An event titled "Tea for Harmony: Yaji Cultural Salon" was held in Tashkent Thursday to celebrate International Tea Day.
The home of celebrated couple Wu Zuguang (1917–2003), a renowned scholar and dramatist, and Xin Fengxia (1927–98), one of the most accomplished performers of northern China's Pingju Opera, was once affectionately described by friends as a "cultural salon" of Beijing.
Shan Se (Hues of Mountains), an ongoing exhibition at Shandong Art Museum, showcases the artwork of contemporary artists.
At the foot of the majestic Wuyi Mountain, in northern Fujian province, lie villages and towns shaped by breathtaking landscapes and a rich cultural lineage that have produced a wealth of arts and crafts.
Now on view at Huafang Zhai, Spring Splendor and Enchanting Vistas presents 60 paintings by artists from the Chinese Painting Department and Research Center for AI and Digital Cultural Heritage, of the Central Academy of Fine Arts.
The ninth John Moores Painting Prize (China) officially launched on Thursday at the Bund 18 Jiushi Art Gallery in Shanghai, with a call for entries now open to artists nationwide.
Running through Sunday, galleries in Beijing's major cultural zones, such as 798, are showing the works of artists who have collaborated for years and have recently been discovered.
The brothers insist on completing every stage of the ceramic-making process themselves, a practice inherited from their early years in the family handicraft trade.
All Rivers Flow to the Sea: Mutual Learning Among Civilizations Along the Maritime Silk Road, an ongoing exhibition at the Museum of Shanghai University, brings a different perspective on how maritime traditions shaped a city's past and present.
Foreign diplomats and their spouses from Portugal, Italy, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, and other countries gathered at Beijing’s Chaoyang Park on May 21, along with foreign professionals in international trade, media, and education. They visited the First China New Cultural and Creative Market & Trendy Toy Carnival to experience the vibrant innovation of China’s cultural and creative industry.
When one's time is inevitably overloaded with images and clamorous expressions, the oil paintings of Liu Kun, born in 1968, offer rare restraint and a still moment of meditative reflection.