Today I was searching through my closet for some T-shirts that were 100 percent cotton with NO spandex. All cotton shirts can be difficult to find nowadays with skin-tight fashions that add polyester and spandex for a close fit and easy care. You cannot imagine how hot just a few percent of tight synthetic fibers can make you feel when it is already 103 degrees Fahrenheit and humid outside. Then I found them, the art shirts, the shirts we can't part with. All designed by Alaskan Artist Ray Troll.
"About “fin” artist Ray Troll:
From his tree lined studio, high on a hill above the Tongass Narrows in rain-swept Ketchikan Alaska, Ray Troll draws & paints fishy images that migrate into museums, books and magazines and onto t-shirts sold around the planet. Basing his quirky, aquatic images on the latest scientific discoveries, Ray brings a street-smart sensibility to the worlds of ichthyology & paleontology.
Ray moved to Alaska in 1983 to spend a summer helping his big sister Kate start a seafood retail store. The fish store is long gone but Ray is not. There's something about Alaska that has led four of the Troll siblings to call the state ‘
home’. . ."
His first T-shirt from handmade silk screens,
"Let's Spawn."
Turned into this . . .
To setting up a gallery and selling billions of shirts and art posters. The designs below are my favorite from the early 90's when our friend T.J. Tremmel had a T-shirt Gallery down the street from us and we discovered Troll's beautiful art of nature and humor.
Troll says of his Amazon mural the "Natural History magazine used the mural on its cover in September of 2001. It was my very first national magazine cover, but as fate would have it the tragedy of 9/11 happened and it got lost in the chaos of those times."
What is cool now?
Helicoprion Exhibit this summer in Pocatello, Idaho. Here are a couple of design examples. The others are much more bizarre.
Lastly, I love getting to read the descriptions of how a design came into being.
"HAPPY HOUR IN HELL
100 percent cotton, pre-shrunk, heavyweight T-shirt. Front print.
Shirt color: Black
I’ve had the immense pleasure of playing music with my band in the Voodoo Room down in Astoria, Oregon over the last few years as part of the annual Fisher Poet’s Gathering. A couple of year’s ago I did a poster for one of our gigs there depicting a flaming human skull sporting a top hat.
A couple years before that Tony Martin had come out to give a few lectures at Emory University in Georgia. While I was there Tony and his wife Ruth regaled me with tales of the dark legend of Emory University and Dooley, the Lord of Misrule.
So that’s how this one came to be spawned. I adapted to the poster to fit the mood I’m in when I need that one last drink very badly!"
Good idea.