"Array-ish" isn't a common construction - I've never seen it before - but this construction can be made with any almost noun.
This "-ish" suffix on a noun means "like, having the characteristics of" -
"He was a young-looking man, almost boyish,"
- so something that was "array-ish" would have the characteristics of an array -
"The objects laid out in straight rows and columns looked array-ish."
"Array" has a few different meanings. It can mean "finery, expensive clothing" -
"She entered the ballroom resplendent in her fine array,"
- or it can mean "range or variety" -
"We have a wide array of options for you to choose from,"
- or "an ordered series or arrangement" -
"An array of solar panels provides the electrical power."
I'm not sure how either of the first two meanings could work with "-ish," so I think this is probably a use of third meaning -
"The disorderly ranks of troops struggled to form up into something that looked array-ish."
I've never seen it, and I'd never use it; but that's what I think "array-ish" probably means. :)