New Stuff!

  • This painting began the moment I pressed play on the audiobook of Braiding Sweetgrass and picked up a brush.

    I started with a blank canvas and no idea what I was going to paint. I thought the book might be something like the old Foxfire books about living off the land. Instead, as the stories unfolded — including the creation story of Turtle Island — the painting slowly began to take shape.

    A reclining dreamer appeared.

    Her braids drift through the water like currents, carrying the movement of the painting across the canvas. Around her, the dream fills with sea life — fish moving through open water, shells and reefs, and above them a dark celestial planet holding Turtle Island itself, a world suspended in space.

    At one point a snake appeared in the painting and honestly scared me. Instead of painting it out, I placed it inside an unbreakable glass globe. The snake remained there, alive but contained, ready but unable to strike... and the dream felt like it could continue again.

    As the painting evolved, the snake slowly changed form and became an eel — something that belonged naturally in the watery world the dreamer was creating.

    The dreamer rests to the sound of the sea from a conch shell,  while her braids move with the currents and the ocean creatures drift through the dream of Turtle Island.

  • Feels Like Home

    From $ 95.00

    Feels Like Home grew out of a question about what actually holds a place together. Instead of painting Hopetown as a view, I focused on the systems underneath it — ecological, navigational, and lived.

    The composition developed through layering and revision: charts embedded into paint, circular forms built up and softened over time, and small, persistent marks that track movement and continuity. Bees became agents rather than decoration, culminating in a queen mating flight that anchors the painting’s sense of future and survival. Pigeon peas act as a quiet foundation — a reminder that sustenance and pollination come before landmarks or nostalgia.

    Human structures appear, but they are not fully in control. A lighthouse burns in the distance, visible only through a window, suggesting guidance that can fail while biological systems continue to function. Throughout the process, edges were adjusted, softened, and reopened to keep the painting from becoming emblematic or overly resolved.

    The final surface reflects that tension: between order and permeability, intention and accident, signal and resilience. Feels Like Home is less about depicting a place than about tracing how belonging is built — through use, interdependence, and time.

  • Once in a Blue Moon

    From $ 95.00

    Once in a Blue Moon is one of those paintings where you feel, almost immediately, that a lot is happening — and that it’s happening on purpose. It’s submerged, mythic, slightly uncanny, drawing from real creatures and real relationships while allowing space for something imagined to exist among them.

    The scene unfolds on a conch bed, and that matters. Conch are known to gather in large numbers, and here they do so in a way that feels abundant and right — not threatened, not harvested, not disappearing. In the real world, conch are increasingly depleted and removed from their ecosystems, but in this painting they remain together, present in their full and marvelous multitude.

    At the center, a feminine figure rests. She is not posed, not guarded, not performing anything. She trusts where she is. That sense of safety is striking, especially given what surrounds her.

    Nearby, the octopus holds its ground. It is blue, strong, unmistakably capable. A blue-ring octopus is not something to take lightly — its power is absolute. And yet here, that power is restrained. The octopus does not advance; it supports. Its arms move through the space with care, offering contact, comfort, and communion rather than harm. This is masculine power fully intact, choosing relationship over dominance.

    Above, eagle rays glide through the water column — effortless, formidable, perfectly at home in their scale. They bring awe without intrusion, passing through rather than pressing down.

    If you look closely, quieter presences emerge. Two turtles move with their own ancient calm. A single conch fish slips among the shells, easy to miss but essential. Small relationships that quietly hold the larger system together.

    Color binds everything. Blues dominate without cooling the painting down, while golds and yellow-greens glow softly through shells, bodies, and water — closer to bioluminescence than light. Warm and cool coexist without struggle.

    And then there are the two moons — not a metaphor so much as a condition. A blue-moon month. Rare, real, and slightly disorienting. The kind of alignment that doesn’t last, but while it does, changes how everything feels.

    What gives the painting its charge is not any single symbol, but the way they coexist: masculine and feminine, danger and trust, abundance and loss, stillness and motion. Nothing is simplified. Nothing is neutralized.

    It feels like witnessing something that doesn’t happen often — but does happen — when conditions are right.

