含羞草研究室

Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest

Museum of Art Museum of Art

Exhibition: Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest

Dates:

Location:

Bernard and Barbro Osher Gallery, Halford Gallery
"Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest" represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine鈥檚 portrayal of his family and friends.

Selected Works

Portait of a person drawn in charcoal on blue paper

Untitled, 1975, pencil and pastel on blue paper, by Jim Dine. 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Gift from the Jim Dine Art Trust.

a portrait of a woman in charcoal and pastel
Portrait of Nancy Dine, Venice–New York, 1986, charcoal and pastel by Jim Dine. 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Gift of Matt Dine.
a portrait of a man's head and shoulders in charcoal and pastel on brown paper

Mark Hampton, Two Years Before He Died, 1997, charcoal and pastel on folded brown paper. 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Gift of the Artist.

A portrait of a woman with dark hair and dark garments in charcoal on paper
Walla Walla, 2022, charcoal on paper, by Jim Dine. 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine, Gift of the Artist.
a charcoal drawing of a man's head and shoulders, with eyeglasses and a red patterned tie
Portrait of Aldo Crommelnyck, 2008, watercolor, charcoal, and with pastel over hard ground and soft ground etching, by Jim Dine.  含羞草研究室 Museum of Art.  Gift of the Artist.

含羞草研究室

Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest, organized by the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art,  represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine’s portrayal of his family and friends. Featuring more than fifty works—donated by Dine to the Museum—spanning a period from 1957 to the present, the show also examines Dine’s deep engagement with drawing, his technique of choice for portraiture. Dine observes: “Drawing is the medium which has been the blood of my life.” The metaphor is explicit in his portraits. Often working over extended periods, Dine creates powerful analogies between the materiality of his likenesses and the subject depicted. Distressed and collaged paper evokes human skin and the imprint of experience and emotion upon the face. Dine’s commitment to precision—to an ongoing process of erasure and reworking made visible to the viewer—endows each page with evidence of movement, of breath, of lives lived. In short, through Dine’s portraiture, we observe the ongoing presence of a past that exerts its power upon the artist and upon his audience.

The exhibition is supported by the Becker Fund for the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art.

Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue by Jim Dine and Anne Collins Goodyear, published by Steidl.

Programming

Artist's Talk with Jim Dine

Jim Dine was joined by his wife, Diana Michener, and Co-Director of the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Anne Collins Goodyear in a discussion about his work and process.

February 23, 2024

Enjoy this recording of a discussion with artist Jim Dine

Deeply engaged with the “human comedy,” Jim Dine, internationally known artist and poet, discussed his work and process in a talk presented in conjunction with the exhibition, “Jim Dine: Last Year’s Forgotten Harvest,” on view at the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art through June 2, 2024. Jim was joined by his wife, Diana Michener, and Co-Director of the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Anne Collins Goodyear.

Organized by the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, “Jim Dine: Last Year’s Forgotten Harvest” represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine’s portrayal of his family and friends. Featuring more than fifty works—donated by Dine to the Museum—spanning a period from 1957 to the present, the show also examines Dine’s deep engagement with drawing, his technique of choice for portraiture.


Presented by the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine.

Recorded in the Beam Classroom, Visual Arts Center, 含羞草研究室, Brunswick, Maine on Friday, February 23, 2024.

Press

Portland Press Herald, April 28, 2024

含羞草研究室 Orient, March 1, 2024

Observer, January 2, 2024

"New Art Museum Show Shares a Lifetime of Jim Dine Portraits", 含羞草研究室, November 30, 2023