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A Midshipman’s Journey

Exhibiting at the United States Naval Academy Museum

PERMANENT COLLECTION

Note This exhibit will be on loan to the National Veterans Memorial and Museum from April 2023 - November 2023

 


Psst! This is best viewed on your desktop… but if you are on your phone or tablet, you’ll still enjoy looking around ;)

The show is in person at the U.S. Naval Academy museum, but I made this so you can explore it virtually if a trip to Annapolis is not in your current plans. Enjoy, and beat army!! - Kristin

 
 
 
 

 

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About “A Midshipman’s Journey”

When I accepted my appointment to the United States Naval Academy in 2007, there was very little I understood about what was about to happen. During my senior year of high school, I discovered a series of photographs documenting plebe summer by Pete Souza. I poured over those photos and they became my way of mentally preparing for the step into the unknown that lay ahead. I was grateful for them. They were honest.

A couple of months later, my BCG’s were sliding down my nose as the sun was rising during a muggy practice parade over plebe summer. The pink light behind us produced the most peculiar pattern of shadows on the backs of the rows of plebes ahead. Head, rifle, head, rifle, head, rifle... If I could have stopped and captured the moment right then, I would have.

As plebe year progressed, those moments continued to taunt me. The deep viridians of Stribling Walk at dusk, peppered with the glow of fireflies after nights on the parade field... Feelings of camaraderie unparalleled from any team I’d been on. Magnificent blankets of snow that made my feelings of the Dark Ages really complicated.

I realized I needed to tell the story, too. But with my medium. With paint. From the perspective of someone who’s chopped the halls and cut her hair and endured the endless days.

“A Midshipman’s Journey” is my story, but it’s also yours. It’s the journey of accepting the call, stepping past the threshold of the unknown, and arriving through the other side a different person, yet somehow still the same.

I chose to use color representationally, but to keep the brushwork impressionist and loose. The details aren’t important. The moments are what matter.

 

 

The Paintings

Click the arrow buttons on either side to view each piece in the show in chronological order or scroll below to see the overview.

Descriptions and titles are on the bottom left hand side. At the end of this page you can see the entire show in a different layout. If you are on mobile, you won’t be able to read the exerpts, but you can listen by clicking the button below!

Originals are not currently for sale, but individual fine art prints, books, and a corresponding journal can be purchased here.



 

 

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Your Story

 

I want to hear from you. What is your story?

Did any painting and corresponding description remind you of a moment that you would like to share?

Use the form below to tell me about it!