Keri Kimura’s paintings explore color, chaos, pattern, and time. She earned a BA from Smith College and also studied at the Glasgow School of Art and the New York Studio School. She lives and works in Southwest Harbor on Mount Desert Island, Maine. Her work has been exhibited at The Painting Center, New York, NY; Golden Foundation for the Arts, New Berlin, NY; Cove Street Arts, Portland, ME; and The Parsonage Gallery, Searsport, ME.
Her artist statement reflects her approach to assembling and reinterpreting visual elements:
“I’m a collector of colors and shapes, shadows, and patterns. I assemble them and weave them together, move them around, search for the places they resonate. I’m fascinated by pattern pieces. The kind you use to sew a shirt or pants, which is something my mother and grandmother both did. When you cut out the shape of a sleeve, it isn’t shaped like an arm. It has flat sides and gentle curves. But there’s a sense that it mimics the body, like a strange geometric shorthand. My paintings are a kind of shorthand too. Every painting begins with a collection of shapes, colors, patterns, ideas about a place, point in time, or problem. But I let them depart from that point. Sometimes I begin with collaged material, magazine scraps, or pieces of old paintings. These become outlines. Every surface takes shape organically and sometimes comes to reference a landscape or physical space. At the same time, their ambiguity is important to me because it keeps them in motion. I want the viewer to find their own space within the picture plane.”