Deep

Ocean Life Art Exhibition by Sküt for Earth Day 2021

Celebrate Earth Day at TAG Gallery April 13 – May 8, 2021

When I was a kid my dad spent hours with me making animals out of construction paper on the floor. He knew I loved art and nature.

One day he took me and my sister to Marineland of the Pacific, a magical oceanarium in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. My six-year-old imagination ran wild. I saw sharks, dolphins, fish, glowing neon blobs, and alien-looking sea creatures I never knew existed.

There I met Bubbles, a female short-finned pilot whale. Seeing Bubbles leap from the water in a shimmering display of acrobatics blew my mind. She was so beautiful. That moment, seared in my heart, ignited a lifelong passion for the ocean.

I visited Bubbles year after year. She always brought joy to the guests. Children laughed, parents gasped, and everyone got soaked. I took way too many pictures.

Bubbles the pilot whale sculpture greets visitors to Marineland of the Pacific in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. Photo credit unknown.

Bubbles the pilot whale sculpture greets visitors to Marineland of the Pacific in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. Photo credit unknown.

The artist Sküt (Scott Lewallen) stands between two Hawaiian Triggerfish and a pop art sculpture replica of Bubbles the pilot whale.

The artist Sküt (Scott Lewallen) stands between two Hawaiian Triggerfish and a pop art sculpture replica of Bubbles the pilot whale.

The ocean covers 71 percent of Earth’s surface and is home to millions of marine species ranging from microscopic bacteria to massive fauna, many of which are on the brink of extinction. Most of us experience marine creatures at facilities like Birch Aquarium at Scripps, and Aquarium of the Pacific.

I created this immersive art experience to celebrate fauna of the deep by reimagining my favorite wet friends via abstract design, extrasensory dimension, and childlike imagination. Deep pays homage to Bubbles and her oceanic legacy, through a pop art lens. Marineland closed forever in 1987. Bubbles died in 2016. Art lives forever.

A portion Deep sales will be donated to Birch Aquarium at Scripps & Aquarium of the Pacific.


Bubbles Breach

Up-cycled Armature, Fine Clay, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Backdrop, Pedestal. 16 x 20 x 70

Short-Finned Pilot Whale

Globicephala macrorhynchus

Bubbles Breach is a small-scale abstract pop art replica of the entrance statue to Marineland of the Pacific in Rancho Palos Verdes (now Terranea Resort).

Bubbles was an ambassador for the ocean, educating guests until her passing in 2016 at SeaWorld San Diego. Fifty years is a good run. We miss you, old girl.

This modern interpretation of the legendary monolith is homage to Bubbles and all of her marine brethren, inspiring countless generations of humans to pursue passions related to the Ocean.


Triggered

Digital, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Canvas. 20 x 20

Reef & Lagoon Picasso Triggerfish

Rhinecanthus rectangulus, Rhinecanthus aculeatus.

Humu humu nuku nuku apua'a is the Hawaiian name for two species of triggerfish, the state fish of Hawaii.

Also known as Picasso, this Triggerfish has a surreal painted quality and equally quirky personality.

The humu trigger comes in two flavors, Reef and Lagoon, respectively, both cherished in Hawaii.

Dueling portraits of this beloved fish come alive with vibrant colors, moody drips, and phosphorescent eyeballs.


Clownfish Alley

Digital, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Canvas. 12 x 12

Clownfish

ephippium, polymnus, latezonatus, clarkii, frenatus, perideraion, sandaracinos, percula, sebae, mccullochi, biaculeatus, ocellaris.

Twelve separate species, each with distinct personalities.

Welcome to clownfish alley, a motley assortment assertive little damsels.

Who is your favorite, and why?


Ghost of the Vaquita

Mixed Media, Thermal Polymer, Acrylic, Spray Paint, PLA, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Canvas. 36 x 48

Vaquita

Phocoena sinus.

A mother vaquita longs for her child, illuminate by the sun rays filtering through the Sea of Cortez, choked by the tendrils of a totoaba gill net.

Which one was she? How many are left? Is it too late?

