World Elephant Daynagpur: WWF India, Rishabh Shroff and Dr.
Tarana Khubchandani have brought together the country’s leading artists to create artwork in their distinctive style, respect the amazing Asian elephant on the day of the world elephant on Thursday.
‘Little Trunkets’ will show off more than 100 artwork, including paintings, sculptures and ceramics, each with its unique individuality.
Some famous artists have compiled and made works, especially for this topical exhibition.
‘Little Trunkets’ hope to help overcome the lack of severe support for elephant conservation in India.
As the world’s rarest elephant species in the world, Asian elephants face various threats, including habitat loss, invasive species, climate change, hunting and human-elephant conflict.
As a perspective, Indian elephants only receive about one third of support as much as African elephants and one tenth such as Indian tigers.
This unfavorable reality sustains a lack of consciousness for the charming asian elephant ignorance.
Echo artist sentiment, Arzan Khatamman, the leading sculptor, said, “Art is a strong way to create awareness about Asian elephant conservation.
Elephants are fun, beautiful, and graceful animals who need our support.” As a fundraising exhibition, ‘Little Trunkets’ ‘Will support two causes: practical efforts to increase human-elephant coexistence and campaigns to educate family and support harness for their conservation.
Environmental education is an integral part of WWF India’s conservation efforts.
Rishab Shroff, Mitra, Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas and Filathropy Ambassador, WWF India, said, “People can support our causes in various ways, which are their beauty.
Make the environmental welfare part of your board’s agenda.
Talk to your children about Elephants and Pique interests them with fun facts.
Create your succession plan with a gift or donation of a lifetime inheritance for this purpose.
Or just get some beautiful art and support ‘small trunkets’.
“” We hope this effort will raise support for Elephant conservation and help people realize what we are fighting for if elephants continue to lose their habitat, “Dr.
Tarana Khubchandani, Director, Arts & Soul.
Recent discoveries have shown wealth of elephant life and how much we will lose if they disappear from our planet.
Elephants play a unique role in the ecosystem, from creating habitats for smaller species to spread the seeds of fruit trees.
Elephants are not just smart, strong, and empathic – they have the ability we can only imagine.
They can hear low frequencies and senses of seismic vibrations along their feet; They might feel the tsunami.
Elephants also have a better sense of smell than dogs.
While dogs have 80 genes dedicated to smell and humans have 40, elephants have 200! Elephants also rarely get cancer, it seems to produce proteins that help destroy cancer cells.
Dr.
Dibankar Ghose, Director of Margasatwa & Habitat, WWF India, said, “WWF India has partnered with Cyril Amarchand and Mangaldas and Gallery Art & Soul for small trunkets, an exhibition aimed at increasing support for elephant conservation.
WWF India works for legitimate animal conservation This national by promoting human-elephant coexistence, handling human-elephant conflicts, and maintaining the integrity of the elephant landscape.
“Elephant painting, Sculpturlelittle Trunkets, an exhibition held in Mumbai from 12 August to September 12, is a great opportunity for people to collect Elephant paintings, sculptures and ceramics.
For young aspiration collectors and art connoisseurs, it is a rare opportunity to collect unique artwork and support important causes.
Some participating artists include – Arzan Khatamatta, Fair Writer, Ankit Patel, Ajay de, Paresh Maity, Sujata Bajaj, Bina Aziz, Trivedi Heeral, Jenny Lamba, Jenny Bhatt, Nabibakhsh Mansoori, Puja Kshatriya, Santanu Hazarika, Shayonti Salvi, Shuvaprasna, Shayonti Salvi, Shuvaprasna Roy Sudip, Suresh Muthukulam, Sushma Jain, Vinita Karim, Shivani Dugar, Vilas Shinde, Jinsook, Revati Sharma Singh, Seema Kohli, Satish Gupta, Vinod Sharma, Yashwant Deshmukh, and Gurcharan Singh.