Caroline Coon & Francesca DiMattio: Snapdragons

Stephen Friedman Gallery presents Snapdragons, a two-person exhibition bringing together four decades of paintings by British artist Caroline Coon, alongside new ceramic sculptures by American artist Francesca DiMattio. The exhibition highlights the radical and rebellious ways in which both artists take on the histories and conventions of their mediums, using them as springboards to bend, modify, and challenge representations of women, femininity, and desire. 

 

Caroline Coon’s career has been defined by unbridled creativity, experimentation, and an unwavering commitment to challenging societal norms. Her journey includes fighting for the rights of women, drug offenders, and sex workers; documenting the London punk scene of the 1970s through photographs and interviews (she also managed the seminal punk band The Clash); and authoring several books, including the autobiographical Laid Bare – Diary – 1983–1984, which inspired her Brothel series. Throughout it all, she has remained dedicated to her painting practice. Although artistic recognition came later in life, she is now celebrated for her figurative paintings, which blend feminist revisionist histories with a distinctly contemporary urban vision.

 

In her painting Sunday Afternoon - Backgammon Players (1985), Coon creates a homage of Manet’s Olympia (1863) and Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres’ Grande Odalisque (1814), subverting the traditional male-female power dynamic by positioning the unclothed Adonis figure as the object of the viewer's gaze. Set in contemporary London, the painting reveals two reclining nudes at leisure, reveling in their freedom and erotic play. In other works, such as Self-Portrait with Model (1993), Coon places herself at the center. She portrays herself as an artist, pencil in hand, ready to draw her lover, who lies in a state of heightened sexual arousal. “This is a bold statement of my identity as an artist,” wrote Coon, “who has, both socially and sexually, transgressed the sexist restrictions imposed on women by respectable society. Not only am I naked, but I am standing beside my canvas before my model who is as elegantly erect as I am. There is no polite illusion here—rather a factual, liberatory contradiction to those in the past who have denied the power and purpose of female sexuality.”

 

Installation: Caroline Coon and Francesca DiMattio, 'Snapdragons', Stephen Friedman Gallery, New York (2025). Courtesy Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York. Photos by Grace Dodds.

In her 2005 painting Self-Portrait: In My Cock Hat, Coon appears naked and statuesque, wearing a crown of penises. Set against a black background, her name is emblazoned across the canvas like a marquee. She meets the viewer’s gaze with a look that is direct and confrontational. In Cunt (1999), a precursor to her 2005 self-portrait, she creates a theatrical stage set inspired by British Pop artist, Pauline Boty’s last extant painting, BUM (1966). “I decided to make a front/cunt sister painting to Boty’s back/bum as a celebration of women’s ‘sex’—the part of women’s anatomy most commonly derided as disgusting, forbidden and used as the worst of insults,” Coon explained. “Following Boty’s theme, I ‘staged’ my Cunt in an archaic temple of sexual pleasure and fecundity. In the pediment are two goddesses of Liberty, beside the birth shell of Venus. Above them is a wild English Dog rose, for love and romance. The torso is framed by two strips—Corinthian columns representing Vitruvian architectural principles that could be read as symbolising patriarchal masculinity, and beside them is a crush of roses to represent female sensuality.” 

 

Flowers take center stage in a series of still-life paintings created between 1988 and 2008. Paying homage to the floral works of Gluck (1895–1978), a pioneer of gender fluidity, Coon’s paintings similarly reject conventional femininity. Her compositions are animated, bold, theatrical, and unapologetically sensual.

 

New York-based artist Francesca DiMattio operates with a similarly insurgent spirit, dismantling traditional boundaries between high and low, art and craft, masculine and feminine, history and the present. Straddling the worlds of art, architecture, and design, DiMattio’s work is non-hierarchical, eclectic, and teeming with ideas. Her pedestal sculptures riff on 18th-century French Sèvres porcelain, German Meissen ware, English Staffordshire pottery, and Ming Dynasty vases, while her vertiginous Caryatid figures draw inspiration from the draped female columnar supports of the Acropolis. DiMattio’s work is a symphony of historical and cross-cultural references. “I examine difference in each piece by putting opposites in conversation with each other,” the artist explains. “Through the making of each piece, similarities begin to bridge the gap of difference, and it all becomes sewn into a new hybrid language. Cultural time and place, gender, beauty, and value become scrambled and presented on equal footing.” 

 

DiMattio takes her exploration further by incorporating everyday utilitarian items—detergent bottles, Chiquita banana boxes, sneakers, high-heeled shoes, and an old teddy bear—into her work. In a somewhat absurd reversal of mass production, she hand-sculpts and glazes each of these objects, then sutures them onto her more traditional ceramic forms. In sculptures such as Meissen Tide (2025) and Meissen Pump (2025), highly ornate porcelain vessels adorned with flower petals, rosettes, and floral vignettes take on Frankenstein-like proportions as they collide with a large Reebok high-top sneaker, bottles of cleaning spray, and a container of Tide. Each sculpture is punctured by wound-like fissures that contrast sharply with the delicate floral patterns spreading across the surfaces like a virus, even extending to the pedestals below. The result is a playful tension: sneakers transform into vessels, laces become ornamental details, and high art meets streetwear.

