About Kimberly

Baltimore City
Born in upstate New York in 1960, I moved to Baltimore with my then fiance and lifelong mentor even after death, my husband George in 1984. I finally started teaching myself oil painting in 1990. I have been working on my present project, the Million Gun Victims March since April of 2013.

Million Gun Victims March

The Million Gun Victims March is an artist driven crusade born out of an overwhelming sense of outrage at the sheer scale of human waste we allow ourselves to live with as part of the unquestioning adoration of our gun culture. No amount of statistics or spoken testimony seems to have penetrated through to too many of us about the truths behind who we lose to guns. I asked myself what would happen if portraits of not just the faces, but the shattered dreams of gun victims were brought together in the same place? Would it take one million portraits to ram home the truth behind the loss?  The first 130 portraits have been completed. As I begin the second hundred subjects the Marylanders will be joined by occassional portraits of victims from other cities and states.
     Because this is an enormous dream. This show is not like any other. The original portraits are not meant to be for sale. The subjects must stay together until we get the basic federal gun safety package signed as law. Then I intend my originals to go home to the families whose loved ones inspired me. The other half of this crusade is precisely to go out and meet as many families and grieving people as I can. I attend meetings of the Mothers of Murdered Sons and Daughters, Moms for Gun sense, and in December of 2016, the Newtown action alliance in D.C. I shall meet and listen to the families of Newtown. Because every mass produced item featuring any of these portraits will be done with not just the families' knowledge, but also as a practical aid for these families to build a bridge to a more tranquil place. The first small group of families are my true partners starting with the 2017 Million Gun Victims March calendar that comes out this year. It will only be a matter of time before other artists join me.
     The Million Gun Victims March is about human lives. The Million Gun Victims March is about healing America.
  • Darlene Johnson holding portrait of DeSean Mckoy.jpg
    Darlene Johnson holding portrait of DeSean Mckoy.jpg
    Darlene Johnson is seen here posing with the portrait of her son, DeSean Lucas Mckoy for an article in the Belgian weekly news magazine, De Standaard, from September of 2016. Written by Steven de Foer. This is what the Million Gun victims March is all about. This is to honor and bring out the human beings behind the statistics. Once the goal is reached in getting a federal gun safety package passed and signed into law, all the portraits will go home. DeSean's portrait will come back to his mother to stay.
  • Carter Scott 2012-2013.jpg
    Carter Scott 2012-2013.jpg
    Carter Scott (2012-2013) is the 11th portrait in the series. In May of 2013, the 16-month old toddler was riding with Daddy while he drove around getting supplies for the upcoming Memorial Day weekend. As the father parked the car, three men ran out with guns blazing. Carter suffered a leg wound with which he bled to death before emergency medical help could arrive. Painted in June of 2013.
  • Keshawna Pinder 1992-2013.jpg
    Keshawna Pinder 1992-2013.jpg
    Kishawna Pinder (1992-2013) the 33rd portrait in the series, would have turned 21 years old in just six more days. What brought her, her best friend Tyreka Martin (1992-2013) and young father Brian Powell (1991-2013) together in that second story rowhouse apartment on March 19, 2013 is unknown. The two men who barged in a riddled all three with bullets are also unknown. Painted in march 2014.
  • Truc Thi Ly Nguyen.jpg
    Truc Thi Ly Nguyen.jpg
