‘Art comes first,’ says twitcher and comedian Jim Moir as he launches Birdland exhibition at RedHouse Originals Gallery

Jim Moir at RedHouse Originals Gallery in Harrogate

“PEOPLE think that I am a comedian, but art comes first,” says Jim Moir, as he mounts his second exhibition at RedHouse Originals, Harrogate.

“This one is ‘Birdland’ because of my love of birds,” he told the crowded preview gathering that spilled out of the gallery doors. “I spend most of my days bird watching and painting.

“My mother said to me, ‘are you going to retire?’. I said I retired at 21 when I was never going to work for anyone again. I wanted to be an artist and then took a diversion into acting and comedy, and this is now the third act, doing what I was doing at 12. I’m 65 now, and I’m loving it.

 “Back in Yorkshire, where I was born, for this exhibition. I’ve been all over the world, but I never get a reaction like I do in Yorkshire – and people buy paintings here!”

Black Cap, watercolour on paper,by Jim Moir

On show – and for sale – until September 28 is an exclusive collection of 50 new paintings celebrating his favourite subject ahead of the October 24 publication of his second bird book, More Birds, Paintings Of British Birds, by Unbound.

 “I’m a big wildlife fan,” says Leeds-born Moir, alias comedian Vic Reeves. “When I started birding, I was very young. I remember all I had was natural history books. I’d just look at them on me bed, all day, all night, and then if it wasn’t that, I’d be looking at birds.

“I loved bird watching as a kid and I could probably tell you what any bird was, to this day. It’s really important.”

Birdland marks Moir’s return to RedHouse, having first exhibited there in 2022 when Yorkshire Rocks & Dinghy Fights captivated visitors and featured in the first season of Sky Arts’ Painting Birds With Jim & Nancy Moir. Two paintings that featured in the documentary are now on show in the new collection, by the way.

Pigeon Mob, watercolour on paper, by Jim Moir

Described as “the Warhol of bird painting” by the Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones, Moir’s enduring fascination and wonder at nature is expressed through his depictions of peregrine falcons, lapwings, curlews, barn owls and ospreys, even elevating the pigeon to iconic status. “To paint a bird and put it in its environment gives a bit more of a clue about its life and its personality,” he says.

Why birds, Jim? “It’s what I grew up doing: I was bird watching because I grew up before tablets and mobile phones,” he says. “Birds. That’s what I liked looking at. I liked outdoor pursuits. Nature. I still do.”

What is his favourite bird and why? “It’s always the one I see that day, and if I have to make a special trip, it definitely will be that one,” he says.

Jim Moir: Birdland, on show at RedHouse Originals Gallery, Cheltenham Mount, Harrogate, until September 28. Opening hours: Monday to Saturday, 10am to 5pm; Sundays by appointment. Free entry.

Barn Owl, watercolour on paper, by Jim Moir

Jim Moir: the back story

BORN James Roderick Moir in Leeds on January 24 1959.  

First came to prominence as a comedian, actor, and musician with the stage alias of  Vic Reeves, writing TV sketches with long-term writing partner Bob Mortimer.

Long before the rise of Reeves, Moir was a practising artist. “Painting is what I always liked doing and if you can get the opportunity to live your life doing what you like doing, then grasp it,” he advises.

After completing an engineering apprenticeship, he studied Fine Art Foundation at Sir John Cass College in 1983, leading to a curator position at The Gardner Gallery and his first exhibition in 1985.

Moir had applied to Goldsmiths but was rejected on the grounds of being “too accomplished” already. “I wanted to go to Goldsmiths but they wouldn’t let me in, so I just walked in and started using the facilities and went to the lectures,” he recalls.” I did that for three years.”

Roc, mixed media on canvas, by Jim Moir

The influence of Pop Art giants from the 1960s such as Gilbert and George, Andy Warhol and Peter Blake, is evident within his paintings, both thematically and stylistically. Often dreamlike and peppered with satirical humour, Moir’s fantastical compositions have been likened to the Surrealist and Dadaist movements of the late 1910s and early 1920s.

Moir’s passion for image-making and sculpture has been integral to his career, through set design and props on such shows as Vic Reeves Big Night Out, The Smell Of Reeves And Mortimer and Shooting Stars, His artwork has remained ever present on television screens as the backdrop to his comedic vision.

Since presenting Turner Prize Moments in 2011, he has tipped the balance of focus from performance towards visual art.

“When I started doing comedy, it was kind of a side-line to my artwork,” he says. “I’ve never not painted. Now I’ve got to a stage where I thought, I’ve done the comedy. I’ve done the TV. I’ll just do bits on TV and film if I want to do it. But all day long I’m going to paint pictures. That’s what I like doing.”

From October 31 to November 3 2012, he transformed the botanical York Museum Gardens into a “magical wonderland” for the Illuminating York festival, lighting up the ruins of St Mary’s Abbey, the Yorkshire Museum and the inners wall of the city’s bar walls with three large-scale, psychedelic, audio-visual  projections as part of the York 800 celebrations.  

Vic Reeves’ Purple man having a fight with green elephant seal in his Wonderland projections for Illuminating York in 2012. Copyright: The Press, York

Given “free rein to unleash his absurd and magical creations” and inspired by absurdist works such as Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, Reeves and partners Bright White Ltd, Bar Lane Studios, Chetwoods and Arup created “a new world that turns the expected upside down and revels in the beauty of the unexpected” at a cost of £500,000.

Organisers invited the public to take part in a projection of dancing figures on St Mary’s Abbey or to power bicycles with wings of light. Among the surreal visions in Reeves’ Wonderland were a bright red elephant, standing on tiptoe while wearing a fez, and a lurid green giant elephant seal fighting a man in purple, while the entire facade of the Yorkshire Museum was transformed into a moving projection of music, pictures and colour.

The third display, beamed onto the city walls behind the bowling green, featured Reeves trapped in a surreal landscape, desperately trying to escape by swallowing blue or red pills to shrink or grow in size.

“Art should be fun,” Reeves told The York Press. “I have ideas and if I think they are funny or peculiar I draw them. I draw because I get a kick out of it. It’s my drug. I’m just doing what I do and it’s projected onto a building that is Georgian.”

Lives and works in converted Georgian schoolhouse in Charring, Ashford, Kent.

Long Tailed Tits, watercolour on paper, by Jim Moir

Naturalist, nature photographer, television presenter and author Chris Packham on Jim Moir

 “JIM doesn’t just see birds, he looks at them, so intensely that he understands them. Not just anatomically or behaviourally – he knows how they feel. That transcends painting or art – that is using a brush and pigment to make a future.

“Jim has imbued the bird with imagination. You can’t do this just because you can paint beautifully; it’s not about reproduction, it’s about translation. About being able to speak bird with paint.

“To me, Jim’s process actually appears more instinctive than constructed, which in turn makes it far more admirable and valuable than ‘clever’. There are plenty of clever artists; sometimes I enjoy unravelling their art, but I prefer art that talks to me, talks straight. Art made from love.” 

Flying Cormorants, watercolour on paper, by Jim Moir

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