Check out my artist page on Apple Music for all my latest tracks, including the upcoming hip hop single "LAVISH" dropping 10-23-24! 🎤🔥 Sing along with the synced lyrics feature and turn up the vibe. Let's get it!

https://sprstr.me/lavish
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#rapperlife #musictrends #artistspotlight #topcharts #viralvideo #artistprofile #musicartist #artistinterview #musicstreaming #musicplatform #hiphopculture #rapworld #musicdiscovery #hitsong #hiphopmusic #applemusic #musicvideo #musicindustry #newrelease

Jöí Fabü - LAVISH

Get ready to elevate your playlist! Legendary hip hop superstar Jöí Fabü is set to drop his highly anticipated single "LAVISH" on October 23, 2024. This track encapsulates the essence of living life in the fast lane, where private jets and supercars are just part of the everyday grind. Fans can pre-order "LAVISH" starting September 18, 2024, ensuring they don’t miss out on this opulent anthem. Prepare to ride the wave of luxury with Jöí Fabü as he takes you on a sonic journey like no other!

Thank you Bay Nature Magazine and Matthew Tedford for featuring my work. Link to full article: https://baynature.org/article/genre-defying-art-textiles-and-maps/
#mapart #sciart #artistinterview #artistprofile
Genre-Defying Art: Textiles and Maps — Bay Nature

If you're like most people and have never thought about textiles and maps at the same time, together, then you just might be the target audience for artist Linda Gass. Add climate change, land use, and Bay Area waterways into the mix, and it’s safe to say her work is unlike anything else out there.

Bay Nature

One Life: Maya Lin
at the National Portrait Gallery

"I feel I exist on the boundaries, somewhere between science and art, art and architecture, public and private, East and West. I am always trying to find a balance between these opposing forces, the place where opposites meet."

—Maya Ying Lin

#MayaLin #Art #Architecture #ArtistProfile

https://npg.si.edu/exhibition/one-life-maya-lin-exhibition

One Life: Maya Lin | National Portrait Gallery

“One Life: Maya Lin,” is the first biographical exhibition dedicated to the architect, sculptor, environmentalist, and designer of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

Eyewitness by Craig Jones: A mother and baby orangutan are rescued from an RSPO palm oil plantation in Sumatra

Craig Jones: Eyewitness

Wildlife Photographer and Conservationist

Bio: Craig Jones

One of Britain’s finest wildlife photographers, Craig Jones is also one of the most humble and down-to-earth guys you will ever meet. His photography and stories capture the lives of endangered rainforest animals that we hold so dearly to our hearts: Sumatran orangutans, Sumatran tigers, Sumatran elephants, Siamangs and more. His work has featured in BBC News, BBC Wildlife Magazine and National Geographic magazine. He has also appeared for Nat Geo WILD discussing Sumatra as part of the “Paradise Islands & Photo Ark” Nat Geo series. He has spoken at the UK Green Party Conference about the disastrous effects of palm oil in South East Asia, that he seen with his own eyes.

In this story, Craig uses his own words to bear witness to the awesome love and intelligence of orangutans, and also shares stories of the immense suffering of orangutans and other species within RSPO member palm oil plantations. Craig is an absolute inspiration to photographers, animal lovers and conservationists. It is an honour to showcase his work and stories on Palm Oil Detectives.

His work appears in:

My name is Craig Jones, I’m a #wildlife photographer. Here is my eyewitness account of rescuing an #orangutan mother and baby from an #RSPO “sustainable” #palmoil plantation in #Sumatra. We #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife 🌴🔥🛢️⛔ @palmoildetect.bsky.social https://wp.me/pcFhgU-1wJ

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“The most beautiful rainforest in the world is turned into a souless landscape of palm oil within weeks, with brutal efficiency. Anything in its way gets crushed, killed and discarded.” #Wildlife #photographer Craig Jones @CraigJones17 #Boycott4Wildlife

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“That scream I can still hear now, the tone went through me, the pitch could have broken a glass, it was so high and shocking to hear.“ @CraigJones17 recalls rescuing a mum and baby #orangutan from an @RSPOtweets #palmoil plantation

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#Wildlife #photographer Craig Jones @CraigJones17 uses his heart and camera to capture spectacular animals of Asia even in settings of absolute cruelty and #palmoil #deforestation he tells his story! #Boycott4Wildlife #Boycottpalmoil

