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  Plan aims to save dying folk culture  
 

惻Beijing Revives Tianqiao Folk Art As Beijing is undergoing tremendous changes on its way to becoming a modern metropolis, traditional Tianqiao folk art, an art representing the old Beijing culture for the general public, is gradually disappearing from people's minds. Now someone is trying to save it. Wang Shusheng, a renowned painter and a member of the Chaoyang District Committee of China's top advisory body the CPPCC, is working hard for the revival of the Tianqiao folk art. In response to his call, the Huasheng Tianqiao Folk Art Culture Street was recently founded in east Beijing, with the aim to bring the old folk art back to life.

Between the end of the Qing Dynasty and the early period of the Republic of China, Tianqiao (Bridge of Heaven) was a bustling place, where folk artists entertained the public with their amazing acrobatic feats or wrestling skills, and small theaters.

Teahouses and antique shops proliferated. Shops that sold flowers, birds, insects, and goldfishes thrived. Many renowned folk artists, such as Liu Baoquan, Hou Baolin, Liu Baorui, and Xin Fengxia, gave t performances there for quite some time.

The newly established Huasheng Tianqiao Folk Art Culture Street covers an area of a bit more than 2 hectares near Panjiayuan and inside the street, traditional folk arts are performed once again. One can find almost every type of the old Beijing folk art here, in the wrestling arenas, small theaters, teahouses, and storytelling rooms. Antiques, traditional Chinese paintings, calligraphy scrolls, shops selling lovely plants, flowers and pet animals can be found here. Acrobats perform acrobatics and street hawkers sell a variety of snacks to audiences. Some shops also sell traditional local products. The culture street has become a new place for people to enjoy traditional old Beijing folk culture.

To Wang, the important thing is to keep and display the genuine elements of folk art. At present, several hundred old timers and their apprentices have moved to the culture street to display their unique skills to the public, such as stabbing the throat with two spears, sawing the stomach with a steel knife, hitting the head with steel blades, rolling water jars, swallowing the iron ball and sword, face changing, performing the lion dance, and juggling with a big pole.

 
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The plan is part of a 17-year-long project that started last year to preserve unique folk arts, crafts, literature and traditions in China.

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