Wang Yixin believes she is now on a fast track to realizing her dream of being a master of the guzheng, or Chinese zither, thanks to a pioneering Chinese music program offered by Bard College, a four-year residential college of the liberal arts and sciences located 144 kilometers north of New York C
Spain's Teatro Real (Royal Theater) and China's National Center for the Performing Arts (NCPA) have signed an agreement on exchange of audiovisual materials through an online platform, Palco Digital.
The 2019 Year of Tourism for China and Pacific Island Countries was launched on April 1 at a grand ceremony in Apia, capital of Samoa, with colored fireworks and wonderful cultural programs.
It is expected that eight Pacific Island countries will become popular destinations with Chinese tourists in 2019.
The 15th Chinese Bridge Cup contest ended last month after two days of competition among students from various schools in Northern California.
An exhibition in the United States showcasing Chinese landscape art, or shanshui, is giving American viewers a taste of of traditional Chinese ink painting blended with contemporary experimental art.
Australian literature has become more known to Chinese people in recent years. To further promote Australian literature in China, the 12th Australian Writers Week was held from March 20 to 27.
The activity "Discover Tongxiang", co-organized by the government of Tongxiang city and China Daily, was launched Saturday in Tongxiang city, East China's Zhejiang province.
The 2019 China-New Zealand Year of Tourism officially kicked off with encouraging messages from government leaders of both sides.
The ongoing exhibition A Journey in Love - which opens with a panda statue slowly circling around a green-walled room - explores the experiences of travelers connecting with different cultures in the form of installations, pictures and short animated films.
The Culture City of East Asia 2019 opened in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi province, March 27.
Chinese and Asian art collectors have become more knowledgeable, sophisticated and are branching out for more Western works, said Francis Belin, president of Christie's Asia, who is excited about the trend.