Introducing Cultivate Spring, Chatham Kemp's debut collection with Caron Gallery.

Cultivate Spring is a thoughtfully curated art collection by Chatham Kemp, featuring oil, acrylic, and watercolor works. Chatham’s paintings serve as metaphors for her lived experiences while bringing joy to those who display her work in their homes.
“I think of making paintings a bit like writing poems—the images are constructed to make the viewer feel rather than observe. I want them to bring color and movement into someone’s life.”
“I think that life and art are inseparable. Having kids enhanced my understanding of what it means to live my life. I grew up around painters (my mother is also a painter), and I teach, so I work with painters every day. It’s nice to be able to fully immerse myself in my own work.”

“Painting is a bit like a chess game where you play yourself, so I am always pushing for new ways to challenge myself and try things I haven’t done before. Color is what drives all of my paintings. I get excited to see how it works every time I paint. This collection is really an intersection of ideas, where I am finishing the Hawaii series—the bolder, busier paintings—while also working on newer, airier pieces with courtyard-inspired white space.”

“‘Til Human Voices Wake Us” is Chatham’s favorite painting in the collection. As both a gardener and a snorkeler, she has long created garden paintings but feels a strong pull toward abstract works inspired by being in the water. This piece represents an intersection of both. During COVID, the Lauren Rogers Museum of Art in Laurel, Mississippi, hosted an exhibition by Bill Scott, Chatham’s mentor and friend. She loved visiting the museum and experiencing his work—it was a meaningful time for her.
This painting is directly influenced by her admiration for Bill’s work, but she sought to expand upon it. She wanted to evoke the feeling of seagrass and currents so that the space would not read as a literal garden. Working on this painting became a kind of safe haven for Chatham, allowing her to focus on what matters most to her.
