Before a child writes a speech, they draw a picture. Before they draft a petition, they pick up a crayon. Art is the first language of advocacy — and Prakritii Foundation has been using it deliberately, powerfully, and with extraordinary results.
Our Awareness Drawings initiative invites students from schools and communities to express their vision of the environment — what it looks like today, what it could look like tomorrow, and what they fear it might become if nothing changes. The results have been stunning, moving, and deeply hopeful.
Why Art for Environmental Awareness?
Words reach minds. Images reach hearts. And in a country as diverse as India — across languages, literacies, and geographies — a drawing communicates what a pamphlet cannot.
Children who participate in awareness drawing activities don't just create art. They process what they know about the environment, confront what worries them, and articulate what they want to protect. The act of drawing is itself an act of environmental engagement — it forces a child to observe, reflect, and express.
When those drawings are shared in schools, communities, and online, they become tools of collective awareness. A child's drawing of a dying river carries more emotional weight than any statistic about water pollution.
"Give a child a brush and a question about the environment, and they will show you exactly what is at stake." — Prakritii Foundation
The Prize-Winning Artwork
Our awareness drawing competitions are judged on creativity, environmental relevance, and emotional impact. Here are some of the prize-winning works that moved our judges — and moved us.
More Voices, More Visions
Beyond the prize winners, hundreds of students submitted drawings that reflected their individual relationship with the natural world. Forests, rivers, animals, the sky — each child brought a unique perspective shaped by where they live, what they've seen, and what they love.
What the Drawings Tell Us
When you look at hundreds of student drawings about the environment, patterns emerge. The themes children return to again and again reveal what resonates most with them:
- Trees and forests — overwhelmingly the most drawn subject; children understand instinctively that trees are central to life
- Before and after — many drawings contrast a green, vibrant world with a polluted, grey one — a visual argument for conservation
- Animals in danger — birds, deer, and fish appear frequently, often shown in peril from human activity
- Children as heroes — a recurring image: a child planting a tree, cleaning a river, or standing between a factory and a forest
- The sun and clean sky — hope is always present; even the darkest drawings include a bright sky somewhere
These themes are not taught. They emerge from what children observe in their own environments and from the values their communities pass down. They are a mirror of ecological consciousness — and they are more sophisticated than most adults give children credit for.
Art That Travels Beyond the Classroom
The drawings don't stay on classroom walls. Prakritii Foundation uses student artwork across our campaigns — on social media, in event backdrops, in awareness materials distributed at our drives. When a child sees their drawing being used to spread a message, it transforms their relationship to the cause.
They are no longer passive recipients of environmental education. They are contributors, creators, and advocates. That shift in identity — from student to changemaker — is one of the most powerful outcomes of this initiative.
Bringing This to Your School
Prakritii Foundation's awareness drawing initiative is available to schools, colleges, and community organisations across India. We provide the theme, the structure, and the recognition — students provide the art.
If you're an educator, a school administrator, or a parent who wants to bring this initiative to your community, we'd love to hear from you. Together, we can turn every school wall into a gallery for the planet.
Bring Art & Awareness to Your School
Support our student-led awareness programs or partner with us to host a drawing initiative in your community.