Full Dinosaur rEvolution Show: Don’t Miss It!

The Dinosaur rEvolution exhibition continues its successful tour going now to the northe of England… we hope it’s going to be as successful al it was at the Horniman… with the special feature that this time it is the full show, not just a sselection of it. Don’t miss it! June until September!

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2025 is almost here… Best Extreme Dinosaurs wishes from this blog!

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Dinosaur rEvolution has left the building!

We are thankful to the Horniman Museum in London for six months of a very successful stay… much obliged!

Now it’s time to search for new pastures… we have several candidate venues but for now we are open to suggestions… and hopefully for wider spaces! Some big skeletons wouldn’t fit at the Horniman hall and they were essential for the narrative of the exhibition.

Thank you to everybody involved including the great visit of the entourage of “Why Dinosaurs?”, TetZoo, Darren Naish, Dave Hone and so many more. Yet another memorable chapter in our lives!

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The very Limited edition EXTREME DINOSAURS PT 3, BLOGGING! Is fully available now.

Despite what Amazon might say (that it will be dispatched very late)… this very limited 100 copy edition is fully available now and it’s £30 (plus postage). 140 full colour pages with as many illustrations. some of them double page spreads, with contributions by Mike Kelly, Anusuya Chinsamy, Darwin Dohrn Museum and many more…. It’s an imperfect but nevertheless fantastically printed labour of love and is full of non-pretentious, provocative witty commentary… So grab your copy before it disappears… only 70 left! Dedicated especially to all the fearless readers of this blog. You can also contact me directly on l.victor_r@yahoo.co.uk and you’ll get your dedicated, signed copy.

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Back to the roots…the continuing obsession of the Liaoning Province biota, via the reconstruction of fossil replicas!

The enantiornithine Confuciusornis (male),

For me, these gave meaning to all… years and years struggling to for vindication finally came true with the extraordinary richness of these fossil finds that changed our modern vision of dinosaurs… feathered dinosaurs galore! Also this has been an excellent pictorial exercise that allowed me to do something similar to abstract paintings while sculpting and remodeling the real fossils..

Everything started with three dimensional reproduction in resin of photographs that were sent to me from Brazil. The quality was motly abysmal, especially when confronted with bigger, more complex casts (like Beipiaosaurus) . I had to use every possible sculpture skill with epoxy resin and follow the best photographs of the foossils available.. What started playfully, ended up as a very serious reproduction of a selected series of the Yi Xian and other deposits from the Liaoning Province, including the two most famous specimens of the four-winged Microraptor,

the therizinosaur Beipiaosaurus,

the troodontid/anchiornithid Serikornis and Anchiornis itself,

the puzzling feathered /bat-like maniraptorans Epidexipteryx and Yi qi

and the possible earliest, Jurassic, preceding Archaeopteryx for 10 million years, maniraptoran Aurornis xui. Added is the pterosaur Sordes pilosus (but wthis specimen lacks the bristly coverage it is famous for).

The colour palette I had to deal with was astonishing… No, these fossils are rich in variety of colours… and depending on the light it varies enormously. Trying to reproduce exactly the colour of the stone and all its shades is not easy at all, but it’s enormous fun and entails a long learning process. After all, colours have always been one of my main obsessions.

And getting the feeling of the rock is even more difficult…

I’m trying to not make them look like “paintings”… they are fossils! But not always the results are successful and the amount of detail needed is staggering…. magnifying glass at hand while the computer pictures give the extra helping hand. See and judge for yourelf!

A little more than just a hobby…The process has been painful to say the least… and it’s not quite finished yet!

Posted in Archaeopteryx, Birds, Chinese Dinosaurs, Customising models, Dinosaur colouration, Dinosaur Models, maniraptora, Museum Displays, Original Art, Paleoart, Raptors, therizinosaurs, Theropods, Uncategorized, Yi qi, Yi Xian Fauna | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

TetZoo 2024. The show must go on.

This was announced as “the last TetZoo Con” meeting ever”... Next year it will be renamed as another another event, will leave London as their main venue, and it will be called DinoCon... and rightly so… after all Dinosaurs always seem the main attraction, depite all the attention other amphibians, reptiles, mammals etc need…Dinosaurs are sexy… and nobody can deny it. Besides, these meetings have become like the “lost Paleofamily” reunion… everybody knows and cares for r each other, perhaps with some surprise exceptions, but they don’t really count.