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“Sustainable palm oil is a con. #Palmoil is all about #wealth and it’s killing us and the planet. So mother nature will have the last laugh. It’s all corruption. #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife#Wildlife photographer @CraigJones17

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“I kept hearing from locals that the government fails to protect national parks and #endangered species. The same government hands out #palmoil licences letting these companies play god” #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @CraigJones17

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“Those with a vested interest in sustainable #palmoil are linked in some way. How can anyone say sustainable is OK when it is grow in the ashes of the dead wildlife and burnt forests?” #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife#Wildlife photographer @CraigJones17

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A mother and baby are rescued from an RSPO certified palm oil plantation

From the moment we received the rescue call, the days plans changed instantly.  I really didn’t know what was waiting for me, as we drove north to the providence of Ache.  All I knew was that a mother and her baby were trapped, and we were heading in that direction as fast as will could. When we arrived all I saw was mile upon mile of this horrific landscape.

When we arrived all I saw was mile upon mile of this horrific landscape…

“Walking through a tattered landscape of barren red earth and alien palm oil trees, where once one of the finest rain forests in the world stood, is just impossible for me to describe. 

“They take the best rain forest in the world and change it into a souless landscape of palm oil within a matter of weeks, with brutal efficiency. Anything in its way gets crushed, killed and discarded.”

Spotlight Sumatra – The Final Chapter by Craig Jones

We started desperately searching for the mother and her baby orangutan and eventually we found them. Once we managed to tranquilise the mother, her basic instinct was to protect her child, fueling her to just hang on and not give into the tranquilizer.

It was heartbreaking. I was praying she’d just let go so they could receive help. She had a strong will and this went on for around fifteen minutes. By this time it was almost too hard to watch, the team was moving below her and watching them both, just to make sure the net was in the right place, as she could fall at any time.

After a while, you could see she was becoming slightly clumsy, missing branches that she was trying to hold onto. Then she went to just one arm, and then she just fell into the waiting net below.

The team scrambled up the steep hillside. They try to take the baby away from the unconscious mother at the first available chance. I managed to capture that incredibly moving moment with this image, as the mother is carried off in the net she fell into, while one of the team give the signal to where they have to go.

As I took images of the mother, the baby was being held by one of the team, as it’s safer for the baby this way. While mother and baby were apart, the baby struggled, trying to bite and screaming.

“That scream I can still hear now, the tone went through me, the pitch could have broken a glass, it was so high and shocking to hear.

Craig Jones

We had about 40 minutes before the sedative wore off. A good chunk of that time the orangutan had fought, hanging in the tree. Time was tight. The vet took blood, checked her teeth, bum area and general health. It was so sad to see but I knew these guys were helping her.

A mother and baby orangutan are rescued from an RSPO member palm oil plantation. Craig Jones Wildlife Photography

I carried on taking images so that I could capture this story no matter what.

The mother looking straight at me with an indescribable emotional stare, and in the background the little baby was screaming.

Craig Jones

An RSPO palm oil plantation where an orangutan mother and baby were found struggling to stay alive in Sumatra. By Craig Jones Wildlife Photography

The mother was slightly underweight but she was fine otherwise. The vet gave her the antidote which brings the Orangutan around by counter-acting the tranquilizer. At that point fresh leaves were put in the cage we’d brought for her. She was placed inside the cage and the baby was reunited with his mother. We loaded the mother and baby into the back of our vehicle then drove to the release site which is part of the national park. After this we released them and within a few minutes they had vanished into the dense forest.

Mother and baby Sumatran orangutans are rescued from an RSPO member palm oil plantation. Craig Jones Wildlife Photography Orangutan baby named Craig, rescued from an RSPO certified palm oil plantation in Sumatra. By Craig Jones Wildlife Photography

“The team named the baby ‘Craig’ after me, which was a great honour and very touching.
“I hope he keeps that fight in his belly that he displayed when he was separated from his mother as this will stand him in good stead for the uncertain future that awaits these Sumatran Orangutans.”

craig jones

Orangutans are us and we are them in so many ways…

Palm oil companies play god and play with fire in Sumatra…

Rainforest is quickly changed to dead land throughout the world by palm oil.

“One of the main things I kept hearing from locals was that the government fails to protect national parks, areas that contain so many endangered flagship species of wildlife. The same government that hands out licensees to palm oil companies letting them play god with some of the richest forests on earth.”

