A new report released this week by an Australian agency says that the 1,400-mile Great Barrier Reef has undergone its sixth mass bleaching. About 91 percent of the brightly colored marine ecosystems were affected by this most recent catastrophe, which occurs when water temperatures rise. Disasters like this are becoming more frequent as the climate crisis intensifies, prompting artists like Christine and Margaret Wertheim to respond with striking displays of what could be permanently lost. More
Coral Reef Made of Yarn Brings Awareness to Climate Change
Op-Ed: Even plastic coral artwork can't survive climate change - Los Angeles Times
In Large-Scale Installations, Sam Wilde Imagines a Post-Natural Future in Lurid Color — Colossal
Colorful Paper-Cut Sculpture Captures the Diversity of a Coral Reef, My Modern Met
Lisa Stevens' Ceramic Sculptures Capture Coral-Inspired Motifs in Vibrant Color – 英國華僑華人美術家協會
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Op-Ed: Even plastic coral artwork can't survive climate change - Los Angeles Times
So Far So Good: Vivid Paintings by Murmure Take a Wry Perspective on the Climate Crisis — Colossal
Our Changing Seas: A Ceramic Coral Reef by Courtney Mattison — Colossal
How Beatriz Chachamovits Champions Coral Conservation Through Art
Cinnamon roll play food pattern by Erika Elfsberg