Underwater "terracotta warriors" have been found in many places abroad, and statues are not only human beings but also animals and monsters
author:Kyomaru Research Institute
Crazy Pill Research Institute, every day to increase a little new knowledge
Today is the 518 International Museum Day, and Crazy Maru has long been prepared, taking this opportunity to take you to see the only few underwater museums in the world built on the seabed.
First of all, let's set the coordinates to Cyprus, when you dive into the blue waters, in addition to seeing a variety of small fish around you, you may be frightened by the human face of coral and aquatic grass at the bottom of the water.
A little deeper, you may still be able to see tourists with cameras, or children covering their faces and crying, with traces of cities and villages in the distance.
Everywhere you go, the humanoid sculptures come to life, like a flood version of Pompeii, and the undersea version of the Terracotta Pit, which is very spectacular.
These different forms of sculpture ideas are actually from the hands of a British sculptor Jason.
The back-to-back sculptures of the duo seem to be looking at the divers who come to visit.
And this one, empty of a leather bag, grew a straw bale head.
Morning exercise rubbing tree uncle?
This one spread his wings and prepared to catapult from the bottom of the water.
Among the many sculptures, there are also some immortal plants made of water-resistant materials, some of which are slender and twisted upwards, and there is a person lying on the base.
Some look like African baobab trees, with leaves or countless spikes sticking out from the top of the branches.
A silent seabed, sparkling light, and these eerie sculptures, this exhibition area is sometimes a little chilly.
And underwater off the coast of Spain's Lanzarote Island, Jason shows off his other whimsy.
Several children swung their oars in small boats on the bottom of the sea.
Some men and women sit on lifeboats, and you can see that some look worried, while others just sit and empty themselves, which makes people think of what kind of shipwreck they have just experienced.
The two men standing upright had been wrapped up in marine life like two large cacti.
Hurrying, is this the lost city of Atlantis where time has suddenly been frozen?
Swimming and playing with mobile phones, mobile phones are all broken.
Across the Atlantic, the Underwater Museum in Cancun, Mexico, houses nearly 500 jason's sculptures, arguably the largest exhibit.
Strange ocean stone doors, giant bombs.
The house was covered with marine life, and the windshield was lying on a personal car.
There's even a coffee-drinking man and his lazy pet dog in this corner.
Because the Cancun Underwater Museum was established earlier, the erosion of these sculptures by seawater and living things is also more obvious, and some of them have been completely unrecognizable.
In fact, considering the problem of environmental pollution, Jason specially uses low-carbon and environmentally friendly neutral materials when making sculptures, and over time, each sculpture will become an artificial reef to provide new habitat space for various marine organisms.
Some sculptures have a new charm under the magic of nature.
Jason attempts to show the fragility of human beings and their relationship to the marine world with nature's erosion of humanoid sculpture.
A few years ago, he also let a huge sculpture fall under the coast of the Bahamas called "Atlas of the Sea", and the combination of the name of the mythical figure and the image of the little girl is thought-provoking.
Several horses with oilfield nod heads were also placed on the banks of the Thames by Jason, slowly submerged with the tide.
In short, water and sculpture are the eternal themes of his artistic creation, and it would be fun if one day he could restore these familiar undersea suites.
(The image material in this article comes from the Internet and is only for learning and communication)