1. Biographical and method of working
Jim Dine, byname of James Dine (born June 16, 1935, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.), American painter, graphic artist, sculptor, and poet who emerged during the Pop art period as an innovative creator of works that combine the painted canvas with ordinary objects of daily life. His persistent themes included those of personal identity, memory, and the body.
Dine studied at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School and at Ohio University. He moved to New York City in 1958, and there he became part of a group of artists who initiated Happenings, an early form of performance art. His early work consists primarily of images on canvas to which three-dimensional objects (e.g., articles of clothing, garden tools) are attached. His Shoes Walking on My Brain (1960), for example, is a childlike painting of a face with a pair of leather shoes fixed to the forehead. His reputation was secured during the 1960s by his wittily incongruous painted images of tools, clothes, and other utilitarian and household objects. He is particularly associated with the bathrobe and the stylized heart. The subject of Dine’s work of the 1970s remained commonplace objects, but he showed a growing preoccupation with graphic media. His exploitation of nuances of line and texture is especially evident in his images of flowers and portraits of his wife done in the late 1970s.
Dine also illustrated (Guillaume Apollinaire’s The Poet Assasinated, 1968; Arthur Rimbaud’s A Season in Hell, 1976), coauthored (Happenings [1965]; with Michael Kirby), and wrote (Diary of a Non-Deflector: Selected Poems, 1987; This Goofy Life of Constant Mourning, 2004) a number of books.
2. Three most famous artworks
Study for This Sovereign Life, 1985
"The Study for This Sovereign life," measuring 48" X 73", is a work of oil and sand on canvas, and was created in the year 1985. The diptych has a blue background and a rope like string divides it into two sections. On