bill937ca Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 That's just ducky. :kermit: Link to comment
Martijn Meerts Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 Guess now we can put a rubber ducky on out layout to fight with Gojira, and we'll still be prototypical =) Link to comment
Bernard Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 Guess now we can put a rubber ducky on out layout to fight with Gojira, and we'll still be prototypical =) Some how a "Big Rubber Ducky" attacking Tokyo just doesn't set "fear and terror" in the hearts of people. I wonder if any children were afraid to take baths after seeing this Rubber Ducky? Aaron - Does the video tell what the Ducky was for? Link to comment
Guest ___ Posted September 18, 2009 Share Posted September 18, 2009 IDK what the video is for, Kay-chan sent it to me today. Personally while one might not fear the giant rubber ducky, let us be reminded of the carnage caused by the Stay-Puft Marshmellow Man did to 55 CPW, up in NYC back in '84. No one thought he'd toast the top end of Link to comment
Guest ___ Posted September 19, 2009 Share Posted September 19, 2009 San-Fran Chronicle There are moments during the long watch of the most avid newshound, brief though they may be, when the pain of injustice, the horrors of war and the spectacle of self-serving, deceitful political chicanery recede from consciousness - if not, unfortunately, from the headlines - just long enough for the savoring of a little unexpected, unabashed joy. The Dutch artist's giant So it is that, in some European news media, mirth-provoking photos have been popping up in the past few days of an object - a big object - that has quickly become the signature attraction of "Loire Estuary 2007," an outdoor, contemporary-art exhibition in France featuring works by 30 artists from around the world. Their creations have been installed along a 40-mile corridor at the mouth of the Loire River, stretching from Saint-Nazaire, on France's Atlantic coast, to Nantes, which lies inland. The smile-provoking concoction that's responsible for this little shot of joy in a global-warming-heated summer, against a backdrop of war chaos and political cant, is a giant rubber duckie created by the Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman. After wrestling with some air-inflating problems, his 105-foot-tall, 85-foot-wide "Rubber Duck" finally took to the sea (that is, to the estuary) last weekend - and that's no canard. The art zone covers a 40-mile stretch of the estuary In theory, no one should be able to say exactly where the giant bird may be found at any given time in the waters of the art-exhibition zone, since, after all, it floats. But how to miss seeing a giant duck that is, the region's newspaper, Ouest France, notes, like a "poem...or rather a fable," that of the duck "who wanted to be bigger than an elephant"? Never mind that some visitors passing through the art zone on sightseeing vessels have not been able to see some of the participating artists' site-specific creations because of obstructive trees and foliage. Jean Blaise, the director of "Loire Estuary 2007," points out that it will be "up to the public to go and find it" - Hofman's oversize duck. With this adventure in mind, he says: "A duck hunt has been organized - unintentionally." Describing viewers' reactions to his work, artist Hofman writes on his personal Web site: "A yellow spot on the horizon slowly approaches the coast. People...watch in amazement as a giant, yellow, rubber duck approaches. The spectators are greeted by the duck, which slowly nods its head. The 'Rubber Duck' knows no frontiers; it doesn't discriminate...and doesn't have a political connotation." It has "healing properties," Hofman observes. He gushes: "The 'Rubber Duck' is soft, friendly and suitable for all ages!" For Hofman, his monumental creation has "healing properties" Since "Loire Estuary 2007" opened, on June 1, some 240,000 visitors have trekked through the Nantes-Saint-Nazaire corridor in search of the artworks on view. The event will run through September 1. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/worldviews/detail?blogid=15&entry_id=18438 Link to comment
disturbman Posted September 19, 2009 Share Posted September 19, 2009 He is quite the voyageur this little rubber duckie... From France to Japan... I wonder if you can ride him on the oceans. Link to comment
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