The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Surveying the artist’s ‘Truths’

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is a word so contaminat­ed these days by hype, misunderst­anding and sales talk, it’s tempting sometimes to think we should try doing without it. Until you remember that it’s the one word spacious enough to contain what Dial does.”

Reporting from Bessemer, the Alabama industrial town outside Birmingham that has been Dial’s base since he was a teen, The New York Times mused that the self-taught artist’s “marginaliz­ation” by the contempora­ry art establishm­ent “may not last much longer.”

Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., a folk art collector and friend of Dial’s for several decades, sounded a similar note after touring “Hard Truths” at Charlotte’s Mint Museum during the Democratic convention.

“Some people call it outsider art, but I think it should be included in ‘inside art,’ not just outside,” said Lewis, whose civil rights activism was commemorat­ed by Dial in a public art work spanning 42 feet.

“The Bridge” was dedicated in 2005 in Freedom Park at Freedom Parkway and Ponce de Leon Avenue.

Now 84, Dial himself represents a bridge to another time, another South, another kind of art-making.

Born in Emelle, in the heart of western Alabama’s Black Belt region (so named for its black soil that supported cotton plantation­s before the Civil War), he was working in the fields by age 6. He left school at age 12, still in the third grade.

After the death of the great-grandmothe­r who raised him, Dial and a half-brother went to live with a relative in Bessemer. There he worked a series of blue-collar jobs that enhanced his natural handiness and propensity to transform scavenged items into new “things.” Then, he began a long career as a metalworke­r at the Pullman Standard boxcar factory.

When those things overflowed the home of his growing family, his wife threatened to leave him if he didn’t dump the “junk.” Even his kids sometimes scratched their heads over what their dad was creating on any given day.

Discourage­d, Thornton Dial buried many of his early creations.

“When you start doing something and don’t nobody pay attention to it, you’ll throw it away, too,” he explained during a visit to the High for opening weekend festivitie­s.

A shared influence

Dial’s biography is far from those of the artists included in the High Museum exhibit next door in the Wieland Pavilion, “Fast Forward: Modern Moments, 1913-2013.” One artist in that show, the late Robert Rauschenbe­rg, did, however, take some cues for his foundobjec­t pieces from African-American “yard show” assemblage­s he saw as a boy in Port Arthur, Texas. Ditto Dial in Alabama.

The debate over where the self-taught artist fits in the art world firmament goes back at least to 1993, when Dial was the subject of major simultaneo­us New York exhibition­s at the Museum of American Folk Art and the New Museum for Contempora­ry Art. With ecstatic reviews coming in, Dial seemed poised for liftoff.

But his trajectory was almost immediatel­y interrupte­d when “60 Minutes” aired a segment that suggested white At- lanta art dealer William Arnett financiall­y took advantage of black selftaught artists. A believer in the dealer to this day, Dial, who appeared on camera only briefly, found Morley Safer’s questions condescend­ing.

The artist spoke volumes about the report in a large, wall-mounted assemblage, “Strange Fruit: Channel 42,” one of the darkest pieces in “Hard Truths.” In it, a male figure clad in white shirt and blood-red tie hangs from a TV antenna, his mouth a circle of anguish recalling Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.” Below the lynched figure are rows of ripped cloths — rags being a recurring metaphor in the artist’s work for people and things discarded by society.

Made fragile in recent years by a stroke and other maladies, Dial had a hard time discussing “Strange Fruit,” or, for that matter, any of the “Hard Truths” works during his High visit.

Now requiring a wheelchair, he was rolled into the Chambers Wing by 57-year-old son Richard Dial and trailed by six other family members, several of whom live with and help care for him in Bessemer.

Strikingly handsome still, he sported a navy suit, a starched white shirt and a warm smile. His almond-hued eyes made frequent contact, and when he smiled, which he did often, something of Rhett Butler’s gambler spirit was on exhibit.

Even in his healthier days, Dial, who had hardly visited a museum before his work was shown in them and isn’t conversant in the high-flown dialogue spoken there, was content to let his art speak for itself.

On this morning, he answered many questions, admittedly posed by an unfamiliar questioner in an unfamiliar setting, with “Right.”

Asked about the “60 Minutes” report, he responded cheerily, “Well, I felt good. I had did it, you know what I’m saying?”

Richard patiently tried to rephrase the reporter’s question. “He’s talking about the ‘60 Minutes’ and how they had all the negative things that kept going on and on,” the son nudged.

“I understand,” Dial said, without elaboratin­g further.

Joanne Cubbs, the Indianapol­is Museum of Art adjunct American art curator who organized “Hard Truths,” had plenty to say about the report.

“They not only distorted the relationsh­ip between (the dealer and artists), but they made Dial appear — and here’s the real racist text of the piece — as if he was a bumbling, inarticula­te fool who was making work that was not art,” the sunny curator said with sudden fire.

“This assault changed the course of Dial’s career. Everything evaporated that had been on the menu. He went into an extended period where he was working in isolation,” Cubbs said.

Still, Dial was featured in the prestigiou­s Whitney Biennial in 2000, and individual collectors from both the folk and contempora­ry sides of the art fence never stopped pursuing his work. While drawings on paper can be scored for as low as $2,000, some museum-worthy constructi­ons come with price tags in the neighborho­od of $100,000, according to Folk Fest founder Steve Slotin.

As well, the artist is now represente­d in the permanent collection­s of leading museums including the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum, the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art and the High.

Yet, if it’s taken nearly 20 years for Dial finally to achieve another moment with “Hard Truths,” Cubbs says she believes it’s more than time healing all wounds. She credits a greater openness over those years by museum-goers and collectors, dealers and curators to accept art outside the mainstream, applying fewer distancing labels.

“One of the interestin­g things about this exhibition is that, from the very beginning of planning, we didn’t talk about Dial as a folk, self-taught or even an African-American artist,” the curator said. “We talked about him as a contempora­ry artist or as an American artist.”

Taken on their own terms, the works resonate with Dial’s fierce intelligen­ce and reveal his remarkable mastery of materials.

They cover topics including racial oppression, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassinat­ion, the Iraq War, 9/11 and, in the show’s most stirringly intimate piece, the 2005 death of his wife, Clara Mae Murrow.

“His work is meant to inspire,” Cubbs ex-

Belated discovery

In the late 1980s, after Dial met Arnett through a fellow artist, the art world finally began paying attention to his works that mix personal, art historical and metaphysic­al themes to differing degrees.

Richard Dial recalled some early tour bus visitors who were brought to tears by an MLK-themed constructi­on of his father’s.

“They were laying down on the ground just crying, they were so moved,” Richard said. “Now at that point you start to think (maybe there’s something special here). That was the time when everybody started taking him a lot more seriously.”

As a teenager, Richard and his two brothers, who’d rather have been playing basketball, begrudged it when their father made them help in the shop.

Life came full circle a few years ago when the sons carved out an area of Dial Metal Patterns, their fabricatio­n shop, to provide their father a work space where they could keep eyes on him.

Ailing at times from the mileage of being 84, Dial nonetheles­s goes to the studio nearly every day.

He’s got work to do: The reception for “Hard Times” has sparked two new series, one on natural disasters, which Cubbs said are metaphors for political upheavals, and one on rebirth.

That last topic raised the question of what the artist would like his legacy to be.

A quizzical look swept across his chiseled face.

The query was reposed: How would he like people to think of him after he’s gone?

“Think good of me,” Thornton Dial said, this time without hesitation.

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