Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

Indian sand artist’s work on global warming bags first prize

Renowned sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik's work has won the first prize in an international competition on 'sculpture on global warming' in Berlin.

.

Renowned sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik’s work – a polar bear on top of a globe praying ‘save my family’ — has won the first prize in an international competition on ‘sculpture on global warming’ in Berlin.

Pattnaik and his student Jitendra Kishore Jagadev were the only representatives from India at the USF World Double Championship on global warming in Berlin on Thursday.

An artist from the US bagged the second prize while a Dutch won the third slot.

Besides India, sand artists from Denmark, Germany, US, Britain, Spain, Holland, Japan, Belgium, Morocco, Italy and France were vying for honours at the championship, which started on June 5.

Patnaik created a 25-feet high sand sculpture that bagged the first prize in the competition, organisers said.

The sculptures would remain for public view for a fortnight.

In 2005, Pattnaik’s 15-foot-high sculpture—Mahatma Gandhi with Three Monkeys—had made him the first Indian to win the first prize at the championship.

Story continues below this ad

The artist from Orissa has so far participated in more than 35 international sand sculpture competitions and won many awards for the country.

 

Tags:
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
Express PremiumIn Kerala local polls: First woman IPS, a porotta maker and a movie inspiration
X