IN DESCRIBING THE BLUE JAY, JOHN JAMES AUDUBON MINCED NO WORDS. “WHO COULD IMAGINE,” he mused, “that selfishness, duplicity, and malice should form the moral accompaniments of so much physical perfection!” As his painting suggests, the large songbirds do snatch and eat other species’ eggs and nestlings. But their primary diet is vegetarian, consisting of various nuts, grains, and fruits.
The idea of avian knavery amused New York–based artist Gizem Vural, but it was the bird’s cobalt plumage that wooed her. “This specific hue that the Blue Jay has mesmerized me,” writes Vural, who is from Istanbul, in an email. “I wanted to focus on how beautiful they are.” After many sketches, she created a final digital rendering with a brush tool that lends a colored-pencil effect. Instead of perching,…