“I have always had an affinity with the urban environment, existing happily in towns and suburbia, yet preferring to shy away from the sprawling masses. As a result, the paintings display a sense of misanthropy and an absence of presence,” says Campbell.
“Over the years, I have been drawn to paint scenes of nocturnal empty suburban streets, burned-out cars, sprawling airports and the London underground. However, recently, through a desire to further my practice, I have introduced a somewhat more fantastical element to the paintings. This has culminated in the works for Epoch.”
Perhaps nothing captures this more than New Dawn (Oil on Linen, 2006) where horses graze, perfectly at ease, in unnaturally empty urban surroundings, swathed in a hazy, almost radioactive-looking sky.
There is an unquestionable sense of menace and threat. Indeed, one horse stands boldly on the right hand side of the painting, bearing its gaze directly at the viewer.
The exhibition also showcases Campbell’s playfulness and desire to experiment with the medium, as demonstrated by the slapped-on oils used to create Shit Heap Sheep (Oil on Linen, 2006) and Suburban Splendour (Oil on Linen, 2006), created almost entirely from a single tube of blue paint.