Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 9

George Goodridge
Thought Forms, 2018, acrylic on 3-D stretched canvas, abstract wall sculpture

2018

About the Item

Acrylic on canvas stretched over handbuilt wood and Sintra armature. Dimensions listed for piece as shown. Dimensions are variable depending on hanging formation. Color palette: orange, green, purple, gray and white. Wall sculpture / Sculptural painting / 3D painting / Neo-geo / Geometric art / Abstract art / Biomorphic art / Gestural art / Minimalist style / Shapes
  • Creator:
  • Creation Year:
    2018
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 24 in (60.96 cm)Width: 32 in (81.28 cm)Depth: 4.5 in (11.43 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Jersey City, NJ
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1269111680022

More From This Seller

View All
Hope, 2020, Acrylic on stretched canvas, wood armature, black, wall sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Acrylic on 3-D stretched canvas with wood armature. Dimensions listed for piece as shown. Dimensions are variable depending on hanging formation. Wall sculpture, black, orange, red a...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Wood, Acrylic, Canvas

Number 26, Vertebrate Companion Series, 2012, acrylic on canvas, wall sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Acrylic on 3-D stretched canvas, dimensions listed for piece as shown. Dimensions are variable depending on hanging formation. Wall sculpture, white, red, and gray.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Acrylic

Beauty is Eternity Gazing at Itself In the Mirror, 2013, Acrylic wall sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Acrylic on 3-D stretched canvas with wood armature. Dimensions listed for piece as shown. Dimensions are variable depending on hanging formation. Wall sculpture, white, tan, and gray.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Acrylic

Waves of Contentment 2, 2019, acrylic, resin on 3-D stretched canvas, sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Acrylic and resin on 3-D stretched canvas. Sculpture, blue, green, orange. Abstract, biomorphic.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Resin, Wood, Acrylic

Waves of Contentment 1, 2019, acrylic, resin on 3-D stretched canvas, sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Acrylic and resin on 3-D stretched canvas. Sculpture, blue, green, orange. Abstract, biomorphic.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Acrylic, Resin

Number 17, Vertebrate Companion Series, 2010, oil on canvas, wall sculpture
By George Goodridge
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Oil on 3-D stretched canvas, dimensions listed for piece as shown. Dimensions are variable depending on hanging formation. Wall sculpture, white, orange, and gray.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Oil

You May Also Like

VERSO EQUIVALENCE 1 - acrylic, staples, pine wood, cut linen -Abstract geometric
By Linda King Ferguson
Located in Signal Mountain, TN
This painting by Linda King Ferguson is part of her equivalence series, which began as a feminist project; works that subvert the historically male gaze and a material language speaking of gendered concerns. While typically, King Ferguson paints both sides of the canvas and cuts a flap on the the frontside to reveal the color of the back of the canvas, she unexpectedly does the opposite here. The painting is hung from the "frontside" of the canvas, revealing to us the raw edges of her linen canvas, stapled to the stretchers. Two oblong shapes of pink and red dominate the center of the painting. A thin semioval cut has been made inside of both of these shapes. Her color choices first came from Helen Molesworth’s essay, Painting With Ambivalence, published in WACK! Art of the Feminist Revolution. The Essay includes a large reproduction of Mary Heilmann’s 1979 painting...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Metal

The Skies of Sky #1 (black)
By Louise Blyton
Located in Phoenix, AZ
b. Melbourne, Australia Louise Blyton is a reductive artist exploring the romance of raw linen and dry pigment. The artist’s geometrically shaped canvas...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

EQUIVALENCE 118- Acrylic on cut Linen - Abstract Geometric Painting
By Linda King Ferguson
Located in Signal Mountain, TN
This painting on cut linen canvas by Linda King Ferguson depicts a diamond shaped canvas that is color-blocked into three main sections. The topmost triangular portion of the canvas ...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

Life on the Shelf
By Louise Blyton
Located in Phoenix, AZ
b. Melbourne, Australia Louise Blyton is a reductive artist exploring the romance of raw linen and dry pigment. The artist’s geometrically shaped canvases explore color, light, and form through the visual language of Reductivism, an aesthetic style characterized by streamlined compositions, restricted color, and a reduction of form and means. Identifying with Reductivism’s simplicity, Blyton’s shaped canvases and three-dimensional wall sculptures elevate craftsmanship and process, achieving a compositional clarity that unifies color and form. To construct her works, Blyton covers custom built balsa wood stretchers with raw linen, adorning them with layers of pure pigment or acrylic paint. Each pigment reacts differently to raw linen and requires a specific number of coats to reach the artist’s desired level of saturation. As the artist explains, “I’m always looking for a kind of quietness and harmony when making my works even if the color being used is loud.” The artist creates her own spatial dimension by manipulating the shape of the canvas, which escapes from the flat surface of the wall, confusing its role as a painting. “Rather than responding to the architecture they ask particular attributes of the building to act as support,” as some works appear to climb the surface of the walls, while others straddle columns and corners. Louise Blyton lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Art at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia in 1988. Her works are held in significant corporate and private collections in Australia, China, France, United Kingdom, Portugal, and the United States. Since 2000, Blyton has run an artist supply store called, St. Luke Artist Colourman, which specializes in professional paint and raw materials, with her husband David Coles.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

Mobile Exhibition Unit - Part II
By Jan Maarten Voskuil
Located in Phoenix, AZ
b. 1964, Arnhem Jan Maarten Voskuil stretches his paintings into the third dimension. His crafted, partly curved wooden constructions are based on simple geometric principles: the c...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

All the Summers are Hers
By Louise Blyton
Located in Phoenix, AZ
b. Melbourne, Australia Louise Blyton is a reductive artist exploring the romance of raw linen and dry pigment. The artist’s geometrically shaped canvases explore color, light, and form through the visual language of Reductivism, an aesthetic style characterized by streamlined compositions, restricted color, and a reduction of form and means. Identifying with Reductivism’s simplicity, Blyton’s shaped canvases and three-dimensional wall sculptures elevate craftsmanship and process, achieving a compositional clarity that unifies color and form. To construct her works, Blyton covers custom built balsa wood stretchers with raw linen, adorning them with layers of pure pigment or acrylic paint. Each pigment reacts differently to raw linen and requires a specific number of coats to reach the artist’s desired level of saturation. As the artist explains, “I’m always looking for a kind of quietness and harmony when making my works even if the color being used is loud.” The artist creates her own spatial dimension by manipulating the shape of the canvas, which escapes from the flat surface of the wall, confusing its role as a painting. “Rather than responding to the architecture they ask particular attributes of the building to act as support,” as some works appear to climb the surface of the walls, while others straddle columns and corners. Louise Blyton lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Art at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia in 1988. Her works are held in significant corporate and private collections in Australia, China, France, United Kingdom, Portugal, and the United States. Since 2000, Blyton has run an artist supply store called, St. Luke Artist Colourman, which specializes in professional paint and raw materials, with her husband David Coles.
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

Recently Viewed

View All