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"BRIDGET RILEY: PAINTINGS FROM THE 1960s AND 70s".


"It is a painting's first merit to be a feast for the eyes," Delacroix wrote in 1863. Over a century later, his diary entry has become a favorite motto for Bridget Riley
For the boxer, see Bridgett Riley.


Bridget Louise Riley CH CBE (born April 24, 1931 in London) is an English painter who is one of the foremost proponents of op art, art that exploits the fallibility of the human eye.
. The word "feast" may beg definition, but at the formal level the Serpentine Gallery's review of thirty-three Rileys from the '60s and '70s could certainly be called visual haute cuisine haute cuisine
n.
1. Elaborate or skillfully prepared food, especially that of France.

2. The characteristic manner or style of preparing such food.
. The recently renovated, pavilion-like gallery, with its symmetrical plan and pleasant balance of natural and artificial light, serves as an ideal setting for her pictures. The first space one enters contains monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 work from the early '60s, as do the flanking, artificially lit areas, and the next two rooms leading off from these. Here, though, warm and cool grays creep in Verb 1. creep in - enter surreptitiously; "He sneaked in under cover of darkness"; "In this essay, the author's personal feelings creep in"
sneak in

penetrate, perforate - pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance; "The bullet penetrated her chest"
, as do moments of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
. In the final pair of side rooms, color takes over, and the grand, domed central space is given over to big vertical and horizontal color stripe paintings: Late Morning, 1967-68, and Rise 1, 1968-70, for example. The installation's shift from monochrome to color is subtly mediated by three particularly striking works, which demarcate de·mar·cate  
tr.v. de·mar·cat·ed, de·mar·cat·ing, de·mar·cates
1. To set the boundaries of; delimit.

2. To separate clearly as if by boundaries; distinguish: demarcate categories.
 the transition: to one side, Deny 2, 1967 (a grid of rotating gray ovals on a darker gray background); on the other side, Cataract 3, 1967 (undulating red and blue lines that shade into gray along the canvas's upper and lower edges); in the central space, the spiky black and white Breathe, 1966.

Riley has confirmed that this selection and arrangement is essentially her own, so it seems fair to address it in toto in toto (in toe-toe) adj. Latin for "completely" or "in total," referring to the entire thing, as in "the goods were destroyed in toto," or "the case was dismissed in toto."


IN TOTO. In the whole; wholly; completely; as, the award is void in toto.
 as a work of the artist's, along with the individual paintings. In her catalogue essay, Lisa G. Corrin suggests that the time is ripe to "return to Riley's work with the critical tools ... of the late twentieth century, not only in order to examine her paintings, but also the discourses and constructions surrounding them." These are sound words, but ones that serve to contradict the actual show's whiter-than-white-cube ethos--its emphasis on finished product over process, and its ruthless exclusion of contextualizing material. Might it be this (and not the once-hyped, supposedly "eye-twisting," optical effects of her paintings) that sends one skating from one beautiful, glacial, finished product to the next, struggling to establish a subjective grip? In the mid-'60s, Rosalind Krauss noted that Riley's preparatory drawings "show [her] analytical gifts to their best advantage" (Artforum, June 1966). A rummage in the archives suggests that this is still true. Riley might have included these--or her slightly earlier, formative, Seurat-influenced paintings. She might have flagged her mid-'60s experiment in theater design or her large-scale 1963 environmental piece, Continuum, but she dismisses the question of including such contextual material as "stupid." The only "process" of significance is that which is transparently revealed by the form of each work (presupposing, of course, a sufficiently "sensitive" viewer). "Context" is irrelevant to the understanding or appreciation of form: For Riley, the myth of the white cube's neutrality is worthy of defense. She specifically values paintings that "are not symbolic or transcendental, but perceptually accessible and plastic," such that they build "a structure of relationships that place us, as spectators, in an analogous 'equilibrium'" ("Riley on Mondrian," 1997). Thus, she reinstates the formal goals of Mondrian, say, or Seurat, but unceremoniously dumps out the Idealist brainchild--the sense that this equilibrium might reference some currently unattainable, less alienated, form of life--with the transcendental bathwater.

In one sense, paradoxically, Riley's formalist project is a relativizing one; it's about harnessing the ways that forms and colors affect their neighbors, and exploiting the unpredictability of perceptual experience, for aesthetic ends. That's as far as it goes, though: The idea that the significance of painting's form ultimately relies on factors outside the literal frame--that history, relations of production Relations of production (German: Produktionsverhaltnisse) is a concept frequently used by Karl Marx in his theory of historical materialism and in Das Kapital. Beyond examining specific cases, Marx never defined the general concept exactly.  and consumption, social formations of subjectivity, inescapably contaminate con·tam·i·nate
v.
1. To make impure or unclean by contact or mixture.

2. To expose to or permeate with radioactivity.



con·tam·i·nant n.
 "pure" form with ideological content--would, one imagines, earn a big raspberry from Riley. So how might one read her work against the formalist grain? It offers a perceptual experience of illusory motion and fluidity, of iridescent ir·i·des·cent  
adj.
1. Producing a display of lustrous, rainbowlike colors: an iridescent oil slick; iridescent plumage.

2.
 mirages, of phantom colors born of simultaneous contrast and optical mixture, all underpinned by rigidly delineated, insistently repeated, progressively more and more "standardized" units (fabricated by Riley's studio assistants). Depth in front, flatness behind: a mind-boggling, anti-Idealist sublime-in-reverse. Risking accusations of crude reflectionism, it's tempting to interpret all this as an unwitting but incisive anatomization a·nat·o·mize  
tr.v. a·nat·o·mized, a·nat·o·miz·ing, a·nat·o·miz·es
1. To dissect (an animal or other organism) to study the structure and relation of the parts.

2.
 of the phantasmagoric phan·tas·ma·go·ri·a   also phan·tas·ma·go·ry
n. pl. phan·tas·ma·go·ri·as also phan·tas·ma·go·ries
1.
a. A fantastic sequence of haphazardly associative imagery, as seen in dreams or fever.

b.
 mechanisms of '60s and '70s commodity design and display. (Riley, incidentally, worked at the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency in the late '50s.) That would certainly raise interesting questions about commercial design's huge attraction to Riley's work when it first emerged, and its ripeness for appropriation by the likes of Damien Hirst and Philip Taaffe. On the other hand, it might also suggest why, despite their refinement, poise, and skill, it's hard to warm to these cold and lonely lovely works of art.

Rachel Withers withers

the region over the backline where the neck joins the thorax and where the dorsal margins of the scapulae lie just below the skin.


fistulous withers
see fistulous withers.
 is a frequent contributor to Artforum.
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Title Annotation:Serpentine Gallery, London, UK
Author:Withers, Rachel
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Nov 1, 1999
Words:814
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