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Gemma Dagger 
Matthew Arthur Williams

Let it Come Down

23 March—22 May 2026


Hours
Monday to Friday
9:30am—4:00pm
Weekends by Appointment
Gallery
Stallan-Brand,
80 Nicholson St, 
Glasgow G5 9ER.
Gemma Dagger, Kir Tree (2026) - Install documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams 
ShapeeroMurray are thrilled to present Let It Come Down, a two-person photography exhibition by Glasgow based artists Gemma Dagger and Matthew Arthur Williams. In this survey of photographic stills, luminous daylight of  the Scottish Borders rest against gothic monochrome imaginings from the forests of Dumfries and Galloway. What happens above is not always echoed below; time rushes in. Let it Come Down inhabits the space in between. Exhibited in the exhibition space of Stallan-Brand, the exhibition will run until 22 May.

The Works



Gemma Dagger
Kir Tree, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
24 × 33 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
Candlewick, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
22 × 33 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
Perimeter, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
22 × 33 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
On the Edge of Time, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
24 × 33 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
Burr, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
33 × 27 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
Parlour, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
24 × 33 cm
Available
Gemma Dagger
Circle Dance, 2026
Archival Pigment Print
Limited Edition 1/1
33 × 25 cm
Available
Matthew Arthur Williams
Perspectives I, 2026
Giclée print, Limited Edition 1/10
40 × 60.5 cm
Available
Matthew Arthur Williams
Further Than Here, 2026
Giclée print, Limited Edition 1/10
40 × 60.5 cm
Available
Matthew Arthur Williams
Perspectives III
Giclée print, Limited Edition 1/10
40 × 60.5 cm
Available
Matthew Arthur Williams
Under The Brow, 2026
Giclée print, Limited Edition 1/10
40 × 60.5 cm
Available

The Exhibition


Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)
Install Documentation by Matthew Arthur Williams (2026)

About the Artists
Gemma Dagger Gemma Dagger (b. Dumfries, 1982) is a distinguished photographer and artist whose creative practice is rooted in narrative exploration and social research. She holds an MA in Film and Moving Image Production from the Northern Film School and a BA in Photography from the University of the West of Scotland. 

Exhibitions include: Clo An Tir, Trades Hall, Glasgow (2025), Eastern Ground, Strangefield, Glasgow (2023), Street Level Open, Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow (2022, 2019), Queer Constellations, MERL, Reading (2021), Skelling, Skeklers and Guizing, The Scottish Storytelling Centre, Edinburgh (2019), Focas: Document, National Institute of Design, Gandhinagar, India, An Lanntair, Stornoway, Platform, Glasgow (2018) Halloween Past and Present, Museum of Witchcraft and Magic, Cornwall (2017), Departures, Street Level Photoworks/ Hillhead Library (2016), Futureproof, Streetlevel Photoworks Glasgow (2014), As Above, So Below, South Block, Glasgow (2013). 

Matthew Arthur Williams Matthew Arthur Williams (b. 1989) is a London born artist, photographer and DJ living and working in Glasgow. Often collaborating with others, Williams’ work typically incorporates photography, moving image and sound. In his first institutional solo exhibition, Soon Come (2022) at DCA, Dundee, Williams combined archive material with filmed documentary footage, interviews with family members and self-portraiture to explore the complex histories tied to people and place, particularly those of Jamaica and Stoke-on-Trent. 

Recent solo shows include presentations at Stills: Centre for Photography and Primary, Nottingham both in 2025. His work has been included in the exhibitions: CONTAINER, Slugtown, Newcastle (2026), Still Glasgow at Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, (2025) Lives Less Ordinary, at Two Temple Place, London (2025) Digging In Another Time, Derek Jarman’s Modern Nature, at the Hunterian, Glasgow (2024), Five By Five at Incubator, London (2024) and Pictures of Us, Gathering, London (2023). Other presentations have been at Viborg Kunsthal, Denmark (2021); Edinburgh Art Festival (2021); Jupiter Artland, Edinburgh (2021); Schau Fenster, Berlin, Germany (2020); Taigh Chearsabhagh, North Uist (2020); Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow (2019); and Transmission Gallery, Glasgow (2017). 


About Let it Come Down
In the Tibetan Book of the Dead, the ‘bardos’ are described as a series of transitional states between death and rebirth. Experienced through a spectrum of visions, dreams and apparitions, the bardos are also said to occur within the gaps of everyday existence. Let it Come Down draws loosely on this dreamlike condition. Both Dagger and Williams conjure a world unmoored, approaching the landscape as a waiting room between sequences of time and states of mind. 

In his selection of photographic stills, Williams composes a spatial double-act between luminous daylight and the dark matter of the earth. Shot in the Spring of 2025 whilst walking the Borders, he engaged with the topography directly. The location in the series – the Cheviot Hills – straddles the Anglo-Scottish border between Northumberland and the Scottish Borders. 

By contrast, Gemma Dagger uses her source material to create imagined places. Working on the edge of forests throughout the south-west of Dumfries and Galloway, her monochrome photographs evoke a rural idyll saturated with ancient forces. Communal rituals and choreographed movement unfold in woodlands and walled gardens, among bluebells and branches. Somnambulant daydreams exist on the edge of time. 

Both series are affected by an invisible gravitational pull. In Dagger’s Kir Tree, a Fastigiata Yew stands on Neolithic terrain, its central axis drawing the viewer inexorably into orbit. Meanwhile, Williams' Further Than Here is tilted directly into the mouth of the Cheviot Hills, upending the horizon line. The descent is contrasted by Perspectives I, whose waves of light embody a ‘thin space’— the Celtic term for a place where the boundary between heaven and earth collapses.




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ShapeeroMurray
Andy Murray
Beth Shapeero
2026