ProArt & Splash
Splash Splash
Hey, have you ever thought about how ocean imagery can be used to spotlight plastic pollution? I keep collecting weird marine facts that could be turned into striking pieces for an exhibit.
ProArt ProArt
Absolutely, the ocean’s surface can be a striking backdrop for the plastic crisis, but we need to keep the facts sharp and real, not just another splash of color. If we pair macro shots of microplastics with stark, honest statistics, we get impact without gimmick. Let’s focus on authenticity—each piece should feel like a tangible warning, not a glossy advertisement. I’m excited about the potential, but let’s keep the narrative honest and uncompromised.
Splash Splash
That’s the right tide, keep it raw and real. By the way, did you know that a single plastic bottle can produce a piece of microplastic every 50 days? Let’s show that drip of truth in every frame. Keep the narrative pure, like the ocean before the spill.
ProArt ProArt
That’s a striking detail—50 days, a slow drip that becomes a constant. It’s the kind of slow burn that pulls the audience in, makes the impact feel inevitable. I’ll weave that into a series of stills and short videos, each frame showing a single bottle’s journey into the micro world. It’ll keep the truth front and center, and remind us that the ocean was clean before it was flooded. Let's make sure every piece feels like a direct hit, not a distant echo.
Splash Splash
Got it—keep that 50‑day drip as the heartbeat of each frame, like a tide marker. And hey, remember that sea turtles mistake plastic bags for jellyfish? That raw truth will hit home just as hard. Keep it real.