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Jim Dine's vivid, candid and detailed reminiscences about his
friendship and working relationship with Aldo Crommelynck, the
printer of Matisse and Picasso, over a period now of more than 30
years are full of affection, humour and layer upon layer of
information. In conversations with the art historian Marco
Livingstone, Dine, one of the greatest post-war American artists,
charts the extent to which his experience of working with a man who
was not only a great printer, but also a skilled draughtsman, an
aesthete, dandy and bon viveur, coloured and enriched his
experience of France on every level, from an appreciation of its
art and culture, its city life and countryside, to its food and its
specialist shops - especially those in which to find the best tools
and musical instruments.Dine's ruminations take some unexpected but
illuminating detours, even into the making of bespoke bicycles,
that prove deeply revealing of the specific nature of his love for
France and of his many debts to an esteemed colleague, fellow
traveller and much loved friend.
Jim Dine's status as a master draughtsman is unquestioned and this
book presents the best of his most recent drawings. Hello Yellow
Glove opens with one of Dine's most treasured motifs, Pinocchio.
Using dense charcoal and dripping washes, Dine depicts the sinister
edge to Carlo Collodi's story and Pinocchio's isolation in his
quest to become a real boy. With similar dark layers and dissolving
forms Dine also depicts botanical motifs such as the thistle and
catalpa tree. In addition to these bodies of work, Hello Yellow
Glove presents Dine's portrait of Gerhard Steidl, an ambitious
suite of nine drawings made by the artist in his Goettingen studio.
Alongside reproductions of the drawings are photographs of Dine
taken by Steidl during the sittings, which form both a candid
portrait of the artist and offer a rare glimpse into his working
processes. Born in 1935 in Cincinnati, Ohio, Jim Dine is a prolific
painter, draughtsman, print-maker and photographer. Initially
associated with the Pop movement, Dine's career spans over forty
years and his work is held in many private and public collections.
His books with Steidl include Birds (2001), The Photographs, so far
(2003) and Hot Dream (52 Books) (2008).
Jewish Fate is an evocative autobiographical poem by Jim Dine accompanied by 18 lithographs of one of his favorite motifs, tools. The poem shows Dine reminiscing about his childhood days spent at his grandfather’s hardware store in Cincinnati, where he worked every Saturday and summer for ten years from the age of nine.
Dine’s vivid co-workers shape his memories. There is the head shipping clerk Joe Kibbing: tall, thin, “very dramatic and high strung and didn’t take orders easily.” Joe’s older brother Bud was the dignified head salesman: “a soft-spoken, intelligent man who had he had an education past high school might have been a lawyer or a surgeon.” And finally there was Willie Tapp, “short and lithe ... he dressed elegantly like a lot of black guys did then for a guy loading trucks and handling greasy tools and heavy boxes... This handsome, lovely man showed up for work drunk most Saturdays, but managed to perform most times.” Among these characters in the inspirational, overflowing store Dine developed his love for tools which accompanies his art today and is seen in the hammers, rollers, brushes and wrenches in this book―all realized in Dine’s inimitable unfinished style, in his words: “Always correcting and reinventing the drawing.”
This book is literally Jim Dine’s letter to his “troops,” a confessional address to the people he has collaborated with, to his friends and family. Consisting of a long fluid poem and 18 color linocut portraits of those closest to Dine, the book explores his emotions and thoughts including childhood memories, reflections on his present artistic practice (“This week I painted, painted, painted the possibility of permanent silence”), as well as more philosophical musings (“Earth gives birth to time and heaven in a jealous parliament”).
This new Steidl book is an adaption with revised design and typography of Dine’s original My Letter to the Troops of 2016, a limited edition of 40 featuring linocuts handprinted on Arches vellum from the blocks at Atelier Michael Woolworth in Paris.
"Inspired by a semi-autobiographical book by the mid-20th century
German printmaker HAP Grieshaber, I have used his idea to create a
story of fifty years as a printmaker. The book includes interviews
with my printers and memories of my life around the prints I made
at that time. I have made over a thousand prints so far and I am
not done yet. There are "key" images illustrated, and the text
attempts to marry the technical with my emotional feeling for the
mediums, etching, lithography, woodcut and silkscreen. I have
included recipes for variations on intaglio and some stories of my
friendships with these gifted artisans who have produced this
work." Jim Dine
"I am an object maker." Jim Dine Night Fields, Day Fields is a
survey of Jim Dine's sculpture from 1959 to 2009. Dine is commonly
seen as a prolific painter, printmaker and photographer whose
central practice is drawing, but this book shows that sculpture is
just as important in his oeuvre. Here we discover Dine's favourite
and reoccurring motifs: hearts, tools, skulls, and Pinocchio, as
well as Classical sculpture in the form of Venus de Milo and Winged
Victory. Dine's media are as diverse as his themes and include
bronze, wood, glass and found objects. His styles are similarly
manifold, testament to an artist who has shrugged off the trappings
of Pop Art to develop an eclectic body of styles that is unique and
authoritative in contemporary art. Born in 1935 in Cincinnati,
Ohio, Jim Dine completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University
of Ohio in 1957, and has since become one of the most profound and
prolific contemporary artists. Dine's unparalleled career spans
fifty years and his work is held in numerous private and public
collections. His books at Steidl include Birds (2001), The
Photographs, so far (2003), and Hot Dream (52 Books) (2008).
"When I was born, I came home to my grandfather's house. His name
was Morris Cohen. He was my mother's father. I lived with him for
three years until my parents built a small little house and we
moved away. But from the time I was born until he died when I was
19, I either spoke to him or saw him every day. He owned a hardware
store that catered to plumbers, electricians, woodworkers,
contractors. It was an early version of a contractors' supply
store. It was called 'The Save Supply Company.' He was a very large
man, and he felt he could do anything with his hands. He made
tables, he fixed automobiles, he was an electrician, and he was
lousy at all of it. But through sheer force of will, he forged
ahead." Jim Dine
Jim Dine redefines everything, his life and his (he)art in these 52
books. Trying to realize the depth of his aesthetic and profane
reality, the books are also documents of an artistic consciousness,
of an intense biography, of personal likes and dislikes, of formal
richness and of exploding craftsmanship, of an exceptional
imagination. These books invent the context for a new melody for
the art of Jim Dine, for all the major byways of this seemingly
inexhaustible creativity, which combines dream and reality - it is
a composition for all the people who would like to sing a new song,
maybe their own song. Dine has reflected authentically on his own
identity and through it the identity of reality, nature, art,
thoughts, feelings in an extraordinary poetic way: we see a POEM,
we read an IMAGE. They are books one may read and regard as a
summary of an unusual life. This Hot Dream first appeared as an
idea 13 years ago. Steidl embraced and blessed the project so I
went ahead. I stewed about it for two years then I stood around
waiting to talk to Gerhard about it then finally I got down to
putting the books together. My method, as in all my work, is the
use of collage, painting and drawing, and correcting; coupled with
my writing and my untouched photographs. The fact of making a book
a week and the sensual possibilities i.e. the act of making a union
with humans through the smell of the ink on the paper, the feel of
the images and words. Hot Dream tells a lot about me, Dine, and
bookmaking. Jim Dine, Goettingen, June 2018
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