Photo of the Day: Falling Chicken

Our Photo of the Day series this week shares the best shots from the Falling Stars Photo Challenge.

On August 8th this year, Ukranian model @ramos_catherine posted a staged photo of herself falling out of a private jet to Instagram. Fast forward to today, and the Falling Stars Photo Challenge has found its way to China.

Winner winner, chicken dinner. Some people take their Falling Stars Photo Challenge more seriously than others. Some take it into the gaming sphere. In this image, a gamer named Wang Chunpeng has made a 3D rendition of his PUBG character falling out of a Jeep.

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Wuzhen Theatre Festival Brings Fringe-Style Performances to an Ancient Canal Town

For the past week, a small town in eastern China criss-crossed by canals and lined with traditional old buildings as been at the center of the country’s performing arts scene. While there are bigger, more commercial events held regularly all over China, the theater festival that takes place every October in Wuzhen, around two hours from Shanghai, is one of the most vibrant gatherings of its kind in the country.

Founded in 2012 by Chinese theater luminaries Stan Lai, Meng Jinghui, and Huang Lei together with Chen Xianghong, the Wuzhen Theatre Festival hosts dozens of performances over ten days.

There are major stage productions from both Chinese and international directors — this year’s schedule includes a rendition of Dancer in the Dark by Hamburg’s Thalia Theater, Romanian group Radu Stanca National Theatre’s version of Waiting for Godot, and a startling interpretation of the Lao She-penned classic Tea House helmed by Meng. But the festival is also notable for its attempts to build a Edinburgh Fringe-like atmosphere by inviting in students and amateur troupes to put on shows beside its picturesque canals and alleyways. As the official slogan has it, “all of Wuzhen’s a stage”.

It can make for a mixed bag of performances with everything from mime and crosstalk (Chinese wordplay stand-up) duos to, well, this:

But whatever you end up seeing, the festival is always an entertaining, atmospheric experience. Here are some photo highlights from RADII’s visit to the watertown last weekend (click the thumbnails for larger images):

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Photo of the Day: Fall Recipe

Our Photo of the Day series this week shares the best shots from the Falling Stars Photo Challenge.

On August 8th this year, Ukranian model @ramos_catherine posted a staged photo of herself falling out of a private jet to Instagram. Fast forward to today, and the Falling Stars Photo Challenge has found its way to China.

In this shot a lady is shown from her, ahem, trip to the market.

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Photo of the Day: The Art of Falling

Our Photo of the Day series this week shares the best shots from the Falling Stars Photo Challenge.

On August 8th this year, Ukranian model @ramos_catherine posted a staged photo of herself falling out of a private jet to Instagram. Fast forward to today, and the Falling Stars Photo Challenge has found its way to China.

In this shot, an art student from Sichuan Normal University falls down. For the whole set of art students falling in Sichuan Normal University, be sure to check out Xiao Jin’s Weibo page. She’s an artist and a lecturer at the university so hopefully they didn’t lose any credits for this.

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Photo of the Day: Someone Call an Ambu- … Oh

Our Photo of the Day series this week shares the best shots from the Falling Stars Photo Challenge.

On August 8th this year, Ukranian model @ramos_catherine posted a staged photo of herself falling out of a private jet to Instagram. Fast forward to today, and the Falling Stars Photo Challenge has found its way to China.

In this shot, a paramedic from Shanghai Sixth People’s Hospital falls from his ambulance.

Here’s another shot from the same hospital’s operating room (slow day, guys?):

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Photo of the Day: Late Night Transit

Our Photo of the Day series this week shares street shots from photographer Sean Foley

RADII: How long does it usually take for you to edit one of these shots?

It can take me anywhere from 10 minutes to 3-4 hours to finish editing a photo. For this one I think it took me around 30 minutes. These are public mini busses which you can find everywhere in Hong Kong.

Sean Foley is an Australian photographer based in Hong Kong. Although he’s only been in photography for less than a year, he’s already amassed more than 14,000 followers on Instagram. He draws inspiration from other photographers, film, literature, music and also from the city itself.

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