Archive for June, 2009

The backstory behind new painting SuperAcid Autobacs-Ambilify

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

I wish I had the quote handy, but memory will have to suffice for the moment. Bridget Riley, the legendary Op Art painter, once said something along the lines of, “The more you give to your work, the more your effort will show through. Viewers will pick up on this.”

I sincerely hope this will be the case with my newest painting, SuperAcid Autobacs-Ambilify. This work took one month to create, and I scrapped two versions of it before arriving at the canvas pictured here.

SuperAcid Autobacs Ambilify
My new painting SuperAcid Autobacs Ambilify, completed on June 7, 2009

Painting SuperAcid, frankly, was a struggle, filled with twists, turns, dead ends, frustration, elation, and opportunity for reflection.

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Snickers ad parodies

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

For weeks, as I’ve been driving back and forth to work, I’ve been greeted by the humorously ironic Snickers ad campaign, which plays word tricks on its iconic logo. “Get dunked on by Patrick Chewing,” one Snickers billboard warns. “Do hard time in the peanutentiary,” another Snickers billboard advises. If you live anywhere in the United States, you’ve probably witnessed these Snickers ads.

After weeks of driving around, I finally lost my mind and decided to channel my reaction into Snickers ads of my own. Here are my very own 7 contributions to the truly wonderful and completely original Snickers ad campaign:

snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody
snickers ad parody

Do you have a Snickers ad parody idea? Post it below!

A slew of sketches for the Cream Gallery mural

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Moments ago I finished a set of preliminary sketches for Spencer Hibert’s much-anticipated Cream art gallery / video arcade / coffee shop / vegan donut emporium. Spencer is looking for something that he calls Aztec Atari.

With those two concepts to guide me, I produced the following set of sketches. The colors are fairly arbitrary and don’t really matter at this point; they can be changed in infinite ways. I view the process of choosing colors as a separate project anyway.

Regardless, whatever doesn’t wind up in the mural will probably land in a painting, or two, or 14 … who knows! It’s not the end result I’m concerned about, it’s the process … and I’ve had a lot of fun making these. I found the project very challenging.

Grant’s note of 16 June 09:

I just tended to version 2 by employing Spencer’s guidance (see comments). The first image shown below represents my interpretation of his guidance (version 2a). Below that, I decided to shake up the colors a bit, just to push the idea further (version 2b). Enough versions already, right?

Version 2a

Version 2b

Version 2c


Anyway, here are the original 7 sketches:

Version 2

Version 1a

Version 1b

Version 1c

Version 1d

Version 1e

Version 3

Do you, fair reader, have a favorite? Your insight is welcome.

Now it’s break time!

— Grant

A few pics of my garden

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Thought you might be interested in seeing what’s going on in the backyard. Every day I am amazed by something different and new.

In particular, my mind is blown by how zucchini grows. The cultivar features a base of slender, tubular lime-green stalks that seem to wander as it matures.

Two “black beauty” zucchini plants are the stars of the first three pics below. Under a massive canopy forest-green leaves, their fruits swell up seemingly by the minute.

Also pictured: an 8-foot sunflower readying to blossom.

While harvest time is nearing for my first crop of corn, I’m almost overwhelmed by my harvest of summer squash (early prolific straightnecks), cucumbers (burpless hybrids) and black beauties. Also growing are tomatoes, watermelon, several kinds of peppers and sunflowers.

Art starts with attitude

Monday, June 8th, 2009

I’ve decided to stop being modest.

When someone pays me a compliment about my paintings, I’m going to take it — and run like hell.

In other words, I’m going to say “thank you” — and I’m going to believe what that person says.

Bashfulness be damned

There’s no point in being bashful. Being bashful will neither help you — nor I — make great paintings.

I am convinced of this: To achieve anything great, you must first believe that you can achieve something great.

To put this into practice: I want to make world-class art. Therefore, I must say to myself, “I can make world-class art.” Or, I can say this: “I make world class art.”

(Typing that last sentence felt pretty good.)

SuperAcid Autobacs Ambilify

SuperAcid Autobacs Ambilify: It's 12:51am, and I've been working on this painting for the past five hours, and I'm ready for sleep. This painting is one of the weirdest paintings I've ever made; it took me four weeks to make; it looks nothing like I originally envisioned it; I trashed two previous versions. But that's another story for another time. Fact is, I didn't quit.

Making “okay” art is not okay

I am also convinced that the greatest artists do no think their is art is just “okay.”

The greatest art critics? Completely full of themselves.

But you know, to do something great, you’ve got to be able to say, “I do great work. Nothing will get between me and my work.”

What did Muhammad Ali say about himself? “I am the greatest.” And he believed it.

As an artist, you should be able to say the same about yourself. It’s not like there’s a Heavyweight Championship of Art, anyway. No one’s keeping score. (Except ourselves, of course.)

Thanks for reading,
Grant Wiggins

Difficulty choosing colors for your painting? Try clear Contact paper

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

For the better part of the past month, I’ve been working on a painting that I call SuperAcid Autobacs-Ambilify.

I’m very close to finishing this painting, but I’ve been very challenged lately with selecting the right set of colors for the central part of the composition.

In other words, the composition is fine, but there’s a pretty large area in the center of the canvas where I’ve waffled over color combinations.

So I had my friend Oliver Hibert look at the painting last night. I also brought a roll of clear Contact paper, and I covered the canvas with it. This allowed me to paint over the canvas, without fear of paint buildup, as we tested different colors.

Long story short, we decided to “go green.” Oliver had some mint green and a light kelly green laying around, and we gravitated toward that part of the color wheel. See below.

Contact paper is laid over the left half of this canvas, allowing me to test different colors.

