Here are some images from my "Dinosaurs are here!" exhibition at Midtsønderjylland Museum. Most are snapshots borrowed from friends, I simply didn´t manage to find time for some more considered photography.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlZKsQQeEDc7HCOp3cQc_Wi1HLI76mcmaZu-fRht8-5217-827Q2MHWJ8nFpe-OggxQJvR62DqbqJ6af444VyGwsnYe2B9NLqwIq1IZov3-5yzkHYaHl-lid9ZaNjREAu6lmEfgTLYGjCX/s400/foss.jpg)
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Some of the "tools of the trade", an unstarted Shane Foulkes 1/18 Stegosaurus kit, a cleaned and prepped Charlie McGrady 1/10 Albertosaurus kit ready for glueing and puttying and a finished Shane Foulkes 1/18 Parasaurolophus.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicwB8DJbUqD7mxcZP6Xi9i4z0QjHRTECYIrb0mFssIgdhlC4GBesQGLv5O8GJ9y59tkmvAFlF2IuHaRhSMec1XXjasIQwvoDAtE5wNFaw7hyJujc6-Z7czbh4ojtvdpQYg70GvzKXjh0YO/s320/Wkshppublab.jpg)
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As well as some of my (all too many!) w.i.p´s, I took along my cast of the skull of Baryonyx, BMNH R9951, and did some puttying on the joins of my life-size Gorgosaurus head, beautifully sculpted by Charlie McGrady.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPxTZ3_VLc9Q9YmSOKJgpMjn7GJrh5zDEnxEuxnbQ1qaBRwl8WLJx8394_xF_0GO-POjsVEfiyhCzOi4L08lEP-hfS_1VeFFoPNJqQRR7hiO5X45I4VEIJhNXwzyOP87y02oNV-KRFjf9u/s320/Entrance16.jpg)
Below, the niches in the wall of the corridor housed some of my completed scale-models.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbfB8kjvrGoZunDF7WTDTWJH9dKpWXJWWsqPIZDAJ9-4Ghw2oHVj5B2T-R3a1u3GZq7eTC8YsRLBN6lcUQVwxKnQhQPcWyPbLvxNHbFtZ4eYbTv-RUewK2h6JKGnCei_aOcjD1pvXwptP-/s320/lWall.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhiiN5SQZr9I8R1m8hRYMdUeDtrrotIGRxWR4s5-q356__wBw0y8UgxpchMS7c4PC9kY4Mv3ueiwz-O85zCWCOvE0aL5_IWDGZrn4GlQB2WC7Mhpkx5TCZ0LuZ14ek8xrbZwtTPP6wafEnF/s320/rWall.jpg)
There was a shallow display case with some of my smaller scale models. Below you can see a Max Salas Iguanodon and a Greg Wenzel Lambeosaurus in 1/35 with a Jorge Blanco 1/24 Centrosaurus in the foreground.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjIGvLXrIjMP9znryYrTii3XF5O1Gc2PV1yEa6hr2oWvZzrQmuoWkmOCbt04k2b_vXFdtVSfgNndV6xN8m70BZoB9eUzwvCo97DBIrlfCmTwr9Z2khgKJ_OO58P4Aa1wWnd_EPdBDX850e8/s320/135LI124C.jpg)
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This is a svelte John Rader 1/18 Baryonyx.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2Mz18gNdBytHmcs9zMxNHnRu1oz1qMRmFDqfLAR_ghG6fjQbPfKYuy_YU79dQgjZgg5cXsKSQMc3HyZQKasL6K0o5SLV_B2au5TKNqD34eCDtEkmgPt-VBc-zan33Mx2fULckrv_II9Ok/s320/BTrx.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEinhpE1uQkz2-31Z09ar6fzu1BJu8ufl76YYLh6ku0bgIQCItDsMgApffiVhvo2BDONxx_0iNt3_nwEkZ_C_zfQ9DM3EvfC9sTcIJt0SkmDi5tprcf8U1cQm2qBGZRdNSd2k2vEPmxhWwfL/s320/FTrx.jpg)
This is probably more "true-to-life" ... Two feathered T. rex chicks squabbling to establish a pecking order. The fossilised remains of many tyrannosaur skulls exhibit partially- or fully- healed scrapes and puncture marks from such "face-biting", so these conflicts were not always fatal.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj8pE3t-GYeLiWybyM3zL48NIsQ9zUJ-kVor7UW3TTKIoa_wfjcs5NsOBHU_GAPoKpwKaMuyiTck3EmwLm-7j6FQ-BDmG6lr31aKS4F9wxFcqH69iHzd-JK5Dftp758xwO86LgKnAcgqTuC/s320/Cryo.jpg)
I painted the strange cranial crest of my 1/24 Alonso Studios Cryolophosaurus in cold, icy blue-greens and white as a visual pun on the name of the animal and also where it´s remains were found. I´m so pleased with the way the arms are tucked up against and into the chest on this sculpt.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3l4LwHQH0d1z88kJGv1ybgk1z_cdAepqXsH3cA5NBVlLEzVq5GQFjNYczolPjNxRNHoy0xkBm-TScMNpvDriY-QSUzrqAciGYcLSCprOdb3LourvZrak8GJ4CLv_Kguk78Gt_eXNmtn29/s320/Ig.jpg)
