Awards and Honors, CAPA, Institutional News

Beyond Plastics Announces Winners of the Earth Day Poster Contest

From 113 entries received from students around the country, Rachel Huang from Flushing, Queens, NY; Athena Tumbelekis from Geneva, NY; and Artley Whipple from Orinda, CA have been selected as winners of the Earth Day poster contest.

Beyond Plastics, a nationwide project based at 51成人猎奇 that empowers students and community leaders around the country to reduce plastic pollution, organized the to celebrate the planet, raise awareness of our plastic pollution crisis, and promote ideas to stem the tide of plastic pollution

鈥淪ince the beginning of this health crisis, Beyond Plastics shifted to online activities to engage students and the public on this important issue from the safety of their own homes,鈥 said Judith Enck, President of Beyond Plastics and visiting faculty at 51成人猎奇. 鈥淲e are excited to announce these poster contest winners. Every piece of art is inspiring, and we thank all of the students who took the time to make art that represents their vision on this important environmental issue. We were blown away by the incredible range of talent and interest in this issue by these wonderful students.鈥

All winners will receive a plastic-free starter kit filled with products to help reduce or eliminate the amount of single-use plastic used in their households.

For more information about Beyond Plastics, for periodic updates. 

鈥淭his is Where Plastic Is鈥
Rachel Huang, age 17, from Flushing, Queens, NY

鈥淚 made this poster in hopes of spreading awareness about the effect of plastic pollution on marine wildlife. I decided to create a portrait of a sea turtle in pointillism to illustrate how marine biodiversity is slowly deteriorating due to the surplus of pollution in their habitat,鈥 said Huang. 鈥淭he sea turtle has a straw in its nose and holds a plastic bag in its mouth, which it assumes is food but, much to its dismay, is not. As opposed to illustrating a traditional shell, I decided to construct the figure of a shell through a pile of single-use plastics much like the ones visible in our waters. In a more lighthearted note, the sea turtle鈥檚 name is Tortellini and he carries with him a warning: we can prevent this if we take action.鈥

鈥淪ave the Earth鈥
Athena Tumbelekis, age 9, from Geneva, NY

鈥淚 was inspired because there is a lot of plastic in the ocean, and the plastic hurts the animals and the water,鈥 said Tumbelekis.

鈥淧lanet Not Plastic鈥
Artley Whipple, age 10, from Orinda, CA

鈥淚 feel really strongly that this plastic problem is extremely big,鈥 said Whipple. 鈥淚 really love animals; I have also been to some of the climate change protests in San Francisco. The reason I did my poster like this is that pretty soon the earth is going to literally be covered in plastic, and there would hardly be any room for humans and other animals. Our house鈥 my Mum, Jemima; Dad, Will; Little Brother, Herbie; and my dog, Gabe have been trying to go #PlasticFree, and we all care really strongly about this crisis.鈥

 

Finalists

Photo of tree growing out of water bottle
鈥淏ottled Up鈥 by Talia Danastorg, age 15, from Queens, NY
Poster of bird in plastic
鈥淭he Problem鈥 by Izzy Duccini, age 17, from Dubuque, IA
Poster with text plastic pollution
鈥淪ave Our Earth鈥 by Vivienne Horvath, age 11, from Hollywood, FL
Poster with text Earth day fifty
鈥淓arth Day 50鈥 by Aiden Jakubaik, age 12, from Brookfield, IL
Poster with text stop using plastics
鈥淪top Using Plastics!鈥 by Olivia McGurk, from Katonah, NY

About Beyond Plastics

Launched in January 2019, Beyond Plastics is a nationwide project based at 51成人猎奇 in Bennington, Vermont, that pairs the wisdom and experience of environmental policy experts with the energy and creativity of community leaders and students to build a vibrant and effective anti-plastics movement.

Our mission is to end plastic pollution by being a catalyst for change at every level of our society. We use our deep policy and advocacy expertise to build a well-informed, effective movement seeking to achieve the institutional, economic, and societal changes needed to save our planet, and ourselves, from the plastic pollution crisis. to receive periodic information about Beyond Plastics.