In the years leading up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Fuwa (福娃, “dolls of good fortune”), the official Olympic mascots, were everywhere: on billboards, in TV ads, made into stuffed toys, and erected as mini-statues in malls and airports all across the country. Since then, hyper-cute anthropomorphic mascots designed through public contests have become all the rage.

Exhibit A: Tian Tian (天天)
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A TianTian poster in the immigration line at Shanghai Pudong.

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TianTian on a billboard near Shanghai Pudong airport。

Tian Tian (天天, “Everyday”) is the official mascot of the “Sunny Border” branding campaign, a joint effort between several governmental departments to give the Chinese border control a friendlier facelift. In posters around immigration areas (and in billboards near airports), Tian Tian greets visitors and promises them a “friendly, efficient, and professional” experience. In a press release promoting the campaign during its 2012 launch, Tian Tian was highlighted as being a hit with kids.

Exhibit B: Chang Chang (畅畅)
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A Chang Chang toy poses with fan letters and next to a safety sign normally posted near the track that reads “For your personal safety and convenience, please don’t loiter here during high traffic areas.” (Image from SHMetro.)
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A detailed introduction to Chang Chang’s design concept. (Image from SHMetro.)
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Chang Chang stars in a video PSA about public safety that loops in Shanghai metro stations. (Image from SHMetro.)

Chang Chang (畅畅) was selected as the official mascot of the Shanghai metro following a 3 month contest in 2009. You’ll spot him in signs and videos around Shanghai’s metro stations encouraging good behavior or issuing warnings, as well as in special merchandising booths in popular stations.

Tian Tian and Chang Chang are part of a growing bestiary of mascots for all kinds of faceless infrastructure. In my travels, I’ve spotted them for fire departments, banks, and a huge number of public spaces such as malls and airports. They seem to be primarily intended for display in the physical environment—as statues, characters in PSAs, merchandise, and signs and banners—rather than on websites or in social media.

In addition to being great for merchandising and photo opportunities, these mascots are also often used to encourage and model “civilized” (文明) behavior. The videos and signs they star in are part of a series of nationwide awareness campaigns to model “civil” behavior” and spread new norms about acceptable public behavior; specifically targeting newly-urbanized migrants learning to share urban public spaces for the first time. The mascots advocating these norms—don’t stand too close to the train tracks, do conserve tap water, don’t smoke indoors, do stand in orderly lines—increase the visual appeal and friendliness of these mandates, especially to the younger generation. These mascots represent not only an interesting part of China’s contemporary visual language, but also a soft mechanism (or accessory) for social regulation.

We’ll be keeping my eye out for these in the future: email us your favorites and we’ll feature them below!

Our collection so far
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The hand-themed mascots of Hunter City Mall in Guiyang.

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The Tao Doll appears on a sign at a Taobao corporate building in Hangzhou, asking employees not to smoke in the bathroom. The slogan reads: “Care for yourself and others: start from smoking civilly.”
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Shenzhen Bao An airport’s mascot is a stingray with a WeChat QR code on its belly. (Screenshot from szairport.com)

written by Christina Xu, of 88Bar. see more.

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