Audubon Aquarium Washed Ashore Art to Save the Sea

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, the front third of "Greta the Bang-up White Shark," i of half dozen huge sea-life sculptures from a project called Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Bounding main, is viewed at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Printing

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, a behemothic jellyfish sculpture is viewed from below at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans. The sculpture, fabricated from line-fishing buoys and cut-upward water bottles that done upwardly on the Pacific Coast, is among half-dozen placed around the aquarium.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photograph taken July 26, 2018, Elizabeth Torres, with married man Cory Torres, takes a photo of their children, Madelyn "Mattie" Torres, 2, and Jackson Torres, 5, in New Orleans' Audubon Aquarium of the Americas. The children are sitting in part of a boat incorporated into the statue of "Greta the Great White Shark" which is part of Angela Haseltine Pozzi's projection "Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Bounding main."

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photograph taken July 28, 2018, fishing rods that washed ashore on the Oregon coast brand up the bill of "Flash the Marlin" at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans. It is amid six huge body of water-life sculptures made out of ocean trash on brandish as function of a project called "Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Body of water."

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, Connor Aikman, 4, of Sioux Falls, Southward.D., looks upward at a statue of a jellyfish at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americans in New Orleans. The jellyfish, made from buoys and cut-up water bottles, is part of the Oregon-based Washed Ashore Project to highlight the ecological problem of plastic that is thrown away and winds up in the ocean.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Printing

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, plastic bottles and jugs that floated onto a Due west Declension beach make up a big part of a walk-through whale-rib sculpture at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans. It is function of a project called "Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea."

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, a section of a boat that done aground is incorporated into the sculpture of "Greta the Nifty White Shark," one of six sculptures made out of ocean trash every bit office of a projection chosen "Washed Ashore: Fine art to Save the Sea" at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photograph taken July 26, 2018, Angela Haseltine Pozzi, of Bandon, Ore., describes her project Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans as she stands in front of a giant jellyfish sculpture made from fishing buoys and cut-upwardly water bottles that washed upwardly on the Pacific Declension.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photograph taken July 26, 2018, Brenda Walkenhorst, director of teaching at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans, demonstrates the sounds of rattles made from bottle caps and incorporated into a sculpture called "Musical Seaweed" at the aquarium. The sculpture is part of a project chosen Done Ashore: Art to Salve the Body of water.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Press

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, "Wink the Marlin" appears to bound in a fountain in the lobby of the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans. It is among half dozen huge sea-life sculptures made out of sea trash that are office of a projection called "Washed Ashore: Art to Salvage the Bounding main."

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Printing

  • In this photo taken July 26, 2018, Andrew Caldera, of San Antonio, lifts girl Jianna, v, and then she tin can hit a high-up rattling leaf of a sculpture called "Musical Seaweed" at the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans. Large sis Jayla, 10, and baby sister Zaylei, i, await on. The sculpture is part of a projection chosen Washed Ashore: Art to Relieve the Sea.

    Janet Mcconnaughey Associated Printing

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Source: https://www.spokesman.com/galleries/2018/jul/31/washed-ashore-art-to-save-the-sea/

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