    Truc Thy Li Nguyen is the 40th portrait in the series. She was a recent arrival to these shores from Vietnam, sponsored by her fiance. She worked at T&T Nail Salon to earn enough money for them to buy a house to live in when they got married. In May, 2014, she was servicing a customer when the shooter barged in with a semi-automatic, and shot rerpeatedly at the customer. Two of the bullets landed in her head, killing her instantly. Painted August 2014.
  • Matthew Thomas 2003-2015.jpg
    Matthew Thomas 2003-2015.jpg
    Matthew Thomas is the 56th portrait in the series. He was a sixth grader who had already won awards in chemistry and astronomy. He may have wanted to emulate Carl Sagan. On New Years 2015 his father took him in his SUV and both went missing until January 4. Their bodies were discovered in a remote parking lot. The father shot Matthew and then turned his shotgun on himself.
  • Yogesh Seth 1966-2015.jpg
    Yogesh Seth 1966-2015.jpg
    Yogesh Seth is the 65th portrait in the series. He worked in the family mini-mart in the Highlandtown neighborhood. Everyone called him "Joe". On May 1st, 2015 two unknown burglars broke into the store. They fatally shot Yogesh and fled in a white car. The only item taken was his friendly greeting to neighborhood customers who loved him.Painted July of 2015.
  • Julian Roary 2002-2015 and Ian Roary 2005-2015.jpg
    Julian Roary 2002-2015 and Ian Roary 2005-2015.jpg
    Julian Roary (2002-2015) was tall for a twelve year old, but he was a gentle giant devoted to ten year old Ian Roary (2005-2015). When the man they called Father lost his temporary job at a package delivery plant, he bought a shotgun and proceeded to kill the two boys before turning the gun on himself. They are #80 and #81 in the series. Painted January 2016
  • Isaiah Deloatch 2011-2016.jpg
    Isaiah Deloatch 2011-2016.jpg
    Isaiah Deloatch 2011-2016, oil on canvas, 12X12: Isaiah Deloatch was cute and curious minded four-year old boy. He was a good boy. If he could have known that the shiny gun on top of his grandparent's kitchen table was at all dangerous, he might have never picked it up. He never meant to hurt any of the family he loved. But as he held it in his two hands, the gun went off, striking him fatally in the head. Isaiah is the 100th portrait in the Million Gun Victims march. Painted October 2016
  • Haing S. Ngor 1940-1996..jpg
    Haing S. Ngor 1940-1996..jpg
    Haing S. Ngor 1940-1996, oil on canvas, 9X12: He survived one of the most horrific genocides of the 20th century under the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia. Upon fleeing to the United States he made his acting debut in the film "The Killing Fields", for which he won an Oscar. He chose to live modestly in order to found the Haing S. Ngor Foundation, an organization dedicated to helping victims of, and try to prevent genocides around the world. He was gunned down by three Asian gang members over some trinkets as he made his way to his car. A man who survived the killing fields of Cambodia ended up dying on the killing streets of Los Angeles. He is the 103rd portrait in the series. Painted November 2016
  • Travis Hiatt 1966-2015, Kayden Hiatt June-November 2015, and Jayden Hiatt June-November 2015.jpg
    Travis Hiatt 1966-2015, Kayden Hiatt June-November 2015, and Jayden Hiatt June-November 2015.jpg
    Travis Hiatt 1966-2015, Kayden Hiatt June-November 2015 and Jayden Hiatt June-November 2015, oil on canvas, 11X14: This is a typical carnage when a domestic dispute combines with easy access to a gun in the home. How could the presence of a baby, let alone two babies, pose such a threat to a man, particularly if they were his own babies? What justifies the aiming of semiautomatic handguns against targets like these, his fiancee, and her father, the babies grandfather? Imagine the wounded mother having to put her shattered treasures down and, as her last act on Earth, crawl to her dying father to say goodbye. But she lives, an orphan and a reverse orphan in a matter of minutes. The shooter committed suicide. They are the #107th, #108th, and #109th portraits in the series. Painted January 2017.