Contact paper is laid over the left half of this canvas, allowing me to test different colors.

Before meeting up with Oliver, I was wary of using green, simply because I feel like I use green so frequently in my paintings. But Oliver showed me otherwise.

Oliver and I also had a good talk about how difficult it is to choose colors when you’re employing practically every color in a painting. You’d think that, because you’re using every color, it would be easy to add another.

Actually, just the opposite is true. The more colors you add, the harder it can be to pick the right one. It’s almost like building a house of cards; the more you add, the more you risk. It’s hard to explain. But do you know what I mean?

It’s almost easier to stick with an analogous color scheme. Yet, where’s the fun in that?

Thanks for reading,
Grant

In appreciation of the late, great hard-edge painter Frederick Hammersley

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

This afternoon, I became profoundly saddened when I learned that Frederick Hammersley, one of my favorite painters, passed away on Sunday, at the age of 90.

An email newsletter from Charlotte Jackson Fine Art revealed the news. The subject line read Frederick Hammersley (1919-2009). Before I clicked to open the email, fearing the worst, I tried to trick myself into thinking that perhaps he would be having a new retrospective exhibition. To my disbelief, I was wrong.

Frederick Hammersley, as pictured in the catalog of the 1959 Four Abstract Classicists exhibition

Frederick Hammersley, as pictured in the catalog of the 1959 Four Abstract Classicists exhibition

I would like to tell you why Frederick Hammersley’s work is so important to me. And I would like to explain my sadness for never writing him a letter, telling him how highly I think of his work, and how much I appreciate how he was able to pursue two very different styles of painting throughout his life (”geometries” and “organics”).

Why Hammersley matters

To me, there is no question that Hammersley is one of the greatest American painters of the 20th century. He’s up there with Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko. I’d love to see a Newman “zip” painting hung in the same room with one of Hammersley’s “geometries.”

However, the reason why Hammersley doesn’t have a larger following, in my opinion, is a simple question of geography.

Because they were based in Southern California, Hammersley, Karl Benjamin and other members of the Hard Edge abstraction group were thousands of miles away from New York, in a literal and figurative sense. While the West Coast Hard Edge painters were doing some truly astonishing, adventurous, highly original work, they didn’t fit the prevailing “discourse” of New York at the time. When the term “hard edge art” took shape in LA in 1959, pop art was right around the corner in New York; hard edge didn’t have a place in New York’s visual agenda.

Frederick Hammersley's In Two the Fray, #5 1978<br />

Frederick Hammersley's In Two the Fray, #5 1978;
via Charlotte Jackson Fine Art - charlottejackson.com

And it is true that the Hard Edge Painters—the Four Abstract Classicists (Hammersley, Benjamin, John McLaughlin, and Lorser Feitselson)—were producing their own form of minimalism at the time. But again, they were ahead of their time—minimalist painting didn’t reach New York until the mid-1960s. These guys just didn’t “fit.”

“It was so brand-new,” Hammersley said, recounting how his paintings were received in 1959. “I assumed people couldn’t relate to it,” he says.

Despite not receiving the critical or curatorial attention he deserved, Hammersley carried on, painting away—way off the radar in Albuquerque—following his intuition, one painting at a time.

Yet, now, with hindsight—and thanks to Dave Hickey (who curated Site Santa Fe in 2001), Charlotte Jackson Fine Art (Hammersley’s gallery), Art Santa Fe (which will soon release a retrospective book of Hammersley’s works), and Elizabeth Armstrong (curator of the recent Birth of the Cool exhibition)—Hammersley’s profile certainly will increase.

Why Hammersley matters to me

I first encountered Hammersley’s work at Charlotte Jackson in July 2006, at the opening of his Hard Edge show, which blew my mind.

(Those IBM 14000 CORE mainframe computer drawings from the late 1960s!!!!!!!!!! I mean, renting time on a mainframe to make computer drawings, using punch cards? And one of the drawings is called Clairol? How utterly and insanely amazing is that! If only I could have been there to witness those being made!)

Anyway, three years ago, Hammersley’s show was exactly what I needed to see. I was in a point of transition, artistically, from painting neo-pop art to my own idea of minimal art. I was experiencing a lot of doubts about my decision, and I could tell I was leaving behind an audience in the process. I felt compelled to keep painting trippy pop paintings—because that’s what people said they liked—but I wanted to do something completely different.

After seeing Mr. Hammersley’s paintings in person, I felt like I had turned a corner—I had found a new artistic role model, if you will. He replaced Andy Warhol in my mind. It was “cool” to paint completely nonobjective work with just a couple of shapes in it. The show not only validated my own intuition, as a matter of fact, as I was leaving Charlotte Jackson, I literally turned around one last time and pumped my fist in the air. My reaction was that intense. I drove back to Phoenix beaming.

Following the Hard Edge show, I felt truly inspired to write Mr. Hammersley a letter. But somehow, I second-guessed the idea, as if it was too much of a stretch. I regret that decision.

But I am thankful to say that I was able to see the Birth of the Cool exhibition at the Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas, two weeks before the touring show closed for good. While I swooned over Karl Benjamin’s loud-as-hell color combinations, Hammersley’s mid-1960s painting Come, really resonated with me. I can’t find an image of it online, so I must ask you to imagine four circles (as I remember, three are white, one black), arranged in the center of a cornflower blue rectangle, in a diamond configuration. The black circle is at the bottom. Yet, it’s not the circles, themselves, that do the talking, it’s the negative space between them. Genius.

We have lost a truly great painter—one of the greatest artists of our time. I know I am not alone in my sorrow. But I am comforted by the idea that so many artists and curators will be inspired by Hammersley’s work, and by his example, far into the future.

For reference: