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Bukowskis presents Jim Dine at Contemporary Art & Design

Jim Dine, 'Mr. Oxide'

Jim Dine's art has become strongly associated with his very personal circle of motifs. Recurring motifs include hearts, tools, brushes and Pinocchio. The painting, 'Mr. Oxide', features another of his most iconic motifs: the bathrobe. Executed in bright red, yellow, blue and green, the painting is a magnificent example of his expressive and colourful painting. Bathrobes have been a central motif throughout his career and recur in several of his many medias. Dine began depicting them in the 1960s, inspired by an advert in The New York Times in 1963. Although he himself has admitted that he never wore a bathrobe in person, they soon took the form of self-portraits. In an interview with ARTnews in September 1977, he described how he first became interested in the bathrobe as a subject: “The ad shows a robe with the man airbrushed out of it. Well, it somehow looked like me, and I thought I'd make that a symbol for me. Actually, it all began when I wanted to paint a self-portrait . . . and just couldn't. It's important for me to say this, because what I really wanted to do was sit in front of a mirror and paint a portrait of myself. But at the time, I was in analysis and the pressures I felt prevented me from going through with it.”

By allowing the robe to clothe an invisible body without head, legs and arms, he found the form perfectly suited to the rectangular composition he preferred to work with. The empty bathrobe becomes an inverted portrait of an unknown person, while retaining its painterly freedom of line and colour.

› Signed Jim Dine and dated 2009 verso. Canvas 122 x 92 cm.




The work will be sold at Contemporary Art & Design.
Estimate 800 000 - 1 000 000 SEK

Viewing: April 19 – 23, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Open: weekdays 11 am – 6 pm, weekends 11 am – 4 pm
Live auction: April 24 – 25, Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm

To the work
Read more about Contemporary Art & Design and see the full catalogue



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