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LONDON Programme 2026
OPENING TIMES
Thursday - Friday  11am - 6pm
Saturday  12-5pm

April 2 
Gavin Wade: L is for Landscape

Without Dirt
Ella Belenky, Harun Morrison , Oona Wilkinson 

EVENT
Gavin Wade
Songs of the Modern World - III release

May 1
David Blamey
Matthew Cornford
Schirin Kretschmann



May 2
Genre [machine] Painting
Andee Collard

May 16
The Taraxacum officinale
Growth Growth Growth!
Hilary Jack

May 23
Old Skool - Artist Talk 2-5pm

May 28
Saulius Leonavičius invites
Jez Dolan,  Lewis Graham, Joanne Masding.
Paul Vivien, more to folow...

May 30
Pallet Show
Daniel Pryde-Jarman

June 4
Old Europe2
Saulius Leonavičius

June 6
Ostalgie Reading Room
-Performance
Old Europe2 - Artist Talk
2-5pm

June 11
Angelina May Davis
Ceder Lewisohn

June 11
Andrew Lacon

June 20 -21
Film Weekend
Céline Berger, Priscila Fernandes,
Duncan Poultan, more to follow...

June 27
Old England - Artist Talk 2-4pm

-end-

2025

NewsRoom News on Demand
The Myth of Barter
Minor Attractions
Village Greens . . 
DreamLife
Stop the Chaos Turn the Page
The Nasty Book

2024

Preserving Hole
Dreaming Upon a White Stone
More News About Flowers
Crate on Pallet 
Tree & Leaf
Imagine What We Can Do Tomorrow
Hyper_DEFLATION
P.A.L
Pressing
Songs of the Modern World
Cool - Warm - Hot
Fayre Share Fayre
NHS
Abstract Kab - Radical Plagerism
Council of Voices : Vanley Burke
Collected Domestic Conceptualism

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P.A.L
Angelina May Davis

Restoration
at Norton & Sons
(below)


P.A.L : The 1970’s were an era where exposure to television was a deliberate and shared experience. At this time the UK had three channels; BBC1, BBC2 and ITV, the VCR was not available to a domestic market and television ownership reached 97.5% by 1979. Davis’ recollection of TV as a child is cited as one of the earliest influences and interest in narrative, she describes this narrative as slow, deliberate and awkward with gaps or intermissions, space to speculate, to change channel up close to the screen (television remote controls were an 1980’s update.) There are strong associations that one has with a particular visual form from a dimly remembered past. We respond to the world through internalized colour memories and visual languages; In Davis’ case; a world mediated through a small family television set using the Phase Alternating Line (PAL) system which had a resolution of 625 lines and a very particular chroma and aesthetic.

In recent work Davis is revisiting the rural English landscape of the 1970’s, fabricating landscapes from multiple sources including recollection, old television footage, site visits, plein air drawing and found imagery.

At odds with the political unrest of the 1970’s Davis’ landscapes are seemingly benign, perhaps depicturing an idea of Englishness, that can have an uncomfortable association in contemporary British life. Real, remembered or imagined, a closer look at Davis’ landscapes reveal nods to a burgeoning class consciousness and the collapse of modernity, one such trope is Davis’ ambiguous claustrophobic compositions, a refusal to leave the confines of a place where the imagining happens (nd), in her youth it was the front room where she watched TV with her family, here, now her paintings often feature the artist’s studio interior that reveal the good stuff, the edges and hidden space.

Norton & Sons

Division of Labour and Norton & Sons are proud to present Restoration, a new series of paintings by the artist Angelina May Davis.

In recent work Davis is revisiting the rural English landscape of the 1970's, she is ‘Restoring’ the Elm, a tree that has been decimated by Dutch Elm disease in the artist's lifetime. By fabricating new landscapes, taking images from multiple sources including old television footage, site visits, plein air drawing and found imagery her work uses the English Elm as a symbol for a lost (or a fetishized) idea of England. Historically, the Elm features in the history of Savile Row and Mayfair, woodland and reports of fruit trees wer once found on this site, prior to a 32 acre purchase by the Merchant Tailor, William Maddox in 1622. 

At around the same time, the 17th century saw landscape paintin gaining more prominence and weight in Europe, as the discipline challenged the hierarchy of portraiture and religious and mythological allegory. Poussin would entertain a new Britis mobility amongst the aristocracy and their love of the Grand Tour making way for the movements Rococo and Romanticism.