Cat artworks steal spotlight in Hong Kong Easter celebrations

Hong Kong has replaced the Easter Bunny with cats, featuring giant installations and murals across the city that delight visitors and residents. This taps into the booming ‘cat economy’, with a massive ginger cat greeting arrivals at Hong Kong International Airport and three inflatable felines at West Kowloon Cultural District.

A gigantic ginger cat, measuring eight metres long, seven metres wide and 3.5 metres tall, greets travellers in the arrival hall at Hong Kong International Airport. Its ears and tail move, drawing scores of selfies from visitors.

At the West Kowloon Cultural District, three inflatable marmalade felines sprawl across a lawn, delighting arts hub visitors.

In Yau Ma Tei, local artist German Li and his students reimagined Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night as a cat-themed mural. At Silvermine Bay Hotel in Mui Wo, a one-floor-tall mural depicts a three-dimensional cat sleeping belly-up. Most installations appeared in the past few days, as reported by the South China Morning Post.

These displays tap into Hong Kong’s booming ‘cat economy’, supplanting the Easter Bunny as the holiday star.

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Hongkongers crossed into Shenzhen in large numbers on the second day of the Easter holiday on Saturday, drawn by bargain-priced shopping, dining, entertainment, and new landmarks like a futuristic tech museum. Immigration statistics showed 532,023 residents had departed Hong Kong by 9pm, including many via land borders. Travellers highlighted mainland China’s broader selections and lower prices.

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Two famed water lily paintings by French Impressionist Claude Monet go on display in Hong Kong from Friday in a free exhibition highlighting East-West cultural exchange. Titled “Blooming: the Art of Garden in East and West”, the show features more than 100 exhibits from the Art Institute of Chicago, Beijing’s Palace Museum, the Palace of Versailles and the Hong Kong Museum of Art. Museum director Maria Mok Kar-wing said it reflects the museum's diverse Hong Kong identity.

Hong Kong residents flocked to Shenzhen on the first day of the Labour Day 'golden week' holiday, attracted by better restaurant service, lower costs and family-friendly attractions. Families budgeted about HK$1,000 (US$128) for a full day covering dining, dental clinics, indoor amusement parks and ice-skating rinks. Crowds packed border stations like Lok Ma Chau and Lo Wu.

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Reports of traffic accidents involving animals in Hong Kong surged from 36 cases in 2021 to 416 in 2025. Advocacy groups link the increase to pet abandonments and urban development.

A major exhibition of more than 250 sets of Han dynasty relics, with over 95 per cent shown in Hong Kong for the first time, has opened at the Hong Kong Heritage Discovery Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui. Titled “The Majestic Han: A Golden Age of Vigour and Cultural Integration”, it runs until September 20 with free admission. Development chief Bernadette Linn Hon-ho called it a “sequel” to last year’s Tang dynasty showcase.

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The Hong Kong Tourism Board will allocate 75 per cent of its resources to overseas markets this year to diversify visitor demographics and attract more overnight high spenders. Executive director Anthony Lau Chun-hon noted the difficulty in convincing day-trippers from nearby mainland Chinese cities to stay overnight. The board plans to launch a global campaign by the end of April.

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