Incredible Underwater Sculptures! |
Jason deCaires Taylor’s underwater
sculptures create a unique, absorbing and expansive visual seascape.
Highlighting natural ecological processes, Taylor’s interventions
explore the intricate relationships
that exist between art and environment. His works become artificial
reefs, attracting marine life, while offering the viewer privileged
temporal encounters, as the shifting sand of the ocean floor, and the
works change from moment to moment.
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Taylor has gained significant
interest and recognition for his unique work, with features in over 1000
publications around the world, including National Geographic, Vogue,
USA today, the BBC, and CNN and he has made several TV appearances.
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His international reputation was
established in May 2006, when he created the world’s first underwater
sculpture park in Grenada, West Indies, leading to both private and
public commissions. Taylor is currently founder and Artistic Director of
the Museo Subacuático del Arte (MUSA) in Cancun, Mexico.
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VICISSITUDES
Vicissitudes depicts a circle of
figures, all linked through holding hands. These are life-size casts
taken from a group of children of diverse ethnic background. Circular in
structure and located five meters below the surface, the work both
withstands strong currents and replicates one of the primary geometric
shapes, evoking ideas of unity and continuum.
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The underwater environment is much like that of the outdoors. An object is subject to changes in light and prevailing weather
conditions. The cement finish and chemical composition of Vicissitudes
actively promotes the colonisation of coral and marine life.
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The figures are transformed over time
by their environment, and conversely as this happens so they change the
shape of their habitat. This natural process echoes the changes exacted
through growing up. Social interchange shapes this process, while
conversely as the product of a particular society we in turn invoke
change on the workings and dynamics of that environment.
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The sculpture proposes growth,
chance, and natural transformation. It shows how time and environment
impact on and shape the physical body. Children by nature are adaptive
to their surroundings. Their use within the work highlights the
importance of creating a sustainable and well-managed environment, a
space for future generations.
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Taylor notes that close to forty
percent of coral reefs worldwide has been destroyed and that this figure
is set to increase. His work reminds us that the marine environment is
in a constant state of flux, and that this in turn reflects poignantly
the vicissitudes, changing landscapes, of our own lives.
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THE LOST CORRESPONDENT
The Lost Correspondent depicts a man sitting at a desk with a typewriter. The desk is covered with a collection of newspaper articles and cuttings that date back to the 1970s. Many of these have political significance, a number detail Grenada’s alignment with Cuba in the period immediately prior to the revolution. |
The work informs the rapid changes in
communication between generations. Taking the form of a traditional
correspondent, the lone figure becomes little more than a relic, a fossil in a lost world.
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THE GARDENER OF HOPE
La Jardinera de la Esperanza (the gardener of hope), depicts a young girl lying on garden patio steps, cultivating a variety of plant pots. The sculpture is sited four metres beneath the surface Punta Nizuc, Cancun. |
The pots are propagated with live
coral cuttings rescued from areas of the reef system damaged by storms
and human activity. This technique, a well-established procedure in reef
conservation, rescues damaged coral fragments by providing a suitable
new substrate.
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THE ARCHIVE OF LOST DREAMS
The Archive of Lost Dreams depicts an
underwater archive, maintained by a male registrar. The archive is a
collection of hundreds of messages in bottles brought together by the
natural forces of the ocean. The registrar is collating the individual
bottles and categorising the contents according to the nature of each
message – fear, hope, loss, or belonging.
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Oceans teem with microscopic
organisms that are constantly drifting down towards the sea bed,
attaching to and colonising on the way any hard secure surface, such as
rock outcrops, and thereby creating the basis of a natural reef. Coral
reefs attract an array of marine life (such as colourful fish, turtles,
sea urchins, sponges, and sharks) and also provide enclosed spaces for
sea creatures to breed or take refuge.
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mercredi 3 septembre 2014
Incredible Underwater Sculptures!
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