She lives on, in memory and motive.

100% of proceeds from sales of the Vaquita artwork will be donated to Sea Shepherd
on behalf of Sküt to benefit the “
Saving the Vaquita Porpoise” campaign.*

Vaquitita

Up-cycled Armature from Recycled Cans, Fine Clay, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Pedestal.
18x18x50

Vaquita

Phocoena sinus.

A young vaquita searches for his mother.

She shouldn’t be long… just a moment… foraging for food.

The shudder of the rudder, a maze of gill nets. Am I alone? Will I survive?

Please watch Sea of Shadows by Richard Ladkani to learn more about the plight of this incredible little dolphin.


Jazzy Jellies

Up-cycled Armature, Fine Clay, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Pedestal.

Red Sea Nettle. Moon Jellyfish.

Chrysaora quinquecirrha. Aurelia aurita.

Functional art that glows with the show. These two hanging jellyfish sculpture lamps come complete with tentacles and a slowly pulsing blue light.

Sting yourself.


Tiburones

Digital, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Canvas. 16 x 20

Bull Shark
Oceanic Whitetip Shark
Shortfin Mako Shark
Tiger Shark

Carcharhinus leucas, Carcharhinus longimanus, Isurus oxyrinchus, Galeocerdo cuvier

Everyone knows the Great White Shark, but did you know there are more than 1,000 species of sharks and rays, with new species discovered every year?

This quartet of sharks presents the distinct apex predators in a minimalist monochromatic woodcut-style design, flanked by saturated colors of movement while they prowl.

Each shark is adorned with a phosphorescent eyeball element, and a projected AR lighting effect makes them come alive and glisten in the open ocean.


The Brink

Digital Installation with Physical Component.

All species under seige.

Sea dragons evaporate. An orca decays in pixels.

Oceanic whitetips and Great Whites are a cluster of evidence.

A clownfish dies while the penguin ceases its march.

See the dolphins disintegrate.

Triggerfish are but a bag of bones.

This is the Brink, a witness to the ephemeral reality of our oceans.

Gaze into the mirror. See yourself. See what you can do to help, make a difference.

Before it’s too late…


Agador Spartacus

Up-cycled Armature from Recycled Cans, Fine Clay, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Pedestal.
11 x 11 x 65

American Flamingo

Phoenicopterus ruber

People ask why a flamingo made it into Deep? This isn’t even an ocean creature.

Agador insists he is part of the tapestry.

Miami. Art Deco. South Beach.

He dips his foot into a placid lagoon. He gawks and chortles as he seeves for shrimp in the balmy brine.

This is a fabulous flamingo, equally important to the narrative of our oceans and beyond.

Embrace Agador, and tell Hank Azaria his shoes are waiting.


Leviathan

Up-cycled Armature from Recycled Cans, Fine Clay, Acrylic, Mixed Media, High Gloss, Phosphorescent Element, Pedestal.
14 x 24 x 60

Orca

Orcinus orca

The most iconic cetacean is the killer whale. Yet, he is dolphin, not true whale. This orca, big, black, and white, breaches the surface with his majestic saddle of disruptive color.

What if this sea wolf cruised along in effervescent neon hues of pinks, purples, yellows, and green?

Would you still brave the waters with her ultimate apex predator?

I would, Leviathan.


Pixel Fish

Sculpted Electronically, 3D Printed, Hand Painted, UV light reactive. Misc hanging fish sculptures.
Sizes vary by species.

Clownfish, Blue Tang, Green & Blue Chromis Damselfish

Amphiprion percula, Paracanthurus hepatus, Chromis viridis, Chromis cyanea

A menagerie of three-dimensional fish sculptures, assembled to immerse you somewhere beyond the sea.

This modular installation can be designed, displayed, and hung to your liking. Multiple fishes available. The Blue Tangs are scarce, the Clownfish come in subtle hue variations between red and yellow (but mostly orange) and the Green and Blue Chromis Damselfish are in a larger blue hue flavor, and a smaller green yellow tint.

Take a deep breath, dip below the surface, and enjoy!