Sea creatures and environmental issues sprang to life through art created out of single-use plastic by 完美体育 students, Clearwater High School students and other community members on display April 9 in the Wrenn Hall lobby of the James Center for Molecular and Life Sciences at the Used Once, Lasts Forever Art Show.
From paintings to crocheted plastic, students, alumni and other members of the St. Petersburg community brought their passions for art and the planet together. Eckerd President Jim Annarelli, Ph.D., was celebrating his 70th birthday that day, and 35 years at Eckerd, as he explained at the start of the event.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a wonderful educational tool to help raise the consciousness of our community about the importance of the pledge to avoid single-use plastics,鈥 he said about the art contest鈥檚 impetus.
For most of the event, students, faculty and Annarelli explored the artwork鈥攍earning about the meaning and inspiration behind each piece from the artists themselves.
Yarrow Bercovici-biotti, an Eckerd junior environmental studies student from Ashburnham, Massachusetts, had originally made reduce, reuse, reef-cycle, featuring a coral reef and parrotfish, for her Performance in the Environment class last semester. The class had been assigned to make a prop and learn about reducing waste and being environmentally aware.
鈥淚 wanted to reuse it even further by adding it to my art piece for this contest,鈥 she said. So she gave him 鈥渁 home鈥 with the reef made of plastic bottles, cardboard, pipe cleaners and other materials.
Yarrow is inspired by the ocean and marine life, and saw a parrotfish during Winter Term last year while scuba diving in Roat谩n, Honduras.
鈥淚 just thought that they鈥檙e really funny looking and colorful, so I thought it would be a great subject for something like this, especially with how much plastic is in the ocean. I think it鈥檚 important for art to be used for awareness for that,鈥 she explained.
Rachel Smith, a senior marine science student from Waverly, New York, exhibited a piece that explored plastic in our oceans and overfishing. Overall, she said鈥攑ointing to the 45 fish and a frame of crocheted and braided plastic bags鈥攈er artwork is about overconsumption.
Because the chain of bags that formed the frame was so long, she had to tape it to the top of her dorm-room door so she could braid them.
鈥淭hat was a really funny moment where I was like, 鈥榃hat in my life has led me to this moment of braiding plastic bags together?鈥欌 she said.
After everyone mingled, learned about the entered artwork and enjoyed the food, winners were announced. Five $100 prizes were offered for various categories, and one award was the People鈥檚 Choice, which attendees voted for by scanning a QR code and selecting their favorite piece.
This event gave many students both a way to repurpose items that would otherwise be tossed and a creative outlet to express their environmental interests.
The show, Annarelli said, 鈥渁llows us to celebrate the artistic talent of members of the Eckerd community whose creativity, whose vision and imaginativeness are on display.鈥
Winners
- Best Messaging/Reducing Plastics: Rachel Smith 鈥25, Overconsumption a plastic diet
- Science Communication: Raymond Pintauro 鈥26, Doomsday
- Functional Art: Sonya Harding 鈥28, Plastic Bride
- Honors: Nicole Manuel 鈥98, Something Borrowed, Something New
- People鈥檚 Choice: Tati Perez-Perez, Can鈥檛 see the light