Dingle works in series, some of her most well-known of which are her paintings of maps from memory, installations and paintings of Dingle's id doppelgänger Priss, the saga of Fatty and Fudge, Home Depot coloring books (anyone can do it), painting blindfolded and the Crush painting series,
1990s Her first mainstream solo exhibition was in 1991 at Richard/Bennett Gallery in Los Angeles. Titled
Portraits from the Dingle Library, it combined images of her mother, Cram, with portraits of iconic figures like
George Washington,
Queen Elizabeth II, and
George Foreman as a baby. Shortly after this, she created the "Paintings of the West" series employing vintage wallpaper and other imagery as her canvas along with a hundred curated drawings of "Horses by Teenage Girls". In
Untitled (Girls with Dresspole) (1998), Dingle's girls raise a flagpole "dresspole" (a long pole with a dress attached to the top) in a pose reminiscent of the famous photograph of soldiers
raising the flag on Iwo Jima. Following works included the
Never in School series, where Dingle introduced school mates, where characters
Fatty and
Fudge dominate in the absence of adults or boys. Dingle created three-dimensional works featuring Fatty and Fudge in 1993 named "Priss".
2000s Priss later took the form of a 1963 MG midget car and was shown in the 2000
Whitney Biennial. In 2000, with chef (actor and author) Aude Charles, Dingle opened a fine dining vegetarian restaurant in the middle of her studio and called it Fatty's. . Her piece
I Will Be Your Server: The Lost Supper Paintings was exhibited at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects in 2019. The artist
Lia Clay Miller notes that the show consisted of various renditions of Dingle's signature “Psycho-Tods." Dingle's work was included in the 2022 exhibition
Women Painting Women at the
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. ==Collections==