Collection: Jim Dine

Jim Dine is a renowned American artist whose prolific career spans over six decades and includes painting, drawing, sculpture, and printmaking. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, Dine studied at the University of Cincinnati and the Boston Museum School before receiving his BFA from Ohio University in 1957. He emerged in the early 1960s as a key figure in the Pop Art movement, though his deeply personal and expressive approach has always set him apart from his contemporaries. Dine is best known for transforming everyday objects into powerful symbols—hearts, tools, robes, and Venus de Milo figures recur throughout his work, rendered with bold color, gestural energy, and emotional resonance. His art blends the cool visual language of Pop with the psychological intensity of Neo-Expressionism and the intimacy of autobiography. A master printmaker, Dine has produced hundreds of editions, many of which explore the same symbolic themes across various techniques. His work is included in major museum collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Tate (London), the Centre Pompidou (Paris), and the Art Institute of Chicago. Dine continues to create with remarkable vitality, his art ever evolving yet anchored in a vocabulary that is distinctly his own.

Jim Dine