"The Peony Pavilion — The Campus Youth Version" was staged in Taipei by college students from the Chinese mainland on Jan 15.
The first rehearsal for the 2026 Spring Festival Gala of China Media Group was held on Saturday. Various performances, innovative technological applications, and visual design elements were seamlessly integrated, ensuring a smooth flow throughout the event.
The 23rd Forum on International Cultural Industries of China opened on Jan 10 at Peking University, bringing together politicians, scholars and practitioners to explore how artificial intelligence can empower cultural development.
Winter is the perfect time to taste the mandarin oranges which are currently being harvested in Yongchun county, Quanzhou, Fujian province. The fruit is a daily treat for those living in Fujian and they are currently being shipped to other cities across the country.
Over 200 artifacts are on display at the National Museum of China, where the ongoing exhibition, Twin Stars Illuminating the World, illuminates a small corner of the large, thick veil of the ancient Shu state.
Folk arts and handicrafts are artistic expressions of farmland laborers, embodying their emotional attachment to the soil. The lifestyles associated with these laborers may be waning, but museums are celebrating their aesthetics.
HAIKOU — As evening sets in, the lights at the Sanya Football Park flicker on one by one. On the pitch, a coach completes a short warm-up session, then stands and signals for training to continue. Nearby, several children gather around, listening intently.
Many people might not realize that one basic life necessity has lost control: meals. With so many online shopping platforms, people have discovered the freedom to get anything they want quickly and at a reasonable price.
Its white feathers carried a soft pink sheen, its slender neck formed a gentle curve, and when it spread its wings, it looked like a dancer in the sky. Artist Yanzi recalled her first encounter with the crested ibis.
In a digital lab at Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Zhao Haiying, professor at the university's artificial intelligence college, studies an intricate emblem glowing on her computer screen.
In 2015, Lu Jie received a gift that would shape the next decade of her life: a CD of Peking Opera master Mei Baojiu (1934-2016), son of the legendary Mei Lanfang (1894-1961), performing Taizhen Waizhuan (The Anecdotes of Taizhen).
A style of calligraphy once used to record one of ancient China's most ambitious scholarly projects is being brought back to life — not on silk or paper, but on screens, posters and mobile phones.