WILD WONDERS
Making Magic
Thomas Dambo’s installation of seven giant trolls across North Carolina is the biggest in the United States
By Ayn-Monique Klahre
At the edge of the woods, the troll peeks out: a baby by the standards of her kind, but, at over 12 feet tall, she’s giant to most of us humans. In one hand, she’s holding onto her mother’s tail, which winds deep into the trees — all the way to the hidden spot where Mom sleeps with one eye open, attentive to her children. This baby troll’s siblings have gone further afield to play, and their father is foraging nearby.
These trolls are not alive, of course, but a multifigure sculpture called The Grandmother Tree from Danish artist Thomas Dambo. There are five of these trolls in Raleigh’s Dorothea Dix Park, one in the Southwest Mill District of High Point and another at the Crescent Communities River District Community in Charlotte. Taken together, The Grandmother Tree is the largest permanent installation of Dambo’s trolls in the United States.
The idea to bring the trolls to North Carolina came when Dix Park Conservancy Art Task Force chair Marjorie Hodges and her husband, Carlton Midyette, visited the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay. There, they came across a Dambo troll installation called Guardians of the Seeds. “We saw the trolls and it took us 30 seconds to say, We need these for the park,” says Midyette. He worked with philanthropist Tom Gipson to lead a campaign to finance a project of that scale for Raleigh. Visit High Point spearheaded bringing its troll, Little Sally, to the area, working with the David R. Hayworth Foundation and DRIVE High Point Foundation for fundraising, with the Southwest Renewal Foundation facilitating the site selection. In Charlotte, developer Crescent Communities saw its troll, named Pete with the Big Feet, as a natural extension for its vision of the River District, which is in a mixed-use town center called Westrow, bordering the Airline Bike Park. “Big Pete is more than just a striking public art piece,” says Rainer Ficken, senior managing director of The River District. “He’s an invitation for Charlotte and its visitors to engage with the land in a new way, to explore our public trails and to reflect on the impact each of us has on the environment.”
Part of what attracted Dambo to this project was the way his installations would be part of reinventing and reengaging with these urban spaces. The 308-acre Dix Park, for example, was a longtime site of a state psychiatric hospital. “I loved the story about how this park used to be something else,” he says. “It’s a land of reinvention and restoration,” says Kate Pearce, executive director of Dix Park for the City of Raleigh.
For each of his installations, Dambo crafts a narrative around the trolls that offers a sustainability lesson and a little mystery, too. In his telling, the North Carolina trolls are all protecting the Grandmother Tree, the oldest and wisest tree in the forest, who is hidden in another forest in the area, disguised as a regular tree. Each of the seven trolls wears a medallion around its neck that contains pieces of the same heritage tree. Taken together, they share the location of the Grandmother Tree. (We’ve been told it’s in Raleigh, but that’s as much of a hint as we got.) The medallions were made by Billy Keck and Melody Ray of Raleigh Reclaimed, a company that makes furniture using salvaged woods.
In part of the poem that tells this story, Dambo says:
But one species, all trolls, has learned to fear through evolution
Invasive, a pollution, you must never trust a human
A human seeks the oldest trees, to kill and cut them down
and chop it up in tiny pieces, haul it, burn it in their town
And so the trolls have cast a spell, enchanted the grandmother tree
So no human can find her; now she looks like any other tree
But every time the moon is dark, the red wolves howl and bark
This is the sign that sparks the start, the trolls to search the park
Each of the trolls came together through a robust community effort. Dambo and his team of professional troll-makers designed the creatures and built the frames, then used local volunteers to build the trolls on site. In Raleigh, Habitat for Humanity Wake County used a mix of staff and skilled volunteers, plus a wider volunteer effort to do the rest. When the signup to volunteers opened, there was so much interest that the server crashed. (“It was like buying a Taylor Swift ticket,” laughs Midyette.) “We rotated our entire construction staff to work on the project,” says Patricia Burch, CEO of Habitat Wake. “It was unique, exciting and a lot of fun — so cool to have a hand in building them.” In Charlotte, Crescent Communities solicited volunteers from their own staff, as well as nonprofit partners including Daniel Stowe Conservancy, Catawba Lands Conservancy, Sustain Charlotte and the Tarheel Trailblazers.
Dambo’s team also worked with local organizations to source the reclaimed materials to build the trolls. In High Point, materials were provided by Wise Living, Reliance Timber, Triad Timber & Millworks, Hood Distribution and Southwest Renewal Foundation. In Charlotte, Crescent Communities used its own construction waste, as well as recycled material donations from D.H. Griffin and She Built This City. In Raleigh, Habitat Wake and its ReStores donated much of the material, as did Raleigh Reclaimed, which sourced rot-resistant woods such as cedar, oak and locust for the project. “We use materials that otherwise would go into landfills or the waste stream, so we had a built-in process for collecting these materials,” says Ray. “It just made sense to partner on the project.” Additionally, Kentucky Bourbon Barrel chipped in 17 tons of old bourbon barrels (most of which went into making Raleigh’s mama troll’s 620-foot tail), and Midyette donated the remains of a fallen-down barn and about a mile of old fencing he had on his property.
In Raleigh, it took about 400 volunteers and three weeks to build the five trolls (not including work Dambo and team had done in Denmark ahead of time). “Every single stave was put in by a volunteer,” says Midyette. A lot of volunteer work went into the making of the more than 300 sections of the mother’s tail, for which the bourbon barrels were completely disassembled and reassembled to fit the landscape. “This was great for the community volunteers, since it was safer than being up on scaffolding,” says Dambo. “The trolls are not meant to be perfect — I always like to see the dents and cracks — because when you zoom out, you don’t see the imperfection.” In the end, it took more than 24 tons of lumber and 50,000 screws to make those five trolls.
The goal with The Grandmother Tree is to draw visitors to these natural areas — and for these visitors to experience the same sense of magic and wonder as Dambo did going into the forest as a child, he says. “Bringing Little Sally to life reinforces our focus to create experiences that blend creativity, sustainability and community pride,” says Melody Burnett, president of Visit High Point. Agrees Pearce: “It’s about bringing magic back into spaces.”
