Gallery
Deep Hole, New Hampshire captures light filtering through the trees as a dozen young men and women distribute themselves among rocky outcroppings, poised for adventure in the water below. The composition recalls the quiet drama of Thomas Eakins’s 19th-century painting of nude swimmers. This reference drew Kimball to the picture as it played out in front of him, along with the palpable sense of elation in the youths’ encounter with the landscape, no matter the deteriorating state of the site due to its heavy use. Kimball’s series “Where We Find Ourselves” explores the fantasy of finding wilderness in state and national parks, where we only find other people looking for it, too.
For real! (Take my money ) I found him in a Facebook group. He posts all sorts of fun pics there. It’s called dads and lads. But I also signed up for his Patreon channel. It’s under Rocky & Kimball. I honestly think I love him It’s bad because he’s already married
Kimball also said he looked to the work of Thomas Eakins, who painted the scantily-clad figures of those relaxing in public greens and rivers around Philadelphia during the nineteenth century. It’s not far-fetched to see in the bathing-suited individuals in Kimball’s “Deep Hole , NH” (2002) and “Warren Dunes, MI” (2003) the modern day equivalents of Eakins’ nude young men depicted in some of his well-known works, such as “The Swimming Hole” or “Arcadia”.
Local and federal agents investigating whether Scott Kimball killed as many as 21 men and women in Colorado and across the West have drawn closer to proving the serial killer fatally strangled and dismembered a woman whose nude body was found in a Westminster alley in 2004, according to a Dateline NBC program set to air Friday.










