[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 82 (Thursday, May 29, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H4914]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE LIFE OF ARTIST THORNTON DIAL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Alabama (Ms. Sewell) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SEWELL of Alabama. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to honor one of
America's most prolific and self-taught artists, Mr. Thornton Dial of
Bessemer, Alabama.
Today at the age of 86, Thornton Dial has lived, worked, and created
art in Alabama for his entire life. From childhood, Dial was creating
symbolically dense pieces of art by using castaway objects, anything he
could find in his environment: pieces of wire, scrap metal, bones, tree
roots. He used his environment to define his environment.
Dial's work provides a forceful and compelling narrative of the most
insidious challenges and remarkable triumphs of African American
history in the Deep South. His work contains layers of rich history and
reflects on race and class struggles that he witnessed in the Deep
South.
Dial rose to prominence in the 1990s while in his sixties through his
large-scale assemblages, paintings that were made of scrap metal,
pipes, very interesting visual interpretation of the history and
politics that he saw around him.
Dial is described as having been one of the most amazing art
biographies in art history. He is described as being a very quiet man,
a listener who dressed impeccably. What he lacked in terms of formal
education he more than made up for in his highly visual and historic
vocabulary.
Dial's created brilliance is truly illuminating and inspiring. Dial
has stayed in Alabama in the heart of the Seventh Congressional
District to live and work his entire life. He was born in 1928 in
Sumter County, Alabama. He was one of 12 children. And in childhood, he
built his own toys because, as he said: We didn't have much.
Thornton began full-time farming at the age of 5. In his early teens,
he was sent to live with his aunt in Bessemer, Alabama, where he
attended Sloss Mining Camp. His peers made fun of him for his large
size and for being ``country.'' His teachers told him that he would
never amount to much.
I want you to know that we in the Seventh Congressional District are
extremely proud of Thornton Dial because we know that he really
interpreted what he saw around him in the Deep South. He interpreted it
in a very creative way, and only now is he gaining such preeminence for
that form of art.
Dial never really made a living as an artist. He worked for over 30
years at the Pullman Standard factory. Yes, he made boxcars for a
living.
``People have fought for freedom all over the world,'' he said. ``I
try to show that struggle. It is a war to be fought. We are trying to
win it.''
In his time off from the Pullman factory, Dial would escape to his
garage or backyard and create masterpieces out of whatever he could
find. Out of fear that people would laugh at his art, he would bury his
work. Later, he would dig it up and deconstruct it and reuse materials
for new masterpieces.
Dial began to dedicate himself to his artwork in 1981. He founded
Dial Metal Patterns, a garden furniture business, with his sons in
1983, after the Pullman Factory closed.
Dial's handmade designs were discovered by Lonnie Holley, a
neighboring Black artist, in 1987. Holley brought Bill Arnett, an
artist himself and a collector of African American art, from Atlanta to
see Dial's work. Arnett helped him to get national attention about his
art. The two finally, working together, agreed on a price for his first
sculpture.
Initially, Dial offered Arnett the piece for $20, and Arnett refused
the low price. He said to Mr. Dial that this piece deserves more than
$20. They agreed on $200. This was the first transaction that Mr. Dial
had as an artist.
Dial's work has been the subject of exhibitions across this country.
At the New Museum of contemporary art and the American Folk Art Museum
in New York. His work can be found in more than 15 public collections,
including those of, among others, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta and
the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. Many, many people now collect his
art. An art form that was considered outside art now is considered
world-class art. With no formal training and education, Dial's powerful
artwork stands out in the world of highly degreed artists.
Dial continues to create art today, and this weekend he will be
honored by his hometown of Bessemer, Alabama. He will be honored as a
great American hero and a great American artist.
I ask my colleagues to join me in honoring this great, wonderful
Alabama treasure, Thornton Dial.
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