Posts Tagged ‘paintings’

Minimal art: New Süfnex series of paintings

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Here for you is some fresh-off-the-griddle goodness, my latest paintings in the Süfnex series. Just put the finishing touches on them, as a matter of fact.

minimal artminimal artminimal art
Left to right: Süfnex Seibu 4, Süfnex Solaris, and Süfnex Seibu 3. I painted them Sunday (Apr 27) through this evening (Apr 29) … in about 54 hours.

Each of these recent explorations of minimal art measures 10 inches square and is acrylic on canvas, as usual.

Keeping the creative energies going, flowing through my speakers over the past couple of days have been these remarkable recordings:

Dandelion Gum by Black Moth Super Rainbow. Utterly phenomenal!

Pop Artificiel by Lassigue Bendthaus … which was brought on by the aforementioned album.

Also, I am reading Minimalism: Origins by Edward Strickland … a very well-written survey of how minimal art, music, etc. came about in the United States in the mid-20th century. I also have my hands on a pile of CSS books, because I’m getting ready to redesign wiggz.com. The functionality will remain the same … just need to start making it look a bit jazzier.

Other from that, things are going well. Can’t wait to cook up more new designs and paintings soon. Until then, I wish you happiness and the causes of happiness.

Grant Wiggins

More Space Loop paintings

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Here are pics of the latest in the Space Loop series of modern paintings, produced on Thursday, April 10 and Friday, April 11.

Space Loop Paintings
SL0612D30 (30 inches square; acrylic on canvas)

Space Loop Paintings
SL0612CX10 (10 inches square; acrylic on canvas)

The chartreuse piece is an alternate design of the Space Loop series, as noted in my previous post. Felt like I had to paint it anyway, if only as an experiment. It’s now available for sale in the online art store.

Since then, I have been developing a new set of sketches involving a painting I made four years ago, called Süfnex. I look forward to revealing those sketches within the next few days.

I’ve also been brainstorming titles for new work, whether they’re prints, paintings, etc. Some names: Phratophir, Biyuvial, Ostroddol, Etcholxen, Exubeix. There are others, but I will spare you of them! The Basque language is particularly fascinating, and ripe with points of inspiration, as demonstrated by the newspaper Berria.

Otherwise, I have been doing quite a bit of gardening lately, before the Arizona sun increases the degree of difficulty on such activity. Gardening is much like painting, I have found, because it’s very meditative. I started a compost pile in late December, and I look forward to starting a raised garden this summer.

On that note, I wish you happiness and causes of happiness. Thank you for reading.

Grant Wiggins

First Space Loop painting reaches orbit

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

This afternoon, my first Space Loop painting evolved out of concept form, into canvas form:

Space Loop

I am encouraged by this afternoon’s result. I look forward to continuing the series in the near future.

I have to admit that spent a seemingly ridiculous amount of time trying to get the stripes “right” for this series. Hours adjusting the curves, undoing those adjustments, bending the curves some more, comparing them to the original sketch, measuring the distances between stripes, rethinking all of my edits, starting over, etc.

After arriving at two designs, all of the editing came down to one big “hunch,” to borrow a term used by Frederick Hammersley, one of my favorite painters. One composition looked more dynamic. But the other composition looked slightly antisocial, but in a good way. I chose the former.

Can you notice the difference?


What is the difference? Decide for yourself. Left to right are original sketch (December 2006), the more “dynamic” version (from three weeks ago) and a “rethinking” of that version (from last night).

As I was going through this process, I was reminded of the saying “Too much tuning, not enough music.”

I do find myself deliberating, wondering, and doubting my designs perhaps a bit too much. However, I am trying to be more mindful of overthinking my designs. I have to be able to cut off my thought process and say “Time’s up. What’s your decision?” That’s where the hunch comes in.

Anyway, today was a great day. Beautiful weather and good music. Among the many albums on the stereo today were:

Animism by Expo 70 (mind-blowing space/ethereal/droning/classification-defying stuff)

Back from the Futer by Aavikko (brilliant 8-bit Casio tunes from Finland)

Affenstunde by Popol Vuh (a classic from the dawn of the digital era)

I highly recommend any of these albums. On that note, I am heading back to the easel. Thank you for reading.

Grant Wiggins

Four new hard-edge paintings

Monday, December 17th, 2007

Below are four new hard-edge paintings, representing the beginning of a series I started a couple of Fridays ago. Four pieces thus far, each 10 inches square by 1.5 inches deep, titled Motus 001 through 004. Motus is Latin for “motion.”

The design reminds me of some of the semi-truck designs I can’t get enough of, which I see as I drive around. I don’t really like driving, but seeing well-designed 18-wheelers can make any trip worthwhile.

Over the near-term, I’d like to produce perhaps 20 to 30 of these, just switching up the colors.

hard-edge painting
hard-edge painting
hard-edge painting
hard-edge painting

In other news:

Things have been quiet on the blog lately because I’ve been working hard at redesigning my site, which will go live on January 1.

Cool art show alert: Birth of the Cool: California Art, Design, and Culture at Midcentury at the Orange County Museum of Art through January 6. The show features Frederick Hammersley, Karl Benjamin, and Lorser Feitelson — three of my favorite artists.

Cool book alert: Untitled by Stéphane Dafflon, another of my favorite artists.

Until next time, I wish you happiness and the causes of happiness.

— Grant Wiggins

5 new modern geometric paintings

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Here’s a handful of new modern geometric paintings I’ve completed recently:

modern geometric paintings
modern geometric paintings   modern geometric paintings
modern geometric paintings
modern geometric paintings

From top, they are:

Row one: Fluorescent Brown, 20 x 40 in.
Row two: Warph and Green Machine II, both 30 in. square
Row three: Square Warp, 18 in. square
Row four: Red, Brown and Blue, 10 x 20 in.

Thanks for visiting!

Grant Wiggins

Miniature art: Painting small for Think Small 4

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

I just finished a miniature art painting that I’ll be showing for Think Small 4, a miniature art show at art 6 gallery in Richmond, Virginia (November 2 – December 22, 2007). The guiding principle of the show is that no miniature art painting can be larger than 3 inches in any dimension.

This is the second time I’ll be showing in Think Small; I participated in Think Small 3 a couple of years back.

This year I’ve submitted Omnicron’s Dilemma. Acrylic on panel; three inches square.

miniature art paintingminiature art painting
At left is a sketch of the miniature art painting, called Omnicron’s Dilemma, I’ll be showing in Think Small 4. At right is the actual painting, which measures three inches square.

It could be yours, framed, IKEA style, for just $71.10. (I determined the price at random, using the random.org integer generator.)

Ultimately, I think I’m going to paint a larger version of this piece, just to do the design justice.

Omnicron’s Dilemma was an offshoot of the work show below, which just might be the last of my works in a pop art style. It is called An Error Occurred While Processing this Directive:
miniature art painting

There’s lots more I’d like to write about, but I’ve got to cut this short, because I’m catching a plane to Portland tomorrow. Otherwise, I’m very much digging the new album by The Fiery Furnaces, Widow City. I think they’re making some of the most challenging music out today.

Grant Wiggins

A change of course, of course

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Over the summer, I returned to minimalist painting yet again. My interest in pared-down compositions was rekindled unexpectedly, out of the blue. Starting in mid-June, I was focused solely on making pared-down compositions, letting line and color work on their own terms. I was transfixed by the idea of doing more with less.

Somehow, however, the novelty of minimalism started to wear off about three weeks ago. Inexplicably, I found myself getting bored with the pared down and spare — the simple stuff. No matter what adjustments I made, I wasn’t happy with the results. A few stripes here and there weren’t doing anything for me. I felt like I was trying to divine something that wasn’t there. I got bored.

So I started making patterns again. And it only took about two months to reach that point.

And so, a few days ago, I decided that minimalism isn’t where I want to go with my art, after all, at least for now. I therefore feel compelled to recant what I wrote back in June, when I swore off maximal art. The funky, fresh, and fun stuff — swatches of my homespun 70s wallpaper patterns, fragments of logos and garbled nonsense, the work I produced this spring — is where all the fun is at.

I’ve veered from minimalism and maximalism several times over the past four years. I wonder if changing my mind like this is healthy — a sign of growth — or a sign that I’ve lost my voice. Hopefully it’s the former.

Years ago, I banged out weird ideas for paintings with seeming ease. They just popped into my head and I made them happen. My ideas don’t happen that way anymore. My process is different; I sketch out elements in pieces and jam them together. To me, that way of working offers many more possibilities for surprise and strangeness.

My plan for now, and for the future, is just to make things that I enjoy and lose myself in the creative process — the act of making. I just want to sit down at the desk (or easel), put on the headphones, and mess around, not really caring about the outcome or thinking so much. Just focusing on process, not product. I hope to post the results of this newly chartered course soon.

Grant Wiggins

Painting Geometric Shapes

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Lately I’ve been very much into painting geometric shapes. As an example, the painting you see below measures 20″ x 40″ inches, and features fluorescent red, fluorescent blue, and two shades of brown. The combination of colors is exciting and jarring to me.

painting geometric shapes

While I’ve been coming up with a lot of ideas recently, I haven’t quite found the time to make them reality, sadly. I’m thinking about taking a break from minimalist painting for a while. The ideas I have are more about patterns, shapes and colors entwining and colliding. That stuff is so much more exciting to paint.

Otherwise, I haven’t been painting much, because freelance writing and home renovations have been taking over. But that’s all right … I’ll get back to the easel soon enough.

Grant Wiggins

In the studio: Labor Day ’07

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

Just finished a larger version of Asymmetrikelly (below, center), which is 100% pure eye-piercing fluorescent orange-red on white. (Lights dimmed for enhanced effect.)

In part, Asymmetrikelly is a nod to the early “figure/ground” compositions of Ellsworth Kelly, which he painted in red, green, and blue. In April I produced the original study of this painting, just 9 x 12 inches. This piece is 30 x 40 inches. I think I might make an even larger square one, too … 60 inches square.

To the left is Rust & Sky, another recent work.

Inspired by Ellsworth Kelly

Grant Wiggins

Abstract Geometric Paintings

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

Over the weekend I produced a new series of abstract geometric paintings, starting with a white, red and orange design.

This series of abstract geometric paintings took a major turn, however, when I focused on combinations of fluorescent red, fluorescent blue and brown. These colors bounce against each other to a fantastic op art effect. Each measures 10 x 18 inches. Here are the results!

abstract geometric paintings
abstract geometric paintings
abstract geometric paintings
abstract geometric paintings

That’s all of abstract geometric paintings I have to share for now. Thanks for reading!

Grant Wiggins