Richard Gray Gallery
Chicago
875 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 2503
312 6428877 FAX 312 6428488
WEB
Jim Dine
dal 4/4/2005 al 17/6/2005
312 642-8877 FAX 312 642-8488
WEB
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Richard Gray Gallery


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Jim Dine



 
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4/4/2005

Jim Dine

Richard Gray Gallery, Chicago

Pinocchio as I knew him. The exhibition will highlight the artist's recent sculptures as well as a multi-panel oil on canvas, and a multi-sheet drawing. Dine uses his new favorite image for this exhibition, that of Pinocchio, the lost boy. The puppet, carved from a talking branch, is the very ideal of a double message - so innocent and simple, wanting only to become a real boy, and yet lazy, irresponsible, selfish and ungrateful to his creator.


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Pinocchio as I knew him

Richard Gray presents an exhibition of new work by Jim Dine. The exhibition will highlight the artist's masterful recent sculptures as well as a multi-panel oil on canvas, and a multi-sheet drawing.

Jim Dine's name is inextricably linked with the Pop art movement, but the artist today follows a more personal path. The images that he incorporates into his work, are recognizable, archetypal symbols, rather than the everyday objects of Pop art. He explains that "These subjects have become part of the cultural DNA of America, and my inclination as an artist is to examine all that means to me."

Dine uses his new favorite image for this exhibition, that of Pinocchio, the lost boy. It seems a perfect fit for the artist who has also adopted among other motifs; tools, bathrobes, and hearts. These images, always recognizable, are at once innocent and charming, but as Dine looks deeper, they become much more complex and sometimes threatening. The puppet Pinocchio, carved from a talking branch, is the very ideal of this double message - so innocent and simple, wanting only to become a real boy, and yet lazy, irresponsible, selfish and ungrateful to Gepetto, his creator, and the one who truly loves him. Much like the story of creation is the story of Pinocchio, with all of the imperfections of humanity exposed. Like Gepetto, Jim Dine brings Pinocchio to life in this exhibition, carved from a block of wood, with all of his pathos, his charm and his humanity.

Image: The Tender Boy, 2004 - Paint on carved wood - 90 x 53 x 24 inches

[In New York: MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY MASTERS, April 5 - May 28
Including Works by: Willem de Kooning, Jean Dubuffet, Alberto Giacometti, David Hockney, Fernand Léger, Claes Oldenburg, Pablo Picasso, Cy Twombly.
Richard Gray Gallery - 1018 Madison Avenue, 4th floor - New York, NY 10021 - Telephone 212 472-8787, fax 212 472-2552]

Richard Gray Gallery
875 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 2503
John Hancock Center
Chicago, Illinois 60611

IN ARCHIVIO [3]
Suzanne Caporael
dal 21/4/2006 al 25/5/2006

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