Even if you haven't heard the name Ray Troll, it's still almost guaranteed that you've seen some of his artwork. Maybe you saw an amazing museum exhibit, or picked up a copy of Cruisin' the Fossil Freeway, or perhaps you remember a few weeks ago for Mary Anning's birthday we debuted an awesome piece of his:
“Mary Anning's story was really inspiring to me and Brad when we made that book all those years ago and then finding out “she sells seashells by the seashore…” it's all about her..." - Ray Troll |
But Ray Troll is much more than an amazing artist: he's a top-notch paleonerd, amazing author, game-creator, science education advocate, fish enthusiast of the strongest sort, and also a musician! He also recently completed a project close to home for the Vengeance Team: he painted the mural of the Saber Toothed Salmon fossil, part of the Explore Oregon exhibit at the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History (That exhibit is freshly opened and extremely awesome, so if you get a chance you should swing by and check it out).
Amy and blog assistant/boyfriend Kelly were lucky enough (Meaghan is SUPER GODDAMN JEALOUS) to sit down with Ray Troll and his wife Michelle at their beautifully fossil-decorated house in Ketchikan, Alaska and pepper him with questions about his music, art, connections to Mary Anning and paleoichthyology musings while Meaghan sat at home grumbling and doing science stuff.
Amy: If you could live in a different time other than now,
which would you choose? And which would be your last choice?
"Ages of Rock" by Ray Troll |
Troll's whorled toothed Helicoprion |
I’d like to see the Permian too, if I could take a little sideways veer. I’d like to see the whorled toothed shark and the edestids and all that going on there but I’m really, I think the biggest mystery in paleontology is what happened at the end of the Permian? It’s still not nailed down - what the hell happened? But anything in the Paleozoic, just go back to the Paleozoic, it’s such a different world.
Amy: Alright you’re a pretty greedy time traveler here.
Ray: I am, I am. What’s my least favorite time period to go
back to? Is this a standard question that you ask?
Amy: No we just came up with it earlier today.
Ray: It’s for me? Well hmmm...
Amy: Yeah, oh yeah this is a personalized interview! So... the Archean or some boring time like that?
Ray: Yeah thank you for the leading hint there from the help
line but yeah... the Great Age of Cyanobacteria I think, "nah not so much." But you know, that
said, I’m still very curious about other planets and Mars. I do look at Mars photos and any paleontologists the other day would have said holy crap that’s
strata right there. The Rover was driving by and went whoa, wait! Veer over there!
Amy: Next question! We know that you are a big fan of fish.
Ray: Duuuh. You’ve done your homework.
Amy: Well what got you interested in the
paleontological aspect? What spurred that interest?
Ray: Well my first love was dinosaurs. At age four I was picking up a crayon,
and what was I going to draw? Dinosaurs. I was drawing dinosaurs. The first word
that I could spell was dinosaur.
Amy: Oh awesome, you were just a geek from the get-go!
"Before the King" Troll 2007 |
Amy: Or maybe you just figured it out really early.
Jim Baichtal, Pat Druckenmiller and Troll finding Alaskan fossils |
Amy: Well you just jumped to one of the other questions I have here for you about your current projects. So what specifically are you working on these days?
Long-time friends and colleagues Johnson & Troll exploring the Fossil Freeway |
Ray: Well I am trying to focus on finishing the book with Kirk Johnson who, in the meantime since we started this book project got a job running a little museum back east. The readers can put that together. But I am bound and determined, as is he, let it be known here and in the blogosphere that he is also determined to finish this great project, which was funded by a Guggenheim grant: "Fossils of the West Coast."
This is specifically a book on the fossils from Baja to Barrow. We still have to get down to Baja but we’ve been pretty much all up and down the west coast, which is where I met you first in Oregon and we were working on that book then. But yeah Oregon Washington, California, BC, Alaska, we’ve done all the cool fossil sites together, but the great hole in our jointly experienced fossil site bliss is Bakersfield. Kirk's been there but I have not. That’s sharks tooth hill, so I regret that I have not been there. And he’s been to the Burgess Shale and I’ve only been to the base! I think we’ve been everywhere else and then some. So we are working on a book that’s called The Eternal Coastline, which is turning into the eternal book project.
