Seventeen.
That was my age when I was sentenced and I have now served more than half of my life in maximum security Wisconsin prisons.
My sentence? Life in prison.
My crime? I was party to the unintentional death of an innocent man.
Although I was involved in this death, I am not a murderer. I know this in my heart, in my regret for this loss of life, and through my daily actions.
I am an artist. I paint and donate my works of art. In the years to come I want to create art that will help save youth from making thoughtless choices. I also want to create art that will help you on the outside understand what we face on the inside—the very real need for prison reform in Wisconsin and elsewhere and the very real need to involve more people in working toward prisoner rehabilitation rather than punishment.
Most of us on the inside are both perpetrators and victims. Hurt people hurt people.
Help me lessen the hurt.
DarRen Morris (#236425)
Columbia Correctional Institution
P.O. Box 900
Portage, WI 53901
This "old school snail mail" link is for words about the paintings, not copies of artworks. Information on giclee reproductions should come through the "Buy" link.
The book, In Warm Blood: Prison & Privilege, Hurt & Heart (2014, Milwaukee: HenschelHAUS) is DarRen's story from his Wisconsin boyhood, growing up on the "rough side of the mountain," to his incarceration for life. It is available through inwarmblood.net or Amazon.com.