David Hall studied at
Leicester College of Art and the
Royal College of Art. During the 1960s he worked as a sculptor and showed his work internationally. and by 1975 had transformed this into the first time based media degree course in UK. In 1976 he made
This is a Television Receiver, transmitted by
BBC television. Here David Hall revisited the theme of his classic
This is a Video Monitor made in 1973. Other works by artists had been broadcast by now, but Hall set out to turn the domestic television set into a form of video sculpture through the intervention of his transmitted images. Hall has sculpture, films, videotapes, installations and/or related material in the collections of the Tate Gallery London, Museum of Modern Art New York, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia Madrid, Gemeente Museum The Hague, West Australia Art Gallery Perth, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Arts Council of England, Contemporary Arts Society, British Film Institute, Great South West Corporation Atlanta USA, Richard Feigen Gallery New York, Visual Resources Inc. New York, Royal College of Art, Harvard University, ZKM Karlsruhe, and other public and private collections worldwide. Films and videotapes held by Lux London, National Film and Television Archive, Rewind Archive Scotland, and the Venice Biennale Archive. In January 2012 David Hall received the inaugural
Samsung Art+ Lifetime Achievement Award from an international jury at a British Film Institute celebratory event. Tate acquired his iconic work 'TV Interruptions' (aka '7 TV Pieces) in 2014, and featured it (coincidentally) during the month of his death at TATE Britain. Richard Saltoun Gallery, London showed a selection of his work from July 17–14 August 2015,
David Hall Situations Envisaged, curated by
Stephen Partridge. ==References==