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Peter J. Ketchum

Affordable, Unusual and Graphically Contemporary Art: Paintings, Prints, Mixed Media and Sculpture.

Painting, Prints, Sculpture. NOTE: Commissions available using your photos.

  • PRINTS: HUMANS/SPORTS/ANIMALS/MURDER/LIFE

  • MIXED MEDIA AND LARGER WORKS INCLUDING A REAL SIT ON IT CHAIR

  • NUDES RISQUE SLIGHTLY NAUGHTY ART NOT FOR FEINT OF HEART OR UNDER 18

  • TRUMP, POLITICS, WAR, HEGSETH, TRUMP , HELL AND OTHER UNPLEASANTRIES

  • PEOPLE OF COLOR IN THE U.S.A. , ASIA AND THE REST OF THE WORLD

  • SERIOUS COMEDY FOR SERIOUS PEOPLE AND THE SOCIALLY WARPED

  • ART WORK WITH WORDS AND (NOW AND THEN) WISDOM

  • ART MIX: COKE COFFEE CONVICTS A NUDE AND MAYHEM

  • MOTIVATIONAL ART SMARTASS ADVICE PLUS YENTA STUFF

  • KETCHUM'S WABI-SABI , A GALLERY OF SALVAGED SOULS

  • RELIGION, SAINTS , SINNERS, AND SANTA

  • LBGQT AND THEN SOME (DO ASK)

  • CATS AND LESSER ANIMALS: DOGS BIRDS APES HUMANS AND SPIDERS

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KINSHIP

KINSHIP is a 40x36 mixed media work on canvas made with found b&w photos from the 1850's-1950's. Four modern color photos were also used and color enhanced with markers, paint pens and acrylics. Each was copied and hand-colored with acrylics, photo dyes, pens, paint pens, and/or markers. Photos were then enlarged, cut out, and glued to the stretched, painted canvas. The handmade KINSHIP nameplate is carved 1/2 inch painted pine. It is attached with velcro.
The portraits move from women of the 1800's at the bottom to modern women at the top. Most of the older women in the bottom rows were born into slavery. They were photographed in the 1930's as a WPA project. With one generation building a firm foundation for the next, KINSHIP pays homage to the kinship and strength of women of color.

The flowers represent plants from Africa including cotton and forget-me-nots. The improbable clouds are a reminder of ones unseen by the chained captives in the hull of the American-bound ships.

The surrounding names were all used on slave ships. All but one is a woman's name. Many slave ships were named after the daughters and wives of the ship's owner. The exception is JESUS, a 700 ton ship owned by Elizabeth I, and one of the early transports.
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