The Borneo Post

Young artists get passionate about renewable energy

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PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad: Conversati­ons about renewable and sustainabl­e energy don’t typically include artistic ideas on the subject. However, the Caribbean Community (Caricom) has chosen to engage the region’s youth in the conversati­on by inviting them to create artistic works on sustainabl­e energy for a regional competitio­n.

Seven of the nine winners in the 2016 competitio­n were from Trinidad and Tobago and in June they were honoured at a ceremony held by Trinidad and Tobago’s Ministry of Energy and Energy Industries.

Sobers said her focus in painting “Mother Energy” was to encourage “sustaining the environmen­t with the right motive, with a motive of loving it, cherishing it and benefiting from it.”

Some of those winners told IPS that the competitio­n had indeed kindled their desire to be a part of the sustainabl­e/renewable energy discussion now taking place in the region.

Candice Sobers, who won second place in the profession­al art category, describes entering art competitio­ns “as a hobby” because “exposure in the arts is difficult to come by in Trinidad”. Neverthele­ss, the research she did for the competitio­n has had an impact on how she uses energy. She now turns off any lights and appliances in her home that are not in use, and she has invested in energy-saving light bulbs.

Sobers’ entry to the Caricom Energy Month art and photograph­y competitio­n depicted a tree painted in the shape of woman who is seen pregnant with the sun. The mother tree’s mode of transporta­tion is a bicycle and the environmen­t she inhabits comprises various forms of renewable energy.

The painting, entitled “Mother Energy”, is rendered in acrylics, coloured pencil, and oil pastels. Sobers describes her work, in part, as follows: “The bicycle is a means of exercise without burning fossil fuels, encouragin­g the reduction of the carbon footprint. The energy saving bulb hangs on her neck as an accessory while she rides by the hydro- electric plant and wind mill landscape.”

Sobers said her focus in painting “Mother Energy” was to encourage “sustaining the environmen­t with the right motive, with a motive of loving it, cherishing it and benefiting from it. If the motive is only for money mankind will find themselves abusing it in some form.”

Third-placed winner in the profession­al art category, Seon Thompson, likewise chose to use a woman as part of his iconograph­y. Like Sobers, Thompson holds a BA in Visual Arts from the University of the West Indies, St Augustine. He told IPS, “I tried to give a double meaning to some of the elements.”

He explained that the hair of the woman, in a traditiona­l corn row hairstyle, was also used to depict rows of plants while the palm trees seen in the landscape behind her also carried the implicatio­n of wind turbines. As one gazes at the painting, one’s eyes are led by the graceful lines of the woman’s arm and the undulating lines of cool blue and green depicting her hair to the warm, vividly coloured sun and

In the Caribbean, we have two seasons, rainy and dry, so we really should be using solar energy, hydro energy, and so on…. We are a prime example of nations that have all the elements aligned to practise sustaintab­le energy. We just need to invest in it more and see the value of utilising these mediums that exist and are readily available. Seon Thompson, third-placed winner in the profession­al art category

mountains she carries in a basket on her head, with their obvious allusion to solar energy.

In explaining his work, Thompson said. “I really wanted to connect sustainabl­e energy with the elements of the Caribbean we all could relate to — sun, foliage, fauna, people, houses and hills.” The houses in his painting are shown with solar panels on their roofs.

“In the Caribbean, we have two seasons, rainy and dry, so we really should be using solar energy, hydro energy, and so on….We are a prime example of nations that have all the elements aligned to practise sustaintab­le energy. We just need to invest in it more and see the value of utilising these mediums that exist and are readily available.”

Thompson said in creating his painting, “I really wanted to create an experience, not just have people say ‘ that’s nice’. You must have an experience and really leave with something on your mind.”

He said he has started a project at the school where he teaches art to promote the idea of sustainabi­lity. The project encourages Form 5 students to find objects that are discarded and repurpose them in ways that are beneficial and profitable.

For 19-year- old Fidelis Iwueke, the first prize winner in the Caricom Energy Month video competitio­n, his studies at A’Level in Environmen­tal Science provided the foundation for his creation.

He provided IPS with a textbook definition of sustainabi­lity. “Sustainabi­lity is to ensure that the needs of today are provided for without compromisi­ng the future.”

Iwueke has just finished secondary school and his success in the video competitio­n has awakened an interest in documentar­y production as a prospectiv­e career. “I am a former documentar­y junkie. I love documentar­ies,” he said. He is also a poet and spoken word artist, which made the video competitio­n the most suitable category for him, he said. — IPS

 ?? — Jewel Fraser/IPS photo ?? Winners in the Caricom Energy Month art competitio­n Fidelis Iwueke (from left), Candice Sobers, and Seon Thompson.
— Jewel Fraser/IPS photo Winners in the Caricom Energy Month art competitio­n Fidelis Iwueke (from left), Candice Sobers, and Seon Thompson.

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