"I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience"
About this Quote
The key move is the pivot from “sensation” to “perceptual experience.” Sensation is raw stimulus; perceptual experience is cognition catching up with the body. Riley’s intent isn’t to decorate the eye but to expose the eye’s labor: how we stitch fragments into depth, motion, vibration, stability. The “release” is subtextually a kind of payoff that doesn’t belong to narrative or symbolism; it belongs to the nervous system. That’s why her work can feel both thrilling and slightly adversarial. You don’t stand outside it interpreting; you’re recruited into completing it.
Context matters: Riley comes of age in postwar British abstraction and shows prominence in the 1960s, when optical art gets folded into mass culture (fashion, design, advertising) and dismissed as fad. Her wording counters that dismissal. She’s claiming seriousness without romantic mystique: art as a structured experiment in attention, where the viewer’s perception is not a passive window but the medium itself.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Bridget Riley: In Conversation with Robert Kudielka (Bridget Riley, 1990)
Evidence: “Right up to, and in some ways including, the stripe paintings I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience that flooded the whole as it were. Now I try to take sensation as the guiding line and build, with the relationships it demands, a plastic fabric which has no other raison d'etre except to accommodate the sensation it solicits....I wanted more. A way of working which allowed me to get to grips with plastic issues, to get closer to the real problems of painting.”. Your wording matches a shortened excerpt of a longer statement. The clearest primary attribution I could verify is that it comes from Bridget Riley “in conversation with Robert Kudielka, 1990.” The David Zwirner exhibition page reproduces the passage and gives the attribution, but it does not provide the original publication venue (book/catalogue/journal), location, or page number, so I can’t yet confirm where it was FIRST published/spoken beyond the year and the fact it was a Kudielka conversation. A secondary confirmation that the quote existed in print by July 10, 2003 appears in the London Review of Books review, which says it came from “a conversation published in 1990,” but it also does not identify the publication. ([davidzwirner.com](https://www.davidzwirner.com/exhibitions/2020/bridget-riley-studies-1984-1997?utm_source=openai)) Other candidates (1) Bridget Riley (Bridget Riley, Sidney Janis Gallery, 1990)95.0% ... I used to build up to sensation , accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience that flooded the... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Riley, Bridget. (2026, February 18). I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-used-to-build-up-to-sensation-accumulating-45422/
Chicago Style
Riley, Bridget. "I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience." FixQuotes. February 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-used-to-build-up-to-sensation-accumulating-45422/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience." FixQuotes, 18 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-used-to-build-up-to-sensation-accumulating-45422/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.



