Press Release: Size Matters

July 20 - August 28, 2022
Allison Baker | Holly Harrison | Cassandra C. Jones | Coral Woodbury

Installation view, Cassandra C. Jones and Allison Baker in Size Matters

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to present Size Matters, featuring gallery artists Allison Baker, Holly Harrison, Cassandra C. Jones, and Coral Woodbury. These four artists play with scale, quantity, and implicative imagery – sometimes subtle, sometimes overt. Size Matters is dedicated to the constituents; the parts that make up the whole; the pieces that come together to form something larger than the sum of its parts. Demonstrated by the materiality and thematic functions of the work, each artist engages with the idea of collective power in their own way. Embodied first individually, and then reinforced as a group, the exhibition is a force to be reckoned with in a way that aims to radiate the power of united women.

Allison Baker, Still Life of Lives Past and Present: propagation, 2022. Coloraid on coldpress paper. 24 x 18 in.

 Allison Baker’s color-blocked, still-life collages are created using layered coloraid on coldpress paper. Often working towards a reclamation of domestic spaces, Baker’s work seeks to investigate hegemonic femininity as a site of transgression and resistance. Her work playfully engages scale as a cue to surreality, or that not all is as it appears. The artist’s use of familiar objects – a matchbook, cleaning products, an oyster – create the feeling that something is not quite right and the syrupy artificiality of Baker’s color palette only reiterates this feeling. The objects themselves, recognizable and utilitarian, become devoid of their intended use - a beer bottle becomes a vessel of propagation; a book of matches spills match sticks that bend and contour like fabric; and a pile of melting ice cream sprouts hairy legs to become endearingly anthropomorphic. 

Cassandra C. Jones, Double Barrel, 2019. Archival inkjet on cotton rag pearl. 30 x 20 in. Ed. 1 of 2

 Similarly, Cassandra C. Jones’ plays with humor and scale in her work, skillfully rendering images out of scaled down objects and often using the repetition of a singular element to form something entirely new. Her artworks are a reflection of consumerism on our individual images and on our environments. The three cacti in the exhibition are undeniably phallic from afar, but as with all of Jones’ work, closer inspection reveals the curious components of the image: in this case, beach balls. This series was a response to wildfires in California that sent microplastics into the air, soil and water, resulting in a colorful super bloom of flora. Jones intends to render the ease in which our natural world absorbs the objects we delight in.

 Coral Woodbury’s artwork is rooted in the reclamation of power. An artist and art historian, Woodbury has spent the past two years tearing through an original copy of Janson’s History of Art, a prominent textbook that completely omitted women until Janson’s death in 1986 – and painting the images of the artists made purposefully absent in this history. There is an undeniable power in numbers, and Woodbury’s aim to rework every page of the text perfectly illustrates this.

 Holly Harrison’s exploration of avian motifs stems from a simultaneous appreciation for both the strength and fragility of her subject matter, as she delicately renders each individual bird to create a synchronized, and intermingled flock. The viewer is left with a snapshot of a murmuration, with a collective of birds flying gracefully across the horizon line. As with each of these compelling artists, the work reminds us that we are stronger together; that there is strength in collective power and organized movements; and that when we are a part of something larger than ourselves, none of us are ever truly alone.

Holly Harrison, True Blue, 2022. Mixed media and found papers on wood panel. 36 x 60 in.

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Allison Baker earned her MFA in Sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design, a BFA in Sculpture and BA in Gender Studies from Indiana University. Her work investigates hegemonic femininity as a site of transgression and resistance. Allison clawed her way into higher education with a thesaurus and words she cannot pronounce; currently, she is an Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Studio Art at Hamline University where she tries to impart some knowledge of finesse, persuasion, and manual labor.

 Holly Harrison lives and works in Concord, MA. She received an MA in creative writing from The City College of New York and a BA from Wesleyan University. Her artwork has been featured at galleries and museums throughout the country and is held in private and corporate collections nationally and internationally. Additionally, she has curated two well-received shows at the Concord Center for the Visual Arts, where she was subsequently invited to join the Board of Trustees.

Coral Woodbury, Eileen Agar, 2022. Sumi ink on book page. 11.375 x 8.625 in.

 Cassandra C. Jones was born in Alpine, TX (USA) in 1975 and lives and works in Ojai, CA. She is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University with an MFA in Interdisciplinary Fine Arts and received her BFA from California College of Arts with a concentration in Photography/Glass. Jones has been awarded artist residencies in Germany, the Czech Republic, Canada, and across the United States, and her work has been exhibited both throughout the United States and in Europe. Select recent exhibitions include: Digital Worlds: New Media from the Museum’s Collection, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Houston, TX (2018), The Awakening, Abigail Ogilvy Gallery, Boston MA (2017), Ritual and Desire, Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, KS (2017). She has received several awards and residencies, including the Egon Schiele Art Centrum, Drake Hotel Artist Residency, Invitational, Toronto, Canada (2006), and the Vira I. Heinz Endowment awarded by the Virginia Center of Creative Arts (2004).

 Coral Woodbury is an historian and as an artist who critically reinterprets Western artistic heritage from a feminist perspective, bringing overdue focus and reverence to the long line of women artists who worked without recognition or enduring respect. Her work reclaims space for them, bringing women together across time and place in art that recasts and re-crafts the story of art. Coral has long worked internationally, beginning with a residency in Italy with Rosenclaire, her mentors for 30 years. She has been honored with a grant from the U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities, and has exhibited at Opening Press Week of the 58th Venice Biennale, the Taragaon Museum in Kathmandu, and in the unsanctioned #00Bienal de la Habana in Cuba. In 2020 her work was selected for Area Code art fair.

5 Under 5(k)!

With Art Basel Miami around the corner and holidays on our mind, the art market is in buying mode! Many of our collectors come to us with a budget in mind, so we put together a list of artworks under $5,000, perfect for the holiday cheer. Grab a cup of hot chocolate, and take a peek at the works below:

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1. Cassandra Jones, Patterson Stunt

Archival Inkjet on Cotton Rag, 2017. 31 x 25 in.

Cassandra Jones is a remix artist who collects thousands of other people's photographs, in both print and digital form. She uses digital photography to create collage and video works that tell stories and present a prismatic reflection of our self-involved, technology-based, snap-happy contemporary lifestyles. Each piece unfolds a complex cluster of social messages that infiltrate our cursory habits of perception and comprehension.


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2. Austin Eddy, The Birds Softly Dreaming Among The Trees

Acrylic, Colored Pencil, Paper Collage on Paper, 2019. 26 x 20 in.

Through the tools of abstraction and other historical painting languages, Austin Eddy breaks down qualitative aspects of painting and questions the validity of “seriousness.” He finds answers to this question by making paintings though play. From his singular and personal experience, he deconstructs and synthesizes information, creating a hybridized personal painting vernacular. This process produces semi-representational works that convey emotions and energies of situations and individuals; the paintings have been broken down to the basic building blocks of each story or thing being portrayed.


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3. Keenan Derby, Glimpse

Watercolor on Shizen Paper, 2019. 12 x 18 in.

Keenan Derby’s paintings are in perpetual motion. This painting is a part of his most recent series of works on paper. His paintings have a transitional nature, simultaneously constructing and breaking down forms as the eye travels across each piece, never quite settling on a single state of being.


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4. Natalia Wróbel, Coda Berlin

Acrylic on Paper, 2017. 14 x 20 in.

In her paintings, Natalia Wróbel creates portals into liminal realms beyond our physical world. She reference mindfulness philosophy, neural networks, elements from nature, particle cosmology, physics, classical, jazz, and electronic music, ancient architecture, lyric poetry, and theories about the interconnectedness of the universe to elicit meditative abstractions.


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5. Holly Harrison, Moon Rabbit

Mixed Media and Found Papers on Wood Panel, 2019. 16 x 16 in

Holly Harrison’s work presents a collection of mixed-media pieces that focus on the interplay between the organic shapes and fluidity of birds, and the geometry of repeated horizontal lines—painted, collaged and contained in the imagery of human structures. She began with a series of collages, each one dedicated to a different stanza of the poem. Since then, she continues to compose her collages with the essence of poetry in the rhythms and melody of her work.


Works of art make great holiday gifts. Since many artists price their works based on scale, a piece of art can exist within a variety of different budgets, and we would be happy to work with you to find pieces that fits your needs. Please don’t hesitate to contact us if you have any questions, or are interested in the works above! Keep your eyes open for our next show, The Salon Show, which will feature many of the artists listed above.

Forever Temporary by Cassandra C. Jones

Cassandra C. Jones created a wall-specific installation on view at Abigail Ogilvy Gallery from May 3 – June 16, 2019. The title of the entire work is “Forever Temporary,” which includes a wallpaper installation and nine digital prints. While the bright colors bring you in, the work has a much deeper significance. Read more about the work from Jones’ point of view below.

Cassandra C. Jones in front of her installation, Forever Temporary. Photo by: David Guerra

From the artist:

In 2017, a massive wildfire swept through the small desert town of Ojai, CA. It consumed over 500 homes on the very first night and raged for over a month.  And while our home remained safe, the air around it became toxic and uninhabitable for many weeks.

All the modern day conveniences, and synthetics of our time, in all those houses, melted. They turned to acidic embers, bad gases, and nano-plastics, and then they rose up into the air, swirling in great plumes.  When they reached as high as they could go up in the atmosphere they gently floated down, onto our landscape, as the softest and smallest of relics.

I still struggle to describe the way the mountains that surround our home looked covered in a blanket of ash, knowing it harbored a legacy, of all the pretty things our townspeople bought and considered either temporary or treasures in their lives.  And even though the fire reduced their effects to the tiniest of fragments, many will still be here for hundreds, if not thousands of years. 

detail of Golden Torch, Archival inkjet on cotton rag pearl, 30 x 18 in. Photo by Chris Anderson / CDA Media

When the rains finally came, the tiny shoots of new plants coming up through the charred black earth looked like green lace covering the valley.  And the locals say that all the vegetation this year, in 2019, is more beautiful because the ash has finally seeped in and fertilized the soil.  A super bloom of color; flowers and succulents, cactus and perennials blanket the terrain. It's just like the smog that makes the sunsets more beautiful; it is so vibrant yet still spoiled.

I think about the fresh new wild cactus in the mountains, just coming out of the ground, slow-growing vegetation that will likely still be around when my children have grandchildren.  I imagine them absorbing and curling their watery flesh and spines around all those pernicious particles, like tree limbs sometimes wrap themselves around telephone wires.  All the sinister little-bits are part of them now.  For better or worse, those cactus will never know life without them. 

The beach ball is an object that I chose to represents the ordinary disposable possessions in our lives. It is pretty, shiny, and fun, much like new technologies, beauty products, food packaging, synthetic clothes, etc., And like all those things it is short-lived and replaceable. In whatever way our creations of this caliber are disposed of or destroyed, recycled or reused, the human-made ingredients that go into them are becoming part of our natural world, creating shifting waters, altered landscapes, and new gardens that are forever and temporary all at once. 

Photo by Chris Anderson / CDA Media