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CONTEXTS

Jim Dine

Jim Dine is a master of bringing inanimate objects to life, whose practice is very preoccupied with the idea of tools and printmaking.  

Jim Dine, five paintbrushes, etching, dry point and aquatint, 356 x 692, 1973,

His consideration of tools to be like an “extension of his body” and especially his hand, resonates with my own feelings about our relationship with tools, the hand and sensory experience. Our hands and the tools we put into them become essentially the same entity, the ‘tool-hand’ in which the hand becomes the tool itself (see contexts). This gives tools a special haptic importance and that is one of the reasons they are an appealing subject matter in my work. Another way in which Dine has been informative is the way his relationship with tools has shaped his understanding of them when he was younger. He developed an interest in tools because his grandfather owned a hardware store, and the emotional connection he feels towards them comes from these associations of them being these old utilitarian artifacts of his childhood. Dine’s love of assemblage and found objects is well know, so much so that he cannot use the new fresh tools he buys for his work but must cut, break and abrade them until he’s made them his own. This ties into my own ideas about the importance of surface, and the imbedded histories that come to light through wear and tear.

 

Dine is making his own histories with these objects that carry so many emotions for him. His interest in etching, and the prints he produces of etching tools is very important for what I have been doing in my own practice. Like Dine, I am commenting on the process of etching and responding to this idea of the print room as a kind of tool of many parts and processes that together make up etching in its entirety. I have learnt from Dine about how pop-art associations complement the simplicity and accessibility of graphite rubbings. Dine’s collages of different tools, as well always trying to find new relics of significance are things I may consider moving forward with my research. 

Foot Notes

  1. Dine, J. and Pace (2002). Jim Dine : new tool paintings. New York: Pacewildenstein.  

  2. Dine, J., Wiles, S., Katz, V., Memorial, A., Art and And, M. (2005). Jim Dine, some drawings. Oberlin, Ohio: Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College ; [Göttingen, Germany.  

  3. Dine, J., Liesbeth Brandt Corstius and Museum Boymans-Van Beuningen (1971). Jim Dine : schilderijen, aquarellen,objecten en het complete grafische oeuvre. [Tentoonstelling] Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam, 20 februari/12 april, 1971. [Catalogus door Liesbeth Brandt Corstius]. Rotterdam: Museum Boymans-Van Beuningen. 

  4. Glenn, C.W. and Dine, J. (1985). Jim Dine : drawings. New York: Abrams. 

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