CIMASUB 2022 photo exhibition underway at the Aquarium
This morning, Esther Irigaray and David Sánchez, directors of the Aquarium and Cimasub, respectively, presented the new CIMASUB 2022 photography exhibition, which will be open until 27 November at the Aquarium. It will include the best photographs submitted to this year's CIMASUB. There are 24 enlargements of underwater photographs in which we will see the beauty of nature and the cruelty of man's attitude towards it, together in the same exhibition. Of the nearly 300 photographs submitted from all over the world, the 24 best are on display, including those of this year's winners Luc Rooman (Belgium), Martin Broen (United States), Tom Shesinger (Israel), Plamena Mileva (Bulgaria), Aldo Gustavo Galante (Argentina), Iñaki Alcalde (Gipuzkoa), among others.
At a time of special importance for the future of humanity in which time is already running against us, with the slogan "Now or never", CIMASUB launches a desperate cry for us to take immediate action to change our way of thinking and our habits. The aim is to raise awareness of the real situation of the oceans and the problems that invade them without neglecting the wonders hidden in the seabed, many of them still undiscovered.
CIMASUB, the Donostia-San Sebastián International Underwater Film Series, returns for its 46th edition, bringing together in the capital of underwater cinema numerous fans of the underwater world and photographers and videographers from all over the planet, who, driven by their passion for the sea, all contribute together to show both the beauty of the oceans and their degradation, placing special emphasis on the pressure that we humans exert on an environment that is vital for life as a whole.
The screenings at the Teatro Principal, with free admission (box office open only in the evenings from 17h.), on the 24th, 25th and 26th of November, from 19:00 to 20:50h. include a total of 32 short films and 5 documentaries that will take us to underwater paradises all over the planet and will show us the harshness of the suffering that we are causing to our seas.
This morning, Esther Irigaray and David Sánchez, directors of the Aquarium and Cimasub, respectively, presented the new CIMASUB 2022 photography exhibition, which will be open until 27 November at the Aquarium. It will include the best photographs submitted to this year's CIMASUB. There are 24 enlargements of underwater photographs in which we will see the beauty of nature and the cruelty of man's attitude towards it, together in the same exhibition. Of the nearly 300 photographs submitted from all over the world, the 24 best are on display, including those of this year's winners Luc Rooman (Belgium), Martin Broen (United States), Tom Shesinger (Israel), Plamena Mileva (Bulgaria), Aldo Gustavo Galante (Argentina), Iñaki Alcalde (Gipuzkoa), among others.
At a time of special importance for the future of humanity in which time is already running against us, with the slogan "Now or never", CIMASUB launches a desperate cry for us to take immediate action to change our way of thinking and our habits. The aim is to raise awareness of the real situation of the oceans and the problems that invade them without neglecting the wonders hidden in the seabed, many of them still undiscovered.
CIMASUB, the Donostia-San Sebastián International Underwater Film Series, returns for its 46th edition, bringing together in the capital of underwater cinema numerous fans of the underwater world and photographers and videographers from all over the planet, who, driven by their passion for the sea, all contribute together to show both the beauty of the oceans and their degradation, placing special emphasis on the pressure that we humans exert on an environment that is vital for life as a whole.
The screenings at the Teatro Principal, with free admission (box office open only in the evenings from 17h.), on the 24th, 25th and 26th of November, from 19:00 to 20:50h. include a total of 32 short films and 5 documentaries that will take us to underwater paradises all over the planet and will show us the harshness of the suffering that we are causing to our seas.
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