Cancún Underwater Museum
Museo Subacuático de Arte | |
Location | Cerrada Las Golondrinas 24, Alfredo Bonfil, 77560 Cancún, Mexico |
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Coordinates | 21°04′35″N 86°50′47″W / 21.0763°N 86.8463°W |
Type | Underwater Museum |
Collection size | 500 sculptures |
Visitors | 200,000 per year |
Founder | Roberto Díaz Abraham & Jaime González Cano |
Architect | Jason deCaires Taylor, Sculptor |
Website | musamexico.org |
The Cancún Underwater Museum (Spanish: Museo Subacuático de Arte, known as MUSA) is a non-profit organization based in Cancún, Mexico devoted to the art of conservation. The museum has a total of 500 sculptures, most by the British sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor and the others by five Mexican sculptors,[1] with three different galleries submerged between three and six meters (9.8 and 19.6 ft ) deep in the ocean at the Cancún National Marine Park. The museum was thought up by Marine Park Director Jaime Gonzalez Canto, with Taylor's assistance, with the objective of saving the nearby coral reefs by providing an alternative destination for divers.[2][3] It was started in 2009 and officially opened in November 2010.
History
At the beginning of 2008, Jaime Gonzalez Canto and Jason deCaires Taylor began to create the plans for an underwater museum that would be formed by nature into a coral reef.[1]
Dr. Jaime González Miki, the Director of the National Park Costa Occidental Isla Mujeres, Punta Cancún y Punta Nizuc, saw that the natural coral reefs were being damaged by tourists, anchors, and divers. In particular the largest coral reef in Cancún, Manchones Reef, was receiving the most damage because it is the most often visited by divers and snorkelers.[4]
Early in 2005 González Canto suggested to the then President of the Cancún Nautical Association, Roberto Díaz Abraham, the idea of taking snorkelers and divers to an area where concrete reefs with some corals had been placed, to draw them away from Manchones reef. By January 2008, Díaz Abraham walked away from the project, believing that it would take many more years for the artificial coral gardens to flourish and become an attraction, but González Canto persisted. Pursuing research on artificial reefs, he came across Taylor, who had been pioneering the use of underwater sculptures for the creation of artificial reefs on a project in Grenada that demonstrated the value of art in conservation, the Molinere Underwater Sculpture Park. He was a diving instructor in the Caribbean at the time, which also allowed him to see art in a different way.[5]
Roberto Diaz Abraham agreed to the plan for Taylor to create an underwater sculpture museum. MUSA was created and Taylor was contracted to do the initial work installing almost 500 sculptures, with the others by Mexican sculptors. The first four sculptures were placed underwater in November 2009,[6] and most of Taylor's The Silent Evolution had been installed by the end of 2010.[7][8][9] The museum officially opened on November 27, 2010, shortly before the start of the Cancún climate summit.[10][11]
By the end of 2013, five years after the foundation of MUSA, a total of 500 concrete sculptures had been placed on the ocean floor, 487 by Taylor and the rest by five Mexican artists. 477 are exhibited in the Manchones gallery and 23 in the Nizuc gallery. In addition, 26 replicas and one original are located at a visitor center at Plaza Kukulcán, a mall in the hotel zone of Cancún. More than 100,000 visitors, out of 500,000 that visited the Government Protected Area, visited MUSA during 2013.
Museum
MUSA obtained a permit to sink 1,200 structures in 10 different areas within the National Marine Park. So far only two have been developed, Manchones reef with 477 sculptures and Punta Nizuc with 23 structures. A new installation by Cuban sculptor Elier Amado Gil, Blessings, is to be placed in a new gallery called Chitales. Snorkelers, scuba divers, and tourists can visit the underwater exhibits via a glass-bottom boat.
