Details
Artist
Styles
Original etching and softground etching printed in black ink on Arches Cover Buff wove paper, with hand-coloring in several acrylic colors. Edition of 75 (plus 23 additional proofs of various types, overall edition of 98), numbered in pencil. Published at the Spring Street Workshop, New York; printed by Bill Hall and Julia D’Amario. Sheet size: 52.7 x 70.8 cm (20 3/4 x 27 7/8 in) Image size: 31.4 x 54.0 cm (12 3/8 x 21 1/4 in) Frame size: 57.8 x 75.6 x 4.4 cm (22 3/4 x 29 3/4 x 1 3/4 in)// Jumps Out at You, No? presents three of Jim Dine's iconic hearts side by side in a triptych of blazing colour. Each heart is rendered through softground etching in rich black line on Arches Cover Buff paper, then individually hand-coloured in vivid acrylics — red, green, blue, and yellow — that give every impression in the edition a unique chromatic personality. The title's rhetorical question captures Dine's characteristic blend of emotional directness and wry humour: these hearts do indeed leap from the paper with an almost aggressive vitality. As one of Dine's most celebrated print-and-paint hybrids, the work demonstrates why his heart motif has become one of the most recognisable symbols in contemporary art, bridging the gap between Pop iconography and deeply felt personal expression.
Jumps Out at You, No?, 1993
form
Medium
Size
52.7 x 70.8 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Range
- USD
- EUR
- GBP
Details
Artist
Styles
Original etching and softground etching printed in black ink on Arches Cover Buff wove paper, with hand-coloring in several acrylic colors. Edition of 75 (plus 23 additional proofs of various types, overall edition of 98), numbered in pencil. Published at the Spring Street Workshop, New York; printed by Bill Hall and Julia D’Amario. Sheet size: 52.7 x 70.8 cm (20 3/4 x 27 7/8 in) Image size: 31.4 x 54.0 cm (12 3/8 x 21 1/4 in) Frame size: 57.8 x 75.6 x 4.4 cm (22 3/4 x 29 3/4 x 1 3/4 in)// Jumps Out at You, No? presents three of Jim Dine's iconic hearts side by side in a triptych of blazing colour. Each heart is rendered through softground etching in rich black line on Arches Cover Buff paper, then individually hand-coloured in vivid acrylics — red, green, blue, and yellow — that give every impression in the edition a unique chromatic personality. The title's rhetorical question captures Dine's characteristic blend of emotional directness and wry humour: these hearts do indeed leap from the paper with an almost aggressive vitality. As one of Dine's most celebrated print-and-paint hybrids, the work demonstrates why his heart motif has become one of the most recognisable symbols in contemporary art, bridging the gap between Pop iconography and deeply felt personal expression.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
Jim Dine
Left Panel, From The Three Sydney Close Woodcuts, 1983
Limited Edition Print
Woodcut
Inquire For Price
Jim Dine
The Realistic Poet Assassinated, 1970 / 1971
Limited Edition Print
Etching
Inquire For Price
Jim Dine
Untitled - Artist Palette With Heart In Red, 1986
Sculpture / Object
Mixed Media
Inquire For Price
Jim Dine
Untitled From Pinocchio Suite (wolf And A Cat), 2005
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
Inquire For Price
Jim Dine
12' Saddle Bench For Basil's Studio, 1968
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
Inquire For Price
Jim Dine
Dorian Gray In Multi-Colored Vinyl Stripe Cape, 1968
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 1,430
What is pop-art?
Pop Art is an art movement that began in Britain in 1955 and in the late 1950s in the U.S. It challenged traditional fine arts by incorporating imagery from popular culture, such as news, advertising, and comic books. Pop Art often isolates and recontextualizes materials, combining them with unrelated elements. The movement is more about the attitudes and ideas that inspired it than the specific art itself. Pop Art is seen as a reaction against the dominant ideas of Abstract Expressionism, bringing everyday consumer culture into the realm of fine art.
