Bird's practice tends to revolve around recurring motifs and characters, which throughout her career have been reapplied within different scenarios to access a wide range of emotional effect. Thematic images in the likes of poodles, chains, eyeballs, and green aliens take center stage, second only to her most prevalent motif of choice: kittens. These, she playfully and endearingly places atop the spaces and objects of the everyday. Recently, Margot Bird has produced aircraft paintings that play up the kitten motif with proliferating tiny, cute heads staring out of places where ought to be knobs and dials on the instrumentation panels in cockpits. In her first solo show with Taymour Grahne Projects, Bird floods the faces of kittens over this heavy machinery, raising the stakes on the subject’s risk of danger.
In Bird’s painting technique, there is a tendency for her to abstract the cockpit, creating lapses out of correct perspective, making it somewhat disorienting or chaotic, and perhaps it could seem as if these pilots symbolize the viewer looking at themselves in a dream. Subjectively, the pilots seem unconcerned with the confusion of their situation, a reaction that one would perhaps only have in a dream. It could be that the airplanes or submarines represent vehicles used to navigate through the dream or creative subconscious or even the creative conscious (with an awareness of drifting into total creativity and allowing reason to sort of slip away). As she mentions, “Falling into total creative imagination is an attractive idea. Navigating through it is just as interesting.”
The submarine paintings are a new environment which the artist is debuting with this show. Additionally, the specificities of the vehicle her portrayed models find themselves in interestingly correlates with Bird’s timeline of events within her personal life. “I just recently noticed that I had painted all the submarine paintings while I was pregnant and have painted all the airplane paintings since my son Lou had been born. The landscape kind of coincidentally emerged from underwater and into the sky along with Lou.”, she says. While this may be a detail and purpose that chronologically occurred while she was painting this show, the beauty of these works is in the versatility in meaning that each viewer can develop for themselves through the lens of relatability and exploration of the creative subconscious.