Current:Home > FinanceEchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center|From trash to trolls: This artist is transforming American garbage into mythical giants -AssetScope
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center|From trash to trolls: This artist is transforming American garbage into mythical giants
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-08 10:41:37
Trolls,EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center the menacing otherworldly beings of folklore, are gaining a foothold across America. They haven’t gobbled anybody up yet, but they still hope to shake everyone who meets them to their core and deliver a new message: Trash is treasure.
“It’s an advertising campaign for trash,” quips Thomas Dambo, the Dr. Frankenstein to over 150 troll sculptures around the world. “I want trash to be the fashion, I want it to be cool, because if it was cool then we would be less wasteful.”
The Danish self-described “garbage artist” has been crafting giant trolls from refuse – mainly old wood pallets – for about a decade. The 5-ton sculptures haunt over a dozen countries and U.S. states. He completed his most ambitious troll installation – five trolls plus other giant sculptures – in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota, in June.
Whimsical names, lighthearted stories and the intricate craftsmanship involved in making the trolls give creatures like Ronny Funny Face a broad appeal. But beyond enjoying the sight of them, Dambo hopes viewers will also note how the trolls were made from disregarded materials and appreciate the precious environments they inhabit, from Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to forests near the demilitarized zone in South Korea.
“It’s a cute little fairy tale about a troll but if you look deeper, it’s a story about humans and recycling and how we care for the world,” said the 44-year-old. “I don’t want to just make entertainment. I want to make ‘edu-tainment.’”
Dambo spoke to USA TODAY on video from his studio outside Copenhagen, where he directs dozens of employees in designing the cute-as-a-button monsters. His so-called customers are people from around the world who want him and his merry band to transform garbage into something mystical.
Politicians haven’t passed any “Thomas Dambo laws” protecting the environment, the Dane jokes. But he sees proof of his concept in the life he’s built on garbage and trusts some of the millions encountering his work leave with a new sense of resolve.
Where are the trolls?
Ronny Funny Face, Barefoot Frida and Jacob Everear are among the latest Dambo creations. The artist, his crew and dozens of volunteers built and installed them along with several other sculptures in Northern Minnesota in June.
Project 412, a Detroit Lakes nonprofit aiming to boost the town’s cultural cache, commissioned the project.
“Public art adds to a community in a way that’s equally as important as having a good library or having a great downtown. All of those are gems in the necklace that make a community shine,” said Amy Stearns, the nonprofit’s executive director. The name 412 is a reference to all of the lakes in the area.
The group took to his work because of its awesome appearance and sustainability ethos.
“He’s shining a light on how important it is for us to care for our world, our natural resources,” Stearn said. “Public art can move the needle.”
Project 412 also hopes the giant trolls - one stands 40 feet tall - will draw visitors to small town Minnesota.
The creatures have had an outsized impact on the other places they’ve landed.
Gretchen Osther, CEO and President of the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens, said visits to the Boothbay Harbor destination have more than tripled since Dambo installed trolls in 2021.
The number of visitors shot up from 100,000 in 2019 to 340,000 today. Osther said the increase is partly because tourism has grown in Maine generally, but also because of the trolls’ ability to reach new audiences.
The Maine institution began planning to bring in Dambo’s work in 2019 after seeing the impact it had on botanical gardens in Kentucky and Illinois, where leadership told her the trolls boosted visitors tremendously and attendance remained high even after they were dismantled.
Dambo’s patrons call this the “troll effect,” said Osther.
The trolls in Maine are called the Guardians of the Seeds in reference to protecting native trees. But the impact of the trolls is that they gave the institution the cash flow to do more than they’ve ever done before to protect local flora, according to Osther.
“We were hardly doing any of that before the trolls arrived,” she said. “We didn’t have the funds to invest in that like we wanted to. But the more people we see here, the more we can.”
Both Stearns and Osther didn’t disclose how much installing the troll cost. But Osther said they have paid for themselves “100 times over.”
Dambo maintains a map of where the trolls are located on his website.
Why trolls?
Dambo’s answer to why he began to make trolls as opposed to anything else is simple: No one had seen a real one.
“Animals, they’re hard to build because they have to really look like animals,” said the artist. “This is much easier because I’m the only one who knows how they look.”
Trolls also play a big role in Scandinavian cultures. Growing up, Dambo remembers buying troll figurines, his mom telling him a troll put a large stone in the garden, or how biking up certain hills was hard because a troll tugged at riders' clothes.
Traditionally, the role the beings play isn’t so nice.
“They attack you and kill you and, presumably, drag you to hell with them,” said Ármann Jakobsson, the author of a book on trolls and professor of Old Icelandic Literature at the University of Iceland. They were undefined figures of terror more comparable to Michael Myers.
Dambo’s trolls are “not very traditional,” the scholar said. “They’re not very terrifying; they’re very ‘cutified.’”
But he saw some consistencies in the artist’s repurposing of the otherworldly creatures to fit new narratives as well as their aim of shaking people to their core.
“The impact a troll has upon a person is what makes it interesting,” Jakobsson said. “The troll is now warning against what we’re doing to ourselves.”
Dambo grew up in a dump
Dambo’s garbage art practice began when he was a child. He had nowhere or no way to buy toys, so he made them, sneaking away with things from the local trash before dumpster diving had even become a thing.
He also enjoyed building things. He recalls when he was a preteen and his dad built him a fort from scrap wood. Instead of playing in it, Dambo’s reaction was wanting to make one of his own.
So, dad’s fort became a chicken coop and over the next five years, Dambo embarked on building his own extensive fort with his friends.
His mother tells stories to this day of watching him corral the group into completing just one more piece of the castle.
Decades later, Dambo feels he’s still doing the same thing by hanging out in the wood, turning stories into reality through garbage with friends.
“I love these small universes,” he said. “That’s always been my appeal, build something out of nothing and make it really magical.”
veryGood! (46331)
Related
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- GM suspends sales of Chevy Blazer EV due to quality issues
- When do South Carolina polls open and close for the 2024 primary? Key times for today's Republican vote
- Coyotes look to terminate Adam Ruzicka's contract after problematic social media video
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Chicago Bears great Steve McMichael returns home after more than a week in hospital
- Beauty Blowout Deals: 83% off Perricone MD, Peter Thomas Roth, Tarte Cosmetics, and More + Free Shipping
- Boyfriend of Ksenia Khavana, Los Angeles ballet dancer detained in Russia, speaks out
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Audrii Cunningham died from 'homicidal violence with blunt head trauma,' records show
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Vanessa Hudgens, Cole Tucker & More Couples Who Proved Love Is the Real Prize at the SAG Awards
- Here are 5 things to know about Lionel Messi's World Cup: The Rise of a Legend documentary
- 'Bluey' inspires WWE star Candice LeRae's outfit at 2024 Elimination Chamber in Australia
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Brother of suspect in nursing student’s killing had fake green card, feds say
- At the Florida Man Games, tank-topped teams compete at evading police, wrestling over beer
- Facing backlash over IVF ruling, Alabama lawmakers look for a fix
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Malia Obama Isn't the Only One With a Stage Name—Check Out These Stars' Real Names
Illinois judge who reversed rape conviction removed from bench after panel finds he circumvented law
Nine NFL draft sleepers who could turn heads at 2024 scouting combine
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Inherited your mom's 1960s home? How to use a 1031 exchange to build wealth, save on taxes
Lifetime’s Wendy Williams documentary will air this weekend after effort to block broadcast fails
2 Americans believed dead after escapees apparently hijack yacht, Grenada police say