Off the Wall (1981 film)
Appearance
Off the Wall is a 1981 Canadian documentary film directed by Derek May and funded and produced by National Film Board of Canada. The film is an anthology of the Toronto art scene, circa 1980–1.[1][2][3] Subjects in the film include art dealer and gallery owner Jack Pollack, artist Mendelson Joe and the art collective General Idea.[4]
Produced by Tom Daly, Off the Wall received the prize for best cinematography at the Festival international du film sur l'art in Montreal.[5]
References
- ^ Clive Robertson -Policy Matters: Administrations of Art and Culture - 0920397360 2006 Page 167 "May's film Off the Wall originally was to be about art schools ("an enquiry into the relationship between the student/artist and society... what is the creative urge?"27) but developed into "a film about art, survival, and the marketplace." May's effort.. "
- ^ Loren Ruth Lerner -Canadian Film and Video: A Bibliography and Guide to the Literature 0802029884 1997 "Il mentionne le film Off the Wall (1981) de Derek May. "
- ^ Revue D'études Canadiennes - Volume 21 - Page 112 1986 "The voice-over describes a scene set in the Louvre out of a Godard film. Off the Wall is an unusual work not only in the condescension displayed toward art institutions, but in its refusal to defend or explain the works that it presents."
- ^ Daudelin, Robert (October 1986). "Derek May : L'École de Brighton". Copie Zéro (in French). 30 (Le documentaire : vers de nouvelles voies).
- ^ "Off the Wall". National Film Board of Canada. 11 October 2012.
External links
- Watch Off the Wall at NFB.ca
Categories:
- 1981 films
- 1981 documentary films
- Documentary films about Toronto
- Documentary films about the visual arts
- National Film Board of Canada documentaries
- Films produced by Tom Daly
- Films directed by Derek May
- 1980s Canadian films
- 1980s Canadian film stubs
- 1980s documentary film stubs
- Canadian documentary film stubs