 

Francesca DiMattio, Attica Pump, 2025. Glaze on terracotta, glaze on terracotta pedestal, Sculpture: 88.9 x 50.8 x 45.7cm (35 x 20 x 18in) Pedestal: 91.4 x 34.9 x 34.9cm (36 x 13 3/4 x 13 3/4in). Copyright Francesca DiMattio. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York and Pippy Houldsworth, London. Photo by Karen Pearson.

In another pair of terracotta pedestal sculptures, the artist juxtaposes ancient Greek amphoras with contemporary fashion accessories. In Attica Pump (2025), a vessel inspired by Athenian red-figure pottery from the 6th century BCE becomes host to four precariously tall high-heeled shoes that push through and pierce its clay surface. Similarly, in Attica Cowboy (2025), an oversized cowboy boot adorned with depictions of gods and goddesses is grafted onto an amphora standing on a matching tiled base. The vessel appears to sag under the boot’s weight, resembling a deflated belly. By playing with the morphology and nomenclature of ceramic forms—such as the lip, neck, shoulder, mouth, and foot—DiMattio’s sculptures take on a humanoid quality, simultaneously adorned and disfigured by gender-coded, mass-market symbols of beauty.

 

Francesca DiMattio, Chiquita Caryatid, 2025. Glaze on porcelain and stoneware, 218.4 x 77.5 x 77.5cm (86 x 30 1/2 x 30 1/2in). Copyright Francesca DiMattio. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York and Pippy Houldsworth, London. Photo by Karen Pearson.

DiMattio’s two monumental porcelain sculptures, Chiquita Caryatid (2025) and Teddy Bear Caryatid (2022–25), represent the culmination of the artist’s madcap experimentation. In the first, a massive female figure rises from her base like Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus (c. 1485). Her body morphs and bulges with the imprint of cardboard boxes and plastic bottles adorned with blue floral patterns, barcodes, and Chiquita banana logos. Her companion, named for the teddy bear she stands on, appears as a hyper-ornamented conqueror dressed in a porcelain-mosaic bikini. DiMattio’s figures evoke warrior queens, clad in the armor of contemporary domesticity and transcultural hybridity.


Francesca DiMattio (b. 1981) is known for her dynamic approach to sculpture and painting, where she collapses boundaries between historical and contemporary influences. Her work weaves together an eclectic mix of references—ranging from English Rococo and Islamic Fritware to mass-produced kitsch and domestic patterns—blurring distinctions between high and low culture. In her sculptural practice, she transforms porcelain into unpredictable, fluid constructions, subverting the tradition of ceramics with an explosive sense of movement. Similarly, her paintings layer diverse visual languages, creating compositions that feel both intricate and unruly. DiMattio’s work has been exhibited internationally, and her sculptures are included in prominent public and private collections.



DiMattio has exhibited at Wellin Museum of Art (2022) and Art Omi, Ghent in New York (2019).



Caroline Coon (b. 1945) is a British painter whose vibrant figurative works challenge societal norms and patriarchal values. Deeply influenced by feminism and the politics of sexual liberation, her paintings reject binary notions of gender while celebrating subjects ranging from sex workers and intersex individuals to cityscapes and still lives. A pioneering figure in London’s counterculture, Coon has been a vocal advocate for women’s rights since the 1960s, co-founding the legal-aid organization Release and managing The Clash during the punk movement. Her distinctive style—characterized by crisp-edged lines and saturated color—draws inspiration from artists like Paul Cadmus and Tamara de Lempicka. Coon’s work has recently gained widespread institutional recognition, with pieces entering Tate’s permanent collection and featuring in major exhibitions, including Women in Revolt! touring the UK from Tate Britain.


This is Coon’s first significant exhibition in New York and coincides with her inclusion in the group show ‘Women in Revolt!’, touring the UK from Tate Britain, London. 


 


 

 

Stephen Friedman Gallery

Stephen Friedman Gallery is a contemporary art gallery that was founded in 1995 with a focus on representing exceptional artists from around the world. Since its inauguration, the gallery has been based in Mayfair, London. In October 2023, the gallery expanded and relocated to Cork Street. In November 2023, the gallery opened its first location outside the UK at 54 Franklin Street in Tribeca, New York.

 


 

For more information about Stephen Friedman Gallery, this exhibition, and others, please visit their site here. The gallery can also be found on Facebook and Instagram. The magazine did an interview with both artists which can be found here.

 

 

 

 


Next
Next

Catherine Goodman. Silent Music