Sartorial Contemporary Art presents Notting Heaven



13 Dec 2007 to 19 Jan 2008
Tues to Sat 1:30 - 6:30pm
OpeningWednesday 12th December 6.30-9pm
Sartorial Contemporary Art
101 A .Kensington Church St.
W8 7LN
London
United Kingdom
Europe
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Artists in this exhibition: Maxwell Attenborough, Andrew Bannister, Julie Bennett, Gemma Cumming, Tomas Downes, Sarah Dwyer, Stephen Harwood, Mikey Georgeson, Takayuki Hara, Martin Lea Brown, Peter Lamb, Ursula Llewellyn , Martin McGinn, Nathan 80, Stephen Peirce, Linda Persson, Fran Richardson, Gretta Sarfaty Marchant, Martin Sexton, Terry Smith, Ruth Uglow, James Unsworth, Stephen Walter


Notting Heaven
“Heaven is living in a nice house with a garden in West London"

23 artists transplanted from East to West have made new work for an extraordinary show about class, place, and social mobility.

Notting Heaven is about aspiration, about the relationship between artists and the place they show in, about Notting Hill representing paradise for our consumer society. Rachel Johnson, Boris's sister, has written a book called Notting Hell. The Guardian said “Hell is not other people: hell is books like Notting Hell.”

The problem with showing contemporary art in Notting Hill is not that there aren't lots of rich people here to buy it, or that the gallery is too far from the tube. The problem is that in Notting Hill you might walk into a gallery and buy a landscape, a portrait, or a vase, but you are unlikely to find the next new big thing. Cutting edge galleries are expected to be immaculate white spaces in grimy areas where artists used to live. Somehow the dislocation of expensive art to slightly less expensive areas confirms its authenticity, like finding a truffle in the muck, or a diamond in a coal mine, or a needle in a haystack.

Nevertheless here we are in Notting Hill with a show to put on! The idea is that there is no better place to skewer the bourgeoisie than here. Where all the sunglassed botoxed celebs, glittering bugaboo pushing scrummy mummies, ruddy cheeked teenagers, old men in tweed, and standard issue upper classes can have a chance to be outraged or nonplussed by art without being sure why it has invaded their neighbourhood.

Notting Hill represents all that we can ever desire. If you really succeed in life, or your ancestors did, you can live here, it's not Notting Hell, it's Notting Heaven!

Curated by Jasper Joffe.

Sartorial Contemporary Art will be launching its magazine “The Rebel” with an issue on Class, to coincide with Notting Heaven. “The Rebel” will include an exclusive feature on The Artworld's 50 least important people, an interview with George Galloway and Matthew Collings on where he comes from.

Opening Party will include heavenly performance by Mister Solo and friends