首页
登录
职称英语
As a contemporary artist, Jim Dine has often incorporated other people’s phot
As a contemporary artist, Jim Dine has often incorporated other people’s phot
游客
2025-01-03
48
管理
问题
As a contemporary artist, Jim Dine has often incorporated other people’s photography into his abstract works. But, the 68-year-old American didn’t pick up a camera himself and start shooting until he moved to Berlin in 1995--and once he did, he couldn’t stop. The result is a voluminous collection of images, ranging from early-20th-century style heliogravures to modern-day digital printings, a selection of which are on exhibition at the Maison Europeenne de la Photographic in Paris. They are among his most prized achievements. "I make photographs the way I make paintings," says Dine, "but the difference is, in photography, it’s like lighting a fire every time."
Though photography makes up a small slice of Dine’s vast oeuvre, the exhibit is a true retrospective of his career. Dine mostly photographs his own artwork or the subjects that he has portrayed in sculpture, painting and prints including Venus de Milo, ravens and owls, hearts and skulls. There are still pictures of well-used tools in his Connecticut workshop, delightful digital self-portraits and intimate portraits of his sleeping wife, the American photographer Diana Michener. Most revealing and novel are Dine’s shots of his poetry, scribbled in charcoal on walls like graffiti. To take in this show is to wander through Dine’s life: his childhood obsessions, his loves, his dreams. It is a poignant and powerful exhibit that rightly celebrates one of modern art’s most intriguing--and least hyped--talents.
When he arrived on the scene in the early 1960s, Dine was seen as a pioneer in the pop-art movement. But he didn’t last long; once pop stagnated, Dine moved on. "Pop art had 1o do with the exterior world," he says. He was more interested, he adds, in "what was going on inside me." He explored his own personality, and from there developed themes. His love for handcrafting grew into a series of artworks incorporating hammers and saws. His obsession with owls and ravens came from a dream he once had. His childhood toy Pinocchio, worn and chipped, appears in some self-portraits as a red and yellow blur flying through the air.
Dine first dabbled in photography in the late 1970s, when Polaroid invited him to try out a new large-format camera at its head-quarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He produced a series of colorful, out-of-focus self-portraits, and when he was done, he packed them away. A half dozen of these images in per feet condition--are on display in Paris for the first time. Though masterful, they feel flat when compared with his later pictures.
Dine didn’t shoot again until he went to Berlin in the mid ’90s to teach. By then he was ready to embrace photography completely. Michener was his guide: "She opened my eyes to what was possible," he says. "Her approach is so natural and classic. I listened." When it came time to print what he had photo graphed, Dine chose heliogravure, the old style of printing favored by Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Curtis and Paul Strand, which gives photographs a warm tone and an almost hand drawn loop like Dine’s etchings. He later tried out the traditional black-and-white silver-gelatin process, then digital photography and jetink printing, which he adores.
About the same time, Dine immersed himself into Jungian psychoanalysis. That, in conjunction with his new artistic tack, proved cathartic. "The access photography gives you to your subconscious is so fantastic," he says. "I’ve learned how to bring these images out like a stream of consciousness--something that’s not possible in the same way in drawing or painting because technique always gets in your way." This is evident in the way he works: when Dine shoots, he leaves things alone.
Eventually, Dine turned the camera on himself. His self-portraits are disturbingly personal; he opens himself physically and emotionally before the lens. He says such pictures are an attempt to examine himself as well as "record the march of time, what gravity does to the face in everybody. I’m a very willing subject." Indeed, Dine sees photography as the surest path to self-discovery. "I’ve always learned about myself in my art," he says. "But photography expresses me. It’s me. Me. "The Paris exhibit makes that perfectly clear. [br] What is the main idea of the passage?
选项
A、Jim Dine’s exhibit is a true retrospective of his career.
B、The author tells us Jim Dine’s life stories as an artist.
C、Jim Dine is distinguished for his colorful self-portraits.
D、In a revealing exhibit, Jim Dine points his lens inward.
答案
D
解析
主旨题。首段指出Jim Dine在巴黎举办了个人摄影展。第二段简要介绍其影展作品的主题。从第三段开始,作者介绍Jim Dine作为摄影师的艺术之路,从早期的流行艺术先锋,到自拍照,再到20世纪90年代中期的摄影探索,最后指出Dine turned the camera on himself。全文最后总结:The Paris exhibit makes that perfectly clear.这与[D]意思一致,故为答案。[A]是第二段提到的细节,[D]范围过大,[C]未提及,排除此三项。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3896531.html
相关试题推荐
Asacontemporaryartist,JimDinehasoftenincorporatedotherpeople’sphot
Asacontemporaryartist,JimDinehasoftenincorporatedotherpeople’sphot
Asacontemporaryartist,JimDinehasoftenincorporatedotherpeople’sphot
Asacontemporaryartist,JimDinehasoftenincorporatedotherpeople’sphot
InBlackEnglishpeoplesay"Iwon’tdonothing"insteadof"Iwon’tdoanything
Somepeopleliketolearnforeignlanguagebylisteninglessons,writinghomewor
Somepeopleliketolearnforeignlanguagebylisteninglessons,writinghome
FewpeoplewoulddefendtheVictorianattitudeofchildren,butifyouwerea
FewpeoplewoulddefendtheVictorianattitudeofchildren,butifyouwerea
FewpeoplewoulddefendtheVictorianattitudeofchildren,butifyouwerea
随机试题
Whatdoesthepassagemainlydiscuss?[br]Theauthormentionsthatpublished
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledHo
以下关于绩效类别说法错误的是()A.个人绩效指员工履行自己的工作职责并达到组
根据以下材料,回答11-14题 自从有了文学史以来,散文就好像是受到了歧视。一
关于开展基金托管业务的准人条件,《非银行金融机构开展证券投资基金托管业务暂行规定
A.药品生产企业B.药品批发企业C.药品零售企业D.药品使用机构E.药品研发组织
下列化合物的水溶液强烈振摇后,会产生持久性的泡沫的是A.醌类化合物B.黄酮类化合
技术测定法是通过测定与计算来制定定额,测定的方法主要是( )。 A.写实法
简述我国利率的决定与影响因素。
小儿出牙延迟的判断标准是( )。A.>4个月未出牙 B.>24个月未出牙
最新回复
(
0
)