This time the exhibition, paleoart workshop and vendor stalls wefe all at the eighth floor of the Bush House in Aldwych. With the killer of killers view of London you can imagine!

I mean, even among vendors, there were some real marvels on show that made many of us that had things to sell too make losses instead of gains! Look at this marvels from Jed Taylor and Ruahdri Brennan… or my prize exchange with Darren…direct from the work of James Pascoe.

To celebrate the last of TetZoo’s I prepared a couple of special “events” of my own. First was the exlusive release of Extreme Dinosaurs Pt. 3, Blogging! in a very limited, numbered edition of 100 that once is finished… is finished! Unless we manage to find a publisher. It might not be as well laid-out as many people would liked but it was a labour of love, made in a real hurry… No regrets there! I wwas surprried to see the original pterosaur artwork I gave to Dave Hone in the exhibition

The highlight of the whole three days I have to say was meeting Dinosaur UberFan Aby and her mom… they were the delight of eveybody! Thank you simply for your presence Aby!

The second event for me was Darren Naish organised a group visit to Dinosaur rEvolution on the third day, still at the Horniman Museum as part of their annual field trip and kindly allowed me to be their exhibition guide.

All in all a success! Thanks mostly to Carmen Naranjo, Darren Naish, John Conway, Cheung Chung Tat, Georgia Witton (some pictures here are stolen from her!) , Dave Hone, Mark Witton, Steve White, Janet Smith, Jed Taylor, Ruadhri Brennan, Jim Robbins,Rhys Griffin, Rob Nicholls , Katrina Von Grouw, Emma Lambert, Chris Manias, SplendidHand ltd, our neighbour Sue Wilson, Tabitha and Maxim … and… Aby... and so many many more, ,especially the staff and our guests at the Horniman Museum’s Dinosaur rEvolution..,. their support and presence were most appreciated!

Copies from “Extreme Dinosaurs Pt 3 Blogging!” are still available. Contact me in person for exclusive, signed and numbered copies.

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“Why Dinosaurs?” A tribute that goes way far beyond any tribute.

When I was approached by Tony Pinto last year I was skeptic. I didn’t know him and what he was saying was a little mind-blowing: a whole movie about the sky-rocket prowess of his son from typical dinosaur nerd to being a youthful full academic. He approached me because “his son liked my artwork”… so at the beginning I treated matters in a simple professional way… they just wanted to use some of my artwork and that was it… a movie? Well that was seemed pretty high stakes… but the more I investigated , the more things were getting rally serious. The amount of Paleo-people involved was staggering. And the simple admirable motive: the dedication of a father encouraging to his son’s talents resulted at the end in something that was much more than that… it became an example to be followed by the new generations!

https://www.whydinosaurs.com/about

Yes Tony Pinto put to work his talent to fulfill his son’s dreams,. He knew very well what his son could be able to achive and pu it into action but what emerges from the film and the achivements that James Pinto i goes beyond the simple “dinofan” he was in his childhood to an inspirational inacademic individual.

The film spans three and a half years of his teenage life in a coming-of-age story that concludes with James heading off to the prestigious UC Berkeley to become a paleontologist. He is currently a senior undergraduate working at the UC Museum of Paleontology 

II was lucky enough to be invited to the preview screening of “Why Dinosaurs?” in London. I was also lucky and felt honoured to add my own input to the very approachable dynamic duo of Tony (director) and James Pinto . I likd opennness above all… and they turned the day into a memorable event that lacked pretentiousness and reminded me of my best days with the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meetings… where professionalism and spontaneity were not in collision. So relaxed was the atmosphere that nobody was afraid to talk to anybody else…

