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Jim Dine – The Confetti Heart

Jim Dine, The Confetti Heart is an original color lithograph from The Astra Set. Lithograph with full margins on wove paper. This print is from the signed, numbered, and dated edition of 400.

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.

As Conceptual art was emerging, Dine’s use of iconic forms and repeated symbols attempted to understand how images create meaning. By singling out simple shapes and objects, and depicting them over and over, Dine suggests that they are important subjects for artistic study. Building on Marcel Duchamp’s readymade sculptures, these ordinary objects take on a new, important, meaning solely because they were chosen by the artist and repeatedly studied. Isolating them and framing them in a gallery or museum space, Dine declares them worthy subjects to be celebrated in art, transforming them into something significant. Dine’s work in this conceptual vein transforms Duchamp’s skeptical gesture into part of a sincere investigation on how the artistic process elevates the ordinary.
Title

The Confetti Heart

Year

1985

Medium

Lithograph

Edition

400

Catalogue Raisonné

NA

Signature

Signed

Size 35 x 25 (in)
89 x 63.5 (cm)
Price SOLD
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Description

Jim Dine, The Confetti Heart is an original color lithograph from The Astra Set. Lithograph with full margins on wove paper. This print is from the signed, numbered, and dated edition of 400.

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.
Although his strong graphic style, bright colors, and straightforward, popular imagery have often been connected to Pop art, Dine resisted this connection. He saw his work as an extension of Robert Rauschenberg’s or Jasper Johns‘ Neo-Dada art, questioning the power of iconic symbols, rather than a more simplistic celebration of them.
Dine’s involvement in the earliest “Happenings” extended his influence beyond traditional art media. The Happenings were an important rejection of the solemnity of Abstract Expressionism and a precedent for Performance art. Furthermore, his treatment of the art object as superfluous in these performances contributed to the conceptualism of art and the decentralization of the object, which has influenced much of postmodern art.
As Conceptual art was emerging, Dine’s use of iconic forms and repeated symbols attempted to understand how images create meaning. By singling out simple shapes and objects, and depicting them over and over, Dine suggests that they are important subjects for artistic study. Building on Marcel Duchamp’s readymade sculptures, these ordinary objects take on a new, important, meaning solely because they were chosen by the artist and repeatedly studied. Isolating them and framing them in a gallery or museum space, Dine declares them worthy subjects to be celebrated in art, transforming them into something significant. Dine’s work in this conceptual vein transforms Duchamp’s skeptical gesture into part of a sincere investigation on how the artistic process elevates the ordinary.
Jim Dine, The Confetti Heart

Additional information

Title

The Confetti Heart

Year

1985

Medium

Lithograph

Edition

400

Catalogue Raisonné

NA

Signature

Signed

Size 35 x 25 (in)
89 x 63.5 (cm)
Price SOLD