Jesse Krimes
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Jesse Krimes | |
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Born | 1982 |
Nationality | American |
Education | B.A., Millersville University |
Known for | Mural art, art installations, sculpture |
Website | Official website |
Jesse Krimes (born 1982 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania)[1] is an American artist and curator who focuses on criminal injustice and contemporary perceptions of criminality.[2]
Career[]
Krimes was raised poor without a father and used art as a way to feel safe and secure.[3]
In 2009, after graduating in Art from Millersville University, Krimes was sent to prison for cocaine possession and subsequently served five years of a six year sentence. During this time he devised a way to transfer photos from newspapers and magazines onto soap using hair gel. From this, he cut the bars into works of art and shipped them discreetly out of prison. In his last three years, he was able to gain access to art supplies and was able to produce numerous pieces and mentor others. Krimes explains that “artwork facilitated conversation. And it humanized me to some of the guards. They saw me not as an inmate but as a person.”[4][5] Upon his release he co-founded Right of Return USA, a fellowship program to support previously incarcerated artists.[6]
In 2016, JPMorgan Chase settled a lawsuit with Krimes, acting as plaintiff, for charging exorbitant fees for a debit card program that was supposed to help released inmates.[7]
Krimes has collaborated and received public commissions with a focus on prison reform including Amnesty International, Ford Foundation, Open Philanthropy, and the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts’ Restorative Justice program, to name a few.[8] Krimes was awarded fellowships by Robert Rauschenberg Foundation in 2017, the Independence Foundation in the same year, and the Ford Foundation’s Art For Justice initiative in 2018.[9] Krimes is represented by Burning in Water Gallery in New York.
Work Chronology[]
Selected chronology of showcased artwork.
- The Space Between (2006)
- Coercion (2008)
- Apokaluptein:16389067 (2014) artist[10][11]
- Amnesty International Commission (2015)
- Marking Time in America: The Prison Works (2009-2013) (2016) solo show for artist[12]
- Deus Ex Machina aka God from the Machine (2016)[13]
- Stones, Zips, and Remnants; AP. Voices (2017)
- Portraits of Justice (2018), co-curator with Russell Craig, artist, City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program[14]
- Museum of Broken Windows (2018) artist[15]
- Prison Nation (2018), artist[16]
- The OG Experience (2019), co-curator with Russell Craig, artist[17]
- Emanation 2019 (2019) artist[18]
- Art as Freedom (2019) artist[19]
References[]
- ^ "Philadelphia Artist Jesse Krimes' First Solo Exhibition of New Work Since Returning from Prison on Display at Drexel". DrexelNow.
- ^ Vider, Elise. "Jesse Krimes uses art to engage with criminal justice reform".
- ^ Formerly Incarcerated Artists Visualize Healing https://hyperallergic.com/487401/formerly-incarcerated-artists-visualize-healing/
- ^ Philadelphia artist Jesse Krimes uses a 70-month jail sentence to create a monumental work of contraband art (PHOTOS)
- ^ "Jesse Krimes". Mural Arts Philadelphia.
- ^ "Formerly incarcerated artists can now apply to win a $20K arts fellowship". Mic.
- ^ "JPMorgan Chase settles debit card lawsuit with former inmates". August 5, 2016.
- ^ "Jesse Krimes". Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. June 26, 2017.
- ^ "About | jesse krimes". jessekrimes.
- ^ "prisoner creates 39-panel mural with sheets, hair gel and newspapers". designboom | architecture & design magazine. March 18, 2014.
- ^ "Jesse Krimes: Apokaluptein:16389067 | Zimmerli Art Museum". www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu.
- ^ https://www.artforum.com/uploads/guide.003/id27740/press_release.pdf
- ^ "Jesse Krimes: Deus ex Machina". Mural Arts Philadelphia.
- ^ Rao, Sameer (October 4, 2018). "Philly Mural Project 'Portraits of Justice' Confronts Mass Incarceration". Colorlines.
- ^ Solly, Meilan. "NYC Pop-Up Exhibition Traces Broken Windows Policing's Toll". Smithsonian.
- ^ Smith, Roberta; Heinrich, Will; Farago, Jason; Schwendener, Martha; Cotter, Holland (March 1, 2018). "What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week" – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ "Formerly Incarcerated Artists Visualize Healing". Hyperallergic. March 12, 2019.
- ^ "Emanation 2019". Atlantic City Weekly.
- ^ "Art as Freedom: A New Exhibit by Formerly Incarcerated Artists Opens in Chelsea". NY City Lens. February 20, 2019.
External links[]
- 1982 births
- Artists from Philadelphia
- American installation artists
- Living people