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Jim Dine
Jim Dine: Five Themes Limited edition red heart poster (Hand Signed by Jim Dine)

1985

About the Item

Jim Dine: Five Themes (Hand Signed), 1985 Offset lithograph. Hand signed by Jim Dine Boldly signed by Jim Dine for the gallery in black marker on the front. 35 × 23 inches Unframed How many hearts has Jim Dine drawn over the course of his career? “Millions…I have no idea but it’s mine and I use it as a template for all my emotions,” Dine has said. According to Dine, the heart is a simple shape with limitless potential to represent friends, family, poetry, travel, and more. To showcase these different sentiments, the Pop artist renders his hearts with an expressive touch, filled with patchworks of colors and energetic brushstrokes. While Dine is perhaps best known for his hearts, he’s also dedicated his career to other popular symbols, including tools, plants, robes, the Venus de Milo, and Pinocchio. This vintage hand signed Jim Dine offset lithograph was published on the occasion of the exhibition "Jim Dine Five Themes" at the Hirshhorn Museum. The poster depicts the 1983 work "Jim Dine: The Minnesota Watercolor." It is exceptionally boldly signed by Jim Dine in black marker. The artist signed this print for the present owner here at the gallery so provenance is direct. Makes a delightful and romantic gift. Provenance: Hand signed by Jim Dine for the present owner. Publisher: Pace Editions Inc and the Hirshhorn Museum & Sculpture Garden Jim Dine Biography At the age of 88, Jim Dine was selected as one of the artists featured in the prestigious 2024 Venice Biennale. Jim Dine (born 1935) is a painter, printmaker, and sculptor often associated with the American Pop Art and Neo-Dada movements. Dine incorporates images of familiar objects including tools, rope, shoes, neckties, and other articles of clothing into his colorful works. The most famous examples of this are his paintings of enormous hearts and robes which fill their frames. In recent years he has created large-scale works that utilize acrylic paint, sand and charcoal. These paintings are rough and granulated in texture and are perhaps some of his most powerful creations, embodying abstraction and motion. -Courtesy Jonathan Novak
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