Portrait of a Queen Barn Owl • 24" x 24" • oil on lead-primed panel

Thursday, April 24, 2025
I had been dreaming of a Queen coming to sit for a portrait. English? Danish?
No. None of those. This is an American Queen of the forest. She held my gaze, singing short notes, perhaps the ones she sings to lull her prey into quiet goodbyes.

I'm that guy your art teachers warned you about...
I was born and raised in Massachusetts. Went to The Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY. My further art studies followed the atelier system.
None of the painting teachers at Pratt could teach me anything about how to do the paintings I envisioned. My paintings are about discovery, probably appropriate for someone who has discovered the methods I use to paint them.
I'm currently showing at Principle Gallery (Washington, DC & Charleston, SC) and Waterhouse Gallery (Santa Barbara, CA & Montecito, CA). I've been featured in many national magazines, and my work is broadly collected.
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When a bird enters my studio for a portrait, their presence shifts the light.
Some arrive boldly, like Elian, the American Goldfinch, who hovered before landing, as if asking the air itself whether the moment is ripe. Others, like Simi, one of the Rosy Finches, carried the wind with them, nervous, flickering, half-ready to vanish. But all who stayed long enough to be seen offered something rare: trust.
They do not come for decoration. They do not pose out of vanity. They come, I believe, to be witnessed, actually. And when that happens, when a bird meets your eye and doesn’t flee, something quiet and immense passes between you. That is what I try to paint. Not feathers alone, but gravity. Spirit. A stillness that feels like a breath just before it’s taken.
Each portrait takes more than a hundred hours. The larger ones— owls, especially queens — can take three times that. I paint until the form no longer needs me. Until I cannot find another curve to refine, another glint to coax forward. Until it feels as if the bird might turn, at any moment, and speak.
There’s a particular stillness that arrives only at the very end of a portrait, when I step back and the bird is no longer just painted, but present. It never happens all at once. Each brushstroke, each minute shift of light across a wing or the quiet gleam in an eye, carries its own small uncertainty. But when every part finally settles, and no more beauty needs to be coaxed forward—that’s when the painting begins to breathe. That’s when it becomes something that watches back.
My hope is that, now, it finds you. That you’ll feel some part of the reverence and quiet wonder that shaped it and that this bird, once seen, might stay with you a much longer than expected.
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I draw all of my maps at the biggest size I sell, which is A1. Therefore, the clarity is perfect.
All of our maps are printed on thick, high quality 250 gsm museum quality paper.
I have a 30 day returns policy. If you want to return an order, it must be returned in a perfect, sellable condition in order for a complete refund. You must pay for and organise the shipping yourself. To organise returning an order to me, please email me at richard@richardmurdock.com
I have a selection of frames available. Please email me at richard@richardmurdock.com.

Bird Portrait Collections
Contact
Have a question, an issue with materials, or just want to say hello? My email is richard@richardmurdock.com