Portobello Road Arts Project

The Portobello Road Arts Project is a series of year-round artist commissions for the Portobello Road North Wall linking North Kensington’s Portobello Road and Golborne markets.

The project aims to help regenerate the Golborne area through creating a visual link between Portobello Road Market and Golborne Road Market. The project hopes through this to encourage visitors to continue their journeys further up Portobello Road to discover the vibrant Golborne area.

Brief for artists commission:

The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea is seeking to commission a work of photography for the Portobello Road North Wall to be installed for approximately six months from October 2012 – subject to planning permission.

Proposals must be submitted by email by 12pm Friday 15 June 2012. More information on the event flyer [PDF] (file size 158Kb).

Current commissions

Atom Rooms

2 April 2012

After a three month absence, The Atom Rooms was recently restored to the North Wall of Portobello Road.

The 40 panel, 100m artwork, which was removed in January following a spate of vandalism, will now remain in place until May 2012.

It forms part of the Council’s Portobello Road Arts Project, a series of temporary commissions for the North Wall which links the Portobello with Golborne market. 

The Atom Rooms is the fifth in the series and replicates the works of artists formerly exhibited at the nearby gallery of the same name.

Amongst other things, the Portobello Road Arts Project aims to promote the work of local artists and encourage visitors to continue their journeys up the Portobello Road so that they discover the lesser known but equally vibrant Golborne market.

 


Previous shows

Natasha Mason and Teresa Crawley


Portobello ReCollection
14 October 2010

The fourth commission of the Portobello Road Arts Project is ‘Portobello ReCollection’ by the artists Natasha Mason and Teresa Crawley.

The artwork transforms the 100-metre long wall at the northern end of Portobello Road into W11's own private record collection - a giant shelf of records representing the defining songs of Notting Hill, as identified through collaboration with DJs, musicians, record labels, stall holders and local historians.

Creating an explosion of colour and type design, this celebration of the rich musical heritage of Notting Hill emphasises the connection between the place, its people and its music.

Please visit Portobello ReCollection.

Claire Morgan

Mandala

1 April 2010

The third commission of the Portobello Road Arts Project is ‘Mandala’ by the artist Claire Morgan.

Morgan’s work is made up of around fifteen images, taken of a sculptural work made by the artist and consisting of fresh fruit from the Portobello market suspended in symmetrical patterns and photographed over a period of two weeks as it decays.

The images paint a simple metaphor, of life leading to decay and ultimately leading to new life in turn, a theme reflected in the title Mandala – translated from the Sanskrit word for circle.

Liane Lang

La Muralla

15 July to 14 September 2009

The next commission to be displayed on the wall is by local artist Liane Lang.

Lang’s work consists of a 60 metre long vinyl print displaying fifty consecutive images akin to film stills. The images show the Dominican Convent, now the Spanish School and the wall that surrounds it, which is opposite the site of the work. The images display fleeting scenes of the street taken from sunrise to sunset on Valentine’s Day 2009.

The only steady feature in the images is a figure, reclining on top of the wall, which remains unmoving throughout and the images depict varying responses from passers by. Some stride by, some pause, point or pose with the lonely figure, which is just out of reach. The result is a series of accidental portraits, capturing market traders, residents, shoppers, council workers and tourists who happen to pass this long stretch of road between the two walls that lead from Portobello Road Market to Golborne Road Market.

Hew Locke

Share

24 April to 26 June 2009

The first commission to be displayed on the wall was 'Share' by the artist Hew Locke.

'Share' featured a series of giant share certificates with relevance to the mix of cultures, businesses and produce available in the local area.

The certificates have been investigated and transformed by the Locke to provide a commentary on the fascinating history and movement of money, power and ownership across the globe, linking our home and consumption with lands far away.
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Please email arts@rbkc.gov.uk with any comments or feedback.