THE TAPE READ ‘DEATH IN PROGRESS'

A Glasgow dandy

Liz Shannon finds out about a posthumous exhibition of new work by Steven Campbell, one of Glasgow's most influential artists

renowned contemporary painters died

unexpectedly. Steven Campbell’s sadly premature death at the age of 54, caused by a ruptured appendix, was all the more untimely as he was in the midst of preparing for an exhibition of new work at Glasgow School ofArt.

A year on, and these hitherto unseen works are about to go on show at Glasgow Print Studio and the GSA’s Mackintosh Gallery under the title Wrett'hed Stars, Insatiable Heaven. John Mackechnie, director of the Glasgow Print Studio, the site of Campbell’s last major exhibition, explains that GSA will exhibit seven of the new paintings, while his gallery will show four. ‘We will also be exhibiting all of the prints that Steven made in Scotland they’re mostly woodcuts, apart from one etching,’ he says. ‘l’ve always loved his work.’

After Campbell’s death, Mackechnie helped the artist’s family with the painful task of clearing his studio. One painting in particular caught his attention. ‘There was a self-portrait in among the paintings that Steven had previously exhibited up north and in the Royal Scottish Academy in Edinburgh,’ says the director, who has written a short essay about Campbell for the exhibition catalogue, which also includes a longer piece about the new paintings by Neil Mulholland. ‘The painting included the yellow police tape motif that appears in some of his other works. It was strange the tape read “death in progress”.’

Born in Glasgow, Campbell studied at the GSA after working in the local steelworks. After graduating in I982, he won a prestigious Fulbright

I n August of last year, one of Scotland’s most

Scholarship and moved to New York with his wife. He achieved an international profile, his successes including an exhibition at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. In 1986, he returned to Scotland where he continued to paint and to exert an influence on the national art scene. 2005’s Campbell ’3 Soup exhibition underlined his importance to Scottish art and his work continues to inspire younger artists such as Lucy McKenzie.

An artist who loved Romanticism and the concept of the ‘dandy’, Campbell had an inimitable way of expression. The narratives articulated by Campbell’s works were inspired by a complex mix of sources, with ideas culled from film, literature, real-life events and the history of art. Mackechnie particularly notes Campbell’s use of the ‘Fantomas’ character in his paintings, inspired by the anarchic anti-hero of early 20th century French pulp detective fiction. It comes as no surprise that Campbell’s imagination was noted at art school, where he won the Bram Stoker Gold Medal for having produced the most imaginative work of the yeah

The exhibition’s title, taken from the opera L'Orfeo by Monteverdi, was chosen by Campbell and seems similarly prescient and fitting. This posthumous exhibition will help to promote Campbell’s 25 years of work, celebrate his already cemented status and his legacy as an important, and much missed, contemporary Scottish painter.

Mackintosh Gallery, Glasgow School of Art, Sat 16 Aug-Sat 1 1 Oct; Glasgow Print Studio, Sat 16 Aug-Sun 28 Sep.

Now Showing Touring exhibition of new project film art works recently acquired by the Arts Council of England, organised by London’s Southbank Centre. Great chance to experience the work of emergent and established artists like Mark Noulos, Luke Fowler, ldris Kahn, Rosalind Nashashibi, Mark Lewis and Otolith Group. Stirling, To/booth, until Sat 6 Sep. Garlands/Mineral Park Alex Hetherington and Janie Nicoll finish off their year as Callendar Park’s artists-in- residence, with a joint show that looks at memory, the local community and language. And yes, they nicked the title from local band-done—good The Cocteau Twins. Pictured. Falkirk, The Park Gallery, until Mon 8 Sep.

The Crlsls Projects: Work on Health and Illness 1 982-92 To accompany the current, excellent GOMA exhibition, Terry Dennett, curator of the Jo Spence Memorial Archive, gives a talk on her life, work and illness. Glasgow, Gallery of Modern Art, Thu 21 Aug. Watched Stars, Insatiable Heaven Steven Campbell had planned this exhibition in two locations, and its title. before his sudden death last year. Insatiable Stars... is a testament to his lasting, reaching influence. See preview, left. Glasgow Pn‘nt Studio, Sat 16 Aug—Sun 28 Sep. also at Glasgow School of Art, Mackintosh Gallery, Sat 16 Aug—Sat 11 Oct.

2’: A Shout In the Street Kenny Hunter’s series of sculptures asks viewers to open their eyes to affluence, mocking equestrian statues and plinthed works with models of pigeons and feral cats. Glasgow, Tramway, until Sun 24 Aug.

14—21 Aug 2008 111! List 41