LEVIATHANS behind the scenes: The Siren’s Song
6 May 2010 | By HUSVARThe sea monster for my first LEVIATHANS shoot was torn between two worlds. Sirens have often been mistaken for a kind of mermaid, sitting upon a rocky shore or swimming very nearby, luring sailors to their deaths with its song. In later Greek mythology folklore, Sirens are sometimes portrayed as aquatic and mermaid-like, and in fact, the Spanish, French, Italian, Polish, Romanian, and Portuguese words for “mermaid” are Sirena, Sirène, Sirena, Syrena, Sirenă and Sereia. Even in biology, the order Sirenia is comprised of fully aquatic mammals, including the dugong and manatee.

John William Waterhouse, Odysseus and the Sirens (1891)
The Sirens were actually portrayed as three bird-women parented by the river god Achelous and Chthon, otherwise known as Mother Earth. These dangerous beauties resided in a flowery meadow on an island, perpetually calling after their father who had gone to the sea and left them all behind. Another story had them banished to the island (possibly the Isle of Capri) after losing a singing contest with the Muses, and so they took out their frustrations by luring sailors to swim ashore, pouncing on them and ripping their flesh with their talons, then adding their bones to the piles already littering the island. Yet another tells of their ultimate demise, throwing themselves into the ocean after Odysseus passed without succumbing to their song.
Tags: art, artist, behind-the-scenes, cecaelia, Crouching Woman, Disney, endangered species, fine art, hokusai, HusVar, Leviathans, mermaids, Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Musee Rodin, odysseus, photo, photograph, photographer, photography, Rodin, sea monsters, Sean HusVar, siren, siren holding octopus, The Gates of Hell, the little mermaid, ursula, Waterhouse | Comments: 1


