Paper mache pandas land in Hong Kong

June 11, 2014 | 10:14
(0) user say
An army of paper mache pandas swarmed the arrivals hall at Hong Kong airport on Monday as part of a charity campaign to promote conservation of the endangered bears.


French artist Paulo Grangeon poses with some of his 1,600 paper-mache pandas at Hong Kong's international airport on June 9, 2014 as part of their first appearance in the city. (AFP/Philippe Lopez)

HONG KONG: An army of paper mache pandas swarmed the arrivals hall at Hong Kong airport on Monday as part of a charity campaign to promote conservation of the endangered bears.

The display of 1,600 paper mache pandas at the airport was the first of a series of events planned across the city, as part of a month-long "1,600 Pandas World Tour" campaign.

Designed by French sculptor Paulo Grangeon, the panda installation has already been displayed in other cities including Berlin, Paris and Taipei, before reaching Hong Kong, home to several of the bears.

"Themed around pandas' state of endangerment, the army of 1,600 paper mache pandas shines a spotlight on conservation and sustainable development," a press statement issued by PMQ, one of the organisers, said.

Organisers say the city will see "flash mobs of pandas" descend on various Hong Kong landmarks including Victoria Harbour, the Shatin racecourse and the city's trams during the campaign.

Videos and pictures of the artwork flooded social networking sites in Hong Kong following the start of the exhibition, including a clip created by a local airline showing paper pandas sitting on board a flight to symbolise their "arrival".

According to environmentalist group WWF, which uses the bear as its logo, there are only about 1,600 giant pandas left in the wild, making it an endangered species.

AFP

What the stars mean:

★ Poor ★ ★ Promising ★★★ Good ★★★★ Very good ★★★★★ Exceptional