Clarence Holbrook Carter (American, 1904–2000) was a painter whose work documented the American experience with both clarity and unease. Born in Ohio, Carter began his career with haunting images of rural life during the Great Depression, depicting empty streets, silhouetted barns, and figures caught in quiet tension.
By the 1940s, his style shifted toward the symbolic and surreal. In his later Over and Above series, stark landscapes gave way to mysterious orbs, portals, and architectural forms - compositions that feel part dream, part metaphysical puzzle. Throughout, Carter retained a precise, almost photographic control, using light and geometry to explore themes of mortality, transformation, and the unknown.
Often overlooked, Carter carved out a distinctive space in American art: somewhere between the dust of realism and the cool glow of the surreal.