Thornton Dial "Viewpoint of the Foundry Man"

Andrew Edlin Gallery

poster for Thornton Dial "Viewpoint of the Foundry Man"

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Andrew Edlin Gallery presents Thornton Dial: Viewpoint of the Foundry Man. The exhibition features approximately fifteen of the artist’s renowned mixed media assemblages, created over the last 3 years.

Thornton Dial’s life has been forged on the hard edge of labor. From handling mules on his cousin’s farm in Alabama, at age five, to his years as a machinist at the Pullman Standard factory building train cars, Dial has developed an ethos of hard work, ingenuity, and fierce independence. Nowhere has this been more evident than in his art.

Dial’s work has historically focused on major social, cultural, political, and economic issues. He has addressed the complex and multilayered subjects of civil rights, women’s rights, and the plight of the poor, and has examined tragedies like the terrorist attacks of 9/11, and the war in Iraq. His work has been a tireless advocate of society’s underdogs, giving voice to the disenfranchised.

Dial, at the age of eighty-four, is in the midst of creating a visual autobiography commemorating the people, places, and events that have shaped his own life. These new works are smaller in scale but not in vision. They take us back to the artist’s boyhood spent in the fields, barns, and homes of rural Emelle, in the western Alabama farmlands. They witness the growth and proliferation of factories, foundries, and mills near Birmingham, which for decades had employed Dial, his brother, and his sons. They take us into the iron and ore mines, but also into Dial’s family life and most intimate thoughts. These paintings are steeped in personal memories of how things once were, from a perspective that only longevity can provide.
Thornton Dial’s art has been featured in numerous solo exhibitions including at The New Museum of American Art, New York (1993), The American Folk Art Museum, New York (1993), and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (2005). His work was also included in the Whitney Biennial in 2000.

[Image: Thornton Dial "Viewpoint of the Foundry Man" (2012) 48 x 60 x 6 in.]

Media

Schedule

from November 10, 2012 to December 29, 2012

Opening Reception on 2012-11-10 from 16:00 to 18:00

Artist(s)

Thornton Dial

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