Jason
deCaires Taylor, a former theatre set designer, paparazzi
photographer and diving instructor, has been very busy in the last
few years sinking statues in various oceans and writing a book about
it. Jason's underwater installations can be seen in Grenada, Cancun
in Mexico, Nassau in the Bahamas and now a new installation has
opened in Playa Blanca, Lanzarote and a lot of people have become
very excited about this. Blogs, the diving press and the mainstream
media have all dedicated a great many column inches to Jason's work.
Artistic types with slicked grey hair, thin glasses and effeminate
mannerisms have waxed lyrical about how Jason's works express
everything from slavery and the plight of refugees to mankind's
apathy towards global warming. Ecology minded types, on the other
hand, have upped the lyrical waxing by pointing out that Jason's
installations use marine friendly concrete and promote coral growth –
in short Jason is creating artificial coral reefs and increasing
marine biomass. Others, those with a more financially tuned mind,
have seen the opportunity to boost tourism to their part of the world
with the unique selling point of an underwater art exhibition. The
new installation in Lanzarote is being hailed as Europe's first
underwater Museum, which is a bit odd because Turkey apparently
opened up Europe's first underwater museum last year.
Anyway that
argument aside the whole idea of underwater museums sounds very
laudable doesn't it? After all, what's there to dislike? Jason
deCaires Taylor gets to show off his works and presumably gets some
cash or at least increases his book sales. Environmentalists get to
showcase both the plight of coral reefs and the possible solution,
locals get to benefit from another tourist attraction and divers get
to fin about in a new and interesting environment. Everyone is a
winner then. Well, we're not sure on that. In fact we're a little
worried about the whole thing.
So
let's drill down a bit. Firstly we're not interested in whether
Jason's works have artistic merit. Art, like beauty is very much in
the eye of the beholder, if you think it's art then it is. Nor are we
remotely bothered about Jason using his works to highlight world
issues. Although we would point out that Jason would have to have an
ego the size of Mount Everest if he thought that sinking a concrete
raft full of concrete statutes, in 12 metres of sea water, in the
middle of the Atlantic ocean would bring the plight of refugees to
the attention of the masses more than say; the entire worlds media
that's been collectively filming it, writing about it and
photographing it on a daily basis. Jason is British by the way, so he
can't possibly have that big an ego could he?
What
we are a little unsure about is this: the original reason for the
creation of these museums was not really to create a new coral reef. Sink a
ship, a car or even a pile of concrete blocks and eventually they
will be colonised by marine life. No the real reason for these
creations is to distract divers away from the natural coral
reefs that were being destroyed.
Take
Cancun for instance, the divers and snorkellers visiting the reef
near Isla Mujere were having an unfortunate impact on the ecosystem.
Coral was being damaged, leaching sunscreen was apparently poisoning
the wildlife (and we'll be dealing with that in another post) and the
sheer volume of bubble blowers visiting the reef was stressing the
whole environment. Divers and snorkellers, often the most
ecologically aware of tourists, were quite literally wrecking the
place by their presence. Something had to be done to give the
natural reefs some relief. So locals, conservationists and some arty
folk got together and created an artificial site by dropping some
concrete balls into the water in the hope that divers would want to see
these rather than the natural reef. It didn't work. A concrete ball
is after all a concrete ball until it is colonised and local dive
operators and visiting divers were not impressed. As Robert Diaz,
President of the Cancun Nautical Association put it: ““We have to
bring tourists here. There was nothing to see. There were no fish.
Just big balls that are empty—just horrible.”
The
Director of the Isla Mujeres National Park in Cancun, Jaime Gonzalez
became frustrated and considered closing the reef all together but
this wasn't feasible. The answer came when Gonzalez discovered some
art installations in Grenada. What if you could have something that
wasn't an underwater eyesore before it became colonised by algae and
coral – how about some statues. Enter Jason deCaires Taylor and the
Cancun underwater museum was born. In fact so successful was the
project that some dive operators complained that marine colonisation
of the ghostly statues was ruining the show. This lead to Gonzalez
cleaning the algae off half the statues by hand using steel wool and
leaving the other half to continue being colonised. On Grenada, where
Jason's statues were installed for the same reason as in Cancun,
tourism has boomed with roughly half of all divers having been diverted
away from the natural reef. Early indications seem to show that the
same is happening in Cancun. Other artists are now getting involved
and there are talks of having ten-thousand statues on the site in
Cancun within the next ten years.
Worrying
don't you think? No? Okay let's explain. Firstly, let's ignore the
fact that some environmental purists are appalled and argue that
dumping statues, cars or concrete blocks into the sea is exactly
that, dumping. With all the potential issues of changing the
diversity of marine life and behaviour.
We'll
also ignore the fact that some scientists dispute that divers and
snorkellers are the reason the reefs are being damaged. Instead they
cite pollution from the resorts and rising sea temperatures as the
real culprits. The resorts are now booming so pollution levels are
likely to get worse not better.
But as we said, we'll ignore all
that. The problem we have is that these underwater museums are not
cheap. In Cancun, it cost $12000 to create and install each statue
and that cost needs to be recouped. Which means you are going to be
charged to visit them. And how long will it be before someone hits on
the idea of charging for visiting the natural reefs? And we're not
talking about the tour operator costs of taking a boat out to see
them. We're talking about an extra charge. A tax. And how long will
it be before someone gets the bright idea that viewing the underwater
world as a whole, not just the reefs and sunken statues is a
chargeable activity? In which case Snorkellers and divers entering
the water from the beach, rather than taking an operators boat, are
likely to be seen as tax dodgers and thus someone will want to bring
in a charge for just going in the water! And don't think we are
being absurd here. When environmentalism, economics and Art come to
together, rationality goes out the window or the porthole for that
matter.
After all what diver would rather view a set of concrete
statues rather than a natural reef? What snorkeller would rather look
down on a series of fuzzy grey heads than on a vibrant natural
landscape? And what kind of tourist is so oblivious to world crises
that they can only get their consciences pricked by viewing a sunken
depiction of refugees from a glass bottom boat? In fact when we
think about it, underwater museums are not worrying, they are
depressing. Have we really got to the stage when divers, snorkellers
and freedivers would rather visit a man-made underwater structure in
Cancun that looks exactly the same as the man-made installation in
Grenada or the Bahamas or even Lanzarote than the amazingly diverse,
stunningly beautiful and for the moment, absolutely free structures
of the natural underwater world? Because if we have, that really would
be absurd.
By
the way, according to Jason's own website, freediving on the Cancun
installations is not allowed without a life jacket! Now we're not
sure how you can freedive with a flotation device around your neck
but we'll leave you, the reader, to work out the reason behind that
little rule. We have already organised a trip to Lanzarote later this year, so we'll probably be re-visiting the idea of underwater museums then.
More reading
Jason deCaires Taylor's website
Scientific American website
BBC News website
New York Times website
Huffington Post website
Smithsonian Magazine
PBS website
Last Word On Nothing blog
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