Sea Monkey
On my first visit to the Amazeum I was struck by how fun the water play area looked. Kids playing and figuring things out while splashing around seemed like the perfect place to make a whimsical sculpture about a scientifically unique creature. Sea monkeys are brine shrimp, or fairy shrimp. Sammy the Sea Monkey is a permanent sculpture installed at the Scott Family Amazeum, Benton Arkansas
Sea Monkey assembly
Materials: FDA approved thermoplastic polyester called Polyethylene Terephthalate Glycol (PETG), often used in water bottles. Sammy is made with 100% recycled resin PETG sheets, welded together and shaped using a common heat gun.
They are known for their connection to comic books and main stream media as instant life and just add water pets. Some are even sold in the museum store! Their image has been used in fantastical narratives inspired by the initially misleading comic book advertisements during the 1950s, which displayed sea creatures strangely similar to humans. When it came to how I was going to fabricate the sculpture, I chose a sea monkey because it lent itself to the watery and transparent look of the thermal plastic medium I’ve been experimenting with.
Sammy is a male brine shrimp, because of its two large claspers. Females have no claspers but have egg sacks on their lower backs.