Untitled 2001 by Matt Stevenson, Steel, Unique, 355cm high by 190cm wide by 190cm deep, Outer Space, Other, Transportation sculpture
Untitled 2001 by Matt Stevenson rises above the viewer like a mysterious relic from another world. Executed entirely in steel and suspended tall on sturdy wooden posts, the 355 cm sculpture immediately evokes the presence of industrial machinery fused with the aesthetics of space exploration. Its cylindrical form feels engineered for travel, as though it once propelled movement through unknown territory or carried encrypted information across vast distances.
The steel cylinder commands attention with its heavy, utilitarian appearance. Its shape resembles a vessel or engine core, suggesting both purpose and secrecy. Stevenson doesn’t offer labels or markings, so the sculpture invites viewers to invent its function. Is it a fragment of a spacecraft? A fuel chamber? A communication device from an era driven by technology and ambition? As these questions arise, the work shifts from object to narrative.
Supporting the mass above the ground, the wooden posts create a striking contrast. They root the sculpture in earth while lifting it toward the sky. This tension between grounded support and elevated form adds drama, as if the structure waits to launch or has already returned from a mission. The wood also introduces organic warmth against the cool steel, hinting at the relationship between human made technology and natural resources.
Stevenson uses industrial materials not simply to showcase power, but to spark curiosity. The raised cylinder holds potential energy, and its stillness feels temporary, as if something might activate it at any moment. Ultimately, Untitled 2001 transforms a functional looking object into a portal of imagination, encouraging viewers to consider how industry, exploration, and mystery propel human progress.































