In conjunction with the 10th anniversary of the May 27, 2009, sinking of the 159-meter (523-foot) USNS Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Austrian art photographer Andreas Franke placed a 24-piece art exhibit, highlighting the plastic danger to our life-giving ocean waters.

This exhibit, titled “Plastic Ocean,” is the third exhibit Franke has placed on this unique underwater setting. Plastic Ocean embodies a pictorial resonant message of the destructive nature of plastic and micro-plastics to our oceanic environment. The images he has created show young women, children and babies, literally “drowning” in plastic dumped into our seas. (Andreas says he collected the “trash” he used in only 30 minutes at a local European beach.) The art collection also includes posters enumerating the dangers of this uncontrolled littering of our undersea world.


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Dr. Denny Howley is a NAUI instructor and has been diving since 1961. He was one of the survey divers, who with metal detectors, swept the planned sink site to insure suitability for the sinking of the “artificial reef” Vandenberg at its present location. To date he’s logged over 200 dives on the Vandenberg.

