FRANCE-LISE MCGURN: BAD TV

MASSIMODECARLO is pleased to present Bad TV, the first solo exhibition in Asia by Scottish artist France-Lise McGurn.

November 19 – March 13, 2026

For years, McGurn has mined film and television for visual cues - what she calls “shit TV,” the everyday cultural detritus that lodges deep in the psyche. But Bad TV is the first time that source material appears literally in her work. Two new printed canvases, Credits and MOvie sTillS, shown here for the first time, are made using bootleg reprints of vintage movie posters- fragments from The Goodbye Girl (1977), a film she watched on repeat as a teenager. These off-cut credits, the “directed by…” and “starring…” that usually scroll past unnoticed, now become the backdrop for her painted figures.

Other works tune into the visual texture of pop culture’s past. Test Card F recalls the eerie BBC image of a young girl and her toy clown, once broadcast during off-air hours and now a kind of national subconscious.

McGurn also leans into repetition, the daily rerun, the loop. Sometimes life feels too strange to accept, and people say, “It’s like a bad film.” Tropes in TV, soap opera and film are used as a ‘bail out’, a dissociation to reality in all its complexities.

Other works echo that push and pull between the screen and the body. Levis, painted on denim, captures a cultural attitude, and what she calls “the iconography of cool and rebellion” - her first time painting on the material. Living Apart Together includes collage made with her daughter’s leggings printed with Elsa from Frozen, sealed in bio-resin. Its title is borrowed from a 1982 Scottish film by Charlie Gormley, shot partly in McGurn’s family home. The work ties generations together through the domestic: TV, repetition, and memory.

Elsewhere, Frog depicts a woman crouched close to the ground. The title comes from the French translation grenouille. Striking a dialogue with Rodin’s The Crouching Woman (1882), it’s a quiet nod that also connects to her upcoming two-year commission with the Rodin Museum in Philadelphia.

McGurn’s world is made of these cultural layers - sitcoms, films, pop lyrics, overheard fragments, flashes of Glasgow interiors, and everyday popular culture. She takes what’s nostalgic and pulls it back into the present, half-faded and still alive. Bad TV gathers all that background noise - the images that raised us, the screens that shaped how we see and feel - and leaves them running, cracked but still glowing.

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