Skip to content
Scarecrow with Ducks

Amer Kobaslija

Scarecrow with Ducks

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

81 x 61 inches

AKop 308

Amer Kobaslija, Pumpkin Heads

Amer Kobaslija

Pumpkin Heads

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

71 x 60 inches

AKop 307

Still Life with Nails and Fly

Amer Kobaslija

Still Life with Nails and Fly

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

75 x 66 inches

AKop 309

Holiday Season, Kissimmee

Amer Kobaslija

Holiday Season, Kissimmee

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

63 x 55 inches

AKop 306

Suburbia, Blue Skies

Amer Kobaslija

Suburbia, Blue Skies

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

60 x 70 inches

AKop 311

Suburban Landscape, Peeing Dog

Amer Kobaslija

Suburban Landscape, Peeing Dog

2021

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

56 x 65 inches

AKop 310

Street Musicians

Amer Kobaslija

Street Musicians

2020

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

77 x 65 inches

AKop 303

Man with Dog

Amer Kobaslija

Man with Dog

2020

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

80 x 66 inches

AKop 304

Pinocchio, Yellow Skies

Amer Kobaslija

Pinocchio, Yellow Skies

2020

Oil on unstretched canvas with grommets

77 x 66 inches

AKop 305

Drying Line

Amer Kobaslija

Drying Line

2020

Oil on aluminum

18 x 15 inches

AKop 294

Vinyl Doll

Amer Kobaslija

Vinyl Doll

2020

Oil on aluminum

18 x 15 inches

AKop 316

Amer Kobaslija  Trick or Treat  2020

Amer Kobaslija

Trick or Treat

2020

Oil on aluminum

18 x 15 1/8 inches

AKop 302

Yellow Dress

Amer Kobaslija

Yellow Dress

2020

Oil on aluminum

15 x 17 inches

AKop 319

Juggler, Lake Eola

Amer Kobaslija

Juggler, Lake Eola

2020

Oil on aluminum

21 x 15 inches

AKop 320

Ventriloquist, Alafaya Road

Amer Kobaslija

Ventriloquist, Alafaya Road

2020

Oil on aluminum

17 x 15 inches

AKop 315

Dancing Elephant

Amer Kobaslija

Dancing Elephant

2020

Oil on aluminum

17 x 15 inches

AKop 314

Bride, Lake Eustis

Amer Kobaslija

Bride, Lake Eustis

2020

Oil on aluminum

15 x 18 inches

AKop 321

Halloween Swing

Amer Kobaslija

Halloween Swing

2020

Oil on plexiglass

4 x 3 1/4 inches

AKop 330

Training Grounds, Orlando

Amer Kobaslija

Training Grounds, Orlando

2020

Oil on plexiglass

4 x 3 5/8 inches

AKop 331

Still Life, Storm Passing

Amer Kobaslija

Still Life, Storm Passing

2020

Oil on plexiglass

4 x 3 1/2 inches

AKop 324

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Installation view, Amer Kobaslija, In Passing, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2021.

Press Release

We are pleased to announce In Passing, Amer Kobaslija’s eighth solo exhibition with the gallery since 2006. The exhibition, featuring paintings ranging in scale from three inches to seven feet, expands on his series first shown at the gallery in 2019, of intimate portraits set in the landscape of Central Florida. These new paintings, dating from the past year and a half, reflect a shift in Kobaslija’s perspective stemming from his experience under lockdown. In many cases, the central figures have been replaced: by scarecrows, costumed trick-or-treaters, circus and street performers and even his daughter’s toys.

Many of these images derive from Kobaslija’s impression of scenes he witnessed while driving through his neighborhood in Jacksonville, or to and from Orlando. Rather than the allegorical intensity of the earlier portraits, these paintings have a level of ambiguity, a reflection of these fleeting encounters, or are an amalgamation of successive viewings. In one sense these are an anthology of character studies, cataloguing the street-scape and its inhabitants. His subjects range from concretely human to unexpectedly anthropomorphic, yet more often the two are conflated. Scarecrows in particular are a recurring theme: they appear on lawns and in empty lots as jolly seasonal decorations or more foreboding deterrents. In Pumpkin Heads (2021), one could be forgiven for mistaking two young girls as scarecrows themselves, until realizing their arms and hands are flesh, not straw.

The isolation and upheavals of the past eighteen months have pushed Kobaslija to “[engage] in a conversation with the self and society.” In the earliest works in the exhibition, his daughter’s toys are posed on the windowsill of his studio, the glass behind them a transparent barrier to the distant city outside. Enlarged to human proportions, as in Still Life with Nails and Fly (2021), they become both humorous and grotesque, their plastic features overwhelmed by the complexity of the paint. These ‘Still Life’ paintings, though in one sense academic in nature, in the context of the pandemic are transformed into commentary on our vulnerability. Similarly, while not inherently political, works such as Ventriloquist, Alafaya Road; Dancing Elephant and Street Musicians (all 2020) inevitably call to mind a circus-like atmosphere, though perhaps of the media sort.

Kobaslija’s paintings have always been grounded in observation. He considers the act of painting an intense, visual exploration of the spaces and places he inhabits, noting that he tries “to memorize” the scene as much as he can. Indeed, one of the most striking features of these paintings is the imagined landscape, an endlessly receding vision of the Florida flatlands, which constitute much of the state. Through his use of a skewed perspective - the subject looms large while the background falls away - he creates an expansive yet sparsely populated environment. Scale is also a major aspect of how Kobaslija works, both in the foregrounding of his subjects and the physical scale of the paintings themselves. Considering the richness and energy in his brushwork, the size of the painting also dictates the volume of detail he can pack into every stroke. Beginning with the smallest studies, up to the large canvases, as he develops each image, their complexity grows, building out the verisimilitude of the scene.

Please join us for a masked opening reception on Thursday, December 9, from 6 - 8 pm.