Stuart Ober
For many years Stuart Ober has practiced his own self-taught approach to representational painting, one that combines a deadpan illusionism with a not quite fathomable psychic undertone. “Underneath them all lies passive-aggressive behavior,” he jokes.
Ober has created a defining image over the past several years. It is a meticulously rendered environment in which the implied back-story involves a mishap whose consequences we confront – chairs in a heap at the base of a stairwell or a paint spill on an oriental rug.
His newest work continues in this direction. We are again invited to take delectation in the visually enjoyable appearance of what seems to be an accident’s aftermath. But in this body of work, Ober also moves from the theater of his interior space, approaches the window, and goes outside.
Ober, who studied mathematics at Tufts University, has exhibited at the Art Complex Museum in Duxbury, Massachusetts, the Currier Gallery of Art in Manchester, New Hampshire, and the Tyler Gallery at Temple University.
A self-taught painter, Stuart Ober creates representational interiors and still lifes using the household objects that surround him.