
Anthony Hill, a prominent figure in British art, was a leading thinker among the constructionists, a group of esteemed artists who had shifted towards abstraction, centered around Victor Pasmore. By the mid-1950s, he had forsaken painting in favor of relief constructions. Embracing Marcel Duchamp’s concept of the readymade, Hill utilized industrial materials like copper, aluminum, and perspex to propose a radical perspective on structure in art. He participated in the collective exhibit “This is Tomorrow” at the Whitechapel Gallery in London in 1956. In his debut solo exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art in January 1958, he showcased purely orthogonal relief constructions.
Hill defined his work as “ordered sensation.” Later in the 1950s, his focus shifted from geometrical abstraction to the more qualitative realm of topology, the study of one thing in relation to another. In parallel with his artistic pursuits, his inquiries led him to delve into the realm of mathematics. In 1957, he commenced work on what is now renowned as Hill’s Conjecture, articulated in a 1963 paper co-authored with the distinguished mathematician Frank Harary. Hill’s explorations in topology permeated his series and works, where the mathematical aspect is sometimes derived from his own research in the field, while at other times, it is a purely intuitive study of graph theory, the partitioning of numbers, and symmetry. The underlying thread connecting all of his works is his fascination with structure.
www.ftn-books.com has a Hill screen print now available.














































































