海角大神

Meet the coast鈥檚 living fossils. Horseshoe crab gets an image boost from artists.

|
Epli Photography/Courtesy of Eli Nixon
Multidisciplinary artist Eli Nixon poses in a homemade cardboard horseshoe crab costume at Barrington Beach in Barrington, Rhode Island.

With its dome shape and spiky tail, the horseshoe crab might at first look like a fearsome visitor from another planet. But for artists like Heidi Mayo, the ancient creature is an approachable muse.

A collection of 13 brightly painted horseshoe crab shells hangs along her back fence here. On her kitchen table sits a novel she wrote, inspired by encounters with the living fossil. Upstairs, in the top-floor studio where she , two spiny molts serve as figure-drawing models.听

鈥淭hey鈥檙e really part of my life,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 reverence for them 鈥 that鈥檚 what I have.鈥澨

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The horseshoe crab has been misunderstood by beachgoers for years. Artists are part of a new preservation effort, helping people to see the ancient creature in a new light.

A few miles away, at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, the public can see more of her work 鈥撎齛nd that of other artists, similarly inspired 鈥 at a new exhibit, 听

The exhibition, featuring representations in watercolor, metal, and textiles, is part of a broader effort to save and conserve the once-misunderstood sea animal, which is now facing new threats.听

鈥淭he essence of this show [is] that horseshoe crabs are in trouble,鈥 says Joan Pierce, one of the curators, her silver horseshoe crab earrings swaying as she speaks.

Although the creatures are no longer eradicated as pests that disturb a bucolic summer beach scene, fishers use them as bait for whelk fishing, and pharmaceutical companies use their unusual blue blood to test products for toxins.听

Oli Turner/海角大神.
Artist Heidi Mayo stands near the fence in her backyard in North Plymouth, Massachusetts, where she hangs dried-out horseshoe crabs after painting them.

The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission 听that the Northeast horseshoe crab population is currently in a 鈥渘eutral,鈥 or , state. But the population remains vulnerable, according to advocates.听On March 19, the Massachusetts Marine Fisheries Advisory Commission approved preventing the harvest of horseshoe crabs during their spring spawning season.

Those championing the creature are captivated by the lessons it has to offer about resilience.听

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been around for 450 million years, and so they have clearly evolved strategies for taking advantage of what鈥檚 available to them,鈥 says Sophia Fox, at the Cape Cod National Seashore.听

The horseshoe crab isn鈥檛 actually a crab, despite its name. More closely related to ticks and spiders, it walks on 10 spindly legs in the coastal shallows, feeding on worms, algae, and other inhabitants of the ocean floor. The long, pointed tail protruding from its hardened exoskeleton is often mistaken for a stinger.听At times, the public has seen them only as a nuisance, hauling them away or killing them on sight 鈥 not understanding that their eggs, which migratory shorebirds eat, help the coastal ecosystem.

Oli Turner/海角大神.
Origami artist Andrea Plate holds her paper horseshoe crab creation, which appears in the exhibition "The Horseshoe Crab: Against All Odds," at the Plymouth Center for the Arts, June 21, 2024.

But the tide is turning. The curators of 鈥淎gainst All Odds鈥 felt an urgency to raise awareness about the crabs鈥 plight. They issued听 to artists to highlight 鈥渢he beauty of these ancient creatures, their ecological importance, and the threats they face.鈥澨齌hey hoped for 35 submissions. Then more than听 rolled in from more than 70 artists.听Of those submitted, 74 works made it into the final show.

The exhibition pairs art with educational content from Mass Audubon, New England Coastal Wildlife Alliance, and the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History. Some of the images are meant to be provocative: In one, a horseshoe crab, bronze and gleaming, lies belly up, stretching its legs toward the sky.听

鈥淭his is not just pretty pictures on the wall,鈥 Ms. Pierce says. 鈥淭his is about education and advocacy. ... We want to see stricter regulations about harvesting.

In Ms. Mayo鈥檚 piece, 鈥淭imelines,鈥 42 sketches of the horseshoe crab appear alternately right side up and upside down. She compares them to the phases of the moon, each one in its own patterned square, suspended in rows by miniature clothespins. They seem, at once, delicate and enduring.

Courtesy of Mark Rea
Ceramicist Mark Rea specializes in horseshoe crab sculptures, which are molded from deceased horseshoe crabs that he collects on Cape Cod beaches. Mr. Rea began selling the ceramic creatures at local galleries 18 years ago and now crafts about 600 each year.

Elsewhere in New England, other artists are also trying to raise awareness. In Rhode Island,听another horseshoe crab hub, multidisciplinary artist hopes that learning about the animal can create a new culture of compassion and responsibility. Mx. Nixon鈥檚 2021 illustrated manual and field guide 鈥淏loodtide: A New Holiday in Homage to Horseshoe Crabs鈥 celebrates the longevity of horseshoe crabs. 鈥淲ho else is a better teacher of how to survive than this one?鈥 Mx. Nixon听says.听

To honor them, Mx. Nixon often wears a homemade cardboard horseshoe crab costume to parades, which becomes a point of connection between perfect strangers. Everyone, it seems, has a story to share.

Back in Massachusetts, remembers in his youth, before tourism swept the shores of Nantucket, when horseshoe crabs drifted along the seafloor undisturbed.听

鈥淚t was ... this otherworldly thing on the beach,鈥 he says.听

Oli Turner/海角大神.
A visitor studies the artwork in "The Horseshoe Crab: Against All Odds" exhibition. Curators hope to raise awareness about the plight of the often-misunderstood sea creatures.

For the past 18 years, Mr. Rea has made ceramic casts of the exoskeletons of horseshoe crabs when he finds their remains on Cape Cod beaches. He fires the lifelike molds, glazing them with vibrant, glossy colors. While most of his creations look peaceful, several of them depict the toll the bait and pharmaceutical industries have had. Creating the ceramic horseshoe crabs is now his full-time job 鈥 he makes 600 a year and sells his work online and in local galleries.

In her home studio in North Plymouth, Ms. Mayo sticks out one red flip-flopped foot to show听the bright-blue horseshoe crab tattoo on her ankle. A silver pin in the same shape gleams on the shoulder of her dress.

鈥淚鈥檝e always felt akin to horseshoe crabs,鈥 she says, recalling her childhood on the beaches of nearby Duxbury, Massachusetts. 鈥淭hen I became an advocate ... without even meaning to.鈥澨

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Meet the coast鈥檚 living fossils. Horseshoe crab gets an image boost from artists.
Read this article in
/The-Culture/Arts/2024/0701/massachusetts-artists-horseshoe-crab-coastal-preservation
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe