Anna Grayson is a British geologist, writer, broadcaster, and artist, whom the former editor of Geoscientist magazine has described as "legendary".[1] She is best known for bringing earth sciences to popular attention in the UK through numerous books and BBCradio and television series in the 1990s and early 2000s, particularly through the programmes Rock Solid, Postcards from the Past and The Essential Guide to Rocks.[2][3] In 1996, Grayson made headlines around the world with the discovery of a blue mineral which at the time was believed to be hitherto unknown to science.[4][5][6][7] After further research, the rock was confirmed to be an unusually large sample of the rare blue mineral, aerinite.[8]
From the late 1980s to the early 2000s, Grayson fronted many factual radio and television series covering a variety of subjects. Her work primarily focused on popular science and she is best known for programmes which brought earth sciences into public imagination in the UK.[2] A review of the book and TV programme Postcards from the Past in the journal Geology Today credited Grayson's persistence as a geologist and presenter for the "very welcome breakthrough for our science to have a programme devoted to geology".[18] In 1997, she launched the inaugural Scottish Geology Week.[2][19][20] She was a patron of and adviser to the Dynamic Earth exhibition in Edinburgh for five years, before resigning in 1999 over concerns about the costs.[3]
Major television series looking at the geology of the UK. Grayson was series consultant and writer, and co-hosted with Kate Humble, Ray Mears and Duncan Copp
Contributions to public understanding of Earth Science
Blue mineral
In March 1996, Grayson made headlines around the world with the discovery of a blue mineral that could not be identified by scientists.[4][5][6] She had purchased the rock at a roadside stall in Morocco in the early 1980s, where the seller had identified it as lapis lazuli, a relatively common blue mineral. During National Science Week, Grayson had taken the rock to an event run by the Natural History Museum in London, where museum staff were offering to help identify mysterious objects brought in by the public.[4] After further research, the mineral was identified as aerinite, a rare bright blue mineral originating in Spain and Morocco.[8]
Awards
In 1998, Grayson was awarded the R.H. Worth prize by the Geological Society of London, for encouragement of amateur interest in geology through the broadcast media.[55]
In 1999, she won the Glaxo WellcomeABSW Science Writers' Award for best science television, for her work on The Essential Guide to Rocks.[56]
Combatting sexism
Throughout her career, Grayson has been a vocal force in the promotion of the role played by women in earth sciences and science more generally, as well as combatting sexism directed towards her. Whilst at a promotional photocall for The Essential Guide to Rocks, she declined the photographer's request that she pass her geological hammer to co-presenter Ray Mears, on the basis that she was the only trained geologist in the picture.[1] In 2021, the geologist Stuart Monro was reprimanded by the Geological Society for verbally abusing Grayson at a dinner in 1999. Monro was accused of "shouting, spitting, and making sexist comments." Grayson made the complaint after being inspired by the MeToo movement.[57]
Art career
In 2012, Grayson enrolled on an art access course at Exeter College.[10] For one assignment, she recreated Jan van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait as a photographic pastiche, featuring modern-day subjects looking at their smartphones.[9] The piece was highly commended by the South West Academy and in 2014 was hung at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in London.[29][58][59] A further four more pastiches have appeared at the Summer Exhibition, including versions of Leonardo'sMona Lisa, The Kiss by Klimt, a still life depicting fossils and rocks, and, in 2024, Rembrandt'sA Woman Bathing in a Stream.[10][58][59][60] Her work has been featured on Grayson Perry's Art Club on Channel 4.[9] In 2022 Grayson had a solo exhibition of photographs at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum in Exeter, entitled The Photographic Art Thief.[60][61]
References
^ abNield, Ted. "Reviews – Tools of the Trade". Geoscientist Online. The Geological Society of London. Retrieved 2024-12-16. When the legendary geologist science-writer (now artist) Anna Grayson was posing before the Old Man of Hoy with Ray Mears, Kate Humble and the rest of the team for the Radio Times group photo marking the broadcast of The essential guide to rocks (BBC, 2011), the snapper paused and said 'Anna dear, can you give your 'ammer to Ray?'. She refused – and quite right too. The hammer is, as she protested, the tool of the geologist's trade.
^Grayson, Anna (1992). Rock solid: Britain's most ancient heritage. British Museum. London: British Museum. ISBN978-0-565-01108-6.
^Grayson, Anna (1996). Postcards from the Past. BBC Education. ISBN9781860003097.
^Grayson, Anna (22 September 2000). Equinox: The Earth. Pan Macmillan. ISBN9780752272160.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
^Challoner, Jack; Grayson, Anna; Harclerode, Peter (2001). Equinox Book of Science. Pan Macmillan. ISBN9780752261362.
^Pledger, Keith; Bearne, Amanda; Bolger, Sharon; Grayson, Anna; and 15 others (24 June 2008). Level Up Maths. Heinemann. ISBN9780435537319.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^"Awards". Times Higher Education (THE). 1998-04-24. Retrieved 2024-12-16.