Solid Objects takes its title from a short story by Virginia Woolf, introduced to Jones by the art historian Dr Hope Wolf. The weaving narrative tells of a politician whose career unravels as he sinks into an obsession with found treasures: a lump of glass polished by the sea, a shard of china shattered into a five-pointed star, a cold and radiant mass of iron. Despite the title, these fetichised items live in liminal states, man-made and time-worn, carrying physical weight and floating in the beholder’s subconscious, discarded and adored. Such an in-betweenness resonates with Jones’s object-paintings, which start as a photograph which is then printed onto a swathe of second-hand fabric, painted with watercolour, and stretched and placed in an aluminium frame. Academic interpretations of Woolf’s text sublimate the coveted possessions as symbols of birth, life, and death, and similarly Jones’s subjects encapsulate the arc of the living and the dead. Nodding to traditions of still life and vanitas paintings, the artist equates glowing lamp lights with the state of being alive, and flowers with the transience of existence. Several of her largest works frame the same vase of white tulips as they gradually dance and droop over several days, in a manner redolent of cinematic stills or the sequential anatomic studies of Eadweard Muybridge. In another series, the zippers of puffer vests and details of shirt buttons shine and crease as if lying on the contours of a warm, breathing body. Jones’s objects are solid but not stiff – rather organic, sensual, and moving through life.