one reaching just over $15,000.

The pieces are so large that it is difficult to keep track of them from the ground. In order to plan them out, Popa had to mark the ice and take a picture from above, which ate into how long he had on the ice, adding to the time pressure.

"After I marked the ice and take the picture, it's go time," he said.

The pieces, which are human faces, are ephemeral art - designed to only last a moment before disappearing. Popa's choice to make his pieces on such a difficult medium stem from a love of adventure and an attempt to escape from the stuffiness of the art world.

Popa went to art school in Wenham, Massachusetts, but he was more interested in hiking and adventure. He fell in love with murals in art school, where they had a graffiti wall on which he could practice.

He said: "[When making Fractured], the key question was how I could associate murals to nature."

He wanted the entire piece, from the canvas to the paint, to reflect his two passions: murals and nature.

Produced in association with SWNS.

This story was provided to Newsweek by Zenger News.

Uncommon Knowledge

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