Jim Dine

Painter

Jim Dine was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States on June 16th, 1935 and is the Painter. At the age of 89, Jim Dine biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
June 16, 1935
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Age
89 years old
Zodiac Sign
Gemini
Profession
Painter, Photographer, Printmaker, Sculptor
Jim Dine Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Jim Dine Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Hobbies
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Education
Ohio University, University of Cincinnati
Jim Dine Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Jim Dine Life

Jim Dine (born June 16, 1935) is an American pop artist.

He is often thought of as a member of the Neo-Dada movement.

Education

Dine's first formal artistic education came in the form of night courses in painting at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, where he enrolled in 1952 at the age of 16, while attending Walnut Hills High School. "I always knew I was always an artist, and even though I attempted to attend high school life in those years, I found it difficult because I wanted to express myself artistically, but the school I went to had no facilities for that." Dine was inspired by a copy of Paul J. Sachs' Modern Prints and Drawings (1954), particularly Emil Nolde (1880-1938), and Max Beckmann (1884–1955), who was then living in the basement of his maternal grandparents, who was also living.

Dine completed high school and was accepted at the University of Cincinnati (in addition to his evening classes and self-directed woodcut experiments), but was dissatisfied: "They didn't have an art school, they had a design school." I've been doing this for half a year. I was ridiculous [...] All I wanted to do was paint." Dine enrolled in 1955, not because of the standard of facilities, but because "I sensed a bucolic freedom in the Appalachians' foothills where I could develop and be an artist." Dine experimented with lithography, etching, intaglio, dry paint, and woodcuts under printmaking instructor Donald Roberts (1923-2015). Dine continued to study at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston for six months before returning to Ohio University in 1957 with the faculty's permission.

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Jim Dine Career

Career

Dine descended on New York in 1958, where he first taught at the Rhodes School. He founded the Judson Gallery in Greenwich Village, alongside Claes Oldenburg and Marcus Ratliff, in the meanwhile, they met Allan Kaprow and Bob Whitman, 1959: The Smiling Workman. "Itynts and howls by me" was Dine's first exhibition at the Reuben Gallery, where he also staged Car Crash (1960), which he described as "a slew of sounds and words uttered by a magnificent white Venus with animal grunts and howls by me." The House (1960), an environment that incorporates found objects and street rubble, was another important early work on display at the Judson Gallery.

Dine continued to include everyday life (including many personal possessions) in his creation, which linked him to Pop Art, which was later cited as the first institutional review of American Pop Art by Walter Hopps and later described as the first museum survey of American Pop Art, which included works by Robert Dowd, Joe Goode, Phillip Hefferton, Roy Lichtenstein, Edward Ruscha, Wayne Thiebaud, and Andy Warhol. Dine has, on the other hand, has consistently distanced himself from Pop Art: "I'm not a Pop artist." I'm not interested in the movement because I'm too personal. Pop is worried about the exteriors. I'm worried about the insides. I use objects as a mark of emotion. [...] What I like doing in my work is to explore myself in physical terms—to say something in terms of my own sensibilities."

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