• Goodnight Moon

    New paintings by Yves Scherer
  • Ever since Yves Scherer became a father, he has read to his daughter. He keeps returning to the eponymous book by Margaret Wise Brown, Goodnight Moon, illustrated by Clement Hurd. The book, first published in 1947, has become an iconic bedtime story for children growing up in America. In this story, a bunny wishes goodnight to various inanimate and living objects in its bedroom, including two kittens lounging on the carpet and the moon seen through a window. 

  • Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022

    Yves Scherer

    Goodnight Moon, 2022
    Oil on canvas, painted frame with glass
    46 x 56 cm
    18 1/8 x 22 in
    € 8,000.00
  • The Full Moon

    Featuring an image of the moon seen through a window, the paintings are nearly uniform in composition, with structure given by 9 window panes. The works balance a formal reminiscence to the systems of abstract painters such as Stanley Whitney or Sean Scully with "representation" paintings of the moon or the view through the window, which has been a recurring trope through the centuries - from Pierre Bonnard to Anne Craven.

  • Inspired by the image of the full moon traveling slowly across the horizon and his bedtime ritual with his daughter, Yves Scherer explores the intimacy of a moment caught in time. Reflecting on the themes of childhood, new beginnings, and the vibrancy of blossoming life, Scherer elaborates on these beats through visual multiplicity, bold color, and vigorous brushstrokes.
  • Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022

    YVES SCHERER

    GOODNIGHT MOON, 2022

    Oil on canvas, oak frame with glass
    46 x 56 cm
    18 1/8 x 22 in

    SOLD

  • The full moon can only be seen from the Earth roughly once per month, its shape appearing fully illuminated by the Sun. Unlike its other iterations, the shape of the full moon mirrors that of the Sun. This relationship is amplified by the color choice Scherer makes - looking at the paintings for the first time, we may need clarification on whether the scenes depict daytime or nighttime. The lunar phase of the full moon symbolizes completion, that is - the end, but also a new beginning.

  • A study in orange

    In Goodnight Moon, Scherer paints the scene in various shades of orange. This choice highlights the reflective properties of his expression, a focus on the deep exploration of a singular moment - a calming exercise. One encounters orange just before the apex: it is bold and energizing without overwhelming the senses, warm but not alarming. Like a full moon, it is a harbinger of change, the beginning of a new cycle. 

  • "Orange is like the morning or spring. A state of becoming, the stage before the full blossoming. It is also like the evening and autumn - like settling in and calming down, that moment where the burdens of the current day have passed, and the ones of the day ahead have not yet arrived." 

    - Yves Scherer

  • What Scherer invites us to experience here is not a seriality that explores the combination of colors around a specific subject, as we can find it in Albers' exploration of the square, but a particular color scheme that the artist varies only very slightly within hue, tone, and shade.
  • Images from the artist's studio documenting the process of creation of Goodnight Moon paintings

  • Works in this online viewing room
    • Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022
      Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022
      € 8,000.00
      View more details
    • Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022
      Yves Scherer, Goodnight Moon, 2022
      View more details
  • The works are in our gallery and are available to view by appointment

  • Yves Scherer, b. 1987 in Solothurn, Switzerland

    Yves Scherer

    b. 1987 in Solothurn, Switzerland

    Yves Scherer’s practice, which spans different media and formats has always been centered around a figurative sculpture practice that combined with his paintings creates environments that tell stories of romantic relationships between characters. Scherer's work deals with questions regarding gender, celebrity, and mediated realities. Working with sculpture, painting and installation, Scherer creates immersive environments that combine personal narratives with fan fiction to offer the viewer an often romantic lens or perspective on the self, relationships and the everyday.

  • He holds an MA in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art London. His work has been shown internationally in galleries and institutions like the ICA London, Villa Merkel Esslingen, Kunsthalle Basel, Eva Presenhuber, and the Swiss Institute in New York and Kunsthaus Grenchen in 2020. Recent solo shows include ‘By Your Side’, Cassina Projects, Milan, Italy (2021); ‘Leaves of Grass’, Galleri Golsa, Oslo, Norway (2020); ‘Sunset’, Kunstverein Wiesen, Wiesen, Germany and ‘Boys’, Galerie Guido W. Baudach, Berlin, Germany (2019).
     
    He is the recipient of a Förderpreis Bildende Kunst des Kanton Solothurn 2012, Swiss Art Award in 2015 and was listed on Forbes 30 under 30 “Art & Design” in the class of 2016.