Andrew Campbell is a British contemporary artist whose work penetrates the perceptual space between the screen and the eye. His artistic practice primarily focuses on the transmutation of digital screen imagery into various physical entities — from paintings and light-box installations to video and 3D sculptural models. These works are essentially about making some semblance of coherent aesthetic sense out of a world which is increasingly perceived through a cacophony of disparate pictorial information via computer portals and phone screens. Through his paintings Andrew Campbell liberates the digital image from screen to canvas — transmogrifying the ephemeral into multifaceted compositions executed in several mediums from oil and lacquer to photographically printed formats. In other projects images are drawn from the internet and recomposed into vast netscape juxtapositions or realised sequentially as reconstructed visual bites in both video and digital airbrush painted configurations. It is through these interactions that the artist Andrew Campbell seeks to break new ground — firstly by questioning the process whereby facts are often misconstrued via algorithmic web-based technologies — and then by subverting this new-media subterfuge through innovative works of radical artistic agitation and dissent — which ultimately sublimate and synthesise a complex plethora of imagery into objectively analysed and redefined ways of seeing the truth…