ETV Bharat / international

Ocean Mission: Artists highlight threat of climate change

author img

By

Published : Mar 3, 2019, 11:44 PM IST

Artists in the Seychelles are highlighting the risks of climate change through their works on display across the island nation. The Seychelles is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatures bleaching its coral reefs.

Courtesy: APTN

Mahe (Seychelles): Artists in the Seychelles are highlighting the risks of climate change through their works on display across the island nation. The Seychelles is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatures bleaching its coral reefs.

On a busy Seychelles road, a bustling coral reef ... a mural of one, at least.

Stretching 16 metres across a secondary school wall, this colourful mural is reminding locals of what they have, and also of what's at stake.

The sprawling painting, designed by Seychellois artist George Camille and painted with the help of local school children, features shoals of fish, corals, even a turtle.

It took about a week to paint, over 20 volunteers used an estimated 24 litres of blue paint.

It's all part of an art project - called UP! Seychelles - that aims to highlight the island nation's fragile environment and the need for conservation.

The Seychelles' 115 islands together add up to just 455 square kilometres (176 square miles) of land - about the same as San Antonio, Texas.

undefined

But its exclusive economic zone stretches to 1.4 million square kilometers (540 million square miles) of sea, an area almost the size of Alaska.

The island nation of fewer than 100,000 people is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatures bleaching its coral reefs.

Camille, who'll be representing the Seychelles at the upcoming Venice Biennale, says he wanted to remind passersby about their own environmental impact.

"The idea was to show how a healthy reef should look like and then see it abundant with fish and coral," he says.

"So, at least they'll see it on the wall there and they'll think; 'Everything I throw away, whether it's up the mountain, it ends up in the ocean and it ends up on the reef.'

"It's not enough producing art that's hanged in galleries or bought by tourists and then they put it in their suitcase, and then they leave.

undefined

"I think artists have a role to play, a very important role, and a responsibility to help the collective voice, which is putting across the messages to the population, especially the young, you have to listen to these messages, they're real. And putting it in a visual way, for me, it's very important."

Across the island of Mahe, artist Charles Dodo's "Birds Crying Out" installation is shining in the sun.

The towering artwork takes the form of two grey heron birds, commonly found on Seychelles shorelines, they're made from recycled aluminium plates and plastic objects, mounted on steel bars and surrounded by discarded materials collected on the island.

It took Dodo about six weeks to build.

After monitoring the birds' lifestyle, Dodo says he noticed an abundance of plastic waste washing through their coastal habitat. A plastic bucket is wrapped round one of the herons' beaks.

"My message is simply, think twice," says Dodo.

undefined

"And, you know those birds, they deserve to live fully, just like you get your prey, like they get their prey, when they come there, they eat their fish, not the plastic, not a bucket block (on) the beak.

"Art can pass on millions of messages, but if the person who takes it, he's not interested, so it's a problem. But I strongly believe that through art, we go very far."

Another installation, by Seychellois artist Jude Ally, hangs above visitors to a bus terminal in the country's capital, Victoria.

Named "Don't let the Earth wear plastics" and made using plastic packaging collected in the local area, it takes the shape of clothes hanging from a washing line.

"We wanted to use the art to be (an) emotional instrument, to really reach the deep inside of a human being because we got those cold scientific data, methodology that are we going to solve the problem," says Shirley Yu, a Seychelles Art Foundation project manager.

undefined

"But how deep you can reach to everyone and how much you can really change a small movement of everyday small decisions?"

The UP! Seychelles project includes five different artworks. There are plans to install further climate-inspired works across the island nation.

This month the ambitious Nekton "First Descent" Indian Ocean mission will start surveying underwater life, plus map the sea floor and drop sensors to depths of up to 2,000 meters in the seas around the Seychelles, in part to monitor the impact of climate change.

The mission will conclude with the State of the Indian Ocean Summit in 2022.

Also read- Russia: Hunters celebrate fur and animal skin trade

(With inputs from APTN)

Courtesy: APTN

Mahe (Seychelles): Artists in the Seychelles are highlighting the risks of climate change through their works on display across the island nation. The Seychelles is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatures bleaching its coral reefs.

On a busy Seychelles road, a bustling coral reef ... a mural of one, at least.

Stretching 16 metres across a secondary school wall, this colourful mural is reminding locals of what they have, and also of what's at stake.

The sprawling painting, designed by Seychellois artist George Camille and painted with the help of local school children, features shoals of fish, corals, even a turtle.

It took about a week to paint, over 20 volunteers used an estimated 24 litres of blue paint.

It's all part of an art project - called UP! Seychelles - that aims to highlight the island nation's fragile environment and the need for conservation.

The Seychelles' 115 islands together add up to just 455 square kilometres (176 square miles) of land - about the same as San Antonio, Texas.

undefined

But its exclusive economic zone stretches to 1.4 million square kilometers (540 million square miles) of sea, an area almost the size of Alaska.

The island nation of fewer than 100,000 people is already feeling the effects of climate change, with rising water temperatures bleaching its coral reefs.

Camille, who'll be representing the Seychelles at the upcoming Venice Biennale, says he wanted to remind passersby about their own environmental impact.

"The idea was to show how a healthy reef should look like and then see it abundant with fish and coral," he says.

"So, at least they'll see it on the wall there and they'll think; 'Everything I throw away, whether it's up the mountain, it ends up in the ocean and it ends up on the reef.'