The entourage accepted my invitation to visit Dinosaur rEvolution at the Horniman Museum, right after a visit to the Crystal Palace dinosaurs… a London landmark that is unfortunately neglected and decaying in the middle of the elements, natural or otherwise… the trees and the weather are taking its toll and only a few people, like the Rhys Griffin and the efforts of Friends of Crystal Palace Dinosaurs https://cpdinosaurs.or are doing whatever they can to restore and protect it, despite the staggering amount of money any reparation costs. The budget amounts for any restoration are shocking! They are the only ones that seem to care about it… when it really should be a matter of national pride and government (not charity) support… after all that is the place where “Dinosaurs” were born after Owen coined the name in the 1850’s… the sculptures are worn-out and badly hidden by vegetation to the level that they are barely visible… a true shame. The visit was expertly guided by. Sarah Jayne, that gave us a very complete and accomplished summary of the history of the place … and even if the weather didn’t help, it was quite enjoyable.

Afterwards even more enjoyment was in store: the visit to Dinosaur rEvolution, with almost the Pinto’s whole entourage. I really didn’t expect it, but it. but on arrival the museum was packed with visitors, just as in the days of the opening, proving once again that Dinosaur rEvolution continues to be a complete success… no flooding or the obligatory fixtures to the animatronics. have been able to stop it … in one to one conversation about “skin”, the main theme of Dinosaur rEvolution, I understood the extraordinary interest and talent James Pinto is gifted with,and the reason Tony Pinto has done this magnificent effort. I got the impression that the whole entourage enjoyed Dinosaur rEvolution. I hope they did, even if the crowded place was not the best for long explanations and speeches .

The culmination of the long day was the premiere in London of “Why Dinosaurs?”, just a couple of streets away from the park that made dinosaurs famous. After the generous reception, the proceedings were expertly introduced by Dr. Dean Lomax, producer of the film, and Dr. Ellinor Michel (from the Friends of the Dinosaurs of Crystal Palace trust), The documentary is basically a detailed invitation for any budding palaeontologist to follow iand persevere in the realisation of their palaeodreams. The documentary is packed wth a plethora of interviews of celebrity and non-celebrity palaeontologists, collectors and technicians in the field of Palaeontology… and it is a joy to watch. This is a documentary that everyone (including young paleoartists) need to see.

I myself have never tired to try to popularise Palaeontology and the Pinto team have found an optimal formula of doing just that: personalising the path towards to realise their own full palaeontologial potential via a unique father/son association. This documentary most probably will at the end be part of one of the most influential streaming channels on TV and the internet.. but first it will continue its merry way across England’s cinema venues, Lyme Regis and Sheffield included) and Europe in screenings like this

And what better way to finish the evening by exchanging gifts and meeting people that I had always wanted to meet in person, like Nizar Ibrahim,, the Man of Spinosaur Controversy in the flesh… and his son, both present at the screening? Yes they were there and now have got at least four posters of my version of his favourite dinosaur: Spinosaurus... tailor made to his requirements… at least Ibrahim’s son loved them! And by the way,, I managed to get James Pinto to reveal his favourite dinosaur, and quess what?… it WAS Spinosaurus!

I must thank earnestly Tony Pinto, James Pinto and the whole entourage that included too many to name all, but I’d like to highlight “thanks” to Janet Smith, James Pascoe, Rhys Griffin for their support, and Kallie Moore and Jessica Lippincott for their gifts (books)… maybe we’ll see each other taking Dinosaur rEvolution across the pond to North America one of these days!

And lastly… good luck Tony and James Pinto... and thank you for your inspiring the New Wave with your efforts. Popularising dinosaurs and the promotion of Paleontology : We are all in it together!

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Dinosaur rEvolution and Extreme Dinosaurs Part 2 were right all along!

According to Nature Communications, It seems that we finally have it… the rumoured feathered Psittacosaurus specimen I have been advancing is finally out… not like a half-porcupine this time, butbody covered in feathery, quill-like integument, combined with… scales. Yes, the two skin elements coexisted, as it would only be natural. Keratin rules! The main thesis of the exhibition Dinosaur rEvolution was the diversity of covering integument right at the base of Dinosauria, with quilled ornithischian heterodontosaurs like Kulindadromeus , Pegomastax or possibly even Hetetedontosaurus on one hand and and protofeathery Coelurosaurs, ancestors of the biggest carnivores in the planet, that also combined feathers with scales…. as the exhibition states: the key of the success of Dinosauria was not only the change of posture (making them unlike any reptile)… but also the diversity of skin strategies that almost consolidate the fact that dinosaurs were different in almost everything, including a different kind of metabolism.

This also gives credence to the still not accepted term “Ornithoscelida”, that would group the Ornithischians with Theropoda… leaving Saurischia to Sauropoda or relatives . But let’s not get ahoead of ourselves… in the meantime, for the exhibition the one that went ahead of himself was me: the new reconstruction of fully feathered/quilled juvenile psittacosaurs is featured for the first time in this Horniman Museum outing of the exhibition… and here are the mind-boggling published pictures of the specimen at last… another vindication of that old “porcupine” specimen I reconstructed in the year 2000 and the rumours that came with it.

More images from Nature Communications. Rejoice Dinosauria; you have Class! And Dinosaur rEvolution celebrates it…

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A favourite of mine is being reappraised! Sinosauropteryx.

I still remember that day vividly… in the middle of excited rumours at the SVP that year, there it was: the cover of an issue of Nature in 1997 with the first published photograph of the fossil of Sinosauropteryx on the cover… right at the newstand!… The fossil that would really change it all. That was officially the first fossil that unequivocally showed feathers on a non-avian dinosaur… and got a lot of people fuming! “They were NOT feathers” fiercely argued the “Birds are not dinosaurs camp”… but after all these years, analyses anfter analyses they were proven wrong and the filaments or “protofeathers” that surrounded like a halo the skeleton made it look almost exactly Messel-like… microscopic study corroborated ot and now we even have the possible colours of the protofeathers!

The typical specimen of Sinosauropteryx was about 60 cm long. A bigger specimen was reported as 1 meter… and other similar species like Scalliopteryx were even bigger. But… there was an issue still pending… Currie and Chen 2001 reported that:
“The [smaller] specimens of Sinosauropteryx prima show skull and orbit proportions, and bone texture typical of immature stages.

In April 2024 Andrea Cau published a photo of an undescribed 3.8m long (!) Yi Xian specimen labelled as Sinosauropteryx that is housed in a Chinese museum. The hand and foot are distinct from the holotyoe and the tail is relatively shorter. Legs are also typically longer and theropodian. Quoting the description: ” According to Cau’s caption: “This is the so-far-undescribed “largest Sinosauropteryx”, an amazing 3.8 m long (!) specimen housed in a Chinese museum and claimed to be a Sinosauropteryx. Although not yet included in my matrix, this specimen confirms the hypothesis developed in my latest paper that “compsognathids” are not adult morphs of small size, but juvenile semaphoronts of larger tetanurans. This specimen would surely improve the systematic placement of the Jehol Biota “compys”.After testing in the LRT this specimen indeed nests with the smaller specimens.”

Are we now solving the Phil Currie and Chen’s observations from the early 200o’s and we have finally found an adult or subadult Sinosauropteryx while the original specimens were immature individuals? Celebrating the possibility here’s my take on a family of Sinosauropteryx wading a Yi Xian lake’s toxic waters… and a comparison of three specimens… from the smallest to the biggest yet found. Please note that this is still not completely verified… but in the meantime we have the picture of an upscaled parent of an all time favourite dinosaur!… warning, this may change in the future!

In the meantime> a kind reminder of an unmissable event:

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Getting one (or two) of my dreams realised, step by step…

As Carmen would say: “Why and how do you get this junk? Look’s terrible”… well it came all the way from Brazil from Rodrigo Henrique Gomes. And indeed at the beginning didn’t look very promising… but guess what happened next… little by little, step by step “Dave”, the sinornithosaur, my dream fossil came true…

After more than 20 years of having had it in my hands at dear Mark Norell’s AMNH office looking to Central Park, NY… and having been unable to sleep that night after seeing one of the most perfect examples of feathered dinosaurs EVER… well… the only alternative I could ever lay my hands on this for my shelves. was after a frantic, decent (or half decent) paint job. I still think needs a bit of retouching…

… and next came another biggest challenge… loook at this! It still doesn’t make much sense to me, but the (In)famous Ubirajara was at my desk too!

Carmen had to admit that…the whole lot made much more sense now!

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