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    Lighting up the night

    FUZHOU, CHINA (AFP) – Dozens of giant lanterns in the shape of mythical creatures, flowers and legendary characters light up the night sky in southern China – a dreamlike spectacle to mark the upcoming Lunar New Year holidays.

    As night falls in the southern Chinese city of Fuzhou, lanterns – some of them 10 metres high – transform Hongguang Lake Park into a fantastical land of orange dragons, majestic sailboats, fish with sparkling turquoise scales and goddesses with angelic faces.

    “Aren’t these lanterns cool?” Lei Haoxin, a 17-year-old tourist wrapped up in a parka due to the cool weather, said.

    “Super beautiful, right? We found the place thanks to Douyin,” he explained, referring to China’s version of TikTok.

    “Usually, when we spot something interesting via the app, we try to go there,” he explained.

    Fuzhou is the capital of Fujian province, known throughout China for keeping many traditional New Year events alive.

    ABOVE & BELOW: Photos above shows visitors enjoying light installations marking the Lunar New Year of 2025 in Huaian, east China’s Anhui province. PHOTO: AFP
    PHOTO: AFP
    People walk past a tree decorated with lanterns. PHOTO: AFP
    A woman poses for photos under a monkey king installation. PHOTO: AFP
    ABOVE & BELOW: People look at a dragon-shaped lantern at a lantern fair in Chongqing; and a visitor posing with light installations of swans. PHOTO: AFP
    PHOTO: AFP
    ABOVE & BELOW: A woman hangs decorations for Lunar New Year at her stall in Hong Kong; and a Chinese calligrapher writes good fortune messages for the Lunar New Year of the Snake at his shop in Hong Kong. PHOTO: AFP
    PHOTO: AFP

    Many lanterns are drawn from traditional folklore – one features the likeness of Mazu, a sea deity popular across southern China, and among the diaspora across Southeast Asia.

    “This lantern is exquisitely made and looks even better than in the pictures,” tourist Luo Meiling told AFP.

    Also making an appearance is the mythical Monkey King, Sun Wukong, from the Chinese literary classic Journey to the West. Lanterns date back to a thousand-year-old tradition in China and are a common sight in the country, especially around the Lunar New Year, when millions flock to public spaces to take in their bright lights and vivid colours.

    And with Chinese people around the world set to herald in the Year of the Snake on January 29, artistic lantern displays in all shapes and sizes have sprung up in towns and cities across the vast nation. “We feel more of the New Year atmosphere in recent years,” Qi, a 42-year old resident of Fuzhou, who visited the park with her young son, told AFP.

    “Mentalities are changing and people are making their children do more outdoor activities now,” she explained.

    “Many families come here to enjoy the fireworks and the entertainment.”

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