Mr Mandela's image was displayed on a billboard in New York's Times Square, along with a birthday greeting.
Nelson Mandela spends his birthday in hospital, as people around the world honour his legacy through acts of charity.
The world is celebrating Nelson Mandela's 95th birthday as his family insist he is making "remarkable" progress in hospital.
South Africans marked the momentous milestone with acts of charity, capped by news that the former president's health was improving.
"He continues to respond positively to treatment and we are encouraged
by the progress he is making," said President Jacob Zuma, after visiting
Mr Mandela in hospital.
"We are proud to call this international icon our own as South Africans and wish him good health."
He thanked people for their support of Mr Mandela and "undying love and compassion, and for responding to a call to give the beloved figure "the biggest birthday celebration ever this year."
South Africans took to the streets in celebration of their national
hero. Biker gangs cleaned streets, volunteers planted trees and
politicians spent 67 minutes on worthy projects - to mark Mr Mandela's
67 years of public service.
Children in schools around the country started the day by singing "Happy Birthday" to Mr Mandela.
Thursday also marks 15 years since the anti-apartheid leader married his third wife Graca Machel.
The UN declared the Nobel peace laureate's birthday Mandela Day in 2010, but for many this year takes on extra poignancy.
Mr Mandela has spent the last 41 days in a Pretoria hospital in a critical but stable condition after being admitted for a recurring lung infection on June 8.
His youngest daughter told Sky News her father has been able to communicate and watch television.
"He is making remarkable progress," said Zindzi Mandela, adding that
when she visited him on Tuesday he was "watching TV with his
headphones".
"He responds very well ... with his eyes, and he nods and sometimes he lifts his hand like to shake your hand."
Granddaughter Ndileka Mandela poured soup for poor children at a
charity event and said her family had been unsure about whether her
grandfather would live to see his birthday.
"But because of the fighter that he is, he was able to fight a repressive system, and he was able, through God and everybody's prayers, to make it today," she said.
President Zuma opened low-cost housing for poor black and white
families in the Pretoria area, while Retired archbishop Desmond Tutu
helped to paint a school outside Cape Town.
US President Barack Obama also urged people to honour Mr Mandela on his
birthday "through individual and collective acts of service".
"Through our own lives, by heeding his example, we can honour the man
who showed his own people - and the world - the path to justice,
equality and freedom," Mr Obama said.
The South African government is hosting a ceremony for the symbolic
handing over of Mr Mandela's new high-tech ID card, which will be
received by Zindzi Mandela.
The event is laden with meaning in a country where apartheid was
enforced by pass books, which black citizens were forced to carry and
which limited movement to certain areas at certain times.
"On behalf of government and all the people of South Africa, we wish
Madiba a joyous 95th birthday," said Mr Zuma, using Mr Mandela's clan
name.
A group of young South African artists and designers unveiled a project
celebrating Mr Mandela's life through paintings and posters.
The group whittled down 700 posters submitted by designers from more than 70 countries, to 95 for each year of Mr Mandela's life.
A single special edition of the posters will be auctioned off to raise
money for a proposed children's hospital that will be named after Mr
Mandela, the group said.
"He carries across this concept of humanity and selflessness," said Mohammed Jogie, a co-founder of the project.
Elsewhere world leaders, pop stars and companies also pledged their support for Mr Mandela.
"I will also be giving my 67 minutes to make the world a better place, one small step at a time," said Sir Richard Branson.
In the UK, a giant portrait of Mr Mandela's face has been etched into the English countryside to celebrate his birthday.
The two-acre maze in corn crops in Birchington, near Margate, Kent, was
the idea of Karen Botha and Dawn Tilley who have spent the past five
years working on the design.
Meanwhile, 50 abandoned street children in the Philippines will get to
tour a Manila television studio and see performances by local artists.
And the Australian city of Melbourne will hold a concert featuring
local and African artists at the weekend, while a music festival later
this year in Norway will promote equality in schools.
http://news.sky.com/story/1117193/nelson-mandela-95th-birthday-marked-worldwide
South African artist John Adams works on a giant painting of Nelson Mandela
in a suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa. Mandela, an anti-apartheid
icon and Nobel peace laureate, turns 95 on Thursday, July 18. He has
been hospitalized since June 8 for a recurring lung infection -- a
legacy of the 27 years he endured in prison before becoming South
Africa's first democratically elected president. Click through the
gallery for other artistic tributes to "the world's most famous
political prisoner."
SOUTH AFRICA: A giant mosaic of Mandela made from 5,000 cups of coffee is displayed at Constitutional Hill in Johannesburg.
BRAZIL: A float by the
Porto da Pedra samba school pays tribute to Mandela as it parades at the
Sambadrome during the second night of Carnival celebrations in Rio de
Janeiro.
INDIA: Artist Sudarshan
Pattnaik works on a sand sculpture in Puri to wish Mandela a speedy
recovery. The former South African president remains in critical but
stable condition, according to officials.
NORTHERN IRELAND: A Mandela mural is displayed on a home in Northern Ireland.
SOUTH AFRICA: South African banknotes featuring Mandela are seen at an office in Johannesburg.
FRANCE: Artwork featuring Mandela over the years is on display at an exhibition in Paris.
SOUTH AFRICA: Street art expressing love for Mandela is found in Cape Town.
SOUTH AFRICA: South African banknotes featuring Mandela are seen at an office in Johannesburg.
FRANCE: Artwork featuring Mandela over the years is on display at an exhibition in Paris.
SOUTH AFRICA: Street art expressing love for Mandela is found in Cape Town.
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