Malcolm Bradley

A garden the camera can’t see

8 September - 8 November

PV: 7 September, 6pm - 8.30pm

 

Malcolm Bradley, A garden the camera can’t see, 2023, hydrographic print on foam, acetate, 29 x 39 x 2cm

 

San Mei Gallery is pleased to present A garden the camera can’t see by London-based artist Malcolm Bradley. This will be the third exhibition in San Mei Gallery’s public-facing window space, presenting a series of emerging contemporary artists’ micro-exhibitions with artworks for sale. Open 24 hours a day, this new programming strand facilitates responsive and exciting small-scale exhibitions in a hypervisible context.

Malcolm Bradley’s practice, which spans photography, video, text and installation, uses collage as a form of visual note taking, to blend research and autobiographical material. The diaristic elements in Bradley’s work acknowledge the inconsistencies of his own position and aim to create a vocabulary for the wordless parts of lived experience. He focuses on these moments as they point to something slight and uncredited about how our subjectivity is shaped through day to day, unseen moments.

In the Window Gallery, Bradley presents A garden the camera can’t see, a new collage made through hydrographic printing; a technique commonly used to print on car or motorbike parts. Bradley considers an alternate use for this process by using it to warp low resolution photos of foliage reflected in urban windows. The resulting images are stretched and out of focus. While hydroprinting is commonly used to create a slick, factory-made exterior, Bradley’s prints appear distressed and waterlogged, as if the images have sweated through the material, pooling at the surface. The artist considers how the image’s eerie effect might chime with the history of spirit photography in which ‘ghost orbs’ are thought to prove the presence of spirits. Here however, the image’s low fidelity points to the invisible, material qualities of modern life that affect our vision and perception.


Artist biography

Malcolm Bradley, (b.1992) lives and works in London. Recent projects include; on the flipside was, curated by Kollektiv, group exhibition, Guts Gallery Projects, London, 2023, Dilations, solo exhibition, DES BAINES, London, 2022, “Hope” is the thing with feathers', group exhibition, South Parade, London, 2021, FIELDNOTES: Inaugural issue, Submission with Juliette Pépin, 2020, Interdependence: Artlicks Weekend Radio, Submission with Corelli Hotel, RTM FM, TACO!, London, 2019, Keratin, duo event with Emily Perry, Chalton Gallery, London, 2019, Artist filmscreening, Corelli Hotel, London, 2018, Direct Input, Muddy Yard, London, 2018, Exquisite Corpse, 126 Gallery, Galway, 2018, Stalker, Foundation B.a.d, Rotterdam, 2015, Private Dancer, Wolfarts Project Space, Rotterdam, 2015. He is currently studying on the MFA Fine Art course at Goldsmiths University.


Sales

The works in this exhibition are for sale as part of a new commercial programming strand by San Mei Gallery, providing income opportunities for emerging artists as well as fundraising for San Mei Gallery’s other non-commercial artistic and educational projects. For all sales enquiries please contact rufus@sanmeigallery.co.uk.

Private view

San Mei Gallery is pleased to host a joint private view on Thursday 7th September from 6-8.30pm, for both Malcolm Bradley’s exhibition in our window space as well as Love is a state of mind from Titaness in our main gallery. Drinks are kindly provided by Brixton Brewery.


Press release

A press release for this exhibition can be downloaded here. For all press enquiries please contact rufus@sanmeigallery.co.uk.

Installation View