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Diving artist takes aim at Glacier National Park's watery world

by Chris Peterson Hungry Horse News
| December 10, 2015 9:22 AM

There have been plenty of artist-in-residence at Glacier National Park. Chris Gug is the first to dive right into his project, however — literally.

Gug recently spent a solid month photographing the Park’s underwater landscape. The Fort Lauderdale, Florida photographer has been diving and taking underwater photos since he was 15. He said he stumbled upon the application for Glacier Park’s program after he did a Google search for artists and Fort Lauderdale airport expansion.

Thanks be to Google, the Park’s artist program popped up in the search.

“The more I talked to the Park, the more I wanted to do it,” he said.

Gug was accepted and dove in Glacier’s rivers and streams from Oct. 6 to Nov. 1, taking photos completely underwater and with a unique split view, that shows both the underwater world and the above surface landscape.

He dove in several of the Park’s lakes, including Iceberg Lake, Hidden Lake, Lake McDonald and McDonald Creek, Kintla Lake and Upper Grinnell Lake to name a few.

“At Upper Grinnell there was a three inch layer of ice when I was in there,” he said.

The split views make for fantastic shots. Imagine the viewpoint of a river otter or an ambitious fish.

Gug has dove all over the world. He started his career in warm saltwater, shooting the flora and fauna of coral reefs.

“But I’m tired of that,” he said. “Now I’m looking for things like swamps and frigid freshwater lakes. Glacier was right up my alley.”

He wore a dry suit to keep warm and shot the photos with a Nikon D810 in an underwater housing along with a 15 mm Sigma fisheye lens for most shots. To take close-ups, he used a macro lens.

He saw plenty of land wildlife during his trip, including a grizzly and black bear from a long ways off. But was really got him stoked was a sponge — a bright green freshwater sponge growing in McDonald Creek.

“I was floored,” he said. “It really got my geek up.”

Saltwater has thousands of species of sponges, but freshwater sponges are more rare — there’s about 140 species of freshwater sponges.

Gug makes huge prints of photos and sells them at his gallery in Fort Lauderdale.

He said he’d like to come back and do more underwater photography in the Park, particularly in the winter.

“I’ve got to reach out and do something new and different and creative,” he said.

You can view more of Gug’s work at: www.GugUnderwater.com on his Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/GugUnderwater or if in Florida, visit his gallery in the Galleria Mall in Fort Lauderdale.