For more than forty years, Kent Hult has photographed the human side of the underwater world. Now, his lifetime collection is being preserved for future generations through Ocean Archive.
- Photographs open a door to an underwater world most people never see, capturing moments that convey exploration and human experience.
- A wide-ranging visual record documents diving, marine archaeology, scientific expeditions, shipwreck investigations and the evolution of diving technology.
- The collection will be catalogued, preserved and digitised to support future research, education, exhibitions and storytelling.
- Original film strips and albums are being reviewed to ensure accurate cataloguing and to reveal previously unseen images and contexts.

Some photographs do more than capture a moment. They open a door to a world most people never get to see.
For more than four decades, Swedish photographer Kent Hult has documented underwater work, exploration and discovery, from commercial diving and marine archaeology to scientific expeditions, shipwreck investigations and the evolution of diving technology.

His archive, now donated to Ocean Archive, offers a rare visual record of Sweden’s underwater heritage and the people, tools and environments that have shaped modern marine exploration.
The collection will now be catalogued, preserved and digitised, helping make this important visual history available for future research, education, exhibitions and storytelling.

Read the full story on Ocean Archive to learn more about Kent Hult’s donation and the remarkable underwater world his photographs help preserve.