MGVM: The First Ten Paintings

The Million Gun Victims March was launched out of sheer rage at Congress for lack of interest in addressing gun safety after the Newtown school massacre. During the entire night of April 14, 2013 and into most of the following day I painted the first portrait in a 20 hour nonstop session of brushwork madness. Then as I calmed down a little and painted another the idea of bringing all gun victims together began to take root. Here is the first little boy, and the first ten paintings I did from April 14, 2013 into the early summer of 2013.
  • James Smith III 1994-1997.jpg
    James Smith III 1994-1997.jpg
    James Smith III is the very first Marcher to be portrayed. On January 3rd, 1997, his third birthday, he was taken to the barber shop to get his first big boy haircut with Mommy. While they waited, two men barged into the shop with 9mm semi-automatics blazing. A bullet ricocheted and entered little James' head. He died in hospital two days later. Painted April 14-15, 2013.
  • Ron Waggener 1941-2004.jpg
    Ron Waggener 1941-2004.jpg
    Ron Waggener is the only brother I will ever know. He served in Vietnam, enjoyed gardening, but most importantly possessed an encyclopedic knowledge of opera and symphonic music that was staggering in its completeness. On March 26, 2004, he was returning home from a friends when an unknown man drove up to him, got out of the car, had a few words, shot him the head 4 times, and sped away.He died in shock trauma March 31st, 2004, but not before the Mozart opera "Abduction From the Seraglio" had finished. I was there. I brought him cassettes of Mozart operas every night. I listen to it every March 31st. It's "our" opera.
  • Monae Turnage 1998=2012.jpg
    Monae Turnage 1998=2012.jpg
    Monae Turnage was just 13 years old. She already wanted to be a pediatrician when she graduated college. But in February of 2012, a younger cousin and his friend brought a police issue rifle they had found lying around at an uncle's house. She tried to get the boys to put the firearm down. It went off, shattering her heart and killing her instantly. Painted late April 2013.
  • Sgt. Tyrone Brown 1977-2010.jpg
    Sgt. Tyrone Brown 1977-2010.jpg
    Marine Sergeant and young father of two Tyrone Brown had served two tours in Iraq. He had returned home and was enjoying a night out when he got into a disagreement with an off duty policeman who was also drinking in the same bar. The officer encountered the Sergeant in a nearby alley where he shot the veteran 13 times with his service weapon.
  • John Browning 1962-2008, Tamara Browning 1963-2008, Gregory Browning 1994-2008, and Benjamin Browning 1996-2008.jpg
    John Browning 1962-2008, Tamara Browning 1963-2008, Gregory Browning 1994-2008, and Benjamin Browning 1996-2008.jpg
    John Browning (1962-2008) was a successful real estate attorney living in a quiet area in Baltimore County, where he and his stay at home wife, Tamara Browning (1963-2008) were raising three healthy sons. Thirteen year old Gregory Browning (1994-2008) played on his middle school lacrosse team. Eleven year old brother Benjamin Browning (1996-2008) may have looked forward to doing the same in a year or two. The eldest son shot them all with the family 9mm early in February 2008 so he could attend a party his father had forbidden him to go to earlier that day. Painted early may 2013.
  • Reverend Mary Marguerite Kohn 1950-2012.jpg
    Reverend Mary Marguerite Kohn 1950-2012.jpg
    Reverend Mary Marguerite Kohn 1950-2012) was the beloved pastor to her Lutheran congregation in Howard County. She and right hand volunteer Brenda Brewington (1953-2012) were setting up their church food pantry when a man barged in, fatally shot both women, then ran to the far side of the church parking lot where he shot himself. Painted mid-May 2013.
  • Brenda Brewington 1953-2012.jpg
    Brenda Brewington 1953-2012.jpg
    Brenda Brewington (1953-2012) was a devoted Sunday school teacher and valued aide for the Reverend Marguerite Mary Kohn (1950-2012) at their Lutheran church in Howard County. She and the Reverend were just setting up the church food pantry when a man rushed in, fatally shot both women, then ran across the church parking lot where he shot himself. Painted early June 2013.
  • Carter Scott 2012-2013.jpg
    Carter Scott 2012-2013.jpg
    Sixteen month old Carter Scott (2012-2013) enjoyed going bye-bye with Daddy as they drove around picking up supplies for the coming Memorial day weekend. Father received a phone call and parked in an apartment complex parking lot to meet someone. Suddenly three men rushed toward the car, guns blazing. The toddler was struck in the leg. Despite efforts by bystanders, Carter Scott died before emergency crews arrived. Painted mid-June 2013
  • Kendra Diggs 1976-2013.jpg
    Kendra Diggs 1976-2013.jpg
    MTA bus driver Kendra Diggs (1976-2013) loved to garden. She looked forward to marrying her police officer fiance, by whom she had a young son. But a domestic dispute became so threatening, Kendra called the police. As she stood outside describing to a police officer what was happening, her fiance pointed his rifle out the window and felled her with a single shot to the head, then proceeded to hold emergency crews away until Kendra's death was certain. Painted late June-early July 2013.
  • Vincent Adolfo 1961-1985.jpg
    Vincent Adolfo 1961-1985.jpg
    Second year police officer Vincent Adolpho (1961-1985) chased and cornered a carjacking suspect when the suspect grappled with Vincent and managed to shoot him in the back when he was spun around. Bullet proof vests only covered the chest area at the time. They have been updated since. Painted July 2013.