Underwater Museum of Art in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida

Cetacean Remains, by artist Pat Mclain, was installed in the Underwater Art Museum in 2018.

Swim through a tunnel formed by the arched rib-cage remains of a prehistoric marine mammal at the Underwater Museum of Art off the Gulf Coast of Florida

Atlanta-based artist Pat Mclain’s 2023 installation, Cetacean Remains, forms the tunnel and creates a singular interactive diving experience that offers something mysterious, yet rightfully in its place. 

The Underwater Museum of Art (UMA) opened in 2018 and was the first permanent underwater sculpture exhibit in North America. Located in the gulf waters off Grayton Beach State Park in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, the sculptures lie roughly 60 feet underwater.

The museum’s original mission was to replenish the Walton County Gulf coast waters, which, over time, had become 95 percent barren sand flats. Artificial reefs created by the eco-friendly sculptures create a marine habitat where one had virtually disappeared. 

Local and international artists craft jury-selected sculptures out of concrete, metal, or stone. Allison Wickey, a founding partner of the museum project, formed an intriguing, tentacled creature, an octopus entitled OPUS, for the 2023 season. Other original pieces include a winding, 65-foot-tall propeller in motion, and an 8-foot-tall steel pineapple, specially designed to help small fish thrive. 

Since inception, over 100 animal and plant species—triggerfish, nurse sharks, and dozens of other fish, plus loggerhead and green sea turtles, bottlenose dolphins, and roughly 20 invertebrates and algae—have been observed in the UMA’s waters.


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