Jim Dine, Black Ink Robe is an Original Lithograph in six colors, from the signed and numbered limited edition of 200.
Jim Dine has created a vocabulary out of subjects that have a child-like appeal, such as tools, birds, and hearts. These personally nostalgic symbols are also commonplace and universal, creating work that is both autobiographical and open to interpretation. Dine was also instrumental in the first “Happenings,” a progenitor of Performance art. These Happenings challenged the seriousness and elitism of Abstract Expressionism, de-emphasizing the art object in favor of a performative, interactive, process. Over his career, Dine has both questioned the status of the artwork and continued a tradition of making work full of symbolism and allegory.
Dine is inspired by the power of simple images to be both familiar and symbolic. His repetitions of tools, bathrobes, or hearts are easily understood by the viewer, while also suggesting deeper layers of meaning. He often works with subjects and images from his childhood, giving his work both a sense of innocence and shared nostalgia.
Title | Black Ink Robe |
---|---|
Medium | Lithograph |
Year | 2005 |
Edition | 200 |
Catalogue Raisonné | NA |
Signature | Signed |
Size | 25.5 x 19 (in) 65 x 48.5 (cm) |
Price | Price on Request |
Jim Dine, Black Ink Robe is an Original Lithograph in six colors, from the signed and numbered limited edition of 200.
Jim Dine has created a vocabulary out of subjects that have a child-like appeal, such as tools, birds, and hearts. These personally nostalgic symbols are also commonplace and universal, creating work that is both autobiographical and open to interpretation. Dine was also instrumental in the first “Happenings,” a progenitor of Performance art. These Happenings challenged the seriousness and elitism of Abstract Expressionism, de-emphasizing the art object in favor of a performative, interactive, process. Over his career, Dine has both questioned the status of the artwork and continued a tradition of making work full of symbolism and allegory.
Dine is inspired by the power of simple images to be both familiar and symbolic. His repetitions of tools, bathrobes, or hearts are easily understood by the viewer, while also suggesting deeper layers of meaning. He often works with subjects and images from his childhood, giving his work both a sense of innocence and shared nostalgia.
Title | Black Ink Robe |
---|---|
Medium | Lithograph |
Year | 2005 |
Edition | 200 |
Catalogue Raisonné | NA |
Signature | Signed |
Size | 25.5 x 19 (in) 65 x 48.5 (cm) |
Price | Price on Request |