The Town

Thornton Dial

Object Label

Thornton Dial became a sculptor while constructing railway cars for the Pullman-Standard Company in Bessemer, Alabama, where he remained despite the large-scale Great Migration of African Americans to Northern cities in the wake of the enforced segregation and widespread racialized violence of the Jim Crow era. In The Town, we see a parody of white America—colorful houses and clothes contrast with the violence of the figure who has gouged out their eyes, able to see the hidden truths of racism and brutality underpinning white society.

Caption

Thornton Dial (American, 1928–2016). The Town, 1987. Welded metal, broken glass, window screen, gravel, wire, concrete, Splash Zone epoxy, enamel, spray-paint, wood, overall: 99 lb. (44.91kg) storage (on pallet): 178 in. (452.1 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation from the William S. Arnett Collection, 2018, 2018.28.2.

Gallery

Not on view

Title

The Town

Date

1987

Medium

Welded metal, broken glass, window screen, gravel, wire, concrete, Splash Zone epoxy, enamel, spray-paint, wood

Classification

Sculpture

Dimensions

overall: 99 lb. (44.91kg) storage (on pallet): 178 in. (452.1 cm)

Inscriptions

None seen, but bottom of base was not inspected

Credit Line

Gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation from the William S. Arnett Collection, 2018

Accession Number

2018.28.2

Have information?

Have information about an artwork? Contact us at

bkmcollections@brooklynmuseum.org.