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Children Artists Join Forces with the UN to Combat Climate Change

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Young artists from around the world are lending their support to global efforts to combat climate change through Paint for the Planet, an exhibit and auction of children's art in New York.

Young artists from around the world are lending their support to global efforts to combat climate change through Paint for the Planet, an exhibit and auction of children's art in New York.

 

Launched on October 7, 2008, the Paint for the Planet website features a selection of stand-out entries from nearly 200,000 paintings the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) International Children's Painting Competition received.

 

Showcasing children's hopes and fears for the planet, the paintings are a powerful plea from children for leadership on climate change before it is too late.

 

Paint for the Planet is the launching pad for the 'UNite to Combat Climate Change' campaign to support the call for a definitive agreement at the climate change talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December 2009.

 

 

Sullivan England First Prize

 

Five young artists from Burundi, Colombia, Malta and the United States came to New York for the event to share their message for the planet with decision makers, corporate leaders and the media.

 

 

Bartolo Malta Third Prize

  Maltese student Andrew Bartolo is a keen environmentalist and Scout. He says: "I have painted a scene that, though slightly extreme, gives an insight into a possible future, one where animals lose their homes and are forced to migrate to unfamiliar territories."

 

  • Katherine Liu is a fifth grade student at Foothill School, Saratoga, California, USA. She says: "If everyone did their part in preventing global warming, we might be able to stop climate change." Katherine does hers by recycling, turning off lights whenever she leaves a room, and taking short showers to save water.

 

 

Medovoy U.S.A. Fifth Prize Gabrielle Medovoy is an honour student in Springman Middle School, Glenview, IL, USA. Through her painting of penguins on the move she asks "Where are they going? That will be the question when there is no decent place for the penguins to live."

 

 

 

  • Fourteen-year-old Daniela Melendez goes to Colegio Hacienda Los Alcaparros in Bogotá, Colombia. She explains: "In my painting I was showing today's reality, that we TOGETHER are doing it, together we can work it out. We know it's not who, what or where we are, but what we do that counts."

 

  • Guy Jayce Nindorera from Burundi says that his painting was inspired by the situation in his country but also by reading various articles around the world "where people are dying of hunger and other catastrophes such as the Tsunami, floods and deserts, due to human actions. As a result human beings become victims of their own interventions."

 

They officially opened the exhibit at UN Headquarters in New York on 23 October. This is the first time the original artwork - chosen from a collection of nearly 200,000 paintings - has been displayed.

 

On 25 October, a selection of paintings will be auctioned at the Harvard Club of New York City to raise emergency funds for children affected by climate-related disasters. The proceeds will be donated to UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund.

 

In addition to the live auction, the art will also be sold online on eBay.com in partnership with LiveAuctioneers to enable people around the world to participate. Pre-bidding for the auctioned paintings will also shortly be available on eBay, liveauctioneers.com and www.unep.org/paint4planet.

 

After New York, the exhibit will travel to various climate-related events and meetings around the world, culminating in Copenhagen.

 

The curatorial partner for Paint for the Planet is the Natural World Museum (NWM), which presents art through innovative programs to inspire and engage the public in environmental awareness and action.

 

Paint for the Planet is made possible through the generous support of Bayer, Nikon and the Foundation for Global Peace and Environment, which have been UNEP's key partners for the International Children's Painting Competition and other children and youth initiatives for many years.

 

 

 

Notes:

 

 

Nishchuk Russia Second Prize

To see more of the art work visit  www.unep.org/paint4planet.

 

Contacts:

Lucy Jasmin, Head of Special Events

lucita.jasmin@unep.org

 

Nick Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson/Head of Media

nick.nuttall@unep.org

 

Anne-France White, UNEP Associate Information Officer

anne-france.white@unep.org

 

The information in this article was provided by UNEP,  7 October 200.8  

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