Contemporary Discoveries
Contemporary Discoveries
Venus Technicolor
Lot Closed
October 3, 07:37 PM GMT
Estimate
40,000 - 60,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Jim Dine
b. 1935
Venus Technicolor
signed Jim Dine and dated 1997 (on the underside)
oil on wood
51 by 14 by 16 in.
129.5 by 35.6 by 40.6 cm.
Executed in 1997.
Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner
Venus, the Roman goddess of love and beauty, occupies a coveted place in the oeuvre of Jim Dine, an artist closely associated with the Pop Art movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Over the course of his seven-decade career, Dine has developed a unique visual language through the repetition of particular subjects, including tools, robes, hearts, trees, and gates. In the early 1980s, Dine first began exploring the subject of the Venus de Milo, an important example of classical Greek sculpture widely believed to represent Aphrodite, the Greek equivalent to Venus. The present work, like all of Dine’s expressionistic interpretations of the subject, depicts the ancient muse without a head, bringing her iconic bare torso into focus. Reflecting on this dominant motif within his creative output, Dine once explained, "I have this need to connect with the past in my way, and also I'm devoted to the ideal of woman, as a figure of enchantment...When I went to the art supply store...and got a Venus de Milo figure...I was not responding to it as an object of Pop Art, or popular culture. I saw it as a timeless classical figure which held the memory of its magnificence...But then I knocked the head off of it and made it mine."