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BEIJING, Nov. 3 -- Three designers, who lost out in a
competition to design a logo for Beijing's Palace Museum, have taken the museum
to court.
 Logo of the Palace Museum
| Zhu Yanyue from Anhui, Hong
Qingqi from Fujian, and Xiang Baiping from Shaanxi are suing for a combined
total of 130,000 yuan (US$16,100). They all say the Palace Museum's new logo
bears an uncanny resemblance to their own designs, rejected by the museum a year
ago.
Sources with the Palace Museum and the credited logo
designer, the Beijing Ideal Design Art Company, deny the charges.
The defendants say the logo, released in July, was
designed independently and does not use any element of work by the three
plaintiffs.
Beijing No 2 Intermediate People's Court held the
first hearing on Tuesday, no judgment has yet been made.
Last year, the Palace Museum offered a first prize of
nearly US$10,000 in a competition to design an eye-catching emblem.
A year later, the museum announced that none of the
2,800 designs entered met its requirements and employed the Ideal Company to
take over the task.
The logo is based on the Chinese character gong,
which means palace.
According to Zhu Yanyue, the logo he entered in the
competition was also based on gong. "The logo was similar to my design," he
said.
Zhu claims that, since the Palace Museum entrusted
the Ideal Company to design the logo after receiving his work, designers from
the company plagiarized his work.
Zhu, with the other two plaintiffs, claims the logo
violates copyright, and has demanded the court order the Palace Museum to stop
using the logo and make a public apology.
Sources with the Palace Museum said that the
accusations were groundless. "The Chinese character of gong is in the public
domain," a lawyer for the museum said.
The Palace Museum and the Ideal Company also deny
logos entered in the competition were passed to the design company.
The Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City,
was built in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) from 1406 to 1420. Covering an area of
720,000 square metres, it served as the dwelling for emperors until 1924.
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(Source: China Daily)
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