The Troll was sculpted by four artists: Steve Badanes, Will Martin, Donna Walter, and Ross Whitehead.[5][6] The idea of a troll living under a bridge is derived from the Scandinavian (Norwegian) folklore.
The artists have copyright to the Troll images. They have sued businesses that use its image commercially without written permission.[7] Postcards, beer, and other products approved by the artists are commercially available, and use is free to non-profit organizations.[8]
In 1990, the Fremont Arts Council launched an art competition for the area under the bridge with the intent to construct hostile architecture to deter the presence of "rodents, mattresses, beer cans, [and] guys sleeping" there, believing that the solution to the issue was "having a piece of art" instead. The piece, built later that same year, easily won the competition, and was meant to become a cultural icon of the city from its conception.[9] The vote in favor of the "funky" troll was also motivated of concerns about increased development in Fremont, including numerous large apartment buildings and an office park, urbanizing the largely residential neighborhood.[10]
The construction of the troll provoked immediate complaints from homeless people who previously lived under the bridge, and in 1991, just a year after it was erected, neighbors funded powerful floodlights to deter squatters and "late-night revelers" from acts of vandalism targeting the troll's beard and hair,[11] as well as the continued dumping of trash around it by homeless people who used to live there.[12] Despite the intent of the arts council, the sculpture has periodically been the target of vandalism,[9] although local activists have made efforts to clean graffiti on a regular basis,[13] and the city of Seattle has swept homeless encampments adjacent to the sculpture following repeated drug overdoses in January 2019;[14] from January to mid-May alone, the city received 28 complaints about needles or homelessness within a block of the sculpture.[15]
In 2005, the segment of Aurora Avenue North under the bridge, running downhill from the Troll to North 34th Street was renamed "Troll Avenue" in honor of the sculpture.[16] In 2011 the Fremont Arts Council licensed a Chia Pet based on the Fremont Troll that was sold at a local drug store chain.[17]>
The stairway leading to the top of the sculpture was rebuilt in September 2023 using funds from the Move Seattle levy; the Troll is planned to be surrounded by more vegetation planted by volunteers the following month.[18]
The 2015 video game Life is Strange features the Fremont Troll partway through the first episode, in which the player can find a picture of the protagonist, Max, and two of her friends from her time living in Seattle, climbing on the sculpture.[20]
The seventh and final season of the ABC fantasy-drama series Once Upon a Time features a fictionalized version of the sculpture. Filming for the series took place in Vancouver, Canada, as such, a replica of the sculpture was built for the show. In the season's fourteenth episode, "The Girl in the Tower", a backstory for the sculpture is revealed, which includes references to the 1982 children's book The BFG.[21] In 2016, the Chicago rock band Majungas released "The Fremont Troll" off their Seattle Rock album.[22][23]
In 2022, the Seattle Kraken introduced Buoy, a mascot said to be the Fremont Troll's nephew.[24]
^Nelson, Robert T. (September 30, 1990). "Stuff of Legends: Fremont erecting funky troll sculpture". The Seattle Times/Seattle Post-Intelligencer. pp. B6. Archived from the original on October 26, 2023. Retrieved October 3, 2023.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^Angelos, Constantine (December 10, 1990). "Monstruous New Fun in Fremont". The Seattle Times. pp. E3. Retrieved October 3, 2023.
^Life is Strange, Episode 1, "Chrysalis," Directed by Raoul Barbet and Michael Koch, written by Christian Divine, Jean-Luc Cano, and Raoul Barbet, Featuring Hannah Telle, Ashly Burch, and Nik Shriner, released January 29, 2015.