search-icon
Winners of the 2019 Science Without Borders® Challenge!

The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation is excited to announce the winners of the Science Without Borders® Challenge! The Challenge is the Foundation’s annual international art competition designed to engage students in ocean conservation through art. This year’s theme was Connected Ocean: No Barriers, No Boundaries, and No Borders, and students were asked to create a piece of artwork that shows how the oceans are connected.

Lesya Antoshkina from Ukraine is the winner of the high school category for her stunning artwork “The Bike We Ride,” which beat out fierce competition to take first place. Antoshkina lives in a small town near the sea of Azov. She loves the sea and said that she wants “to show nature’s problems through art.” With her piece, she aimed to convey that the Earth works “as one big mechanism,” and that as people, “we control the Earth, and we have to look after it.”

Second place in the high school category of the 2019 Science Without Borders® Challenge went to Chengkun Xu from China for “Unity,” and third place went to Tianyi Jia of New Jersey for “Water of Gaea.”

High School Winners:

FIRST PLACE: “The Bike We Ride” by Lesya Antoshkina, Age 16, Ukraine
SECOND PLACE: “Unity” by Chengkun Xu, Age 17, China
THIRD PLACE: “Water of Gaea” by Tianyi Jia, Age 16, New Jersey, USA

The winner in the middle school category is Zeno Park from New Jersey, who at only 12 years old created the winning entry “The Place Where Fish are Free to Roam.” With his imaginative piece of artwork, Park said he wanted to show that in the ocean, organisms are “free to go where ever they wish” but that life in his underwater islands is “heavily dependent upon the condition of their habitat.” Park said he was inspired to create this artwork “because the world is becoming polluted and ravaged. We might be forced to live in a difficult situation if we do not change our actions.”

Benedict Tan Kuok Hau from Malaysia took home second place in the middle school category with his piece “The Bigger Picture,” while Worachet Phanthura from Thailand won third for his artwork “The Ocean Life.”

Middle School Winners:

FIRST PLACE: “The Place Where Fish are Free to Roam” by Zeno Park, Age 12, New Jersey, USA
SECOND PLACE: “The Bigger Picture” by Benedict Tan Kuok Hau, Age 13, Malaysia
THIRD PLACE: “The Ocean Life” by Worachet Phanthura, Age 14, Thailand

Each of the first-place winners will receive $500 scholarships from the Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation to celebrate their achievement and help them continue to explore the connection between science and the environment through art.

Our judges were impressed by the sheer number and high caliber of entries submitted this year. We received over 350 pieces of artwork for the 2019 Science Without Borders® Challenge from 30 different countries around the world, including Armenia, Norway, Saint Lucia, South Africa, and Thailand.  

Through this competition, the Living Oceans Foundation hopes to promote public awareness of the need to preserve, protect, and restore the world’s oceans and to inspire many students to conserve and protect coral reefs around the world. Each year, students send in artwork that reflects the issues they are most interested and passionate about. Amy Heemsoth, Director of Education at the Living Oceans Foundation said that “this year, more than any other, students seemed to express through their art and written descriptions that they are concerned about the health of our planet. It gives me hope that youth from all over the world are aware of issues that negatively impact our planet and that they want to preserve it for generations to come.”    

To learn more about the Science Without Borders® Challenge, visit: www.lof.org/SWBChallenge 

Related Posts

Introducing Our New Website: A Fresh Look for the Foundation’s Future

As we celebrate the Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation’s 25th anniversary, we are proud to unveil our newly redesigned website—a modern home for our science, conservation work, and educational programs. This launch marks an important moment for the Foundation as we honor our long history and look toward the future of ocean conservation.

For more than two decades, the Foundation has worked tirelessly to improve the health of our living oceans. We have advanced ocean science, led one of the largest coral reef research missions in history, restored mangrove forests with local communities, created award-winning education programs, and shared the wonders of the ocean with people around the world. Our new website reflects the organization we are today—focused on conserving coral reefs, restoring mangrove forests, and improving ocean literacy—while still highlighting the legacy of work that brought us here.

The redesigned site…

Read More

Connecting People, Art, and Oceans: Championing Conservation at the 2025 IUCN Congress

The IUCN World Conservation Congress brings together thousands of leaders and decision-makers from governments, non-profit organizations, civil society, Indigenous groups, and the private sector to shape global conservation policy and action. This influential gathering serves as a platform to share knowledge, build partnerships, and advance initiatives that protect our planet’s biodiversity.

As a member of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation was honored to take part in the Congress, joining a global community of leaders, organizations, and changemakers committed to protecting nature and advancing sustainable futures.

Read More
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.  You can view our complete Privacy Policy here.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Most of our cookies are used to improve website security and reduce spam. These cookies should be enabled at all times. They also enable us to save your preferences for cookie settings.

3rd Party Cookies

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages. Keeping this cookie enabled helps us to improve our website.