Environmental Project "Save the Planet" is my ecological vision of some problems on Planet Earth: real and imaginary, urgent and pending in time. I believe that art can draw people's attention to these problems. And maybe even save our planet!
Jellyfish, like other stingrays (lat. Cnidaria), are among the oldest creatures on the planet: they are older than dinosaurs and trees. Their population is not threatened by anything, on the contrary, the number of jellyfish around the world is increasing rapidly. They have proven to be the few species that have benefited from climate change. The warming of the oceans has led to an increase in suitable habitat for them.
The advance of jellyfish around the world has many other negative consequences. Off the west coast of Ireland, salmon farms are losing hundreds of thousands of fish bitten by tropical jellyfish. In addition, power plants in Sweden, Israel, the U.S., Japan and other countries are running out of steam: huge numbers of jellyfish are increasingly entering the power grid.
In Japan, jellyfish are called the second danger after earthquakes. There is a giant representative of jellyfish, Nemopilema nomurai, which can reach two meters in size and weigh 200 kilograms.
This abstract diptych is created in fluid art using acrylic paints. Diptych, set of 2 paintings, each painting is 40*40*1.6 cm(unframed). The price is for the 2 paintings together.