"The process is to feel my own being, from the heel of my shoe up to every aspect of myself, in relation to the wind and to the way that I’m moving."

1960s

In 1956 Andy Wing, a recent Bard College graduate and an artist with the Miller Advertising Agency, packed his bags, left New York, and headed West. He wrote in his journal that he hoped to " find the tranquility in which to be [himself] and create, and try to absorb, overcome and place in proper perspective " his art education. Wing chose to free himself from artistic convention, delving into a period of intense creative experimentation in Laguna Beach, California, where he found a community of like-minded intellectual Bohemians whose respect he earned because of his authenticity, art and activism.

talking about creative process, 1 minute 20 sec, 1980s

Andy Wing was one of many American abstract artists whose art was grounded in the forms, materials and cadences of nature. He took classes at the Art Students League in New York City; many of Wing’s artistic philosophies echo Hans Hofmann’s Abstract Expressionist teachings, specifically Hofmann’s exploration of experimental "action" painting and his creation of"push/pull" visual sensations within his vital, light-filled paintings. Yet the techniques Wing employed to achieve these goals were ones he developed alone, based on his own social conscience, artistic instincts and personal circumstances.

andy with his sister

1960s

tour of " recyclery " outdoor studio, 48 sec, 1980s

childhood home

He stored all manner of urban debris and wooden forms found in nature in an area of his Laguna Beach property he referred to as his "recyclery." From these materials, Wing constructed his own innovatively shaped canvases and painting surfaces. He was initially forced by his finances to make the outdoors his studio, but over time the environment of his garden became an integral part of his season- and nature-based artistic process.

showing at the laguna art fair, 1960s

He wrote in his journal
that he hoped to "find the tranquility in which to be [himself] and create, and try to absorb, overcome and place in proper perspective"

Scroll Series, 1960s

talking about life and work, 1 minute 17 sec, 1980s

Scroll Series, 1960s

Scroll Series, 1960s

His strategy of exposing his works to the elements of nature in order to create their exceptional patinas underscores his desire to enlist external universal forces as partners in his creative endeavors. While heaving pigment onto a canvas in a 1987 video recording, Wing explained, "The process is to feel my own being, from the heel of my shoe up to every aspect of myself, in relation to the wind and to the way that I’m moving."

a man about town

andy describes his formal process and tools, 47 sec, 1980s

Andy in the 1980s

watering his gardens