"It's not enough producing art that's hanged in galleries or bought by tourists and then they put it in their suitcase, and then they leave.

undefined

"I think artists have a role to play, a very important role, and a responsibility to help the collective voice, which is putting across the messages to the population, especially the young, you have to listen to these messages, they're real. And putting it in a visual way, for me, it's very important."

Across the island of Mahe, artist Charles Dodo's "Birds Crying Out" installation is shining in the sun.

The towering artwork takes the form of two grey heron birds, commonly found on Seychelles shorelines, they're made from recycled aluminium plates and plastic objects, mounted on steel bars and surrounded by discarded materials collected on the island.

It took Dodo about six weeks to build.

After monitoring the birds' lifestyle, Dodo says he noticed an abundance of plastic waste washing through their coastal habitat. A plastic bucket is wrapped round one of the herons' beaks.

"My message is simply, think twice," says Dodo.

undefined

"And, you know those birds, they deserve to live fully, just like you get your prey, like they get their prey, when they come there, they eat their fish, not the plastic, not a bucket block (on) the beak.

"Art can pass on millions of messages, but if the person who takes it, he's not interested, so it's a problem. But I strongly believe that through art, we go very far."

Another installation, by Seychellois artist Jude Ally, hangs above visitors to a bus terminal in the country's capital, Victoria.

Named "Don't let the Earth wear plastics" and made using plastic packaging collected in the local area, it takes the shape of clothes hanging from a washing line.

"We wanted to use the art to be (an) emotional instrument, to really reach the deep inside of a human being because we got those cold scientific data, methodology that are we going to solve the problem," says Shirley Yu, a Seychelles Art Foundation project manager.

undefined

"But how deep you can reach to everyone and how much you can really change a small movement of everyday small decisions?"

The UP! Seychelles project includes five different artworks. There are plans to install further climate-inspired works across the island nation.

This month the ambitious Nekton "First Descent" Indian Ocean mission will start surveying underwater life, plus map the sea floor and drop sensors to depths of up to 2,000 meters in the seas around the Seychelles, in part to monitor the impact of climate change.

The mission will conclude with the State of the Indian Ocean Summit in 2022.

Also read- Russia: Hunters celebrate fur and animal skin trade

(With inputs from APTN)

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
SHOTLIST:
++NO CUTAWAYS AVAILABLE - SOUNDBITES SEPARATED BY BLACK++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Unknown location in north-eastern Syria - 3 March 2019
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Yago Riedijk, Dutch man who joined Islamic State group and married UK teenager Shamima Begum:
"I understand any government's fear of either foreign fighters or their wives, but to let a young girl (Begum) in her position who has lost her children, who has been through horrors in the Islamic State, be left here to rot in a camp. I don't think that is a very humanitarian position, no?"
(Reporter question: "Some people would say though, ISIS wasn't a humanitarian organisation and she, and you, deserve everything you get.")
"It definitely was not. It definitely was not a humanitarian organisation."
(Reporter: "Do you deserve everything you get as a result?"
"OK then, then that's what it is then."
++BLACK FRAMES++
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Yago Riedijk, Dutch man who joined Islamic State group and married UK teenager Shamima Begum:
"We made a mistake and again we have to live with the consequences. We regret what we did, but I hope that our governments and the people back there might consider giving us a second chance."
++BLACK FRAMES++
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Yago Riedijk, Dutch man who joined Islamic State group and married UK teenager Shamima Begum:
"I know that she's no danger to anybody whatsoever. She cannot kill a spider, she cannot kill a cockroach. But we made a mistake and we'll have to live with the consequences."
++BLACK FRAMES++
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Yago Riedijk, Dutch man who joined Islamic State group and married UK teenager Shamima Begum:
"I very much regret what I did and that I basically lived a very miserable life in the Islamic State. And that I want to better myself and hopefully one day return back to life as it was once, create a family."
(Reporter: "And Shamima Begum, what should happen to her? What should happen to your wife?")
"Wherever she goes I'm going to go. If my country wants me then I either take my wife or I stay with her."
(Reporter: "You'll take her to the Netherlands?")
"If that's possible, yeah. I would very much like that."
++ENDS ON SOUNDBITE++
STORYLINE:
A Dutch man who married a British teenager after she ran away to join the Islamic State group on Sunday said they both "made a mistake" in joining the extremist group in Syria and would have to "live with the consequences".
But Yago Riedijk told UK broadcaster Sky it wasn't a "very humanitarian decision" to leave his wife and their baby son "to rot in a camp", and said he hoped the governments of Britain and the Netherlands would consider giving them a "second chance".
Riedijk's wife, Shamima Begum, fled east London with two other friends to travel to Syria to marry IS group fighters in 2015 at a time when the group's online recruitment programme lured many impressionable young people to its self-proclaimed caliphate.
She recently resurfaced at a refugee camp in Syria and told reporters she wanted to come home with the couple's newborn son.
But the 19-year-old's apparent lack of remorse triggered criticism in Britain and the Home Secretary Sajid Javid revoked her citizenship.
Speaking at a Kurdish-run detention centre in north-eastern Syria, her 27-year-old husband insisted that Begum was not dangerous.
"I know that she's no danger to anybody whatsoever. She cannot kill a spider, she cannot kill a cockroach. But we made a mistake and we'll have to live with the consequences," he said, adding he would go wherever his wife and son ended up going, even if that meant staying in Syria.
Although it's unclear if Begum has committed a crime, her comments - and those of her husband - throw into sharp relief larger questions about how Western societies will deal with others who joined the IS group, but want to return to their home countries.
The Netherlands has declined to comment on individual cases.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
ETV Bharat Logo

Copyright © 2024 Ushodaya Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., All Rights Reserved.