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Extraordinary Cinema: Art & Krimes by Krimes

  • Kennedy Center Millenium Stage 2700 F Street Northwest Washington, DC, 20566 United States (map)

About this event

An incarcerated artist. A secret masterpiece. Finding a way to survive in the act of creativity.

A story of confinement and freedom, loss and creation. This documentary weaves together animation, artwork, and vérité filmmaking.

Isolated in an environment where segregation and hyper-masculine posturing are as rampant as personal expression is verboten, 26-year-old artist Jesse Krimes covertly creates conceptual art during his six-year prison sentence. Jesse’s detailed crafting of this artwork—including a large-scale mural made out of bedsheets, newspaper, and hair gel—provides a mental escape from the dehumanizing surroundings, while inspiring unexpected connections with a variety of souls around him.

With the help of fellow artists, Jesse smuggles out individual panels of his work piece-by-piece to avoid being caught with contraband, only seeing his artwork in totality after coming home. His creations, Apokaluptein: 16389067 and Purgatory, mark his experience with incarceration and his perspective as an artist.

As Jesse’s work captures the art world’s attention, he struggles to adjust to life outside, living with the threat that any misstep will trigger a life sentence. Leaning into his own identity as a formerly incarcerated and celebrated artist, Jesse turns the spotlight on people still in prison, recognizing beauty and potential often overlooked, and reminding us of the transcendent power of art to connect us and to elevate the human spirit.

Total Run Time: 85 minutes.

See a post-show panel moderated by Kara Gotsch, Executive Director of The Sentencing Project. Panelists include artist Jesse Krimes, filmmaker Alysa Nahmias, and more. 

Later Event: October 2
2023 Teach Central America Week