It was usually the children who pointed out the little turtle in my diorama featuring Shane Foulkes´ 1/18 Iguanodon. One of the more senior guests was kind enough to enquire if it as me who had stuffed all these animals! That made the whole show worth-while.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjPLOdTDMpr_PT60Wos3OgMLqzRlgozNlf4LfRO-x6bBUlupUgB-6Kgp7zt_86oZmPOz0qzrGmrwVnPreELUHo61Ziw3UF5Ni7HY2fO0UeOdS0rKsNClCW4d5do6k9573_L3yJEr3fCX2_V/s320/Krit.jpg)
One of my personal favourites, Jorge Blanco´s 1/18 Kritosaurus led to some interesting discussions on incubation and parental care among dinosaurs and "how similar they were to birds", which itself led on to discussions of how birds are dinosaurs just as bats are mammals. Good stuff!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0UhdHbXsMI1fHvGvBY-4M0SgzkHbfU0SXkQgEvEiavZzzEFAB10XBREAvqG0nXhezgXQMHLIIYkJABt8qj1oMetdsyxUjl8q0vteWRs4iDuKrkGlYkBmaLerTT-Z3Ln21rN6YXRxRsmfY/s320/Sty.jpg)
My re-paint of David Krentz´s 1/12 Styracosaurus looking very haughty.
Just outside the hall containing Miocene fossil whales were some large dislpay-cases containing some of the casts of tyrannosaur specimens i´ve acquired from various museums.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUJYDdT09EyjrFgnWp4-BT48gTil_YBI5hNFoaPHUGZu-RkR_hiR8VlBJwAQ1KasIQQNL8VzAUOZhXR94Ol0dL9Yx6yZEDaAJTWGhYz_I8iJG0pUku1f0-ylc3rp1DdNBmEC7fRVvjy2WQ/s320/corridor16.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjoK0FOZoIQgQFBFJ1swbBNhqA6RIdIAEZoz-yqJfvqwfdJTU7SmlBL4GbglMU9IWF4EIlugEd_oLrKCEiJn8hGg1p4db9hqWyXBXZKcXyvH8hwobWErSjTa9qG02_EyAukxB3ETQRGo3-A/s320/Gorg.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0RpxTdVUue6eUQXD-2_DznBqjSJmbD-x7E0jHIy2nmXyG3pcUHMwclXroWqH_SfKzHOxics8SPvv2kiM2CkBVLsbaVlkiR_QgCC-qRZ0jxtHrxvHDhcBiylD8MJZnBS-cws0rjsOMvhsa/s320/Gorgs.jpg)
Above, casts of the arm, foot and skull of the not quite fully grown Gorgosaurus, ROM 1247 from the Royal Ontario Museum, dwarf my 1/18 Charlie McGrady Albertosaurus.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPYdKhRdms8eMtAbWuHfnRndLK72wfyBVST69vFeE9KNr1iYfwYx6V2BYHQKF-rlAgICG5fRk_qq44MHjXXTVc67xXgCg6A2sssbBo4UAXgtcdDgU8XqGpvfpzCqNCgmRTRHhKWDpODPP7/s320/feathsNano.jpg)
Here´s two of the feathered Gorgosaurus "chicks" I commissioned Sean Cooper to sculpt for me way back in 2006. Beside them, my cast of the elegant skull of "Nanotyrannus lancensis", CMNH 7541, which may (or may not) actually be the remains of a very young Tyrannosaurus rex.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLgG7uMht8BJz0rPa4y8Ain4tx0PuzgLVQcBfnOwofP6ZD7VmHmRyFkoRqQsRVfkF3ujQKhQ3g5gNgKPFJA31puMbq5PEX8YFS2RVu3M3rHwbWXgZtA4RxQu0uTQtWvzDh-a1FpT23Wfw8/s320/feathers.jpg)
And, to round up with, a display-case re-inforcing the point about the close relationship between Dinosaurs and birds. On the left, a cast of the beautiful Berlin specimen of Archaeopteryx above a skull and claw of Deinonychus antirrhopus. On the right, my 1/10 scale Bruce Bowman feathered Velociraptor mongoliensis above a skull and claw of this animal. In the centre, a taxidermy specimen of a Eurasian Jay, Garrulus glandarius, above my little vignette portraying the enigmatic tiny feathered Dinosaur Scansoriopteryx doing all it can not to be noticed amongst the litter of a forest-floor.
Spike.
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