To place the statues on the ocean floor, Taylor had a special lift made for the statues so none would be damaged during the move. A forty-ton crane was placed on a commercial ferry in order to lower the sculptures. Some are so heavy that they had to be lifted into the water using lift bags.[5] The sculptures are created with pH-neutral marine concrete, made with the help of marine park officials and the Cancún Nautical Association, and are created above ground and cleaned before being taken underwater so they do not have any chemicals on them that may harm the water, animals, or reef.[5]
Jason deCaires Taylor's The Silent Evolution consists of more than 400 human figures depicted interacting with the environment around them, with both a positive and negative impact. He shows how humans can live with nature and make a workable future between the two, but also how humans have damaged nature, specifically the coral reefs, and show no sympathy.[9][12]
The statues in The Silent Evolution show how some humans see their surrounding and embrace them while others hide their faces. Each statue was made to resemble members of a local fishing community where Taylor lives. Each statue has its own personality and features. Taylor made sure every detail from the hair to the clothes of the statues was perfect. They include a little girl with a faint smile on her face looking up to the surface; six businessmen with their heads in the sand, not paying attention to their surroundings; and even a man behind a desk with his dog lying him, but looking tired and uninvolved in the environment. The work took Taylor 18 months and 120 hours of working underwater and used 120 tons of concrete, sand, and gravel, 3,800m (2.3 miles ) of fiberglass, and 400 kg (881 lbs ) of silicone.[12]
Taylor planted pieces of coral from damaged reefs on some of the first sculptures.[6][13] The Silent Evolution is a two-part art installation: the underwater sculptures themselves are the first part, while the second is how nature will transform them as coral grows and a new reef forms.[14]
In March 2011 a new installation by Taylor, What Have We Done?, opened at Punta Nizuc.[13]
One exhibit room is on shore in a mall, Plaza Kukulcán, with 26 replicas and one original ceramic sculpture by Roberto Díaz Abraham, The Ocean Muse.
Benefits
The underwater museum is to benefit the protection of the coral reefs. Artificial reefs are usually created by sunken ships and other objects that have fallen to the bottom of the ocean floor. The statues are a new technique and material for coral to grow on, a means for art to save the oceans.[5] As the statues were made with pH-neutral cement, coral, seaweed, and algae are able to grow and develop better than on an old ship. Stable structures with a stable base are known to be ideal surfaces for artificial reefs. The statues also have holes in them, which allow marine wildlife to colonize and feed off the coral. Coral reefs will increase, but so will marine life. After only a short time under the water, the statues began to be transformed by nature. In time, all the statues will be covered and their figures will barely be visible[5]
The museum also benefits the community by attracting tourists.[6] One local guide expressed concern to a reporter that the statues will themselves be damaged, but the museum is planned to grow and to repair itself.[2]
See also
- Marine biology – Scientific study of organisms that live in the ocean
- Molinere Underwater Sculpture Park – Collection of underwater contemporary art off Grenada in the Caribbean
- Shark River Reef – Artificial reef off New Jersey
- Gibraltar Artificial Reef – Artificial reef project off Gibraltar
- Sinking ships for wreck diving sites – Scuttling old ships to produce artificial reefs
- Osborne Reef – Artificial reef off Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US
References
- ^ a b Perdomo, Gabriela. "Is Art Better down Where It’s Wetter?" Maclean’s 125, no. 9 (March 12, 2012): 82–82.
- ^ a b Vance, Erik. "The Art of Distraction". Scientific American 309, no. 2 (August 2013): 16.
- ^ "Underwater sculpture saving coral reefs". BBC World Service, October 14, 2010.
- ^ Epstein, Robert. "Portfolio: Jason deCaires Taylor’s 'Silent Evolution' Underwater Sculptures". The Independent. March 15, 2014. Accessed January 23, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e Geiling, Natasha. "Can Underwater Art Save the Ocean’s Coral Reefs?" Smithsonian, June 10, 2014.
- ^ a b c Shah, Dhruti. "Mexico's 'giant underwater museum'". BBC News, November 19, 2009.
- ^ "Dive Briefs — Curious Company". Sport Diver. PADI: 14–15. June 2010.
- ^ "Cancun underwater museum". Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 4 June 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
- ^ a b Faerber, Fritz. "Pictures: 'Bodies' Fill Underwater Sculpture Park". National Geographic, January 11, 2011.
- ^ "Underwater sculpture park set to open near Cancun". The Telegraph, October 11, 2010.
- ^ Nicholson, Sophie, Agence France-Presse. "Art Attracts Fish in Underwater Mexican Museum", at Coral.org, November 11, 2010, archived at the Wayback Machine, April 15, 2012.
- ^ a b "Artist Completes Artificial Reef, ‘The Silent Evolution,’ Installing 400 Sculptures Underwater". LA Times Blogs - Outposts, November 1, 2010.
- ^ a b Garling, Caleb. "Underwater Sculptures Give Sea Creatures a Haunting New Habitat". Wired, April 4, 2011.
- ^ Taylor, Jason deCaires. "Swimming with Sculptures". New Scientist 212, no. 2843 (December 17, 2011): 48–48.
Further reading
- Carlo McCormick and Helen Scales; foreword by Jason deCaires Taylor (2014). The Underwater Museum: The Submerged Sculptures of Jason deCaires Taylor. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 9781452118871.
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