China's barren Ningxia may seem an unlikely place for a contemporary art museum, but MOCA Yinchuan hopes its unusual location will serve as an intersection of two cultures.
Ten films featuring the events of WWII have been chosen to commemorate the victory and show the desire for everlasting peace.
A documentary about the 1937 invasion of China had its first screening, more than 70 years after it alerted the world to the brutality of life under the Japanese.
Lin Hanbing is a fish bone artist in Fujian province's Gulangyu island. As the originator of fish bone painting, Lin is the only fish bone painting artist in China, perhaps the world.
The ornamental part of a pagoda in north China's Shanxi province, which was broken up in the Sino-Japanese war, is to be restored for an exhibition in Taiwan.
Every year during the week-long Shoton, or Yogurt Festival, Tibetans head to Nobulingka Park to enjoy Tibetan Opera. The traditional art form is flourishing on the plateau.
The 9th Mao Dun Literature Prize announced its winners on Sunday, with writers Ge Fei, Wang Meng, Su Tong, Jin Yucheng and Li Peifu on the list.
Lin, a fish bone artist, resides in Xiamen province’s Gulangyu island in southern China, and thinks that the Chinese should engrave the pain caused by the anti-Japanese war.
Charles Dutoit keeps a mad schedule of traveling around the world. Chen Jie catches up with the maestro in Beijing.
After the second episode of the BBC documentary, it sparked even more debate in Chinese media and on the Chinese Internet than last week.
The 11th National Calligraphy and Seal Carving, now at the National Art Museum of China, traces the aesthetic transformation of Chinese calligraphy over the decade.
Thangka, a Tibetan scroll-banner depicting various kinds of contents, can be seen in every monastery family shrine in Tibet autonomous region and has become a valuable kind of collection in recent years.