How Close Will We Get

How Close Will We Get

Winston Wächter Fine Art, New York is excited to announce How Close Will We Get, an exhibition of new sculptural works by Matt Gagnon.
Known for his unique approach to materials, Gagnon presents striking visual relationships and juxtapositions in glass, ceramic, wood, fabric, metal, plaster, and more.
In this exhibition, Gagnon presents a series of geometric sculptures that explore themes of interiority and exteriority. He creates meticulous sets of rules for building each sculpture, and then assembles them with an instinctive, hands-on approach. The resulting sculptures combine precision and intuitive assembly. These constructions connect with space, light, and time to draw viewers in and imagine narratives based on their own relationships and histories with familiar materials.
Matt Gagnon Is This the Place, 2024, Mirror stainless steel and hardware 31 1/2 x 42 x 12 1/2 inches
These architectural forms stack and layer, channeling light through their positive and negative spaces, revealing different aspects depending on the viewer’s position. As in architecture, where a building’s façade offers one experience while inhabiting its spaces offers another, Gagnon’s sculptures unfold over time, rewarding careful observation and movement.
Matt Gagnon, Metaphors Don't Always Lead to Understanding, 2024, Mixed media, 128 x 48 x 36 inches
Gagnon also presents several Light Stack sculptures in this new body of work. These signature columns of stacked discs made from illuminated colored glass and industrial materials delve deeper into the interplay of light, color, and texture. In this series, Gagnon experiments with bolder hues, and explores the balance between warmth and coolness, boldness and subtlety.
Matt Gagnon Untitled (Orange), 2024, Mixed media, 85 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches
How Close Will We Get speaks to Gagnon’s ongoing exploration of boundaries—both physical and emotional. His work encourages reflection on the delicate negotiation between openness and enclosure, vulnerability and security, as we move through the spaces we inhabit in the world.
Matt Gagnon, Common Interest (3), 2024, Glazed terra cotta and wood, 20 1/2 x 9 x 11 1/4 inches
Matt Gagnon studied architecture at Cornell University before joining the studios of Gaetano Pesce and Frank Gehry. He has been featured in publications such as The New York Times, Metropolis, Surface, Interior Design and Dwell. Additionally, Gagnon has been commissioned by Peter Marino (for Chanel and Louis Vuitton), MTV, The Four Seasons and Ritz Carlton hotel groups, Google and NASA’s Deep Space Network facility in Pasadena, CA.