The digitization display of The Qianlong Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour opened at the National Museum of China on Dec 28, which marked the official opening of the stationary digital gallery in the national museum.
A part of the Qianlong Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour. [Photo/chnmuseum.cn] |
The Qianlong Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour is one of the national treasure collections at the National Museum. The court painter Xu Yang was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor to record on 12 scrolls (154.17m in length) the emperor's historic 112-day, 2,900 km tour of southern China in 1751.
The display consists of two parts. The first introduces the painter Xu Yang, the background,the origin and the route of the tour and features a high definition copy of the first and the sixth scrolls. The second part, a 3D animated, four-mimute movie about the Qianlong Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour, includes an advertising video. The first scroll also is displayed on an Imax screen measuring four meters high by 30m long.
"The other 11 scrolls of the Qianlong Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour will continue to be displayed by 3D movies in the future while more modern technical skills will be used in the scroll's display to help audiences have a better understanding of this encyclopedic masterpiece," said Lv Zhangshen, the director of the National Museum.
Hours: Four times each day, 9:30 am, 10:30 am, 2 pm, 3 pm
Venue: Gallery S6
Ticket: 5 yuan per person
The Calligraphy Works of Ancient China from the National Museum of China Collection hosted by National Museum of China and China Calligraphers Association opened on Nov 28. This exhibition features about 120 calligraphy works divided into to six parts, including inscriptions on oracle bones and bronze objects; inscriptions on potteries, bricks and tiles; inscriptions on seal marks and coins;, rubbings from stone tablets, tombstones, and other objects; calligraphy works of the Han and Tang dynasties and calligraphy works of the Song Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties.