Mx. Morgan Robles is a surreal artist and illustrator most known for their depictions of animals and nature with macabre themesโ€”and is the Mercury‘s cover artist of the week. Their personal work is often focused on their own journey with mental health and gender identity; the cycle of life, death, and decay; and environmental concerns. In our interview, we discuss witchcraft, horror movies, and the power of not giving a damn.

MERCURY: Do you remember your first attraction to dark, mystical, and occult visuals?

ROBLES: I was first interested in the idea of death around four or five years old, and I asked my aunt โ€œWhat happens when you die?โ€ She gave a very honest answer: you die, you go to the earth, that kind of thing, and it stuck with me. I would draw pictures of people sitting on couches or pets on the floor “asleep.” Just a kid conceptualizing the transition of life into death. My parents weren’t fond of it! Witchcraft quietly walks among my family so it felt natural to explore, but I didn’t want to go too far. I delved mostly into Viking rune magic and incorporated some of my divinations into my work.

What are your favorite movies/comics/books in that genre?

I’m a massive horror fan. Rosemary’s Baby, The Omen, Hereditary, and The Witch are all personal favorites. I’m a sucker for supernatural or Christian horror. Slashers, not so much. I have a soft spot for The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, though. [Andrzej] ลปuล‚awski’s Possession is another classic. I could go on! As far as comics go, I grew up with Roman Dirge’s Lenore, Jhonen Vasquez’s Johnny the Homicidal Maniac, and later discovered Junji Ito’s work. And I must mention the impact of 1980s fantasies like The Dark Crystal, The Black Cauldron, The Secret of NIMH getting me into mystical things and the desire to create art at a young age.

Can you tell me how your gender identity journey has influenced or affected your artistic journey?

It has shifted my work a whole lot, I think. I feel many things I drew before questioning my gender felt empty. I was drawing a lot of bloody stuff, some occult symbols, just things to grab attention or significant things I found through divination. A lot of this was an outlet for aggression but I didn’t know how to articulate what that frustration was directed at. It ended up being many things, but over time I started thinking of myself more as a cosmic being, just something more than a meat sack wandering through life curated to be attractive or desirable to othersโ€”real Carl Sagan made-of-star-stuff type of thought. As long as Iโ€™m in this body Iโ€™m going to make it look good and feel cozy in it. I started opening doors I couldnโ€™t close, so to speak. I am very much a late bloomer coming out as non-binary and later realizing Iโ€™m also lesbian, whereas a lot of younger queer kids have the language to describe themselves and continue to expand on it (honestly, good for them!).ย 

It was a healing process for me, too. Things I drew were subconsciously how I view myself, how I want to see my ideal self, overcoming so much from bad relationships and emotional abuse, or sometimes a metaphorical slaying of societal and religious pressures of gender roles and other such beasts. The biggest influence and most valuable lesson was no longer giving a damn. The art scene really helped that thrive; Iโ€™ve very much found my weirdo queer goth artist family.

Did you have any formal art training or are you self-taught?

Iโ€™m mostly self-taught. I took a couple art courses at East Los Angeles Community College, but life happened and I dropped out. I just kept doing what I was doing and teaching myself. You can get all the necessary art skills through YouTube for free.

You recently inked a book cover for a young adult novel that will be released next year, can you tell me more about that project?

Yeah! Itโ€™s titled Venom & Vow by Anna-Marie McLemore and Elliott McLemore. Itโ€™s a young adult novel featuring transgender and disabled protagonists whose double lives as assassins tasked with killing each other bring them into unbeknownst conflict. Itโ€™s also all very Mexican and Irish folk centered, and I was born with both of these cultures, so it was a great match! I got to read some excerpts and Iโ€™m really excited to read the rest of it. I wish I had books like these as a kid!

“We’ll Meet Again,” Mx. Morgan Robles, 2021

Can you tell me about the piece we’re spotlighting on the Mercury‘s homepage this week?

I created Weโ€™ll Meet Again in May 2021 and it received so much positive engagement. Why is still a mystery to me, but I think I just made it at the right time during the pandemic. Itโ€™s roughly about walking among the ones we lost and whoโ€™ve never really left; theyโ€™re still with us. I framed it with marigolds because the petals cross the veil between life and death.ย 

Are there any other areas of daily life that provide inspiration for your work?

Iโ€™ve been inspired a whole lot by poster art and art nouveau revival from the poster art scene. I would collect snippets of poster art by Frank Kozik, Tara McPherson, and Rockinโ€™Jelly Bean and just wanted to do what they do. Any time I get a request to make album artwork I get excited, the symbiosis of art and music is such a joy and Iโ€™m always looking for more work with musicians.

Well, hopefully some musicians will read this interview and hire you!

Fingers crossed!