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The world’s largest ice festival features massive, stunning sculptures. See pics

Associated Press, Harbin | By
Jan 06, 2018 03:48 PM IST

The Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival in China is known for elaborate and colourfully lit ice sculptures featuring animals, cartoon characters and landmarks.

Ice sculptures of Moscow’s Red Square and Bangkok’s Temple of the Emerald Buddha are among landmarks featured in the world’s largest ice festival. The Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival in the frigid northeastern Chinese city is known for massive, elaborate and colourfully lit ice sculptures featuring animals, cartoon characters and landmarks.

Visitors look at ice sculptures on the opening day of the annual Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival.(AFP)
Visitors look at ice sculptures on the opening day of the annual Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival.(AFP)

People visit illuminated ice sculptures at the Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival in Harbin, Heilongjiang province, China. (Reuters)
People visit illuminated ice sculptures at the Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival in Harbin, Heilongjiang province, China. (Reuters)

Some of this year’s displays center on Chinese President Xi Jinping’s major foreign policy and trade initiative, the One Belt One Road, an ambitious plan to link Asia and Europe with a network of railways, ports and other infrastructure. Ice sculpture artist Han Zhenkun designed his work based on the historic Silk Road. “Back then, through the Silk Road, exquisite art works from China like potteries were transported by camels and horses to the Western world,” Han said.

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The festival, featuring dozens of huge ice sculptures lit up by coloured lights, attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. (AFP)
The festival, featuring dozens of huge ice sculptures lit up by coloured lights, attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. (AFP)
Visitors walk past an ice sculpture on the opening day of the annual Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival. (AFP)
Visitors walk past an ice sculpture on the opening day of the annual Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival. (AFP)
Workers carve a snow sculpture before the opening of the festival. (AFP)
Workers carve a snow sculpture before the opening of the festival. (AFP)

Main activities start this week and the festival runs through late February, with heavy crowds expected during Lunar New Year celebrations, Feb. 15-23. Temperatures at this time of the year can dip below zero Fahrenheit (minus 18 Celsius). Last year’s festival drew 18 million visitors and 28.7 billion yuan ($4.4 billion) in tourism revenue for Harbin, data from the city’s tourism bureau showed.

One park, the Harbin Ice-Snow World, features more than 2,000 ice sculptures made from 180,000 cubic meters (240,000 cubic yards) of ice collected from the Songhua River by nearly a thousand workers. In the evening, sculptures are lit with colourful lights. In addition to ice sculpture competitions, the festival also includes winter swimming, ice hockey, skiing and snow biking. “Art has no borders,” Han said. “It’s an abstract language. We communicate with our works in this international competition. It means a lot.”

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