Addison Rowe Gallery
Santa Fe

Works Available By
- Mary Abbott
- Clinton Adams
- Milton Avery
- Thomas Duncan Benrimo
- Oscar Edmund Berninghaus
- Janice Biala
- Emil James Bisttram
- Ilya Bolotowsky
- Lawrence Calcagno
- Gerald Cassidy
- Howard Norton Cook
- Andrew Michael Dasburg
- Stuart Davis
- Richard Diebenkorn
- Jim Dine
- Werner Drewes
- Lilly Fenichel
- Sam Francis
- Ed Garman
- Sonia Gechtoff
- Frederick Hammersley
- Angela Heisch
- Sheila Isham
- Raymond Jonson
- Elaine de Kooning
- Albert H. Krehbiel
- Barbara Latham
- Janet Lippincott
- John Ward Lockwood
- William Lumpkins
- Beatrice Mandelman
- John Marin
- Agnes Martin
- Mimi Chen Ting
- Dorothy Morang
- Forrest Moses
- Elie Nadelman
- Kenneth Noland
- Bror Julius Olsson Nordfeldt
- Georgia O'Keeffe
- Agnes Pelton
- Florence Pierce
- Jane Piper
- Louis Ribak
- Rolph Scarlett
- Howard Schleeter
- Fritz Scholder
- William Samuel Schwartz
- Joseph Henry Sharp
- Charles Green Shaw
- Leon Polk Smith
- Vivian Springford
- Joseph Stella
- Irene Monat Stern
- Earl Stroh
- Michio Takayama
- Wayne Thiebaud
- Stuart Walker
- Max Weber
Jim Dine
(American, born 1935)
Jim Dine is an American artist and poet known for his contributions to the formation of both Performance Art and Pop Art. Employing motifs which include Pinocchio, hearts, bathrobes, and tools, Dine produces colorful paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures. “I grew up with tools. I came from a family of people who sold tools, and I’ve always been enchanted by these objects made by anonymous hands,” Dine has said. Born on June 16, 1935 in Cincinnati, OH, he studied poetry at the University of Cincinnati before attending the University of Ohio where he received his BFA in 1957. After moving to New York in 1958, Dine became part of a milieu of artists which included Allan Kaprow and Claes Oldenburg, with whom he began ...
