Tracks a shift in Op artist Bridget Riley's career from use of the vertical stripe to increasingly complex diagonal compositions, seen in studies on paper from 1984 to 1995.
Tracking a transitional period of Bridget Riley's career, the works on paper in this volume move from the vertical stripe to increasingly complex diagonal compositions.
During the mid-1980s, Riley introduced a new pictorial device - the rhomboid - to the then predominantly vertical stripes, developing her exploration of interplaying tones of green, yellow and orange.
Riley constructs new visual relationships between divergent colours and forms within these works, creating what the artist terms a 'harmony of contrasts' that animates the entire visual field.
Illustrated in full colour, the works are accompanied by a historic interview with the artist by Robert Kudielka and a text by Natalia Naish and Alexandra Tommasini, which situate these studies with major paintings during this period.