World Art on Swimming
International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education
Volume 5 | Number 3
Article 8
8-1-2011
World Art on Swimming
Stathis Avramidis
Hellenic Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Greece,
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Recommended Citation
Avramidis, Stathis (2011) "World Art on Swimming," International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education: Vol. 5 : No. 3 , Article 8.
DOI: 10.25035/ijare.05.03.08
Available at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/ijare/vol5/iss3/8
This Education Article is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in International Journal
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Avramidis: World Art on Swimming
Education
International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education, 2011, 5, 325-360
© 2011 Human Kinetics, Inc.
World Art on Swimming
Stathis Avramidis
This article aims to identify swimming-related artwork from Paleolithic times up
to the present day and to assess whether possible use of art could act as an aid to
teaching. An art search obtained 50 paintings and sculptures. Results confirmed
that artists have bestowed a wealth of related artwork on the world of aquatics.
Depictions of people swimming competitively or recreationally, diving, bathing,
working, and fighting were found in Egypt, Greece, Persia, Italy, Spain, the USA,
Japan, and China. Depending on the particular society, the ability to swim indicated either a high or low socio-economic status. In some depictions, knowledge
of swimming was accompanied by the ability to dive from high cliffs or into deep
water, to hold one’s breath underwater, and to show physical endurance. A variety
of swimming strokes were depicted throughout history in art. Various types of
swimwear, or nude swimming, were evident in different societies.
Keywords: swimming, diving, water safety, drowning.
Swimming has been the subject of extensive research in terms of core sports
science disciplines except in the field of art. More specifically, recreational and
competitive swimming have both been studied extensively in relation to biomechanics, physiology, and psychology, since scientists, coaches, and swimmers started
being interested in increasing athletic performance and quality of life through
exercise (see Vilas-Boas, 2010). Apart from very limited references (e.g., Avramidis,
2005, 2009, 2010; Avramidis & Devouros, 2008; Dawson, 2006, 2010), as far as
we know, no study has yet approached swimming from the point of view of art. In
other words, we are not aware the degree to which artists may have been inspired
by swimming or other aquatic activities. We have not used aquatic art so far as an
aid in teaching swimming and water safety.
Given the lack of scholarly work in the field of art related to swimming and
aquatic activities, a number of consequences present themselves. Although scientists and swimming organizations around the world have done respected work in
producing texts and manuals (e.g., Langendorfer & Bruya, 1995; Swimming Teachers’ Association, 2006) and other computer or engineering-based instrumentation
(e.g., Nakashima et al., 2010; Sanders, Machtsiras, & Scott, 2010) dedicated to
these subjects, it seems that there is a lack of literature relating to art in aquatics.
This knowledge gap means we have limited references in the form of art inspired
The author is a researcher with the Hellenic Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Greece),
the Lifesaving Foundation (Ireland), and Leeds Metropolitan University (UK).
Published by ScholarWorks@BGSU, 2011
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International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education, Vol. 5, No. 3 [2011], Art. 8
326 Avramidis
by religious, historical, cultural, or other events. A potentially significant part of
our swimming and aquatic heritage remains neglected and undiscovered and has
not yet been summarized or made available for research, education, and teaching
in the fields of aquatics (i.e., swimming and water safety).
In turn, this leads us to pose the following questions: What examples exist of
artwork related to swimming? Are there themes represented in aquatic artwork?
Could aquatic artwork give us any insight into the way our ancestors swam or
how they spent their time in or around the water? What types of aquatic events
inspired the artists?
Possible answers to these questions could be meaningful for a number of
reasons. First of all, we might be able to see how swimming and aquatic activities
were perceived by artists in the past. Second, their artwork might give us insights
into the antecedents of various swimming activities, even how strokes may have
evolved over time. Third, answers could raise awareness of another dimension of
swimming that so far has been unknown in most of the world of aquatics (e.g.,
researchers, coaches, parents, and athletes). Fourth, they could enable us to preserve
this dimension of our aquatic heritage. Fifth, they could represent a unique and valuable source that could be used in education (e.g., presentation material for teaching
the general public, sports scientists, and swimming coaches; introductory historical
references for swimming textbooks; useful material for exhibitions, museums, and
other swimming related organizations; and even for creating supporting materials
for documentaries about swimming). Therefore, the purpose of this article was to
identify examples of works of art related to swimming and other aquatic activities
and to evaluate their content thematically.
The Literature Search Process
The terms swimming, art, artwork, and depiction were used as keywords in a
search that was undertaken to identify paintings and other artwork that may have
a swimming-related theme. The search used the internet search engines “Google”
and “Wikimedia Commons” (2011a, 2011b, 2011c, 2011d, 2011e, 2011f, 2011g,
2011h), as well as swimming and water safety books with historical references. To
be selected, works of art had only to meet one simple criterion: they had to have
a swimming or aquatic-related theme. The search revealed 50 examples of works
of art in the form of paintings or sculptures that met the selection criterion. From
these, 2 were dated from Paleolithic times and the other 47 from ancient times
up to the present day. From the latter, 6 originated from Egypt, 13 from Greece,
3 from Asia, 7 from the USA, and 19 from other civilizations (e.g., Persia, Italy,
Spain, and others not reported).
Swimming and Aquatic-Related Artwork
In the following sections of this paper, I present a brief description of the nature
of the artwork, the title, the artist, and the content. To make it easier for readers
to understand, the artwork has been classified into chronological/historical and
geographical sections that refer to swimming and aquatics in Paleolithic times, in
ancient Egypt, Greece, and other historical civilizations (e.g., Persia, Italy, Spain,
the US (...truncated)