Home>News Center>Life
             
     

    A feast for the eyes this holiday
    (China Daily)
    Updated: 2005-02-03 08:47

    Art lovers in Beijing are set to enjoy the upcoming Spring Festival with an exhibition of 90 Chinese cultural relics that have been ranked "national treasures."

    The artefacts on display at the exhibition, which is on at the National Museum of China until March 31, include the best of relics unearthed in the 3,600-year-old Sanxingdui Ruins and 3,200-year-old Jinsha Ruins in Southwest China's Sichuan Province.

    Some of the items were used by Emperor Kangxi (1662-1722 in reign) including a delicate calculator and a globe, and ink paintings collected by the Palace Museum, Shanghai Museum and Nanjing Museum are also included at the show.

    They are chosen from four exhibitions that travelled to Paris between 2003 and 2004: "The Shu Kingdom," "The Confucius," "Holy Mountains" and "Emperor Kangxi."

    Each has been a great success with about 1 million visitors passing through the display at the Paris City Hall, the Musee National des Arts Asiatiques-Guimet, the Versailles Palace Museum and the Grand Palace Museum, said Dong Baohua, deputy director of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, which organized the shows.

    "The show at the Guimet, called 'The Confucius,' attracted a record number of visitors in the history of the museum, which opened to the public in 1882," he noted.

    The exhibition in Beijing, a retrospect of the Parisian shows, is divided into four sections.

    The famous bronze mask with protruding eyes, unearthed at the Sanxingdui Ruins in 1986, is among the 29 bronze, gold, jade and ivory artifacts included in the first section about the Shu Kingdom.

    The kingdom allegedly existed for more than a millennium before the 3rd century BC in today's Sichuan.

    It is widely speculated that the mask represented the magical power of Chan Cong, who was in legends the first King of Shu, and also showed the adoration for the sun by ancient residents in the misty, mountainous province.

    The second section tells of the life of Confucius (551-479 BC), and how his philosophical thinking, which later developed into Confucianism, has evolved throughout the history and dominated the Chinese's ideological world until challenged by Western philosophies in the late 19th century.

    It features the most important relics in the collection of the Shandong Museum and the municipal museum of Qufu, Shandong, where Confucius was born and where his descendants have lived to date.

    It includes portraits of Confucius, documents of his teachings, bronzes that were used as ritual vessels at his time, bronze chimes, books, paintings and sculptures that displayed the development of his philosophy in the more than two millenniums after him.

    The third section, entitled "Holy Mountains," tells of the evolvement of Chinese landscape painting from its origin in the 3rd century to its breakthroughs in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).

    It is especially worth a visit for those interested in Chinese ink paintings because of the debut of most of the 19 fragile pieces, which are highly valued in the art community and known to almost all Chinese art lovers.

    They include the 13-metre-long scroll "Pines and Cypresses" by Zhu Da (1626-1704) and the "Endless Mountains and Rivers" by monk artist Kun Can (1612-73), which are in the collection of the Shanghai Museum; the 9-metre-long "Landscape of Yangtze River" by Wu Wei (1459-1508) in the collection of the Palace Museum; and masterpieces by such important artists as Ni Zan (1301-74), Shen Zhou (1427-1509) and Wang Shimin (1592-1680).

    The fourth section, "Kangxi Emperor" is interesting as it includes swords, guns, ceramics, mathematics books and items of 17th-century cutting edge technologies - a globe and a calculator.

    The globe placed in the emperor's study much resembles a modern one. On it one can find major continents on the earth, navigational courses in parts of the Pacific, and sites marked with names such as "Australia," "New Guinea" and "The Great Wall."

    The bar-shaped copper calculator has on its surface 12 glass plates, which represent 12 digits. One can make calculations with it when rotating a copper handle.

    Meanwhile the National Art Museum of China is to hold an exhibition of Renaissance and Baroque art, on loan from the national collection in France, from February 5 to 20.

    The French Government bought the 111 works from private collections in 2003, through a sponsorship of 11 million euros (US$14.3 million) from the retail giant Carrefour Group.

    The exhibition, also sponsored by the Carrefour, includes works by such Renaissance masters as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and Raffael.



    Casts promote 'Seoul Raiders' in Beijing
    Li Bingbing
    'Beyond' puts on farewell concerts
      Today's Top News     Top Life News
     

    New stock hopes spark strong rebound

     

       
     

    Chen invites ARATS chief to visit Taiwan

     

       
     

    All 30 law-breaking projects building stopped

     

       
     

    Project protects river ecosystems

     

       
     

    Spring Festival spawns business boom

     

       
     

    Beijing starting meningitis vaccination

     

       
      A feast for the eyes this holiday
       
      Policy-makers recognize value of public sentiment
       
      Will Lang Ping coach America to play China?
       
      210,000 ideas for Beijing Olympic slogan
       
      Boyfriend arrested for body-carving freak
       
      'Memoirs of a Geisha' finishes filming
       
     
      Go to Another Section  
     
     
      Story Tools  
       
      Related Stories  
       
    Xi'an vying to protect relics
       
    Nation's relics threatened as never before
       
    Builders trash 500-year-old Chinese palace ruins
       
    Buffer zone to safeguard Forbidden City
       
    Official gets death for stealing relics
       
    Protection of relics to get stronger legal basis
      Feature  
      Chen Ning Yang, 82, to marry a 28-year-old woman  
    Advertisement
             
    亚洲欧美日韩在线不卡中文| 亚洲中文字幕不卡无码| 中文字幕在线亚洲精品| 无码人妻精品一区二区三区99仓本 | 中文字幕人妻在线视频不卡乱码| 免费一区二区无码视频在线播放| 亚洲日韩乱码中文无码蜜桃臀网站 | 无码乱码av天堂一区二区| 伊人蕉久中文字幕无码专区| 波多野42部无码喷潮在线| 亚洲A∨无码无在线观看| 中文字幕精品亚洲无线码一区应用 | 精品无码国产自产在线观看水浒传| 精品久久无码中文字幕| 在线观看免费无码视频| 久久人妻少妇嫩草AV无码蜜桃| 人妻丰满熟妇无码区免费| 亚洲国产精品无码久久一线| 成人无码区免费A片视频WWW| 亚洲中文字幕伊人久久无码| 开心久久婷婷综合中文字幕| 精品久久久久中文字| 久久久99精品成人片中文字幕| 中文字幕高清在线| 中文在线√天堂| 最近更新中文字幕在线| 中文字幕久久欲求不满| 精品亚洲欧美中文字幕在线看 | 亚洲一区二区三区无码中文字幕 | 中文无码喷潮在线播放| 无码精品蜜桃一区二区三区WW| 亚洲国产综合精品中文第一| 本免费AV无码专区一区| 国产成人无码A区在线观看视频| 99久久人妻无码精品系列| 成人无码免费一区二区三区 | 亚洲Av无码乱码在线播放| 亚洲AV永久无码精品一区二区| 中文字幕无码久久人妻| 欧美中文在线视频| 在线中文字幕精品第5页|