Michelle: But they’re always like that.
Ray: They are always like that, so that’s why I’m not really
sweating.
Amy: Yeah, like Cruisin’ the Fossil Freeway, how long did
that take, start to finish?
Michelle: It was long, it was a long haul.
Ray: It was like, five years over-due. Too ambitious. So now I’m about to start the Alaska one, and I keep thinking “oh the
BC one will be quick!” And then there’s Mexico. Oh yeah. Baja-hahaha. So that’s
how we deal with those things. I am trying to focus on that and in the meantime keeping the T-shirt empire alive and well,
that which feeds us and allows us to be here. It’s also the infrastructure that keeps all the other
craziness alive because I, unlike Dr. Johnson and others in the academic and museum
world, don’t have a steady paycheck! I must fend my way in the real world,
like Mary Anning. She was never
affiliated with an institution, I'm not working, I am perfectly unemployable, you couldn’t employ me, I couldn’t work for anyone, I really couldn’t! Just like Mary- she was taken somewhat seriously by academics, “(british accent)
Yes Thank you Mary, thank you for the specimen, what was your name again? Maybe
I’ll mention you…”
Amy: Or just call her “Hanning,” a common typo.
Ray: Was it? Really?
Amy: Yeah oh yeah. And even more connections between you and
Mary - she was an artist! She did some of the earliest drawings of what these
fossils would have looked like alive, the ichthyosaurs, and plesiosaurs, and
reconstructed their skeletons with no formal education at all. She would
dissect modern sharks, fish, and rays to figure it out and piece together these
ancient creatures.
Ray: So she got curious. Were her drawings any good?
Amy: I think so, she has one drawing of Squaloraja this
shark/ray thing…
Ray: Wait wait wait…. Squaloraja is a ratfish.
Ray: Wait wait wait…. Squaloraja is a ratfish.
Amy: Really?! There we go.
Ray: Squaloraja was a ratfish… She drew it?!?
Amy: Yeah! She found the first one! I am pretty sure! We can
double check with Google but we wrote a little piece, one of our “Awesome Dead Shit” posts was about Squaloraja and Mary Anning a few months ago.
Ray: Man, that’s two degrees of ratfish here! I have done
drawings of Squaloraja myself [see sketches below, making their digital debut right here!]. It’s just because the fossil is so weird.
Ray: It’s Chimera. And she found the first one. (british
accent again) Wait a minute. Mary is speaking to me from the grave. Mary the
Ratfish Queen.
Amy: Here’s another good one: You do a lot of science outreach, and Meaghan and I are big advocates of that. We are curious about your favorite form of outreach? You do all these different things, your artwork, murals, sculptures, and of course, your band The Ratfish Wranglers!
Ray: Each outreach aspect has its joys and tribulations. Ugh, the rock and roll aspect... doing an event
is always fun, and having the band together is always fun. Doing these
weird science rock and roll things, the joy and the terror of that is they
can veer totally out of control, which they usually do because it involves bands
and audiences, and sound systems, and you never know! Sometimes we
pull it off in a spectacular fashion and it’s great, and other times a spectacular train wreck. It’s out of my
field of comfort, which is always more interesting for me, but when
you pull it off there’s nothing like the high of an audience appreciation
moment. And you know that you’ve reached a couple thousand people,
or fifty.
But its also really cool to go to classrooms and do it on a smaller scale or take a whole school. It's worth the time to go do that because in an hour-long presentation you can't reach them all, but there really is this genuine thing where you can actually transform a life. I also like doing drawing workshops where’s maybe 20-30 people in the room and there's a couple hours of that. Not to get too hippie dippy about it, but I am an old hippie after all, and you connect with the audience and the intellectual pursuit is there in every single level because we are very curious animals and we are very curious about our lives, about every level of our lives. And we should always be!
But its also really cool to go to classrooms and do it on a smaller scale or take a whole school. It's worth the time to go do that because in an hour-long presentation you can't reach them all, but there really is this genuine thing where you can actually transform a life. I also like doing drawing workshops where’s maybe 20-30 people in the room and there's a couple hours of that. Not to get too hippie dippy about it, but I am an old hippie after all, and you connect with the audience and the intellectual pursuit is there in every single level because we are very curious animals and we are very curious about our lives, about every level of our lives. And we should always be!
