The One Island Project
In and around The Bahamas
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A little background information: Our professor leading this expedition was Steven Loar, Director of IUP’s Turning and Furniture Design department, and under him were ten IUP students: Ben, a graduate student, Jeff, the only boy amongst us undergrads, and eight girls: Roxanne, Jess, Karina, Ali, Aly, Abby, Sarah, and myself. The island we stayed on for three weeks, Andros, is the largest in the Bahamas, but was by no means one of the tourist hot-spots one would imagine visiting on a cruise ship. Andros is known as a “family island;” typically, family islands are—what you may have already discerned—populated mostly by families, and have very few tourists visit them. If one were to take a cruise to the Bahamas, he or she would land in Nassau on New Providence Island, which is the place for tourists. Our mission, as art students, was to troll the beaches of Andros for trash, particularly plastics, collect said trash and create sculptures resembling the local fauna, and travel to Nassau to present our works in a gallery in the hopes that we would draw awareness to the pollution disaster that Andros was becoming.

