I don't know enough about c# in order to actually judge the content of your question so I will refrain from voting on it, but here is my impression when looking at it.
1) The question contains a very complex example for a (relatively) simple issue. It takes quite a bit of reading to get to the core problem, which is that you want to repaint an object upon some event occurring. You could make a much easier to digest example by taking out the grid and movement, and just try to make an object paint itself on one space, then given an arbitrary event, the object paints itself on another.
The benefits of doing this are two fold: The problems is isolated (So we aren't confused if the WASD button presses are causing anything or if something with the grid is going wrong, we know we're focused on the repainting of the object and we can easily focus on the important thing you're asking), and also the question then becomes applicable not only to people who want to move an object through a grid with the arrow keys, but rather it's applicable to anyone who wants to repaint an object.
2) Before the edit, there wasn't enough information for the example to be complete and verifiable.
This may seem to contradict my previous point, since now I'm saying didn't provide enough information, even though at first I said you provided too much. But allow me to explain:
With the information you gave at first, another user couldn't copy/paste your code and have a working example to fiddle with, they would have to add in other things that were missing. So a person wanting to help you is left wondering if the error might be in some other part of your code that we can't see.
However, by including all your other code, the question just became that more cumbersome, with so many moving parts that it's hard to know where to start looking for the answer.
That's the beauty of reducing your issue to something much more simple. If you just have some sort of generic event instead of all the wasd movement commands, and if you're just worried about painting the object in one place and then repainting it in another without all the code calculating where it lands, then you can make a complete and verifiable example that someone can run with a minimal amount of code in the question.
My suggestion:
Figure out a really easy to code event, something that's less than 3 lines if possible. You might be able to do that with a button or keypress, but make sure it's simple.
Then, draw your shape at a certain point, and make the result of the event draw it at another predetermined point. This will get rid of all the calculations because we're just looking at two certain points, where we start and where we want to be.
Now that you have your simplistic GUI just drawing one thing twice based on the one event, try to figure out why in this minimal example the object isn't redrawing.
Edit your question and swap the complicated movement/keypress example for this really simple one, with the entire code there so that someone else can run it, and an explanation of what commands you've tried to get it to repaint and what results are different from what you expected the commands to do.
If you write your question like this, it will be simple and to the point, easy for an answerer to understand and help you, and on top of that, when another person is having the same issue and cannot redraw their object, whatever event they may be using or calculations of where to redraw the object, they will be able to read your question and find their answer.