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Transforming silent killers in the ocean into art in support of marine conservation

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SINGAPORE – A seemingly harmless piece of fishing net drifting on the ocean can strangle a hapless sea turtle traveling to its nesting ground. Sharks, coral, and other marine life all over the world have also suffered similar fates through entanglement in fishing nets. There is a dire need for action against such mindless pollution of the oceans, because it endangers marine life, and inevitably, humans. How does one transform lethal debris into a poignant message for education and change?
 
Artists from the Erub Arts group, drawing inspiration from the ocean and from stories of indigenous island life, have put this debris to use in a meaningful way. Hailing from Darnley Island in Australia’s Torres Strait, they have transformed abandoned fishing nets, or ghost nets, into a spectacular art installation featuring precious marine life and provoking reflection on how we humans are impacting the world’s oceans. Over 80 colourful sculptures of fish, turtles, squids, jellyfish and corals woven from ghost nets will be showcased in Ghost Nets of the Ocean or Au Karem ira Lamar Lu – a unique marine-themed exhibition celebrating the island, the reef, the ocean and the beauty of life. 
 
Dr. Lim Chye Hong, ACM Deputy Director for Festivals and exhibition curator shared, “These sculptures are an interesting contrast to popular motifs in Asian Art – fish, turtles, and other marine creatures appear in the textiles, paintings, and ceramics that make up our ACM collection. The symbolic languages of these motifs offer a way to learn about the various cultures, both our own and those with which we are less familiar. This is a wonderful opportunity for us to reflect on the power of art and its ability to bring people together.”
 
The Ghost Net Art Project first began in 2008 as an initiative of GhostNets Australia, a non-profit organisation which champions and coordinates the removal, by local indigenous communities, of ghost nets from remote beaches along the coastline. Local artists appropriated the nets and incorporated them into their works of art and craft, first producing bags and baskets, and later creating large-scale artworks inspired by personal and cultural stories. Marine creatures feature strongly as they are totemic animals for Torres Strait islanders. The artworks on display in the Asian Civilisations Museum were created by Lynnette Griffiths, Marion Gaemers, and 18 Erub Arts artists over the past year. These artworks are being showcased for the first time in Singapore.  
 
 
The exhibition is complemented by the Tiny Turtles project – an installation of smaller-scale artworks created as part of a collaboration between Torres Strait schools, local and international schools in Singapore, and children with special needs in Singapore. Over 700 miniature turtles woven from ghost nets will be displayed on the lawn of the Asian Civilisations Museum, as part the museum’s Children Season 2017 programmes. Also on offer during the June school holidays in Singapore are a wide variety of craft workshops, storytelling sessions and talks, drama and musical performances, and gallery trails.
 
Australian High Commissioner, Mr Bruce Gosper, added, “This arts and cultural exchange echoes Australia and Singapore’s commitment to strengthening the connection between peoples in our countries, and in a more profound way, I believe it will also allow visitors and a younger generation to better understand the world in which we live. As maritime nations, we have a shared responsibility for the health of the oceans. I hope the remarkable art of Au Karem ira Lamar Lu inspires and sparks important conversations in this region on pollution, recycling and marine conservation.”
 
Ghost Nets of the Ocean will be held at the Asian Civilisations Museum from 1 June to 6 August 2017, and admission is free. This exhibition is co-organised by the museum and the Australian High Commission in Singapore, with support from the Australia Singapore Arts Group, generous support from the Australian Commonwealth Foundation’s Art grant programme and the National Museum of Australia, Canberra. Other supporters of the project include James Cook University, Pratt Foundation, Australian International School, White Lodge Education Group Services, Qantas, and Erub’s local partner and agent ReDot Fine Art Gallery.

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