Depth of Field
When
Sat, 12 April 2025 - Sun, 29 June 2025
Tues - Sun, 12-5pm
Where
Street Level Photoworks - Street Level Photoworks, Trongate 103, Glasgow, G1 5HD
Further info
Cost: free
Depth of Field - SLP WebsiteType: Exhibition

© Oladele Bamgboye
Depth of Field
Street Level Photoworks
12th April – 29th June 2025
David Eustace, Oladele Bamgboye, Alan Dimmick, Stewart Shaw, Agnes Samuel, Leslie Black, Robert Burns, Roger Farnham, Sarah Mackay, Kay Ritchie and Sandy Sharp
This exhibition includes a diverse range of photographers whose involvement in Glasgow Photography Group (GPG) between 1987 and 1989 underpinned the practical and conceptual raison d’être, leading to the establishment of Street Level Photoworks in September 1989. As a collective (as it would likely be termed today), that common objective of establishing a permanent centre for photography in the city, became its watershed moment with Glasgow’s impending accolade as European City of Culture in 1990. The work in the exhibition includes a range of photographic practice undertaken before, during, and after the intense lifetime of GPG, with many bodies of work presented in a gallery for the first time and others rediscovered or resurfaced after a lengthy hiatus.
Internationally renowned photographer David Eustace quotes ‘We keep passing unseen through little moments of the other people’s lives’ from The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (Robert M Pirsig) in his publication ‘Ego’, as a philosophical metaphor for his approach to a series of portraits of actors, musicians, artists and other known faces. These fibre-based prints were printed immaculately by Eustace in his darkroom and demonstrate his prowess not only as a photographer, but also as a printer. Included are portraits of Robbie Coltrane, Eve Arnold, Yasmina Reza, Gina Bellman, Robert Carlyle, Ewan McGregor, Albert Watson, George Mackay Brown, Ronnie Wood, and many more.
Nigerian born Oladele Bamgboye is part of a group of Nigerian/British artists. His experiments in large format darkroom prints in Glasgow in the late 80s and early 90s (along with fellow artist at the time, Anne Elliott) embody his exploration of self in domestic spaces, whilst commenting on the experience of diaspora, with underlying themes rooted in the challenges that cultural displacement poses to identity.
Being shown for the first time, Agnes Samuel’s landscape portraits are from a time in 1988 when she and her friend, artist Bet Low, drove to South Ronaldsay in Orkney. Whilst Bet painted, Agnes explored the tranquil landscape of the island. Having recently bought a camera, she was encouraged in her photography by Robert Burns, a fellow GPG stalwart, who would develop her films and print her images. It was this which prompted her to set up her own darkroom and to continue working in photography.
In the early 80s, Kay Ritchie embarked on her photography career, with one of her first jobs being to photograph an array of contemporary giants for the title sequences of ‘Voices’, which went out on the newly launched independent Channel 4. It questioned modernity & its discontents, and amongst the people she got the opportunity to photograph were Stuart Hall, Kathy Acker, E.P. Thomson, Noam Chomsky, John McGrath, Lindsay Kemp, Susan Sontag, and Salman Rushdie.
Leslie Black’s work is a slice through some of the artists, actors and patrons in the Glasgow arts scene at the turn of the 90s – including Steven Campbell, Calum McKenzie, Johnny Taylor, Eirene Houston, as well as miscellaneous snapshots from her unrecorded archive. Again, this will be the first time these have been scanned and presented in an exhibition.
Stewart Shaw’s series from the 1980s encapsulate his keen eye as a street photographer combining humorous juxtapositions of people in environments alongside moments which capture signs of the times – Aids billboard, Glasgow’s Miles Better gable end, the launch of the Norsea ferry on the Clyde, an unrepeatable moment in the history of Clyde shipbuilding.
Whilst he is better known for his candid shots of people involved in Glasgow’s art scene, Alan Dimmick’s works precede this and were started when he was a teenager in 1979, covering a period up to 1991, many of which appear in two recent photozines by Café Royal Books. These include candid moments of everyday life and the spontaneous interactions that take place in the ‘blink of an eye’.
Similarly, Roger Farnham’s series records the changing urban environments of the East End of Glasgow, with scenes devoid of people, similar to the empty streets during lockdown. This series was taken between 1987 and 1990, when Roger was an active member of GPG, which he unearthed recently and will form the basis of a forthcoming self-published book.
‘Regeneration’ is a theme embraced in Sandy Sharp’s work ‘Another World’, the focus of which is the former steelworks of Ravenscraig in his former hometown of Motherwell, Lanarkshire – with the black and white images acting as a eulogy for a lost industry, whilst the colour works signalled renewal and nature’s return.
The works by Robert Burns are from his series ‘A Window on Ukraine’ and offer distinctive observations and reflections of the country over several years from his first visits there in 2007 onwards.
Views of other places are also captured poetically in Sarah Mackay’s ‘Roman Empire’ (1990/1991), where the past is embedded in the remnants of statues, pantheons and colosseums that remain of that empire, and which attracts tourists the world over.
Posted by: Street Level Photoworks