This April, Sadie Coles HQ presents Flora + Fauna, an exhibition on the theme of nature as imagined through the distinct styles of fourteen of the gallery's artists. Spanning different media - including drawing, painting, sculpture and video - the exhibition will highlight the ways in which artists have embraced, subverted and reinvented the traditional (and traditionally 'safe' and sentimental) stuff of flowers, plants and animals.

Various artists in the exhibition embrace the genres of flower painting and still life, reanimating these classic - or even clichéd - modes to pursue ideas of colour, shape and figuration. In a series of paintings by Laura Owens, flowers appear as evanescent flashes - alternately dematerializing into scattered impressions and coalescing into a graphic silhouette. The silhouette reappears as a structural and symbolic motif in Wilhelm Sasnal's painting of elongated ferns, and again in Simon Periton Mosstrooper (2018), a semi-dissected leaf magnified into a free-standing emblem. Don Brown's Plum (2008), an enlarged bronze plum elevated on a rod, hovers similarly between metaphorical import and crisp formalism. An equivalent dualism occurs (in strikingly different terms) in Hilary Lloyd's video Parrot (2017), featuring a close-up of an electric-green bird - at once a nature study and a celebration of hypnotic colour.

Throughout, we find artists playing with the sentimental and picturesque possibilities of nature while pushing the subject into more ambivalent territory. Borna Sammak's young deer (2019) consists of an embroidered picture of a fawn's head that evokes decorative furnishings while swerving clear of the 'cute' connotations the motif. A number of works edge towards the darker and more ambiguous aspects of nature and 'supernature' (a term coined by the biologist Lyall Watson, who sought to understand supernatural phenomena in biological terms). The drawings of Christiana Soulou, inspired by Jorge Luis Borges's Book of Imaginary Beings (1957), transform literary chimeras into images - hybrid or mythic beasts that remain uncannily recognisable.

Other works similarly examine the symbolic, surreal and performative appeal of animals - from the domestic to the preternatural. Monster Chetwynd's animal costumes, made for her 2016 film and performance Dogsy Ma Bone, celebrate supposedly 'ugly' and ungainly attributes. Seemingly inviting us to step into animal roles, her strung-up costumes conjure a mood of possibility that is reflected in their theatrical backdrop, a panorama from a Roman fresco. In this ancient garden scene, flowers and fruits from different seasons bloom together in impossible synchrony.

Here and elsewhere, the category of landscape stands as a kind of imaginative and poetic terrain. Michele Abeles’s Milano series of prints on aluminium (2016) use the motif of jungle foliage – reminiscent of the dream scenes of Henri Rousseau – within a larger collage of tinted ‘compartments’ suggestive of displaced memories (the nude male body appears an incongruous piece of the scenery). An equivalent tension between coherence and disjunction is traceable in Daniel Sinsel’s painting Untitled (2018), in which clover leaves are woven into an abstract constellation of meandering lines and fleshly nodules. Elsewhere, in Urs Fischer’s sculpture Bless Them All! (2018), the poetic possibilities of nature are weighed up - almost literally – in the form of a meticulous bronze cast of a fallen branch that has been adorned with globular ‘cartoon’ birds. In its jangling elements, Fischer’s object flits between earthbound literalism and breezy fantasy.