Objects at Hand, on view at Olney Gleason from May 7 through June 6, 2026, presents a new body of photographs by Daniel Gordon that further complicates the relationship between image, object, and illusion. Known for transforming printed source material into handmade sculptural constructions before photographing them, Gordon has spent the last two decades dismantling photography’s claim to realism. In this latest exhibition, however, the artist moves into notably restrained territory, abandoning the vivid color palette that has long defined his work in favor of black-and-white compositions focused on light, shadow, and surface.
The exhibition coincides with the release of Gordon’s fifth monograph and arrives at a moment of increasing institutional recognition, including his inclusion in the Guggenheim Museum’s upcoming exhibition
Guggenheim Pop: 1960 to Now. Yet rather than expanding outward,
Objects at Hand turns inward, concentrating on ordinary domestic items—glasses, scissors, combs, kitchen utensils, and stationery—arranged in tightly framed still lifes that recall the precision of early modernist photography.
Gordon’s process remains deliberately transparent. Images sourced online or photographed by the artist himself are printed, cut apart, folded, glued, and reconstructed into fragile three-dimensional objects. Seams, tape marks, and torn edges remain visible, emphasizing the handmade quality of the constructions. Once photographed, however, these imperfect paper assemblages take on an uncanny visual coherence. Some objects appear translucent despite being entirely opaque in reality, creating subtle perceptual contradictions that destabilize the viewer’s trust in the image.
The resulting photographs engage a broad lineage of photographic experimentation, echoing the sculptural still lifes of Edward Weston, the surreal arrangements of
Man Ray, and the perceptual investigations of artists such as Barbara Kasten and Jan Groover. Yet Gordon’s work remains distinctly contemporary in its negotiation between digital imagery and physical craft. The photographs originate in screens and printers, but arrive as carefully staged objects existing somewhere between sculpture, collage, and illusion.
In
Objects at Hand, Gordon strips photography down to its essential deceptions. Through the quiet choreography of paper, light, and shadow, he transforms familiar objects into visual puzzles that reward slow, sustained attention.
Image:
Light Study (Scissors and Hand), 2024 © Daniel Gordon, courtesy of Olney Gleason gallery.