Woodcock worked in a variety of media and art forms including immersive installation, video, multiples, text-based work, and neon. Her work has been noted for its playful engagement with the legacy of
conceptualism, involving both humour and emotion, while engaging with theoretical issues. She often drew on language--playlists, book titles, flyleaves, turns of phrase, punctuation, commercial signage--to complicate linear readings and invite multiple interpretations of pop culture and the everyday. Her works include
On a clear day, a sculpture in the collection of the
Art Gallery of Ontario. Her work is also in the collections of the
Agnes Etherington Art Centre and
McCarthy Tétrault. == References ==