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The nature of Op Art: Bridget Riley and the art of nonrepresentation
The monochrome paintings of the British Op artist Bridget Riley produced between 1960 and 1965, in common with a number of experimental arts and media practices of the 1960s, were characterised by a drift away from traditional representational techniques towards what are now described as nonrepresentational practices. The dynamics of the Op Art aesthetic and the critical writings that surround it bear striking similarities to much recent work on nonrepresentational thought. Based upon an engagement with Riley s early work and specifically the perception and understanding of nature it engendered, an argument can be made that suggests that despite claims to the contrary, Riley was engaged in a form of representational practice that rendered a new and fashionable understanding of cosmic nature. The multi-dimensional nature evoked in her aesthetic was designed to be experienced by the viewer in a precognitive, embodied fashion. In this there are strong echoes with the call made by nonrepresentational theorists who operationalise the same kind of cosmology to develop an evocative, creative account of the world. Both Op Art and nonrepresentational thought seem to build upon a shift in the representational register that occurred during the immediate post-war period, one which prompted representational practices which attempted to subjectify rather than objectify, to evoke instability and multi-dimensionality, and to exercise not only visual, oral and cognitive ways of knowing, but also the precognitive and the haptic. The complex co-relations between representation and nonrepresentation are apparent here, suggesting that it is problematic to emphasise one side of the duality over the other.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Environment and Planning D: Society and SpaceISSN
0263-7758Publisher
PionExternal DOI
Issue
3Volume
23Page range
351-371Pages
21.0Department affiliated with
- Geography Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes