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Other details :
Artwork on wood. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
24x16in
About this artwork
Part of the Lost in the Law series, this painting was inspired by my work alongside justice-impacted men and a visit to a maximum-security prison. While rooted in incarceration, the work speaks to something universal — how we are shaped, confined, and redefined by our past.
The fractured portrait suggests identity interrupted and reshaped. Scraped, layered oil reveals both erosion and resilience. Though the surface holds darkness, the eye remains… clear — awake, undeniably human.
What moved me most was the depth of reflection and desire to grow. Even within unchangeable circumstances, there was accountability, mentorship, and meaning.
This piece asks us to consider our own forms of confinement — the labels, mistakes, and narratives that limit who we believe we can become.
Even when circumstances feel fixed, humanity remains. And growth is still possible.
Keren Nimmo is a self-taught painter working with oil, acrylic, and mixed media on canvas and wood panel, drawing upon a personal history of migration and resilience. She employs reductive techniques—excavating layers of color to reveal ethereal portraits—balancing abstraction with figuration and pairing vibrant backgrounds against stark black-and-white forms. Her textured surfaces, full of tension and revision, symbolize the layered nature of identity and generational memory. Nimmo’s art radiates empathy and hope, inviting viewers to find connection, resilience, and shared humanity within each expressive, emotionally charged piece.