A: What advice would you have for aspiring artists?
Specifically artists interested in science, paleontology, or paleoart…?
Ray Troll's art on the local Ketchikan buses |
Makin' ancient beasts come to life |
Lasting art FOSHO! Check out this piece in the movie Super Bad |
life is the thrill of discovery! Actually rustling about in old museums finding things that are in the collections that nobody's ever really brought to life before. In particular some of these ancient creatures you need to really engage science enough to make an educated guess on it. So that to me, that paleo-surrealist dreamworld life, making things come to life. So there. Was there advice in there for young artists?
Amy: Definitely. There was a lot of advice in there.
One of Meaghan’s questions: You love fish a whole lot, but
are you not aware of the existence of animals with fur and limbs?? Seriously,
if you had to choose your favorite extinct mammal, what would it be?
Amy & Ray rockin' out with the Killer Pig |
Amy: Yeah, or giant ground sloths.
Ray: Giant ground sloths yes the list goes on and on!
Basilisaurus, Eocene whales just bam they're there! And Pachycebus the walking
whales just walking around… I am particularly obsessed with the Desmostilids,
the ocean elephants. I'm putting a spin on, they're
basically ocean-going north Pacific proboscidean. I
cannot get enough of them I am a desmophiliac! And if there are paleonerds
reading this, tinodon??? are really freaking bizarre animals, Stylinodon… in the
Paleocene and Eocene the mammals really start diversifying, and all these extinct branches that went nowhere... They got
big and weird and blunt teeth in real basic forms and giant claws and what the
hell were they doing?? And they, poof! Gone. Uintatheres, such crazy things
Uintatheres…
Uintatheres: acid trip or extinct mammal?? |
Amy: Okay let’s do
the fun questions now! Enough serious chatter! Okay
Saber toothed Salmon: Grilled with brown sugar and soy sauce? Or baked in the
oven with lemon?
Kelly: How would you prepare it?
Ray: Grilled. Seared. I would sear that motherfucker. And
you can quote me on that. I would probably eat it fresh, as fresh as I could.
Amy: And feed the entire town!
Ray grilling his famous blackened salmon. Photo cred: Alejandro Chavarria |
Amy: So these are the Rapid Fire Questions that we ask at the end
of every interview. But they are different for everyone of course. The idea
here is you don’t over think it you just say what is in your gut, whatever your
instinct. All it is Who Would Win in a Fight? Remember do not over think it,
whatever fight you envision, and we will just give you a list of opponents.
Ray: So who thought of this? You and your co-blogger?
Amy: Yep me and Meaghan. Kelly helps. Okay here we go:
A: A ratfish versus a rat in a fish costume?
R: Ratfish
A: Saber toothed salmon versus Thylattosaurus?
R: Saber toothed salmon!
A: King Crab versus King Salmon?
R: Titaalik!
A: Kirk Johnson versus the snowmastodon?
R: Kirk Johnson!
A: Nice! Dinohyus versus Black Sabbath?
R: haha Dinohyus!
A: Hell pig wins! Whorled toothed shark versus an Orca Whale?
R: Whorled toothed shark! Slice and Dice the orca!
Amy: Our last question: Meaghan has taken some photos of her
different fish faces her human fish faces… And she would like you, as a
professional fish expert, to vote on which fish face is the best! (shows
picture) that’s Meaghan by the way.
Amy: Fish Face number three! Nice! And now her request is
for you to teach me a good fish face and then we have to take a photo of
course.
Ray: I was born fish faced!
Ray: I was born fish faced!
Amy and Ray's best fish faces, seen with our guide book "Fish Face" by David Doubilet |
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We were so grateful for the opportunity to interview Ray for Mary Anning's Revenge and we hope all of you readers enjoyed the interview! Please see Ray's website for more awesome artwork, clever t-shirts, paleo news and so much more. All of the artwork featured above is, of course, all Ray's. Stay tuned to the blog as we will continue to feature more of Ray Troll's paleoart!
Another spectacular piece by Troll of Mary Anning and ichthyosaurs aka "fish lizards" |
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