A New Underwater Sculpture Just Appeared in the Bahamas — and It Has a Secret Twin Across the Ocean

By: - June 3rd, 2026
bahamas underwater sculpture
Lady of Coral. Photo courtesy of Jason deCaires Taylor.

Somewhere on the other side of the Atlantic, in a wild meadow scattered with wildflowers, a sculpted woman stands quietly among the grasses, the wind moving over her like water. And here in the Bahamas, off the southwest coast of New Providence, her exact twin has just settled onto the sea floor, where the currents will move over her instead, and where coral will slowly claim her as its own.

They are the same figure, cast twice. One belongs to the land. One belongs to the sea. And together they tell a single story about how deeply the two are connected.

Her name is Lady of Coral, and she’s the newest creation from Jason deCaires Taylor, the British artist whose underwater work has made him one of the most quietly influential sculptors alive. If the name doesn’t ring a bell, his most famous piece almost certainly will: Ocean Atlas, the monumental Bahamian girl holding up the weight of the ocean, the largest underwater sculpture on the planet and one of Nassau’s most beloved landmarks. Lady of Coral now joins her, just a short swim away.

She’s been installed in the Sir Nicholas Nuttall Coral Reef Sculpture Garden, the extraordinary underwater art space and coral nursery run by the Bahamas Reef Environment Educational Foundation. The garden sits within the Southwest Marine Managed Area, off the coast of Clifton Heritage National Park, and it has become one of the most unusual cultural sites in the Caribbean: a living gallery on the sea floor, equal parts art installation, coral hatchery, and open-air classroom.

What makes Lady of Coral so striking isn’t just the sculpture itself, but the idea behind it. Taylor created two identical figures and placed them on opposite shores of the Atlantic, one beneath the waves of Nassau and one rising from that distant wildflower meadow. Each will be seeded with life over the coming years. The underwater version will be planted with coral fragments nurtured in the adjacent BREEF nursery, growing a reef across her surface. The land version will bloom with wildflowers. Two ecosystems, one form, an ocean apart, both slowly coming alive.

“Through this dialogue between ocean and land, the work evokes the interdependence of our world, reminding us that every ecosystem is part of a greater whole,” Taylor explained. He has generously donated the sculpture to the garden, where it will live alongside the rest of the collection.

That collection is worth knowing. Lady of Coral and Ocean Atlas share the water with works by Bahamian artists Andret John and Willicey Tynes, whose pieces honor the islands’ first inhabitants and their cultural lineage. Over the past decade, the whole garden has transformed from a set of submerged statues into a genuine reef, dense with fish, patrolled by spotted eagle rays, and steadily greener with coral. The sculptures were always meant to do this. Built from marine-grade, pH-neutral materials, they’re designed to invite coral to colonize them and to give fish and invertebrates a place to shelter, turning art into habitat.

For BREEF, that slow transformation is the entire point. “The sculptures are living art, changing as corals and other marine life grow over their surfaces, and vulnerable to threats such as pollution and warming waters,” said the foundation’s executive director, Casuarina McKinney-Lambert. “We are excited to see how this new sculpture transforms in the coming years. The sculpture garden is a focal point for celebrating the wonders of the ocean and inviting members of the public to join us in protecting it.”

There’s a real urgency under the beauty. The garden was built in part to lure snorkelers and divers away from the Bahamas’ more fragile natural reefs, giving people something spectacular to see while taking pressure off the ecosystems that need protecting. The adjacent coral nursery, where endangered corals are grown and then replanted on damaged reefs, is doing the unglamorous, essential work of restoration. Installing Lady of Coral right beside it strengthens that mission and adds another piece of climate-resilient habitat to the seabed.

And then there’s the human side, the thing that may matter most. Every year, thousands of Bahamian students snorkel out over these sculptures on school field trips, getting an ocean literacy lesson no textbook could offer. They learn what a reef is by floating above one. They learn why it matters by watching a statue of a girl disappear beneath living coral. For many of them, it’s the first time the ocean stops being a backdrop and starts being something worth fighting for.

So she’s down there now, the Lady of Coral, waiting for the reef to find her, while her twin stands in a field somewhere far across the sea, waiting for the wildflowers. Two halves of the same idea. The next time you’re in Nassau, she’s well worth the swim out to meet.

About the author

Caitlin Sullivan began her career with Caribbean Journal as Arts and Culture editor before shifting to travel full time. She writes frequently on the Caribbean cruise industry, flight networks and broader travel news. Her most frequent Caribbean destination? Nassau.
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