Plant Becomes a Fan
This work is not currently on view.
- Title
Plant Becomes a Fan
- Artist
- Date
1975
- Medium
lithograph on paper
- Dimensions (H x W x D)
image: 28 3/4 in x 22 in; sheet: 36 in x 24 5/16 in
- Inscriptions & Markings
copyright: (copyright symbol) J.D. 1975, recto, lower right
annotation; initials; date: prints proof J.D. 1975, verso, lower right
chopmarks: (2 chopmarks), verso, lower left
annotation: U.S.F. 171 c, verso, lower right
- Collection Area
Graphic Arts
- Category
Prints
- Object Type
planographic print
- Culture
American
- Credit Line
Museum Purchase: Helen Thurston Ayer Fund
- Accession Number
80.103.1
- Copyright
© artist or other rights holder
- Terms
The witty and surreal transformation of a plant into a fan has occurred in Jim Dine's work since 1961. In this series of prints, Dine gradually converts the organic form of a leafy plant into a balanced mechanical object. Unlike other Pop artists who employ everyday things for their neutrality, Dine selects his images because, for the artist, they are charged with personal meaning: "When I use objects, I see them as a vocabulary of feelings."
- Exhibitions
1996 Signs of the Times Portland Art Museum