  • What began as a workboard for cleaning brushes and pressing leftover paint evolved—entirely by accident—into a vivid, abstract portrait of Tiloo Cut, the narrow turquoise passage between Elbow Cay and Tiloo Cay in the Abacos. No deliberate brushstroke was made; the image emerged from layers of wiped color, dried palettes, and chance impressions.

    Yet the place revealed itself unmistakably: the sandbar at Tahiti Beach, the shallows shifting from aqua to gold, and the deep channel where the Atlantic breathes through. The randomness of paint echoes the living movement of water and light in the cut—how color there never holds still, and how even unconscious gestures can carry the memory of a landscape lived and loved.

  • Bahamaland

    From $ 95.00

    “Lift up your head to the rising sun, Bahamaland…”
    Inspired by the opening line of the Bahamas national anthem, this light-filled painting captures the quiet strength of a sea turtle rising through crystalline waters. Sunlight fractures across her back as she moves upward, powerful and unhurried. Beneath her, the reef hums with layered color—blues, aquas, and golds shaped by current and memory.

    But there’s more here than meets the eye. Meaning drifts just beneath the surface, if you know where to look.

    Bahamaland is both a portrait and a hymn—a tribute to the sacred, living waters of a place I’ve come to call home.
  • A vivid self-portrait painted in words, sun, and sea. This 12"x12" acrylic on wood panel maps the artist’s inner voice onto the landscape of the Bahamas.  Scroll below for more details. Price: Make an offer
    Product Note:
    This original is one-of-a-kind and not available as a reproduction. If the piece speaks to you, make an offer—serious inquiries only; email me directly to start the conversation.  
  • Please Release Me

    From $ 95.00

    A meditation on impermanence and transformation, this luminous sailfish painting merges abstraction and realism. Available as the original 40x72” acrylic and in open edition gallery wrapped giclées. (See drop down menu)

  • 10X10" Acrylic on Birch.  No reproductions.  Whitewashed cradle on sides. Email me if you want to make an offer.  
  • The GOAT

    From $ 570.00
    The greatest fish of all time… the awesome blue tuna.  Worth researching to find out how magnificent a creation it really is.  I was first introduced to this amazing fish through Carl Safina's 1998 book "Song for the Blue Ocean" (click here). The author really opened my eyes in the very first chapters to see what a marvelous feat of engineering went into this powerhouse of a sea creature.
  • Our Job

    $ 1,200.00
    No reproductions. 10X10" Acrylic on Birch.  Whitewashed cradle on sides. Email me if you want to make an offer. I've been reading Aldous Huxley lately. Funny how something written so many years ago resonates so strongly today. As if he were writing for future readers back then.
  • Complete 2 Complete

    From $ 95.00
    Start something. Finish doing that. Go on to the next thing, rinse and repeat. Wise words from Steve Straus.
  • Ned Goes Fishing

    From $ 95.00
    Here's my husband Mark's dad having a blast in Bozeman, Montana. We sure miss him! And, here's the backstory: I had painted my dad "lost in the Everglades" a few months back, and hung it in our bedroom.  But, something was a little off.  I finally figured out that Mark needed his dad in there as well! So I searched through Mark's pics and found one of Ned on a fishing trip they took for his 80th birthday.  I've included a pic of how they look together. They only met each other once but I'm sure they would have been fast friends.    
  • Let the Lover Be

    $ 2,000.00
    Something new for me.   No reproductions. 10X10" Acrylic on Birch.  Whitewashed cradle on sides. All the words of Rumi's poem (as well as the punctuation) are in this painting.

    “Let the lover be disgraceful, crazy, absentminded. Someone sober will worry about things going badly. Let the lover be. ”

    ― Mawlana Jalal-al-Din Rumi, The Essential Rumi
  • Quantum Fishics

    From $ 95.00

    The funny thing about this painting is you can hang it right side up OR upside down. It's acrylic and mixed media on linen canvas.  I'm not usually into pastels but I had a lot of fun with this one. Don't miss the eagle rays making a pass in the background.

