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Culture: Arts The Art of the Deep Underneath the glistening sun and crashing waves of Cancún, Mexico, lies a hidden treasurean underwater sculpture museum in Manchones Reef. The sculptures, created by British sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor for the Museo Subacuático de Arte (MUSA), is a collection of four hundred life-size statues modeled after workers, farmers, and other people who live near the reef. The exhibit provides an opportunity for scuba divers, snorkelers, and other tourists to interact with the ocean in a new way, all while preserving the life and natural beauty of the ocean. Creating an Underwater Museum The project began in 2006, when the Yucatán Peninsulas National Marine Park learned about a few of Taylors sculptures, which were submerged off the shore of Grenada. These sculptures were meant to become living, breathing parts of the ocean as they grew coral and provided homes for fish in their crevices. Cancúns coral reefs and tropical fish had attracted snorkelers and scuba divers for years, but both coral and fish were dwindling because of hurricanes and tourists. Taylors idea seemed like the perfect solution to revive them. The National Marine Park contacted Taylor to propose their idea, and Taylor accepted. The statues are made out of special concrete designed to withstand rough conditions on the ocean floor and to provide a perfect breeding ground for underwater plant life. Now MUSA’s underwater sculpture museum featuring Taylors life-size, human-like statues is helping to revive the popular reefs surrounding Cancún and Isla Mujeres. Not only does it distract tourists from other reefs that need a chance to regrow, but it also provides additional places for more coral to grow.

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Culture: Arts

The Art of the Deep

Underneath the glistening sun and crashing waves of Cancún, Mexico, lies a hidden treasure—an

underwater sculpture museum in Manchones Reef. The sculptures, created by British sculptor

Jason deCaires Taylor for the Museo Subacuático de Arte (MUSA), is a collection of four

hundred life-size statues modeled after workers, farmers, and other people who live near the reef.

The exhibit provides an opportunity for scuba divers, snorkelers, and other tourists to interact

with the ocean in a new way, all while preserving the life and natural beauty of the ocean.

Creating an Underwater Museum

The project began in 2006, when the Yucatán Peninsula’s National Marine Park learned about a

few of Taylor’s sculptures, which were submerged off the shore of Grenada. These sculptures

were meant to become living, breathing parts of the ocean as they grew coral and provided

homes for fish in their crevices. Cancún’s coral reefs and tropical fish had attracted snorkelers

and scuba divers for years, but both coral and fish were dwindling because of hurricanes and

tourists. Taylor’s idea seemed like the perfect solution to revive them. The National Marine Park

contacted Taylor to propose their idea, and Taylor accepted.

The statues are made out of special concrete designed to withstand rough conditions on

the ocean floor and to provide a perfect breeding ground for underwater plant life. Now MUSA’s

underwater sculpture museum featuring Taylor’s life-size, human-like statues is helping to revive

the popular reefs surrounding Cancún and Isla Mujeres. Not only does it distract tourists from

other reefs that need a chance to regrow, but it also provides additional places for more coral to

grow.

Visiting the Museum

You can access the museum by contacting local scuba-diving companies in Cancún. These

companies will either take you over the reef on a glass-bottom boat ride or transport you just a

short distance from the Manchones Reef to snorkel or scuba dive in the underwater museum

itself.

As snorkeling and scuba-diving tourists swim around, over, and even through some of the

works of art, they can view Taylor’s pieces from a variety of positions—and have a more

personal interaction with the pieces than visitors get with artwork in traditional museums. Amy

Thomas of Davidson, North Carolina, explains that snorkeling at the underwater museum “is

totally different than swimming over a natural reef that seems to be the ‘usual’ scenery.

Snorkeling above the statues is very surreal. It’s almost like you are seeing something you aren’t

supposed to.”

While some museums always have the same pieces to see again, the underwater museum

is always changing because the longer the sculptures are in the ocean, the longer the coral grows

and evolves around it. The art can also change color as the sun rises and sets. In an interview

with USA Today (reported on Taylor’s website), the artist says, “The coral applies the paint. The

fish supply the atmosphere. The water provides the mood.”

Hidden below the surface of Cancún’s glimmering waves is a whole new world just

waiting to be explored. Take a dip and discover it for yourself.

—Kaylee Herrick

www.underwatersculpture.com