Cosmic Garden — Charlie Roberts
Charlie Roberts  ·  b. 1983, Hutchinson, Kansas

Cosmic Garden

Oil on linen  ·  2026  ·  160 × 150 cm  ·  63 × 59 in

Medium
Oil on linen
Dimensions
160 × 150 cm63 × 59 in
Year
2026
Price
$18,000180,000 NOK  ·  plus 5% art tax in Norway
About the Work

There is a particular way a new father looks at the world. Slower. More careful. As if the light has changed, or his eyes have.

Cosmic Garden is painted from that vantage point, across a picnic bench, across a garden in Oslo, toward a woman nursing a child. Charlie Roberts is painting his wife Vic and their newborn son. The view is his. And because it is his, it holds everything he sees, everything he feels, everything he fears and loves and cannot say.

Norway is the grass and the trees and the long summer light. New York is everything else — the Diet Coke sweating on the bench, the green apples, the Richard Hell paperback, the faint skyline blurred into the treeline like a memory half-remembered. Vic brought these things with her. Their families are far away, and the objects stand in for them. Small pieces of home scattered across the wood.

The garden is not just a garden. It never was, in paintings. Manet knew it. Morisot knew it. The garden is the world made small enough to hold — a clearing where the things you love can be gathered together and, for one afternoon, watched over.

But Roberts knows, and the painting knows, that the world doesn't stop at the garden gate.

A spider has strung a web in the high branches. A cat chases a squirrel up the trunk. A clock is embedded in the bark, going nowhere and everywhere at once. And up Vic's leg, a procession is arriving — beetles, frogs, caterpillars, a bumblebee — they have come through the grass and found their way here. At the front, a mantis has nearly reached the baby's head. At the back, a snail is still at the shoe, with the longest road ahead. On the grass nearby, an iguana stands and watches the whole thing, carrying a small rider on its back. An iguana eats insects. But not today. Today it stands aside.

In the canopy, something hides. A butterfly patrols the middle air carrying its own small armed rider. The garden is full of guardians — some expected, some unlikely, some that had to put old habits aside to be here.

This is Roberts' temperament: Bruegel and Biggie, Fragonard and Rick Ross, the tender and the threatening laid out without hierarchy. He works corner to corner until every inch of the picture is inhabited. The good things and the bad things are always in the same garden, at the same time, competing for the same light.

What makes Cosmic Garden ache is that Roberts isn't hiding any of this from his son. The procession isn't only there to enchant. It's a kind of reckoning. This is what's out here.

The clock in the tree trunk keeps time whether anyone watches. The leaves will turn. The baby will grow. The objects on the bench will scatter. But here, in this one afternoon in Oslo, everything is present at once — the whole enormous fact of a new life, held in the frame the way a father might cup water in his hands, knowing it will run through, wanting just for a moment to feel the weight of it.


The Painting
Cosmic Garden — Charlie Roberts — oil on linen, 160 × 150 cm, 2026
Oil on linen  ·  160 × 150 cm  ·  2026
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Details
Detail — Vic and baby
Detail — cat, spider web and clock
Detail — butterfly with rider
Detail — car and tunnel on table
Detail — insect parade
Detail — bench still life

References in the Painting

The Artist
Charlie Roberts

Charlie Roberts

b. 1983, Hutchinson, Kansas  ·  lives and works in Oslo

Charlie Roberts was born in Hutchinson, Kansas in 1983. He studied at the University of Kansas and the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design in Vancouver, where he worked as an assistant to the Dutch artist Peter Schuyff, who became his mentor. He graduated in 2005.

He taught himself to paint by copying old masters in miniature. When that process became too tedious, he picked up a chainsaw. The sculptures he carved from raw wood, somewhere between tribal art and pop culture, became a counterpoint to his paintings: physical, rough, satisfying in a different way. The two practices have informed each other ever since.

His paintings are densely layered and compulsively detailed, built corner to corner over weeks until every inch of the picture plane is inhabited. He draws on art history, hip-hop, folk art, and pop culture without ranking one above anything else. Bruegel and Biggie Smalls, Fragonard and Rick Ross, the Flemish still life and the street — all of it admitted into the same frame. The figures are elongated, wiry, precisely observed. The stories are crowded and alive.

Roberts has exhibited widely across Europe, North America, and Asia, with solo presentations at Palo Gallery in New York, Anna Zorina Gallery in Los Angeles, Marlborough Contemporary in London, WOAW Gallery in Hong Kong, David Risley Gallery in Copenhagen, Galleri Magnus Karlsson in Stockholm, and eiklid / rusten in Oslo. His work has been covered by Artforum, Art in America, Juxtapoz, and It's Nice That. He has been profiled by Louisiana Channel in a series of interviews filmed in his Oslo studio.

"The paintings that sing throughout time are the ones that caught this energy that is really hard to catch, so when people can catch that, it is amazing."

— Charlie Roberts, Louisiana Channel
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About the Norwegian Art Tax (Kunstavgift)

A 5% levy on all sales of visual art in Norway above NOK 2,000. Collected by Bildende Kunstneres Hjelpefond (BKH), the Visual Artists' Aid Fund. The money goes to stipends, grants, and prizes for working artists in Norway — all career stages, regardless of nationality.