20.08.2025 Views

Bridget Riley - Selected Works 1966 to 2024

Transform your PDFs into Flipbooks and boost your revenue!

Leverage SEO-optimized Flipbooks, powerful backlinks, and multimedia content to professionally showcase your products and significantly increase your reach.

Bridget Riley

Selected Works

1966 to 2024


Bridget Riley, (born April 24, 1931, London, England), English artist whose vibrant optical pattern paintings were

central

to the Op art movement of the 1960s.

Riley spent her childhood in Cornwall and attended Goldsmiths College (1949–52; now part of the University of

London) and the Royal College of Art (1952–55; B.A.). Until 1960 she painted primarily impressionistic

landscapes and figures. Her study of the Pointillists, particularly Georges Seurat, led her to experiment with

colour juxtaposition and optical effects, and under the influence of Victor Vasarely and others, her work took on

a geometric abstraction, in which intricate patterns of black and white and, later, alternating colours were

calculated to produce illusions of movement and topography. In 1965

she participated with Vasarely, Yaacov Agam, and others in a noteworthy international exhibition entitled “The

Responsive Eye” at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City. She won a first prize for painting at

the Venice Biennale in 1968. Her notable works from this period included Drift No. 2 (1966) and Nineteen

Greys (1968).

Riley’s experiments with optical illusions continued throughout her career. In 1967 she introduced colour into

her work, making her first stripe paintings. She sometimes broke from geometric forms in the 1970s to create

what she termed curve paintings, in which waving lines give the impression of undulating movement. Notable

examples include Gala (1974) and Entice 2 (1974). In the 1980s Riley introduced diagonal lines, creating a

series she called rhomboid paintings. She also began to adapt her palette to match the pigments she saw on her

travels to such countries as Egypt (Achæan [1981]) and India (Nataraja [1993]). Her work from the 21st century

took on a more lyrical quality, its forms inspired by the arabesque, as in Rajasthan (2012). Riley also received a

number of commissions for wall murals, a practice she began with the design for the Royal Liverpool Hospital

in 1983. Such pieces include Bolt of Colour (2017), a temporary work for the Chinati Foundation, Marfa,

Texas, and Messengers (2019), a permanent installation at the National Gallery, London.


Bridget Riley : The artist in her own words

BBC Newsnight Interview

Please click the image above to watch this fascinating interview via YouTube


• Bridget Riley | Winged Curve | 1966

• Silkscreen on paper | Signed edition of 75 | 63 x 58 cm

• Although printed in 1966, Winged Curve was not published at

that time. The work was printed on rectangular sheets and Riley

felt, then, that the image had not quite worked.

• The edition was kept in the studio. Upon rediscovery and long

consideration, around the turn of the century, the decision was

taken to crop the sheet to the near-square format that we see

today. This adjustment resolved Riley's concerns and, happily, the

edition was signed and released in 2001.

• Under £45,000

Please Click Here To View On Website



• Bridget Riley | About Lilac| 2006

• Silkscreen on paper | Signed edition of 75 | 80 x 49 cm

• Under £9,000

• Please Click Here To View On Website



• Bridget Riley | Sideways | 2010

• Silkscreen on paper | Signed edition of 250 | 33 x 46 cm

• Under £13,000

Please Click Here To View On Website



Bridget Riley in her studio

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!