Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case MB2G, Shelf DR112, Box MP343

Coloured Greys II

Print
1972 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Bridget Riley is Britain’s most celebrated exponent of Op art, a movement which began in the 1950s principally through the work of the Hungarian-born French artist Victor Vasarely, though rooted in the work of the early 20th-century Italian artists known as the Futurists. Using purely abstract, geometric forms, ‘Op’ artists sought to create patterns which affected the optic nerves to induce sensations of movement or to suggest an intricate three-dimensional perspective on what was in reality a still flat surface.

In her early work Riley frequently used black and white or monochrome to achieve these effects. Often she produced a series of images relating to a single theme. In the suite of three prints, ‘Coloured Greys’, her use of colour is muted and subtle, but integral to the effect of light and movement, which appears to be related to the colour and movement of the sea.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleColoured Greys II
Materials and techniques
Colour screenprint on paper
Brief description
Bridget Riley: 'Coloured Greys II', 1972. Screenprint.
Physical description
A series of 14 horizontal, parallel, waving bands of colour. Each band is divided along its length into strips of differently hued 'greys' so that colour subtly shifts across the image from grey-green at the top of the image through green and purplish-brown to grey and purplish-brown to almost pure grey. The whole creates a moiré, rippling effect against the white ground.
Dimensions
  • Sheet height: 72.6cm
  • Sheet width: 73.3cm
Style
Production typeLimited edition
Copy number
28/125
Marks and inscriptions
Bridget Riley '72 Coloured Greys 28/125 (all in pencil: signed and dated and inscribed with title and number.)
Production
Plate II from the suite of three plates: Coloured Greys I, II and III.
Summary
Bridget Riley is Britain’s most celebrated exponent of Op art, a movement which began in the 1950s principally through the work of the Hungarian-born French artist Victor Vasarely, though rooted in the work of the early 20th-century Italian artists known as the Futurists. Using purely abstract, geometric forms, ‘Op’ artists sought to create patterns which affected the optic nerves to induce sensations of movement or to suggest an intricate three-dimensional perspective on what was in reality a still flat surface.

In her early work Riley frequently used black and white or monochrome to achieve these effects. Often she produced a series of images relating to a single theme. In the suite of three prints, ‘Coloured Greys’, her use of colour is muted and subtle, but integral to the effect of light and movement, which appears to be related to the colour and movement of the sea.
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • This print was included along with Coloured Greys I and III in the Arts Council of Great Britain exhibition 'Bridget Riley Silkscreen Prints 1965-1978', Hayward Gallery, 1980. The prints in the museum's collection are not numbered 'I', 'II' or 'III'. This plate does not correspond exactly in size to that captioned 'Coloured Greys II' in the ACGB Catalogue, the measurements of which are given as 72.6 x 71.9cm
  • This print was included along with Coloured Greys II and III in the Arts Council of Great Britain exhibition 'Bridget Riley Silkscreen Prints 1965-1978', Hayward Gallery, 1980. The prints in the museum's collection are not numbered 'I', 'II' or 'III' but this plate corresponds in size to that in the ACGB Catalogue captioned as Coloured Greys I.
  • Taken from Departmental Circulation Registers: 1976-1977
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.259-1976

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Record createdJune 20, 2008
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