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Through the Public Voting the 10 most publicly voted submissions in each category will have the opportunity to go straight into the final selection made by The Universal Sea jury.

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2
The Ocean is Crying, Bleeding, Dying.
by Sophie Carnell
Category: RE-act
836
Contest is finished!
https://universal-sea.org/second-public-voting?contest=photo-detail&photo_id=4469
2
836
Title:
The Ocean is Crying, Bleeding, Dying.

Author:
Sophie Carnell

Category:
RE-act

Description:
- Found fishing line, beach debris plastic bottle & straws, discarded ‘disp osable’ contact lenses, deconstructed beach rope,  recycled sterling silver, brass, glass beads. 'Degraded rope and water bottles broken up by tide and time, fishing line fragmenting into ever smaller pieces, even innocuous ‘disposable’ contact lenses all become an invisible poison in our oceans, harming all sea life - from the tiniest krill up to the largest whales. The repeated hexagonal shapes in this work represent the chemicals added to plastics to increase their flexibility, transparency, and longevity.  Once ingested, plastics compromise the gut and starve sea creatures, but ominously these plastics also leach their chemicals, affecting sea life - and the entire food chain, in ways we are only just beginning to comprehend.'
Description:
- Found fishing line, beach debris plastic bottle & straws, discarded ‘disp osable’ contact lenses, deconstructed beach rope,  recycled sterling silver, brass, glass beads. 'Degraded rope and water bottles broken up by tide and time, fishing line fragmenting into ever smaller pieces, even innocuous ‘disposable’ contact lenses all become an invisible poison in our oceans, harming all sea life - from the tiniest krill up to the largest whales. The repeated hexagonal shapes in this work represent the chemicals added to plastics to increase their flexibility, transparency, and longevity.  Once ingested, plastics compromise the gut and starve sea creatures, but ominously these plastics also leach their chemicals, affecting sea life - and the entire food chain, in ways we are only just beginning to comprehend.'
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