Google – AFP, 27 August 2013
![]() |
A boat made
to look like a roasted duck on the Huangpu River
in Shanghai on August 27, 2013
(AFP, Peter Parks)
|
SHANGHAI —
Shanghai has served up a "roasted" version of a Dutch artist's giant
yellow duck, complete with drumsticks and crispy brown skin.
Florentijn
Hofman's Rubber Duck installation gained rave reviews when a 16.5 metre-tall
(54-feet) version arrived in Hong Kong this summer.
Hundreds of
thousands of people viewed it against the backdrop of the skyscrapers that line
the city's Victoria Harbour.
Not to be
outdone, Shanghai -- which is vying with Hong Kong to be China's financial
capital -- has unveiled its own version on the Huangpu River, which forms its
waterfront Bund district.
"The
design process took place during Shanghai's scorching hot summer days, so we
just thought: 'Let's roast it'," designer Han Beishi told AFP.
![]() |
The
16.5-metre-tall inflatable Rubber Duck
art installation at Hong Kong's Victoria
Harbour on May 2, 2013 (AFP, Philippe
Lopez)
|
Shanghai's
duck is actually a working ferry boat which state media reported Tuesday will
carry passengers and host cultural performances including poetry reading.
The duck's
head, at the bow, is yellow, but reversed and looking back towards its body
which is made of papier mache, with jutting drumsticks and cooked wings.
Several
Chinese cities rushed to display versions of Hofman's Rubber Duck -- which has
been making appearances around the world since 2007 -- leading the official
People's Daily newspaper to criticise the flock of copycats.
But the
Huangpu river has made more headlines this year for a pollution scandal which
saw more than 10,000 dead pigs drift down it in March, discarded by farmers
upstream.
Han said he
floated the idea of making a pig but city fathers were not amused.
"It
was my first choice, but the organisers had some concerns and the idea was
dropped," he said.


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