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In 2005, hikers trekking through the Piedmont region of Northern Italy stumbled upon something that looked like it had glitched out of a cartoon and landed on a mountain. This was “Hase”, a 200-foot-long, 20-foot-thick pink rabbit created by the Viennese art collective Gelitin. The “story” isn’t just that it was big; itโ€™s that it was designed to be a living, dying organism. The artists spent five years coordinating with local Italian grandmothers to hand-knit the entire exterior out of pink wool, filling the inside with tons of straw. They didn’t want a statue you just looked at; they wanted a giant you could “infest.” Visitors were encouraged to climb its massive, noodle-like limbsโ€”which bear an uncanny resemblance to Jax from The Amazing Digital Circusโ€”and fall asleep on its soft, knitted belly.

The “dangerous reason” the video hints at is the art of biodegradation. The artists didn’t want the bunny to last forever; they wanted it to be “eaten” by the mountain. They described the experience as feeling like a tiny parasite crawling over a massive, fallen creature. Because it was made of wool and straw, nature took its course immediately. Over the decades, the vibrant “Jax-pink” faded to a sickly grey, the straw began to rot, and the local wildlife began to nest inside its “wounds.” By 2016, the bunny had almost completely decomposed, leaving behind a dark, flattened silhouette on the grassโ€”a “crime scene” of a cartoon giant that finally became part of the soil. It serves as a surreal reminder that even the biggest, brightest things eventually get swallowed by time.

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#GiantPinkBunny #Hase #Gelitin #AmazingCircus #JaxTADC #TheAmazingDigitalCircus #ItalyExploration #abandonedplaces #SurrealArt #CollettoFava #artinstallations #jax

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