Wood/WOAD: SPRING/BREAK Art Show 2021

Visit Spring / Break Art Show 2021 from September 8-13, 2021
LOCATION: 625 Madison Avenue, New York, NY
TICKETS: https://www.eventbrite.com/o/springbreak-art-show-12813445625

Haley Wood, Punch Needle Coat, 2019. Acrylic and wool yarn with cotton lining

Haley Wood, Punch Needle Coat, 2019. Acrylic and wool yarn with cotton lining

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to announce our third year of participation in Spring / Break Art Show, occurring September 8-13, 2021 in New York City. The booth will feature a solo presentation of Haley Wood’s artwork for Spring/Break’s 2021 theme ‘HEARSAY:HERESY.’

Contemporary artist Haley Wood is a medieval storyteller at heart. Finding inspiration in medieval marginalia, folklore, and all living creatures that display a great deal of personality, Wood relishes in the challenge of conveying complex emotions with a simple facial expression. Her desire is for each of her pieces to tell a story to the viewer, whether it consists of multiple panels or a singular surface. 

Her most recent body of work, Woad, is a twelve-page story inspired by her relationship with her grandmother Mathilde, who suffered from dementia in her later years of life. The story takes place in a settlement of quasi-medieval hares. Elisabet is the dyer in her village, primarily working with woad. Over the course of a year, Elisabet’s focus shifts from her dyework to caring for her ageing Ancestor, and the acceptance of the inevitable.

WOAD Page 1, 2021. Acrylic yarn, hand-tufted. 38 x 30 in. Ed. 1 of 2

WOAD Page 10, 2021. Acrylic yarn, hand-tufted. 38 x 30 in. Ed. 1 of 2

Woad (Isatis tinctoria) is a plant native to the Mediterranean, commonly used for dyeing in Medieval Europe and Britain. The woad plant is a biennial. In its first year, it grows a group of spinach-like leaves, which is how the dye is produced. In its second year, the plant may grow up to 6 feet tall and blossom bright yellow flowers in early May, around when Mathilde’s birthday fell. The woad dye vat is very similar to indigo. The addition of an alkaline solution helps the woad to fasten to the fiber. The dye becomes a dark yellowy green with a shimmery blue flower on top. The more one dips and oxidizes the fibers, the darker blue they become.

Through this narrative series of hand tufted rugs, Wood illuminates the antagonistic qualities of choice and inevitability. Flat, stylized characters, anthropomorphic subjects, and the minimal modeling of perspective in her compositions nod to Medieval influences, while the accompanying text under each panel demonstrates her aptitude for storytelling. Wood’s expert execution of narration can be observed not only in the series as a whole, but within the compositions of each panel, arranged in the style of a comic book. When choosing her characters, Wood became drawn to the medieval hare after seeing their diabolical behavior in the marginalia of the Pontifical of Renaud de Bar. This liturgical illuminated manuscript from c. 1303-1316 contains legions of hares shooting crossbows and catapulting stones at knights, all in a lovely blue and orange color palette. Wood found the vacant expressions on the hares’ faces to be disturbing yet amusing. The people of that era surely knew the horrors of war, and yet decided to turn them into an ironic vignette on vellum.

By presenting the tale through this comic book format, Wood welcomes the viewer to consider the intense and often unspoken disease of dementia. The process of aging and loss of memory are hard to grasp in our youth, as we age, we understand the feeling of slowing down and contemplating what happens next. The narrative parallels Camille Paglia’s description of Hamlet in Provocations: “The play seems to have changed every time we come back to it – a mysterious effect that intensifies as we age.” The story of Woad becomes more relevant as one cares for an aging loved one, or becomes the one in need of care themselves. Similar to the lessons taken from Shakespeare’s iconic tragedy, Woad grows more important each time you follow the narrative.

VOLTA Basel, Switzerland

This September, VOLTA Basel returns for its 16th edition as part of Art Basel Switzerland, where Abigail Ogilvy Gallery will present new artworks by Brooklyn-based artist Austin Eddy and San Diego-based artist Natalia Wróbel.

Both artists create a visual dialogue through hidden shapes, scaffolding, and figures. For Eddy, his 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. In Wróbel’s paintings, she references mindfulness philosophy, neural networks, elements from nature, particle cosmology, classical, jazz, and electronic music, ancient architecture, lyric poetry, and theories about the interconnectedness of the universe to elicit meditative abstractions. The question “what is painting” is at the forefront of their exploration and experimentation. Through the tools of abstraction and other historical painting languages, they break down qualitative aspects of painting and challenge the art historical canon.

Dates: September 20 – 26, 2021
Location: Elsässerstrasse 215, Basel, Switzerland


Austin Eddy, Every Duck In Its Place While Moving From Here To There Forgetting Nothing, 2019. Oil, flashe, colored pencil, paper on canvas in artists frame. 22 x 26 in. (SOLD)

Austin Eddy was born in Boston, MA (USA) in 1986 and lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He received a BFA in Painting from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Select recent exhibitions include: Althius Hofland Gallery, Amsterdam (2020), Galerie Sabine Knust, Munich (2020), Hermes Riders Lounge, Lyon, France (2019), Volta NYC (Plan B) (2019), Ampersand Gallery in Portland, OR (2018), David Shelton Gallery, Houston, TX (2017), Dallas Art Fair (2017), Code Art Fair, Bendixen Contemporary Art. Copenhagen, DK. (2016), Agnes B. Gallerie, Paris, FR (2016), and Left Field Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2015). He recently completed the Liquitex International Residency in London, England (2018). Austin Eddy is the founder and curator of EDDYSROOM, a nomadic curatorial project launched in 2015.

