High and Wide (Carrying the Rats to the Man)

  • Click on image to enlarge

    Photo: Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio
  • Click on image to enlarge

    Photo: Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio
  • Click on image to enlarge

    Photo: Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio
2002
Goat hides, carpet, found metal, clothing, stuffed-animal backpack, barbed wire, upholstery, textbook cover, Splash Zone compound, enamel, and spray paint on canvas on wood
76 x 134 x 13 inches
Collection of
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Museum purchase and gift of the Souls Grown Deep Foundation
Description

In this piece, Dial recalls one of the most horrifying specters in American history and consciousness—the African slave ship. Overall, the work is an ominous scene of entrapment, composed of welded iron bars, chains, and tangled fencing. The golden yellow ship sails are goat hide, a reference to the trade in human chattel, a cargo of human flesh, with a nation’s culpability remembered by the eerie presence of the U.S. flag hanging from the ship’s prow. Chained at center is a disturbing and paradoxical figure: a stuffed Mickey Mouse.

With a dark sense of irony and humor, Dial uses the pop-culture icon as a tongue-in-cheek representation of the slaves, imprisoned down in the ship’s hold like rodents, while the character's contradictory association with childhood play and innocence underscores the brutality of the event. It is also no coincidence that Mickey Mouse is himself black. Appearing here in a smudged blackface and with his traditional white gloves, the familiar figure takes on the additional identity of a black minstrel, whose self-lampooning antics once helped to promulgate America’s racist ideology, a ratting out of his own. Then again, Dial points out that black people survived for centuries by playing the cartoon figure to white world expectations. Acting the jester diffused racist aggression and masked protest. More than a form of enslavement, the black comic guise has been a transgressive rebuttal to its power.

In Dial’s work, history often insinuates itself into the present. Hidden symbols suggest further twists of meaning and connect the events of the past to ongoing struggles. Here, for example, the destination for Dial’s slave vessel is represented by a line of mountains, the artist’s recurring symbol for the daunting obstacles that blacks must continue to overcome, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous “mountain of despair.” At the foot of the mountains is a city scene, not a small town from the eastern seaboard of eighteenth-century America, but a harbor view of a major modern metropolis. The source of the image is the cover of a child’s grammar book titled High and Wide, a reference to the towering realm of the modern urban world, whose grim tenement blocks, housing projects, and rat-infested welfare hotels are contemporary counterparts to the past horrors of Dial’s vast slave ship.