A Series That Found Its Own Wings
Nearly twenty years ago, I began painting a series of abstract birds that unexpectedly became some of the most meaningful work of my career. Those paintings traveled through galleries across San Francisco, appeared at Fort Mason Art Fairs, and found their way into a number of group exhibitions during a period when I was still primarily focused on figurative work.
What surprised me most was not the response, but the process itself.
My figurative paintings often required structure, narrative, and emotional precision. The birds asked something entirely different of me. They invited instinct instead of control, movement instead of planning. They became a place where I could loosen my grip and simply respond to color, gesture, and feeling. In many ways, that series shifted my understanding of what painting could be.
Why the Bird Paintings Still Resonate
Even now, collectors continue to ask about those early abstract bird paintings. Every so often, someone reaches out wondering if any are still available. The truth is, only a handful remain, and I've held onto them over the years. (Saving them for my future MoMA retrospective. Manifestation counts, right?)
What I've come to understand is that symbolic imagery has a lasting kind of power when it's approached honestly. Birds carry meaning almost universally: freedom, peace, transition, hope. When those symbols are explored through emotion rather than formula, they tend to stay with people long after they've left the gallery. That's what collectors who seek out original symbolic bird art are often responding to, something felt rather than explained.
Returning to the Birds
I still return to bird imagery whenever I feel the need to step outside the structure of my geometric coastal abstractions. Painting them feels quieter. More intuitive. A reset.
There are no hard edges to follow, no rigid composition to solve. Just paint, movement, and instinct.
For collectors familiar with my geometric work, these paintings reveal another side of the same language: color as emotion, form as a way to hold meaning. That same quality of surrender becoming creation runs through everything I make.
Dove: A New Original Abstract Painting
My newest piece, Dove, is a 20" x 20" original painting that evolved slowly over the course of six months. I've always been drawn to doves for what they symbolize: peace, gentleness, hope, and resilience. In a world that often feels fractured and loud, painting them feels grounding.
This is not meant to be a purely decorative bird painting. It's an abstract interpretation of what a dove represents emotionally, the quiet persistence of calm, the tenderness of hope, the longing for peace.
The process itself mirrored that feeling. Layers were built up, scraped away, softened, and rebuilt until the painting settled into its own stillness.
For collectors interested in original symbolic bird art, Dove represents a rare departure from my geometric series: intimate in scale, deeply personal in process, and singular by nature. Like all of my original works, it will never be reproduced. Once it finds its home, it's gone.
Explore the Geometric Collection
If you're drawn to the interplay of color, structure, and landscape that runs through my work, these pieces from the geometric collection may speak to you as well:
- Sail Away, 36x36 Geometric Coastal Art
- Beach, Original 30x30 Geometric Abstract Painting
- Ebb and Flow, Original 36x48 Geometric Abstract Painting
On Painting What You Feel
At its core, this painting became less about creating an image and more about following a feeling.
Sometimes art doesn't need to explain itself. Sometimes its purpose is simply to exist beside us, quietly holding emotion, memory, or hope in ways words cannot.
If Dove speaks to you, I'd love to hear from you. Inquiries welcome at shiloratner@gmail.com. You can also view product here.