  • 12X12" acrylic on wood panel
  • 12X12" acrylic on wood panel
  • 12X12" acrylic on wood panel
  • We usually take our sailboat to Little Harbour over the Christmas holidays. This year (2023) was no different.  Here's a view of Pete's Pub at night, with the constellation Orion's Belt rising out of the west.
  • Elbow Cay reef used to look a lot more like this than it does now.  Corals and fish don't like super hot water and have essentially "left the building" where I live.  But the reef is still alive in our dreams. Original is a triptych of three 30X30 stretched canvases, (total size 30X90) with frames by Mark. Gallery wrapped Giclees can be purchased separately or together. This COULD be confusing....  the square sizes listed would be one THIRD of the complete piece.  (Your choice!)  The COMPLETE piece is either sold as ONE BIG STRETCHED CANVAS, or THREE INDIVIDUAL SQUARES.  Kind of overwhelming, so Contact Kim for all the multitude of ways you can purchase and display this painting.  Thanks!
  • Thanks for the Drink

    From $ 180.00
    We are surrounded by beautiful poinciana trees here at Fry's Fish Camp.  It's been dry, but this is what it looked like the day we got deluged with the first day of the rainy season.  Heaven! Original IS available. Contact the artist, please.
  • Majority Rules

    From $ 95.00

    Majority Rules arranges four pelicans into a narrow vertical column, stacked, overlapping, and partially submerged.
    The image feels less like a captured moment and more like an arrangement — a deliberate ordering of forms inside a compressed space.

    Light is selective. Heads and upper bodies catch illumination, while lower forms slip into deeper blues and greens. This uneven distribution establishes hierarchy without declaring a single focal point. Nothing announces authority, yet structure is clearly present.

    The water is active rather than atmospheric. Built from layered strokes and dense color passages, it shifts between turquoise, teal, deep blue, and green. Embedded texture interrupts the paint field, thickening the surface and slowing the eye. The painting feels constructed, not descriptive.

    The pelicans are unsentimental. They do not interact. They do not perform. Each figure appears self-contained and watchful. Proximity suggests togetherness, but psychological distance introduces quiet tension.

    Rather than describing an event, Majority Rules examines how order emerges through placement.
    Not through action, but through position.

    The title hints at a condition rather than a story — a subtle imbalance inside the group, a quiet skew in numbers, an unspoken tilt that shapes the whole, felt more than explained.

  • Be Still

    $ 500.00
    Something new for me.   No reproductions. 10X10" Acrylic on Birch.  Whitewashed cradle on sides.
  • Junkanoo in the summer can be quite challenging with the hot temperatures even in the evenings when you are wearing a fabulous hand made costume.  Thank you Heema Inder for your captivating photo!
  • The Aristocrat

    From $ 95.00
    One of my favorite seabirds, the Royal Tern lives up to its regal name with a tangerine-colored bill and ragged, ink-black crest against crisp white plumage. Royal Terns fly gracefully and slowly along coastlines, diving for small fish, which they capture with a swift strike of their daggerlike bills. They are social birds, gathering between fishing expeditions on undisturbed beaches and nesting in dense, boisterous colonies. In late summer and fall, Royal Terns lose most of their black crest and sport a white forehead.
  • Moonbeams in a Jar

    From $ 40.00

    Remember that song from when you were a kid? It was playing over and over in my head so I googled it and found Bing Crosby! Click here to hear the song and sing along.

    And yes, I have always rather been a fish!

    I started this painting YEARS ago - it sat in my Bahamas studio and made it through Dorian.  I guess you could say this took me five years to paint.  But I finally finished it!
  • “Morning Cruise”

    From $ 40.00
    Here's a Bahamian sea turtle on her morning cruise, just under the surface of the water. Original is available, contact Kim, please.
  • Motion of the Ocean

    From $ 40.00
    Kind of abstract.  I was going for a very busy sea. Original is available, contact Kim, please.
  • Romantica

    From $ 40.00
    I've ALWAYS loved flamingos, but this is the first one that I have ever painted!!! Original is available, contact Kim, please.
  • Sea Turtle Dream

    From $ 40.00
    Another junkanoo inspired sea creature.  Zoom in to see the detail.  This painting started as a place to put leftover paint as not to waste it. And a turtle emerged on its own.  I followed the brushstrokes to fill in with different colors. Giclees are available in ANY square size.   If the size you want is not here, just shoot me an email. Giclee prints come gallery wrapped and ready for hanging. (If you want to frame it, please let me know and I'll use skinnier stretcher bars). Original is currently available.
  • Lost In Tangs Redux