Natalia Wróbel, Jigsaw, 2021. Oil paint on canvas. 24 x 36 in.

Natalia Wróbel is an artist based in Encinitas, CA after spending years in Boston, Amsterdam, and New York City. Originally from La Jolla, CA, Wróbel studied Studio Art and Art History at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. She furthered her study at the Lorenzo de'Medici Institute in Florence and then the New York Studio School (NYSS). She received the NYSS Mercedes Matter Fellowship in 2012, and the Murray Art Prize in 2015. In 2017, Wrobel completed a painting residency at the Berlin Art Institute. Her work has been featured at international art fairs including Art Basel: Miami, Texas Contemporary, and Art SouthHampton, and has been an official selection at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, and MassArt Auction. Her paintings have been featured in publications in the US and Europe, in coursework at The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and are included in public and private collections around the United States, Europe, South America, Asia, and Australia.

Art in Nature: Cassandra Jones at Taft Gardens

Cassandra C. Jones: Woah and Wonder
May 29 - July 31, 2021
Ojai, California

Cassandra C. Jones at Taft Gardens. Image taken by Marc Alt.

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to announce the opening reception of Woah and Wonder featuring artist Cassandra C. Jones. Hosted by The Conservation Endowment Fund (CEF), the exhibition takes place at the Taft Gardens and Nature Preserve in Ojai, CA, from May 29 - July 31, 2021. A longtime resident of Ojai herself, Jones approached Taft Gardens with the idea for a residency in which she would fully immerse herself in their 15 acres of South African and Australian horticulture for five months. Now the inaugural artist in the Art in Nature Residency, her culminating collage, and wallpaper works will be on view in the Taft Art Studio for a two-month exhibition..

Image courtesy of Cassandra C. Jones

The series she has been developing during her residency started in 2018, a year after the Thomas Fire burned over 500 homes and structures in the surrounding areas of Ojai. When she and her family returned from evacuation and saw the charred landscape surrounding their home, she was interested in what was left behind. All of the technology, plastics, and modern-day conveniences that burned, rose into the air in enormous clouds of smoke and rained down as harmful chemicals and nano plastics, concealed in a blanket of ash. She soon learned that humans have dusted the entire planet with tiny plastic particles, and scientists are now starting to understand how plants are absorbing them on a subatomic level. The resulting collage works depict the natural world, inspired by the flora of Taft Gardens, infused with the physical stuff of humanity.

“I spend just as much time walking alone on the grounds as I do in the studio, which has been time well spent. This last year has been a challenge on many levels. My time in the garden has been a kind of mental mending. Watching intently as a season changes and witnessing new life emerge on a macro, and a micro-scale is cathartic. The garden has new gifts every day. There is so much I would never have absorbed with one or two passes.” - Cassandra C. Jones

Contact us directly for more information about the May 29th opening reception of Woah and Wonder: abigail@abigailogilvy.com

Image courtesy of Cassandra C. Jones

About the Art in Nature Residency at Taft Gardens:

Taft Gardens are a one-of-a-kind experience that have inspired visitors for over 30 years. Art In Nature is a new program capturing the spirit of our long-standing mission to “Explore the relationship between humans and their environment.” The Taft Gardens Art in Nature programming works to illuminate the vision of growth and understanding of ourselves and others through the experience of beauty in the natural world. The Art in Nature Residency provides artists the opportunity to develop and explore new works with a broadly environmental and ecological focus. CEF/Taft Gardens invites the residency artists to explore the relationship of humans to their environment. Artists are encouraged to depict the variety of cultural and natural resources of the local ecosystem and wildlife. 

Residencies include the artist's use of the Historic Art Studio to work and draw inspiration from the surrounding grounds and open space. The residency will conclude with an exhibition of work, with 20% of the proceeds of sales going to the CEF/Taft Gardens.  - Courtesy of https://www.taftgardens.org/art-in-nature

Image courtesy of Cassandra C. Jones.

Richard Keen: Abstracted Topographies

Richard Keen, Blue Trees No. 07, 2020, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas, 24 x 20 in.

Click to view all available artwork.

For artist Richard Keen, the Maine landscape serves as an important influence across his entire body of work. Keen’s newest paintings in the Abstracted Topographies series clearly reference trees, landscapes, and coastal vistas around Maine, the imagery directly linked to recent hikes with his family and dogs. Created over the last six months, these paintings are a result of the artist trying to maintain physical and mental health during the pandemic. Textured skies and brightly patterned grasses stand in stark contrast to the smoothness of the trees themselves. The trees exude calmness against the frenetic, tactile energy of each background, as they are able to stand in quiet opposition. These are not static snapshots of a forest scene, but instead a rhythmic reinterpretation of natural space. The subject matter of trees brings a sense of unwavering resilience; the works are a reminder that it is a feat just to stand and remain standing in the face of chaos.

His Form Singularity paintings are more minimal: typically there is a horizon line, with patterns and colors that strike Keen’s eye on any given outdoor experience. Their reductive qualities give the artist a meditative experience during the process of making art  - which has been critical to his mental health throughout the pandemic. Keen works on these series simultaneously, and often finds that colors overlap and influence each other: and if you look closely, all of the shapes that he paints are connected.

Richard Keen, Purple Trees No. 04 (Monhegan), 2020, Signed on, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas, 36 x 30 in.

Richard Keen’s whimsical color palette interacts playfully with the textured, natural world it represents. These trees are unique; they challenge us to build new realities up and away from the reality we have been given. We are in a difficult moment in history, and the collective trauma of living through a pandemic has challenged the mental health of us all. Keen’s work is a breath of novelty and innovation that renews our sense of place and challenges our more creative sides to craft new truths.