Tom Wall (artist)

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Tom Wall (30 May 1941 – 5 October 1992) was a British landscape painter and educator.

Biography

Born in Balham, London, England, Wall moved with his family to Bryhonddu in Wales at the age of 10, later studying at Newport College of Art and the Slade School of Fine Art in London. It is believed that the countryside around Abergavenny inspired his enduring relationship with art and landscape. Wall spent most of his teaching career at Cleveland College of Art and Design, arriving in 1968 and staying for 23 years, ending up as principal lecturer for art. He retired in August 1991 to devote the rest of his life to his beloved art. He was described as a "painter of great talent with a remarkable personal vision" by Kenneth Clark, who also said he was "a natural painter who is also a poet". The major body of Wall's work was entitled "Visionary Landscapes" and he was highlighted as "a true artist on the verge, perhaps of visions so transitive that they become revelations" by the Yorkshire Post. He also produced other series such as "Journey Paintings", "Symphony in Colour" and "Fantasy Landscapes". His 1985 exhibition at the Warminster Arts Centre (organised by a former pupil, John Henshaw) was nearly a sell-out. One of his largest works in that exhibition (6' × 4') was sold to the local Warminster Hospital where it still hangs. Wall's last exhibition was held jointly with a former pupil of Cleveland College of Art and Design, Mackenzie Thorpe at St. Martin in the Fields Gallery, London, 28 June – 11 July 1992. Thorpe later said of Wall, "His style (of working) made a great impression on me and was the beginning of what I have gone on to do."

Exhibitions

Wall contributed to the following exhibitions:

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