The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Campbell show is dressing to impress

- Jan Patience

There is a lovely moment in Dressing Above

Your Station, an online exhibition devoted to the role of fashion and textiles in the work of artist Steven Campbell.

As the interactiv­e exhibition, narrated by his wife, Carol, walks through his life and times, via paintings, photos and memorabili­a, we reach a section which focuses on what his children thought of his unique sartorial style.

One photo of Campbell and teenage daughter, Greer, on a holiday in France, and another with him with his kids at Eurodisney, reveal

“a man more appropriat­ely dressed for combat than a family holiday.” Yes, a black beret on top of flowing blond locks...

Carol’s voiceover adds the refrain from the Campbell kids was: “Why can’t we have a Marks & Spencer’s daddy like everybody else?”

That was never going to happen, as this richly textured exhibition – hosted by Glasgow’s Tramway – reveals in spades.

Campbell, who died aged 54 in 2007, was a key figure in a revival of figurative painting which emanated from the Glasgow School Art (GSA) in the 1980s. He is generally associated with the group known as The New Glasgow Boys – although he hated the term.

Campbell worked in a steelworks in Cambuslang before becoming a mature student at GSA. He dressed as he painted. With style. And like no other dad.

A lynchpin in Dressing Above Your Station is a collection of clothes by Japanese label Comme des Garçons. The collection, worth more than $10,000, was acquired by the couple while living New York in the 1980s in exchange for one of Campbell’s paintings.

To accompany the exhibition, a series of shop window projection­s on Glasgow’s Sauchiehal­l Street have also been installed.

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 ?? ?? ● Tyson Boxing T-shirt As Landscape With My Shirt As Sun by Stephen Campbell, inset below
● Tyson Boxing T-shirt As Landscape With My Shirt As Sun by Stephen Campbell, inset below

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