    From $ 40.00
    I asked for help in naming this convict tang painting on facebook and got a lot of great ideas.   One kept coming up - "Lost in Tangs" however there seemed to be a problem. Twenty three years ago I painted "Lost In Tangs" (click to see it) in my painting class with Kathy Windrow at Eastfield Community College.  It was about 30" X 40" on birchwood from Home Depot. A woman down the street bought it and hung it in her living room in Rockwall, Texas. But everyone loved that name for the painting.  So I pulled an image of the first one (from 1998 or 1999) up my website, and remembered why I named it that.  So...  I had to add a little lost fish!!! I love swimming with the tangs.  They let you zoom around with them, like you are one of the gang.   And sometimes there are MASSES of them. 36" X 48" original has been SOLD.  Please contact the artist for Original Price List of paintings still available.
  • Self Portrait

    From $ 95.00

    I'm not much for selfies but I reversed the camera in my phone and took a head shot of myself down in the Exumas.  Mark and I had just gotten back from New York where we saw the dramatic and impressive multimedia Van Gogh exhibition.  It reminded me that Vince completed quite a few self portraits over his career.  I've only completed one other about twelve years ago.   Maybe I'll post it here if I can find it. Anyway, it's an odd sensation "seeing yourself" as you paint yourself.   My neck has a bunch of wrinkles, just like the turtles I paint!  Somebody said it looks like me, and somebody else says it doesn't.   But my goal was to learn about painting - I got a little help from a college art prof who challenged me to unify the painting with similar brushstrokes throughout the painting. This instruction caused me to modify the flat water behind me which was a new step.  

    Original not for sale.

  • Cosmic Crabs

    From $ 40.00
    Maryland Blue Crabs in an enamel pot. OUT OF THIS WORLD!  Well, they are really in a black enamel pot.
  • Another Junkanoo Sea Creature.   GICLEES AVAILABLE IN SIZES LARGER THAN 20X20.  Contact artist. Otherwise, choose from the dropdown menu here. Thank you!
  • Maitland’s Trap

    From $ 95.00
    Maitland Lowe.  "Bonefish Dundee", Lobster Man, Husband, Father, Friend.  He used to take Mark and I to his traps during lobster season to help him out.  I brought my camera once and got some great shots of an old loaded trap. Original not for sale.
  • Shane’s Lighthouse

    From $ 40.00
    Thanks Shane Cash for letting me use your drone's picture of our beautiful Elbow Cay lighthouse!  I added the approaching thunderstorm cuz we need some rain.  My own little raindance, let's call it. Giclees can be ordered any size - length is DOUBLE the height (i.e. 10X2 = 20.....  10X20).  Or, see the pull down menu for standard sizes.
  • Air Pinot

    $ 19.95

    Yummy 100% premium cotton tea towel with Kim's sealife! Measures 27" square UNFOLDED. 

  • Yummy 100% premium cotton tea towel with Kim's sealife! Measures 27" square UNFOLDED. 

  • Swimming Pig

    From $ 40.00
    Swimming Pig in the Bahamas. The NEW NEW THANG TO "DO" as a tourist.   GICLEES AVAILABLE IN SIZES LARGER THAN 20X20.  Contact artist. Otherwise, choose from the dropdown menu here. Thank you!
  • Here's a quote (and the story) from the photographer of this terrific composition, Keith Salvesen of Rolling Harbour, Abaco:  "Kim Rody, well-known artist has kindly chosen to use my photo of a group of Abaco sanderlings on the beach at Delphi as the basis for a gorgeous painting (still a work in progress). So pleased these sweet little shorebirds have become a work of art..." For info regarding the 36" X 48" original, please contact the artist.
  • Here's a 10X10 linen canvas painting (acrylic) for our Hope Town 10X10 show.  I usually paint BIG, but once a year I get out my tiny brushes and try for small. Here's our well remembered dog, Schooner, doing what she loved to do best: FISHING! Just like her dad.

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