
Thornton
Dial, sometimes called Buck Dial, is an
Afro-American artist who creates
sculptural objects, large assemblages using found objects. He also uses
pastels and paints on small to large sized artist papers. Dial has deep
convictions concerning racial, religious, political, and social valves
which he expresses brilliantly in his work. Thornton Dial has had one man
shows in New York City and Houston. He is recognized as one of the
greatest living self-taught artists in the United States. Dial only
began seriously making art after his retirement. Thornton Dial Sr. is
one of a handful of artists that will bridge the chasm of self-taught
verses trained artists. His brilliant work begs the question of artistic
training. Dial's work is as thoughtful, thought provoking and timeless
as the best of contemporary art in the universe. Thornton Dial Sr.
attended school through the fourth grade and neither reads nor writes.
He is married and has three sons and two
daughters.
Thornton Dial worked for the Pullman Standard Company for thirty
years. He did iron work, cement work, a jack-of-all- trades. He worked
in and around Bessemer, Alabama, finally starting his own family
business making painted steel furniture. Dial is the
"patriarch" of a clan of noted folk artists including his son, Thornton
Dial Jr., known as "Little Buck", and Richard Dial. “Little Buck” Dial
began his artistic activity about 1986, inspired by works of art in his
father’s backyard. |
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Dial Sr. first came into the spotlight after being discovered and promoted by folk art collector Bill Arnett. A prolific art dealer, Arnett was virtually excommunicated from the Atlanta art scene in the mid-1980s. Arnett turned his sights to collecting art from African-American "folk artists." He became, as Morley Safer labeled him, "the king of outsider art." Because Arnett loudly promotes certain African-American vernacular artists as "better than Picasso, better than Matisse" he is often dismissed as the P.T. Barnum of the 21st century art world. Others believe he is a prescient genius who is championing an art form that is as important to the art continuum as blues and jazz were to music. Those putting Arnett in the "genius" category, in fact, compare him to Alan Lomax the white man credited with "discovering the blues." |
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Arnett
believes there is a conspiracy afoot aimed at keeping African-American
Vernacular Art out of the art history books and at destroying him,
Thornton Dial and their grand, ever-evolving mission. Arnett discovered
Dial's work through self taught artist, Lonnie Holley and he brought
attention of Dial's work to the art world in 1987. It wasn't very long before he was discovered by the outside art world, and showing his artwork at galleries and museums, including The New Museum in New York and the Whitney Biennial. His art functions like folk tales, combining African and American traditions to tell stories that are at once personal, political, and spiritual. Dial's work is stretching the borders of both folk art and modern art. When asked how Buck came to be an artist he replied "I didn't have no real job, so I made a job making art." In the beginning his family laughed at his paintings, he buried them and created many of his works in secrecy. Dial's work is more complex and sophisticated than the naive style so often associated with outsider art. Some of his works often incorporate materials such as rugs matted with paint, furniture and sculptural objects. With more time to make things simply for his own pleasure, Dial started constructing figurative sculptures, then branched out to painting and mixed-media assemblages. |
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Not
long ago, Dial was unaware of the formal meaning of art; yet, he
recently stated in an interview, "Art ain't about paint. It ain't
about canvas. It's about ideas. I have found how to get my ideas out and
I won't stop. I got ten thousand left.". Thornton Dial has this to say
about his artwork: "Art is strange-looking stuff and most people don’t
understand art. Most
people don’t understand my art, the art of Negroes; because most people
don’t understand me, don’t understand the Negroes at all. If everybody
understand one another, wouldn’t nobody make art. Art is something to
open your eyes. Art is for understanding.” Too many people died
without ever getting their mind out to the world. “Thornton Dial,” a
documentary produced and directed by Alabama Public Television’s Celia Carey,
won The Golden Gate Award for Best TV Documentary Short Form at the 2006 San
Francisco International Film Festival. The film was funded by Alabama Power and
the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. “Thornton Dial,” examines the extraordinary life and work of
the artist from Bessemer, Alabama, which is sixteen miles south of
Birmingham. The film also explores Southern African-American improvisational visual art, the
underrated sibling of jazz, the blues and gospel. |
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