Natalie Murry is a freelance forensic artist currently based in Austin, Texas. She began her forensic art career while working as a police officer in Kent Washington. She does reconstructions and postmortem drawings for the King County Medical Examiner’s Office in Seattle Washington, and the Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office in Everett Washington. She has taught forensic artists to draw digitally at workshops at police departments from Washington to New Jersey as well as at Scottsdale Artists School and at the Forensic Anthropology Center at Texas State University. Natalie is on the forensic art subcommittee for the International Association for Identification, and is an IAI certified forensic artist. She has had two articles published in the Journal of Forensic Identification: in September/ October 2015 entitled “Rotating the Anterior View of a Skull into the Frankfort Horizontal Plane for Postmortem Drawings” and in April/ June 2021 entitled “Skull to Photo Comparison for Identification Purposes.” She has been a beta tester for Corel Painter since the 2016 build. Her work can be seen on her website, www.natal iemu rry.com, on Instagram as @NatalieMurryForensicArt, and on Facebook as NatalieMurryForensicArt.
“After working hundreds of these cases, I thought that I knew everything that there is to know about reading a face from the skull, but then I read Natalie’s book. Such a wealth of information, and you can tell that it has been composed by someone who has really put their heart into knowing every single solitary piece. This book showed me the scientific reasons for the intuitive understandings of the human face which drive my work for the dead … a perfect reference guide for the forensic artists who want to be taken seriously in a group of seasoned anthropologists. When I started reading … I honestly learned something from every single chapter. Artists who don’t do the work every day should have this book close at hand for each case they get. Even for those artists who have been doing the work the same way for years, Natalie introduces additional methods beyond just the American standard that we have all learned with all principles backed by photo comparisons and study references. If you feel like saying, ‘there has to be another way’ then Natalie likely has it introduced in this book.”—Kelly Lawson, Forensic Artist, Georgia Bureau of Investigation “As a contributing author, I hadn’t had the opportunity to read the full book until publication. Natalie has presented her experience of real-world casework in a way that brings the theory of facial reconstruction to life and shows how to apply it. ‘Reading the Skull’ is an invaluable reference point.” —Tim Widden, National Crime Agency listed Forensic Artist based in London, England, UK (https://timwidden.co.uk/)