2022 Science Without Borders® Challenge Finalists: 15-19 year old students
The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation is pleased to announce the finalists in our 2021 Science Without Borders® Challenge! This international student art contest engages students in important ocean issues through art.For this year’s competition, students were asked to illustrate one or more of the ways people can use a ridge-to-reef approach to conservation to preserve coral reefs.
Entries to the Science Without Borders® Challenge are judged in two categories based on age. Here are the finalists selected from the older group of applicants, students 15-19 years old:
"Rooted in the Ocean" by Yeon Jae Lee, Age 16, Republic of Korea
ARTIST’S STATEMENT: Ridge to reef management plans connect human activities that take place on land with the ocean. The specific solution that I have chosen to address with my artwork is reforestation. The roots of trees act as forest buffers and help prevent pollution from entering the water by stabilizing the sediment. The depiction of a father and son planting a young tree represents a hopeful future where the current generation can hold hands with the next generation to save the ocean. The illuminating roots of the trees depict the power that they hold in saving coral reefs. In the background, the trees and the sky seem to reflect the ocean to represent the connection between the world above and below the water. Finally, the ocean beneath is glowing with vibrant coral reefs and sea animals - an ocean that we must save.