Margaret Davidson has a BFA from the University of Michigan and an MFA from the University of Washington. She is both an artist and illustrator, and, until retirement in 2014, taught a variety of drawing classes at Gage Academy of Art in Seattle, Washington. In scientific illustration Davidson concentrated on archaeological and anthropological subject matter, drawing lithics, pottery, and especially basketry and textiles.
To this end she has illustrated various books and journal articles, such as Spruce Root Basketry of the Haida and Tlingit by Sharon Busby (2003 Marquand Books and the University of Washington Press) and The Archaeology of the Yakutat Foreland: a Socioecological View, Volumes I and II, by Stanley Drew Davis (1996). She has also drawn the maps for Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer (Villard Books, New York, 1996), and Ten Degrees of Reckoning by Hester Rumberg (Berkley Books, 2010).
In contemporary art, her focus in her own drawings is on the subtle and reciprocal relationship between the mark and the surface and illusion and reality, and on a realistic depiction of the very ordinary, and the discoveries of unique singularity to be found there. Like all drawing artists, she works on various art papers, and then also draws on such materials as wooden sticks, desiccated leaves, and wooden bowls. Davidson is the author of Contemporary Drawing: Key Concepts and Techniques, published in 2011 by Watson-Guptill, a division of Random House, New York.
She also wrote for Drawing Magazine from Winter 2015 to Summer 2017.