Trailer test

[slideshow_deploy id=’79’]

 

The Brian Wall Foundation was established in 2014 by the British-born, American sculptor Brian Wall (b. 1931), to benefit working artists in financial need. Awards funded by the Foundation are administered by other non-profit organizations that recognize artistic merit and provide assistance for personal or professional financial need, or both.

AN IMPROBABLE ODYSSEY: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF BRIAN WALL: 6-minute Trailer

Produced by Brian Wall Foundation and directed by Peter Stern, the 60-minute documentary has been selected by the Palm Springs Architecture Design Art Film Festival, the Venice, California, Fine Arts Film Festival, the Berlin International Art Film Festival, and the Sacramento International Film Festival for 2022. It was a Semi Finalist in the FilmArte Film Festival in Berlin and in the Blow-up Arthouse Film Fest in Chicago in 2023. Please contact the foundation for screening availability.

    

     

Privacy Policy

Brian Wall Foundation respects the privacy of those accessing its website. The Foundation is taking this opportunity to communicate its privacy and data policies, responsive to the European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), effective May, 2018.

Brian Wall Foundation does not share, trade, distribute or sell information or data to anyone. Inquiries are private and confidential to the extent permitted by law. The Foundation does not track or record users who access other sites through links on the Brian Wall Foundation site. Contact those sites for their respective privacy policies. If you have questions about this privacy policy, please contact our office.

Photographs

Portraits of Brian Wall

St. Ives, Cornwall, 1960

London, 1965
Photo by Adrian Flowers

Thornaby, England, 1968
Photo by Sylvia Brown

Emeryville, California, 2015
Photo by Nicole Katano

Sculptures by Brian Wall

Red Black on White, 1955
Painted wood relief
21” x 23 1/2” x 3” h

Standing Form I, 1958
Steel
4” x 17” x 23” h

Brown Bomber, 1965
Oil-based enamel on steel
216” x 60” x 36” h
Photo by M. Lee Fatherree

Blue Diamond, 1968
Oil-based enamel on steel
156” x 181” x 60” h
Photo by M. Lee Fatherree

Window, 1971
Collection: Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Painted steel
240” x 162” x 98” h

Early Yellow, 1975
Private collection
Painted steel
17” x 48” x 65” h

Ali, 1978
Collection: University of Houston, Texas
Painted steel
144” x 144” x 180” h

Dancer Dancer, 1983
Painted steel
132” x 173” x 173” h
Photo by Ben Blackwell

Red End, 1991
Painted steel
36” x 33” x 24” h
Photo by M. Lee Fatherree

Hokusai, 1993
Painted steel
71” x 72” x 14” h
Photo by M. Lee Fatherree

Long Ball, 2010
Stainless steel
115” x 84” x 68” h
Photo by Brian Wall

Elegy, 2012
Collection: de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University
Stainless steel
122” x 84” x 63” h
Photo by Tena Scalph

Pike, 2014
Stainless steel
72” x 84” x 123” h
Photo by Brian Wall

White Edge, 2018
Stainless steel
90” x 138” x 82” h
Photo by Douglas Brown