Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

THE OBSERVER: The Invincible Jim Dine On Drive, Draftsmanship and His Own Mortality

Artist Jim Dine is a painter, sculptor, printmaker and poet—one who exemplifies what it takes to master a craft. He works seven days a week, 365 days a year, except when he’s traveling between studios and exhibitions, which he refers to as a “holiday.” Dine’s work day begins at 9 a.m. At 3 p.m., he takes a one-hour break, then resumes working until 6 p.m. From there, he—still keeping to a schedule—spends an hour working out, cooks and eats dinner and reads until bed. It would be a challenging schedule for anyone to maintain, but Dine is 88 years old with no intention of letting up or slowing down.

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

ARTPRESS: VENICE BIENNALE: COLLATERAL EVENTS

“The official program for the 60th edition of the Venice Biennale includes more than two dozen so-called “collateral events.” They are being held in sumptuous museums and palaces, rented short term for small fortunes by powerful organizers, including art foundations and international galleries. No matter how many miles we walked through the labyrinth of the Serenissima, it was impossible to see everything, but below is a selection of events that particularly appealed to us for their discreet, implicit or evocative affinities with the “island city”…”

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

LE MONDE: At the Venice Biennale, Jim Dine comes to “measure up” to the sumptuous Palazzo Rocca Contarini Corfu

“When the paintings arrived from my studio, they appeared completely different to me: it was as if they belonged to the palazzo. I was very surprised.“ It is the same for the visitor. On the ground floor, where the rooms have fairly low ceilings and bare walls, the small paintings of heads are perfectly at home; likewise the very large ones in the noble gallery, upstairs, where they get along well with the decorative elements and the allegorical frescoes.

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

ARTLYST: Foreigners Everywhere: My Mad Dash At The 60th Biennale di Venezia

“Jim Dine is another artist whose origins trace back to Pop Art and who is in great form with a presentation at Palazzo Rocca Contarini Corfù, open through 21 July and presented by TEMPLON. Dog on the Forge, curated by Gerhard Steidl, is a comprehensive presentation of 32 works made for this show. Sculptures are placed beautifully in the palazzo’s garden and throughout the building. There are Venuses, heart paintings, a monumental hammer, a room of Pinocchios, and two giant vases with writing scrawled around them.”

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

FAD MAGAZINE: THE @LONDONARTCRITIC GUIDE TO THE VENICE BIENNALE – PART II

“I also enjoyed the Jim Dine exhibition at Palazzo Contarini Corfu, particularly his hefty metal sculptures, in an exhibition that cuts across all the mediums he works with – in yet another impressive palazzo. I also stumbled across the digital work of Memo Akten at the Chiesa di Santa Maria della Visitazione – it’s the kind of digital artwork that I may walk past in any other setting but inside this beautiful church it suddenly becomes elevated by its surroundings.”

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

Exibart: La Biennale and surroundings, what to see in Venice #6: From the Gardens to Giudecca

“Together we pass Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, reaching the Dorsoduro district in Palazzo Rocca Contarini Corfú, near the Gallerie dell'Accademia, for the inauguration of Jim Dine – Dog on the Forge , curated by Gerhard Steidl, in collaboration with the Kunsthaus Göttingen. The exhibition is a collateral event of the 60th Venice Biennale.”

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

Artepiù: Jim Dine: Dog on the Forge at the 2024 Venice Biennale

“The exhibition, a collateral event to the 60th Venice Biennale, brings together paintings, drawings, bronze and wooden sculptures and an outdoor installation of large bronzes. These are monumental and site-specific works conceived for the 2024 Venice Biennale. Paintings and never-before-exhibited sculptures will be in dialogue with each other and with works ranging from the 1980s to the present.”

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

VERTU FINE ART: JIM DINE IN VENICE / THE WORK OF SUSUMU KAMIJO AT VFA

“At age 88, Jim Dine is still works, travels and continues to create new works of art in multiple styles and a variety of mediums. He divides his time among homes and studios in Paris, Göttingen, Germany and Walla Walla. ‘When you paint every day, all year long,” he said, “then the subject is essentially the act of working.’”

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

Frieze: The Unmissable Off-Site Exhibitions in Venice

“I’m reminded of the time when Jim Dine gave a demo for a printmaking class I was taking at university in Connecticut, USA. He showed students how to turn a piece of cardboard into an etching plate. First, you would incise marks on the discarded sheet with a Dremel or simply rip layers of cardboard off with your hands, then brush Elmer’s glue onto it to give it a slick, smooth surface for ink to pool in. You would then go about printing with it in the intaglio method and voila! A cheap and easy way to make an etching. The demo left a long-lasting impression on me…”

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

A CONVERSATION IN MONTROUGE: PART III: INSTINCT, INSPIRATION, AND INTROSPECTION

French writer Brigitte Adés recently interviewed Jim Dine. The result is a deep and informative discussion, providing a comprehensive understanding of Jim’s work. The interview offers a profound exploration of Jim’s creative process, inspirations, and reflections on his remarkable career. This is the third installment of a three part interview between Brigitte Adés and Jim Dine.

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

A CONVERSATION IN MONTROUGE: PART II: ICONS, SELF-PORTRAITURE, AND DRAFTSMANSHIP

French writer Brigitte Adés recently interviewed Jim Dine. The result is a deep and informative discussion, providing a comprehensive understanding of Jim’s work. The interview offers a profound exploration of Jim’s creative process, inspirations, and reflections on his remarkable career. This is the second of a three part interview between Brigitte Adés and Jim Dine.

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

A CONVERSATION IN MONTROUGE: PART I: TECHNIQUES & MATERIALS

French writer Brigitte Adés recently interviewed Jim Dine. The result is a deep and informative discussion, providing a comprehensive understanding of Jim’s work. The interview offers a profound exploration of Jim’s creative process, inspirations, and reflections on his remarkable career. This is the first of a three part interview between Brigitte Adés and Jim Dine.

Read More
Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon Reviews Diana Fitzgibbon

NEW YORK SUN: Pop Art Pioneer Jim Dine’s New Show Hearkens Back to His Origins as an Innovator

“A pioneer of pop art and one of the early instigators in the “Happening” movement, Jim Dine, is probably best known for his “heart” series. Once as ubiquitous as Keith Haring’s dancing figures, they have perhaps misdirected attention away from a 60-year career rich with other pioneering work. Mr. Dine, who by his own admission is compulsively productive, has been especially prolific since the pandemic, churning out drawing, painting, and even monumental sculpture.”

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

DOG ON THE FORGE

In occasione della Biennale Arte 2024, il leggendario artista americano Jim Dine trasformerà il Palazzo Rocca Contarini Corfù, inaugurando una grande mostra di sculture in bronzo, dipinti e disegni realizzati appositamente per Venezia.

Read More
Diana Fitzgibbon Diana Fitzgibbon

FORBES: Celebrated American Artist Jim Dine Creates Works Through Intuition And Improvisation

“Feeling the urgency to create even after more than six decades, 88-year-old Jim Dine doesn’t take holidays as there is just too little time, preferring instead to put his hands to work each day to paint, sculpt, draw, make prints or write poems, always with the sole aim of “trying to make art”. For him, the creative process is just as important as the finished piece, so he likes to get his hands dirty, working instinctively.“

Read More