4401 Forest 58e
Kim Keever was an internationally acclaimed contemporary photographer whose work redefined abstract photography through process, scale, and scientific precision. Born in 1955 and trained as an engineer at Old Dominion University, Keever began his career working as a thermal engineer for NASA before transitioning fully into art in the mid-1970s. This technical foundation remained central to his practice, informing a uniquely methodical approach to image-making that bridges experimental photography, colour theory, and physical process.
Keever’s signature works are created using a meticulously controlled 200-gallon water tank in his studio, where he introduces pigments and paints into suspended water. Using a large-format digital camera, he captures the fleeting moments as colour clouds bloom, collide, and dissolve into atmospheric abstract formations. The result is a body of work that feels both cosmic and microscopic - evoking natural phenomena, deep space imagery, and painterly abstraction within a single frame. His photographs are widely recognized for their luminous colour fields, immersive scale, and dreamlike compositions.
Blurring the boundaries between photography, painting, and scientific experiment, Keever’s practice occupies a distinctive place in contemporary art. His work has been exhibited internationally and is held in major public and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington, DC), the Brooklyn Museum, Harvard Library, and the Kunstmuseum Den Haag. In 2019, he collaborated with acclaimed designer Iris van Herpen, with his imagery translated into couture garments for her Spring collection - further extending the reach of his visual language into fashion and design.
Keever passed away in 2025 in Miami, FL, leaving behind a powerful and influential legacy in contemporary photographic abstraction.
His large-format photographs are printed and mounted with archival materials and framed in white or grey with plexiglass.