Craig jones

Sustainable palm oil is a con

“@RSPOtweets #sustainable #palmoil is a con. How can anyone say sustainable is OK when it’s grown in the ashes of dead #wildlife #ecocide #deforestation?” @craigjones17 #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife

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“Sustainable palm oil is a con. Palm oil is all about wealth and it’s killing us and the planet. So mother nature will have the last laugh. It’s all corruption. Those with a vested interest in this sustainable nonsense are linked in someway you mark my words because how could anyone say sustainable is OK when it’s grow in the ashes of the dead wildlife and burnt forests. This saddens me”. ~ Craig Jones

If consumers at the supermarket were able to see what their purchase destroyed in its production then there might be more change. Cheap, calorific foods are killing the planet and us in the process. Companies need to give back to nature not take more. @BorisJohnson @PalmOilDetect pic.twitter.com/O2RTh9a2YN

— Craig Jones (@CraigJones17) July 4, 2021

I have loved these enduring animals since childhood and now as an adult helping them is a blessing for me…

I witnessed so much in Sumatra, it has been an emotional roller coaster. I feel there is so much we still don’t know about these great apes. For as long as I walk this earth I will do my best to help them, alongside every other creature we share this planet with, by using my camera and my own voice to help them. Without direct intervention in the national parks the Orangutans along with other forest-dependant wildlife- like the Sumatran Tigers and Elephants will become progressively scarcer until their populations are no longer viable.

Their peaceful mannerisms and intelligence is just remarkable…

Photography: Craig Jones

Words: Craig Jones

Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on supermarket brands causing palm oil deforestation

Find out more

#ArtistProfile #Artivism #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #conservation #CraigJonesWildlifePhotography #CreativesForCoolCreatures #deforestation #ecocide #endangered #orangutan #palmoil #Photographer #photography #Primate #RSPO #Sumatra #SumatranOrangutanPongoAbelii #sustainable #wealth #wildlife #wildlifeActivism #wildlifePhotography

Wildlife Photojournalist and Animal Advocate Dalida Innes

Dalida Innes

Wildlife Photographer and Portrait Photographer

“If I could tell animal activists and conservationists something, I would say: Never give up! Once a species is gone that is a terrible loss to us all! #Boycott4Wildlife #Boycottpalmoil” #Wildlife Photographer @dainnes67

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Dalida Innes @dainnes67 specialises in #wildlifephotography and #portrait #photography. She captures rare intimate moments with animals in all of their emotional complexity. Read more about her and her incredible photos

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“I am against all supermarket brands that have deforestation in their supply chain. I am a vegan for the animals and I #boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife” Wildlife Photographer Dalida Innes @dainnes67

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My name is Dalida Innes, I am from France originally and I live in Sydney, Australia. I love wildlife, landscape, travel photography and everything between. I travel as often as I can and try to make the most of it. Encounters with nature have taken me to incredible places and I have met fantastic people. 

I am self-taught with a sincere passion for all things photographic

Adventurous spirit with camera in hand, I try to capture moments of wonder and serenity. For me, capturing images is like freezing the time and I can go back to it whenever I want. Trying to get that precise moment that your eye doesn’t have time to memorise or to remember.

I love witnessing special moments between animals

You never know what’s going to happen. Everyday is a new adventure when you’re photographing wildlife. No two days are exactly the same.

We can learn so much just from watching animals

I have always worked with animals. I just love watching them, observing their behaviour is something I am fascinated by. I have learnt so much from them and I want to share all of the beauty that I have witnessed with the world.

Buy Dalida’s photographic prints

When I was a child, I used to play with a broken camera

I dreamt that as an adult I would become a filmmaker and make animal documentaries, as I loved watching these shows as a child. Later when I started to work, initially I bought my first video camera but I quickly realised that this wasn’t for me. So instead I started doing photography and it all accelerated from there.

Never give up the fight to save wild animals!

If I could tell animal activists and conservationists something, I would say: Never give up! Once a species is gone that is a terrible loss to us all!

Always respect a wild animal’s personal space

To wildlife photographers just starting out, I would say that it’s important to respect the animals’ personal space. Don’t try and encroach on the animals too much, as they will feel uncomfortable and won’t behave naturally. Always be prepared for the unexpected, it may not happen, but if it does, be ready for it.

Morning Glory by Dalida Innes Wildlife Photography

I am against all supermarket brands that have deforestation in their supply chain

Less trees means less habitat for wild animals. Not only this, today with so much advanced research and technology there should be other ways, other methods of producing palm oil and other commodities. They have the technology to make anything they want. So I still don’t understand why they don’t just do that instead of destroying forests!

