Bridget Riley
Paintings from the 1960s to the Present
April 14 - August 26, 2018
- Hours:
- 9:30-17:00 (last admission 16:30)
- Closed:
- Mondays (except Apr. 30, Jul. 16), May 1, Jul. 17
- Organizer:
- DIC Corporation
- Patrons:
- Chiba Prefecture, Chiba Prefectural Board of Education, Sakura City, Sakura City Board of Education
- In Collaboration with:
- Bridget Riley Studio / David Zwirner
Museum Admission
- Adults ¥1,300
- College / 65 and over ¥1,100
- Elem / JH / HS ¥600
Groups of 20 or more:
- Adults ¥1,100
- College / 65 and over ¥900
- Elem / JH / HS ¥500
Persons with a disability pass:
- Adults ¥1,000
- College / 65 and over ¥800
- Elem / JH / HS ¥400
*Admission also includes entrance to the permanent collection galleries.
- For students and seniors over 65, discounts require identification such as a Student ID, passport or driver's license.
- For persons with a disability pass=the same discounted price applies for one accompanying care-giver for each disability pass holder
Outline
British artist Bridget Riley (born 1931) gained recognition beginning in the 1960s for her abstract paintings that employ geometric patterns in order to produce optical sensations. Riley began her career painting landscapes in the style of Georges Seurat following early artistic studies that were largely informed by Old Masters painting, Impressionism, and Pointillism which led to a dramatic change in her style. Entering the 1960s, her work became fully abstract and she utilized a reduced palette of only black and white. In 1967, Riley introduced color into her work, generating what would become a signature series of paintings that juxtapose undulating bands of color to create a strong visual sensation of movement within the picture plane. This unique style would secure her a place of recognition in the art world. Since then, Riley has continued to innovate and to create works that privilege the interaction of color and form to produce strong optical sensations that appeal to so many viewers.
In an attempt to highlight the sustained brilliance of Riley’s art, this exhibition presents more than 30 paintings that span her career—including key examples of her black-and-white works of the 1960s, stripe paintings of the 1970s, curve paintings of the 1990s, in addition to her more recent wall paintings. As such, this is the first full-scale exhibition of Riley’s work in Japan in 38 years.
Lectures and Talks
*All will be conducted in Japanese
Lecture 1.
Yukiko Kato (Critic, Associate Prof. Saitama University)
“Riley and Seurat – Hints for Thinking About the 21st Century”
Saturday, April 21
- 13:30-15:00 - Reservations required.
- Free with Museum admission
Lecture 2.
Michio Hayashi (Art historian, Critic, Prof. Sophia University)
“Sensation and Freedom: On the Art of Bridget Riley”
Saturday, July 21
13:30-15:00
- Reservations required.
- Free with Museum admission
Gallery Talks by the Curator
Saturday, April 14
Saturday, May 26
Saturday, June 9
Saturday, July 7
Saturday, August 11
All 14:00-15:00
- No reservations required
- Free with Museum admission
- Gather at the Entrance Hall 14:00
Guided Tours
Daily (except on days of lectures and curator gallery talks)
- No reservations required
- Free with Museum admission
- Gather at the Entrance Hall 14:00
Dance Performance
Yasuyuki Shuto & Megumi Nakamura in “Yuragi”
Two leading Japanese dancers who are active internationally will perform in the gallery.
Saturday, May 12 *Sold Out
18:00-18:30
- Reservations required.
- Limited to 70 people
- Admission: ¥5,000 / ¥4,500 for Museum Friends (includes Museum admission on
performance day, plus light meal at the restaurant before performance)
Concert
Gamelan music by Paraguna Group and Mamoru Fujieda’s “plant music” “Patterns of Nature, Tremor of Life”
Tokyo-based gamelan musicians will play the Indonesia’s classical gamelan music and contemporary music composed with data-patterns from plant cells.
Saturday, August 4
18:15-20:00
- Reservations required.
- Limited to 120 people
- Admission: ¥4,000 / ¥3,500 for Museum Friends (includes Museum admission on
performance day)