Bridget Riley: Studies 1984-95

Natalia Naish,Alexandra Tommasini

Bridget Riley: Studies 1984-95
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Ridinghouse
Country
United Kingdom
Published
1 March 2015
Pages
72
ISBN
9781909932043

Bridget Riley: Studies 1984-95

Natalia Naish,Alexandra Tommasini

During the mid-1980s, Riley introduced a new pictorial device, the rhomboid, to her then predominantly vertical stripes, developing her exploration of interplaying tones of green, yellow and orange. This allowed the artist to construct new visual relationships between divergent colours and forms, creating what she terms a ‘harmony of contrasts’ that animates the entire visual field. Tracking a transitional period in Riley’s career, the works on paper in this volume
studies produced between 1984 and 1995
shift from a focus on the vertical stripe to increasingly complex diagonal compositions. Illustrated in full colour, the works are accompanied by a historic interview with the artist by Robert Kudielka and a text by Riley’s archivists Natalia Naish and Alexandra Tommasini, situating these studies in relation to major paintings produced during this period. AUTHORS: Natalia Naish has worked as an Archivist for Bridget Riley since 2012 and is a writer. Alexandra Tommasini has been an Archivist for Bridget Riley since 2012, having previously worked at museums in the UK, USA and Italy. Robert Kudielka is Professor Emeritus of Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art at the Hochschule der Kunste in Berlin and a curator. He is a noted scholar of the works of Bridget Riley and has published numerous books on, and with, the artist. Bridget Riley CH CBE (b.1931 London) was celebrated early in her career as a pioneer of Op art, and her early works in the early 1960s featured highly geometric black-and-white patterns. She has worked with colour since the mid-1960s. Though her work is thoroughly abstract, Riley was hugely influenced by the work of the Pointillist artist Georges Seurat. This is often visible in the colour palette of her works, though her palettes often took inspiration from her travels (eg to Egypt, Italy). She has also written about artists (Old Masters and modern/contemporary artists alike) and curated exhibitions at London’s Hayward Gallery and National Gallery. Her work is widely collected by the world’s greatest museums (eg MoMA, Tate, MFA Boston, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen) and others across the UK and USA, as well as the UK’s Government Art Collection. Now 90, she is still working as a painter and printmaker. SELLING POINTS: . Bridget Riley CH CBE (b.1931, London) was celebrated early in her career as a pioneer of Op art, and her early works (early 1960s) featured highly geometric black-and-white patterns. She worked with colour from the mid-1960s . Tracks a transitional period in the artist’s career, from using vertical stripes to the introduction of rhomboid shapes and diagonals. This resulted in more visually complex compositions of contrasting colours and forms . Focuses on a seminal series of works on paper, the so-called ‘rhomboid paintings’, which are now held in collections including the Tate . Reproduces an interview with the artist by Robert Kudielka, a longtime friend of the artist as well as a noted scholar of her work 34 colour illustrations

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