I welcome you to connect with me on social media and visit my shop to buy prints

Visit my website #Africa #ArtistProfile #Artivism #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #conservation #CreativesForCoolCreatures #MountainGorilla #Photographer #photography #portrait #Primate #TigerPantheraTigris #wildlife #wildlifeActivism #wildlifePhotography #wildlifephotography

Animal Rights Advocate and Artist Jo Frederiks

Jo Frederiks

Artist and Animal Rights Activist

Jo Frederiks is a passionate animal rights advocate, speaking through her art to create awareness and inspire change to a vegan way of life. She is a full-time practising artist, exposing the well-hidden plight of animals we enslave, exploit and needlessly use for food, clothing, entertainment and research. Working in varying mediums, Frederiks favours graphite and oil paint. She has previously studied at The Arts Academy in Brisbane, graduating with Honours.

She has had many solo, joint, and group exhibitions throughout the years, and her work is in private collections in numerous countries across the world. Her drawings are sensitive, exquisite and beautifully detailed, portraying the unique character of each individual being.

Frederiks grew up on a million-acre cattle station in central Queensland, Australia. It was this environment that not only nurtured her connection to nonhuman animals but highlighted their immense vulnerability at the hands of humankind.

Buy Jo’s art

Jo Frederiks @JoFrederiks is a passionate animal rights advocate and vegan #artivist from #Australia making provocative and haunting #art about animals endangered by meat #agriculture See more #art on my website #Boycott4Wildlife

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#Agriculture #art #Artist #ArtistProfile #Artivism #artivist #Australia #conservation #CreativesForCoolCreatures #JoFrederiks #vegan #wildlifeActivism

Wildlife Artist Szabolcs Kókay

Szabolcs Kókay

Hungarian conservationist and wildlife artist

Szabolcs Kókay @kokayart is a talented, respected and award-winning wildlife artist with a passion for animal conservation. Find out more about him and submit your #wildlife #art #artivism to Creatives 4 Cool Creatures #Boycott4Wildlife

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Szabolcs Kókay was born in Hungary in 1976, and has been interested in nature, especially birds, since childhood. Although he has been drawing for as long as he can remember, it was only later on in his life, around the age of 20, when these two interests merged. For Szabolcs, watching and sketching nature go hand in hand, so much so that he cannot imagine doing one without the other. When potraying wildlife he is trying to have a vision of the animal within its natural habitat. That’s why he travels in search of new inspirations (like Snow Leopards in Ladakh, Birds of Paradise in Papua New Guinea, Spoon-billed Sandpiper in China).

Szabolcs Kókay

After working in nature conservation, Szabolcs became a full-time artist and illustrator in 2001. He has won many international art competitions including the former British Birds ‘Bird Illustrator of the Year’ award, and Birdwatch ‘Artist of the Year’.

Study trips have taken him to various places around the world, including Trinidad, China, India, Australia, Papua New Guinea, Morocco, Uganda and Japan.

Over the years, Szabolcs’ technique when approaching painting wildlife has radically changed, as he used to work solely from photographs. He feels that the revolution in digital photography and the invention of digiscoping attributed much to this approach. He now feels lucky to have realised over time the importance of working directly from life, and in recent years he has tried to spend as much time in the field as possible.

Society Memberships

Society of Wildlife Artists

Scholarships, Awards, Prizes

2000. British Birds ‘Bird Illustrator of the Year’ PJC Award
2001-02. British Birds ‘Bird Illustrator of the Year’ 3rd place
2002. Birdwatch Artist of the Year, identification category winner
2008. Birdwatch Artist of the Year 1st prize
2010. Don Eckelberry Scholarship Award from the Society of Animal Artists
2014. Langford Press Field Sketches Award
2015. Sociedad Gaditana de Historia Natural illustration competition 2nd prize

Exhibitions

The Natural Eye 2016

Publications

  • Birds of New Guinea, Princeton University Press
  • Woodpeckers of Europe, Bruce Coleman Publishers
  • The Black Woodpeckers, Lynx Edicions
  • Le Requin, Delachaux et Niestlé Publishers
  • Protected birds of Hungary poster series, Ministry for the Environment

Buy art, puzzles, stickers and clothing by Szabolcs Kókay

#art #Artist #ArtistProfile #Artivism #Bird #conservation #CreativesForCoolCreatures #Primate #primates #SzabolcsKókay #wildlife #wildlifeActivism