“Vote the Environment” campaign uses art to inspire youth awareness about environmental issues at stake on Election Day
Ventura, CA (August 21, 2014) -- Patagonia today launched a crowdsourced art campaign inviting
artists & designers to create a collection of designs to express
why they believe the environment is the #1 issue in the upcoming
election and inspire people to vote – especially young people.
According to a Harvard University study, only 23 percent of Americans ages of 18-29 say they will definitely vote this midterm.
Patagonia worked with top graphic artists Alex Trochut, Natas Kaupas
and Eric Junker to produce three new “Vote the Environment” t-shirt
designs available at Patagonia retail stores and online today. The campaign is open for anyone to contribute their own designs – part of Patagonia’s longstanding series of “Vote the Environment” campaigns to inspire voter engagement around the environmental crisis.
“We’ve rooted our business in the environment – we want to act
responsibly, live within our means, and leave behind a planet we would
want to live in,” said Patagonia CEO Rose Marcario. “We need leaders
who will act on behalf of the future and the planet and we know art can
create a sense of pride and urgency and inspire real action for this
movement.”
The campaign is not a contest, and all submitted designs that meet
the contribution requirements will be featured in the online gallery
made available for sale as posters to spread the message. Forty percent
of any net sales go directly to the artists, and 30 percent goes to
support voter registration through HeadCount,
a non-partisan organization that uses the power of music to register
voters and promote participation in democracy. Posters may also be
turned into buttons, stickers, signs, etc. and shared virtually in
support of this broader movement.
The new “Vote the Environment” website provides
resources allowing people to register to vote in their state, gives
information on candidates scored by the League of Conservation Voters
according to environmental issues, invites artists to showcase their
work and features information about the artists. Five dollars from the
sale of these shirts in Patagonia retail stores and online goes to
HeadCount.
“We face a great crisis: climate change, extinction, destruction of
wild places,” said Lisa Pike Sheehy, Patagonia’s global director of
environmental initiatives. “That’s why we must support candidates who
push hard for clean, renewable energy, restore clean water and air and
turn away from risky, carbon-intensive fuels. We cannot afford to sit
out this election.”
While the millennial generation does not show a large interest in
voting, they consistently express passion and awareness for
environmental issues. The “Vote the Environment” designs will allow
people to display their support of environment and stress the
importance of political participation to keep it protected.
In 2012, Patagonia successfully ran a similar campaign by partnering
with the band Wilco to bring awareness to “Vote the Environment.” They
set up booths outside each concert during Wilco’s tour in order to
garner 110,000+ registered voters through HeadCount.
Visit “Vote the Environment” for more information. To read
Patagonia’s recently released Environmental and Social Initiatives book
for 2014, click here.
About Patagonia
Founded by Yvon Chouinard in 1973, Patagonia is an outdoor apparel
company based in Ventura, California. A certified B-Corporation,
Patagonia’s mission is to build the best product, cause no unnecessary
harm and use business to inspire and implement solutions to the
environmental crisis. Since 1985, Patagonia has dedicated 1 per cent of
sales each year to environmental causes. More information is available
at www.patagonia.com.
By press release
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