As a rejoinder to our Film Friday post yesterday, today we take you into deep waters where OLEK has just crocheted a bomb or two.
If you think our land is being stripped of entire mountains and trees and our soil and drinking water is being poisoned by factory farming and fracking, consider that it is estimated that 100 million sharks are killed each year to create shark fin soup. They have been at the tops of the oceanic food chain for about 450 million years but we are on track to knock them out in the next 20.
Does that sound like an ecological ticking time bomb to you?
OLEK says she wants to “bring awareness to the state of the world’s oceans and promote the preservation of marine life.” With this new project she is definitely making waves.
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
In a new project with PangeaSeed and sculpture Jason DeCaires Taylor, the Brooklyn based street artist dove to the ocean floor off the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico to create these astounding, poetic, and inspiring underwater images. As she has done in other projects on land OLEK created costumery for friends and others to model, and these crocheted mermaids are the bomb. The yarn bomb.
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
Olek for Pangeaseed. Isla Mujeres, Mexico. August 2014 (photo © Pangeaseed)
To learn more about Pangeaseed click HERE
<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks! <<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSAOther Articles You May Like from BSA:
It’s unusual to capture a ROA inside. He is usually running free outdoors with the wildlife, climbing walls over multiple continents, perched within the industrialized margins of cities and rustling a...
Cancer and fashion. Cancer and rugged virile outdoorsmen. Lifestyles of the rich and cancer. Judith Supine is swaggering back to the street in rawhide stilletos, shooting out a new a campaign of...
European sentiment toward their neighbor to the east is nearly unanimous right now due to the ongoing invasion of Ukraine by the Russians. As usual, the art on the street reflects society and bas...
Fun summer shots at Welling Court in Queens today as two big names from the New York graffiti scene, Daze and BG183 (TATS Cru) collaborated on a piece. The symbols they use meld together some of the ...
As you would know if you waited in the dark out in the open night for a freight train to paint, the earth vibrates and the rumbling can raise adrenaline levels with fear and excitement, and anticipat...