The Santa Barbara Maritime Museum will reopen its exhibit Mermaids: Visualizing the Myths and Legends through Photography, 16 images printed on canvas by Ralph Clevenger and friends, Nov. 11-April 30 at the museum, 113 Harbor Way, Ste. 190.
Originally scheduled to open on April 22, 2020, the exhibit was postponed due to pandemic closures. It is opening now thanks to support of Mimi Michaelis, the Alice Tweed Tuohy Foundation, and the Wood-Claeyssens Foundation.
There will be mermaid photo opportunities at the museum by appointment, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and 1-2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13. Cost is $10 for museum members, $30 for non-members.
Most of the 16 images displayed in the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum’s gallery exhibit — Visualizing the Myths and Legends of Mermaids through Photography — were part of an underwater photography course Clevenger taught at Brooks Institute. Each summer students would spend several days living on a dive boat off the Channel Islands where they would work on their assignments.
Clevenger would invite professional mermaids to join the class on the boat and work with the students creating portraits, visual stories, and conceptual images for their final class portfolios.
Clevenger said that as the students worked, the models faced a number of difficulties:
“There is no question about how hard the mermaids worked for these images,” he said. “Wearing cloth-covered monofin tails or silicone molded tails, they could swim farther and faster than any of us. While students wore wetsuits in the cool 70-degree water, the mermaids were nearly naked, spending upwards of 30 minutes in the water at a time during a photo shoot.
“The models had to hold their breath and repeatedly dive down, release their breath, so their face looked natural, pose gracefully, then return to the surface. They did this over and over, all day long. We always provided safety divers, paddle boards for the mermaids to rest on, and hot showers and warm drinks on the boat in between shoots.”
The origins of the myth of mermaids go back thousands to the Assyrian goddess of the sea, Atargatis, who transformed herself into a mermaid by flinging herself into a lake. She emerged with the lower body of a fish and the upper body of a human. Ever since, mermaids and mermen have captivated the imaginations of people and cultures around the world, including Europe, Asia, and Africa.
In the West, the idea of mermaids may have been influenced by the sirens in Greek Mythology. A popular subject of art and literature, they have also been the subject of operas, comics, animation, and live action films.
Clevenger grew up on the coast of North Africa and began diving with his father in the Mediterranean Sea when he was 7. He went on to study zoology and worked for the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego as a diver/biologist before attending Brooks Institute of Photography.
Clevenger was a senior faculty member at the Brooks Institute for 33 years, teaching courses in natural history and underwater photography.
Based in Santa Barbara, Clevenger specializes in location photography and video projects of eco-travel, environmental portraits, wildlife and undersea subjects. He’s traveled on assignment for Fox Sports, University of California, Denali National Park Wilderness Center, and National Marine Sanctuaries. He is the author of the book “Photographing Nature,” published by New Riders.

