Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
    Opinion
    Home / Opinion / Opinion Line

    Show must go on, even amid tariffs and tensions

    By Zhao Huanxin | China Daily | Updated: 2025-05-27 07:00
    Share
    Share - WeChat
    A comprehensive collection of Chinese bronzes from the 12th to 19th centuries is on display in The Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met) from Feb 27-Sept 28, 2025 (local time), marking a new chapter in Sino-US cultural exchanges. [Photo provided to China Daily]

     

    "The show must go on" may sound like a theatrical cliché, but in the tense arena of US-China relations it has become a quiet and resilient act of diplomacy.

    While trade tensions simmer and policy dialogue stutters, artists, curators, educators, and cultural institutions are building fragile but essential bridges between the world's two largest economies. Their work may not make headlines, but it remains indispensable.

    In a conversation hosted recently by the National Committee on US-China Relations, Alison Friedman, executive and artistic director of Carolina Performing Arts at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a veteran of two decades of cultural exchanges with China, offered a rare window into this quieter side of bilateral relations.

    "The arts," she said, "are the good news, even when there's a tremendous amount of bad news, especially domestically for the arts". Even as political sensitivities escalate and funding for cultural institutions recedes, institutions are "continuing to do things," Friedman said, "just doing them more quietly."

    It's a return, she noted, to how her own company operated in China years ago: securing permits, planning events, but staying under the radar until after the curtain fell.

    "That's exactly what we're seeing here in the US now with projects with China," she said, a situation in which the pressure to go silent increasingly originates from Washington. Friedman described the current moment as "a time of much quieter foundation-laying," so that, when the political climate eventually shifts, cultural engagement can expand without having to be "starting from scratch".

    Consider the March opening of Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100-1900 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a project years in the making with the Shanghai Museum. At a gala co-hosted by the Chinese embassy and the Washington National Opera at the Kennedy Center earlier this month, Ambassador Xie Feng emphasized that "people-to-people friendship lays the foundation for enduring relations and peace between nations", and that "it matters even more at difficult times".

    On May 9 in Boston, Chinese Consul General Chen Li attended the opening of Qi Baishi: Inspiration in Ink, a joint exhibition by the Beijing Academy of Painting and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He called it not only an artistic collaboration but a "cultural bridge".

    Friedman sees hope in younger generations still willing to cross borders, often literally. She shared the story of a student at NYU Shanghai who, struggling in Chinese class, decided to bike from Shanghai to Xi'an, learning the language by talking with fruit sellers along the way. These "transformative" and "contextual" experiences shape long-term perspectives and relationships, she said.

    Friedman highlighted the growing difficulty of securing visas for foreign artists — O and P artist visas can now cost thousands of dollars, with premium processing often required just to meet performance deadlines. The high costs are deterring participation in major festivals.

    At the NCUSCR discussion, Jessica Chen Weiss, a China scholar at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, described navigating reviews at the university's exports control office for a planned research trip to China. "I worry that we are very much going to be cutting off our ability to understand what is even happening in China," Weiss said.

    For all the gloom surrounding US-China ties, the quiet work of cultural diplomacy offers a modest but meaningful source of optimism. The show must go on — not for the sake of appearances, but for the hope that it plants.

    Most Viewed in 24 Hours
    Top
    BACK TO THE TOP
    English
    Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
    License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

    Registration Number: 130349
    FOLLOW US
    久久午夜夜伦鲁鲁片免费无码影视| 无码人妻久久久一区二区三区| 精品国产一区二区三区无码| 亚洲国产精品成人AV无码久久综合影院| 亚洲欧美日韩另类中文字幕组| 无码国内精品久久人妻麻豆按摩 | 国产做无码视频在线观看浪潮 | 午夜精品久久久久久久无码| 亚洲精品无码成人片久久| 中文成人无字幕乱码精品区 | (愛妃視頻)国产无码中文字幕| 日本中文字幕在线2020| 亚欧无码精品无码有性视频 | 国产亚洲?V无码?V男人的天堂| 亚洲精品无码久久久久久| 亚洲国产综合精品中文字幕| 欧美日韩中文国产一区发布 | 国产爆乳无码视频在线观看| 成人无码AV一区二区| 最近免费最新高清中文字幕韩国 | 中文字幕无码不卡免费视频 | 下载天堂国产AV成人无码精品网站| 日韩精品无码熟人妻视频| 在线精品无码字幕无码AV| 最近更新免费中文字幕大全| 狠狠精品干练久久久无码中文字幕| 日韩人妻无码中文字幕视频| 制服丝袜中文字幕在线| 中文字幕av无码专区第一页| 无码人妻黑人中文字幕| 中文字幕AV影片在线手机播放| 伊人蕉久中文字幕无码专区| 亚洲精品国产日韩无码AV永久免费网 | 亚洲av无码一区二区乱子伦as| 精品久久久久久无码不卡| 国产高清中文手机在线观看| 中文字幕精品一区影音先锋| 中文字幕日本高清| 日韩免费码中文在线观看 | 天堂Aⅴ无码一区二区三区 | 一本无码中文字幕在线观|