MARY OBERING
Sole/Sabbia, 1997
Egg tempera, gold leaf and limestone on gessoed panel
9 1/2 x 9 1/2 in (24 x 24 cm)
(MO9611)
Throughout her prolific career, Mary Obering (b. 1937 in
Shreveport, Louisiana; d. 2022 New York, NY) brought
profound innovation to minimalist painting, marrying her
interest in Renaissance Art with abstraction. The artist
ushered in unexpected materials, including gold leaf and
egg tempera, to balanced compositions inspired by her
interest in science and the landscape tradition. Obering
studied experimental psychology at Harvard under B.F.
Skinner, and received an MFA at the University of Denver,
before relocating to New York City in 1971, at the behest of
her close friend Carl Andre. Within the years after her move
to New York, she would present a solo exhibition at Artists
Space (1973), curated by Andre, and her paintings in the
second ever Whitney Biennial (1975).
Obering remained in New York throughout her life,
eventually splitting her time between SoHo and Puglia,
Italy, where she continued to research the arts of the Italian
Renaissance and Baroque era. It is through this period that
she would develop an iconic and singular style, presented
by the most intrepid gallerists in New York, including John
Weber, Annina Nosei, and Julian Pretto. Throughout her
long career, she kept close associations with the Minimalists
of her generation and counted Andre, Marcia Hafif, Robert
Ryman, and Donald Judd amongst her friends.
