Pink Dolphin Monument


Pink Dolphin Monument is a public monument in R.A. Apffel Park/East Beach on Galveston Island, Texas. Inaugurated on July 25, 2014, the monument is dedicated to celebrating gender and sexual minority communities. It is the first monument dedicated to gender and sexual minorities in the southern United States.

History

The Pink Dolphin Monument was created by artist Joe Joe Orangias, in collaboration with writer Dr. Sarah Sloane and scientist Dr. Frank Pega.
Orangias carved the monument’s central figure - a pink dolphin - from red sandstone sourced from the Texas coast. The image of the pink dolphin references the historic Pink Dolphin Tavern located in the city of Galveston. It also refers to the logo of the Pink Posse, a local group of gender and sexual minority activists. Orangias donated the monument to R.A. Apffel Park/East Beach to further the Park’s mission and contribute to honoring diversity on the island.
“There are starting to be more monuments for gender and sexual minorities around the world, so this piece adds to that network,” the artist told the Galveston Daily News.
In 2015, Pink Dolphin Monument was featured in the "Island Time" exhibition at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston.
Due to vandalism, artist Ryan Hawk completed a restoration project of the statue in 2019.

Design

The main statue is the approximate size of a small dolphin. It is supported by a five-foot plinth, which is designed to create an impression of a dolphin jumping overhead, in the Gulf of Mexico surrounding Galveston Island. The monument is housed in an open-aired pavilion and its pedestal replicates the columns that hold up the pavilion. The statue is accompanied by the following poem:
∩ The path that led you here

through giant gold headdresses

shaking in the wind

below a long calligraphy of stars -

finds you standing in R.A. Apffel Park

lit by dreams of dolphins rising

pink arches in the dark

The carving of the dolphin statue resulted in 243 chips from the original sandstone boulder. Orangias carved these into 243 triangles and buried these on Galveston Island to further memorialize gender and sexual minorities into the landscape. The dust from carving the statue was collected and then poured into the ocean by participants at the unveiling ceremony.