"Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest" represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine’s portrayal of his family and friends. Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest, organized by the Bowdoin ...
Installation view of Jim Dine: Three Ships at Templon, New York. Pictured: Tampa Tool Reliefs series (1974), cast aluminum; suite of five panels, 26.5 x 28.5 x 2 inches each, edition of nine (all ...
"I’m just a lone wolf," says Jim Dine. Dinner is being prepared at his house in the Blue Mountain foothills of Walla Walla, Washington, which he shares with his wife, the photographer Diana Michener.
Please be advised that due to recent global shipping events, there may be fulfillment delays during the post-sale process. The present work is a large scale hand colored woodcut by the American artist ...
SOUTH BEND — Smudgy, expressive lines and shadows give Jim Dine’s prints and paintings a rough-hewn, human feeling, a glimpse into an iconic artist who helped to define the Pop Art movement of the ...
Feeling the urgency to create even after more than six decades, 88-year-old Jim Dine doesn’t take holidays as there is just too little time, preferring instead to put his hands to work each day to ...
A pioneer of pop art and one of the early instigators in the “Happening” movement, Jim Dine, is probably best known for his “heart” series. Once as ubiquitous as Keith Haring’s dancing figures, they ...
Opening the exhibition is a self-portrait by the artist, completed recently. Reflecting on his long career, Dine observes: “I’m interested in the passage of time. I don’t mean metaphysically; I mean ...
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