Jim Dine was born in Cincinnati, Ohio
in 1935. He grew up in what he regards as the beautiful landscape of the Midwest, a tone and time to which he returns constantly.
He studied at the University of Cincinnati and the Boston Museum School and
received his BFA from Ohio University in 1957.
Dine, renowned for his wit and
creativity as a Pop and Happenings artist, has a restless, searching intellect
that leads him to challenge himself constantly. Over four decades, Dine has
produced more than three thousand paintings, sculptures, drawings, and prints,
as well as performance works, stage and book designs, poetry, and even music.
His art has been the subject of numerous individual and group shows and is in
the permanent collections of museums around the world.
Dine's earliest art -
Happenings and an incipient form of pop art - emerged against the backdrop of
abstract expressionism and action painting in the late 1950s. Objects, most
importantly household tools, began to appear in his work at about the same time;
a hands-on quality distinguished these pieces, which combine elements of
painting, sculpture, and installation, as well as works in various other media,
including etching and lithography. Through a restricted range of obsessive
images, which continue to be reinvented in various guises - bathrobe, heart,
outstretched hand, wrought-iron gate, and Venus de Milo - Dine presents
compelling stand-ins for himself and mysterious metaphors for his art.
The human body conveyed though
anatomical fragments and suggested by items of clothing and other objects,
emerges as one of Dine's most urgent subjects. Making use of the language of
expressionism and applying it to themes concerning the artist as a creative but
solitary individual, Dine ultimately asserts himself as a
late-20th Century heir to the romantic tradition.