A press conference for the eighth Wuzhen Theater Festival was hosted in Beijing on Sept 6, announcing its schedule, format and program.
American author Michele Wucker's You Are What You Risk: The New Art and Science of Navigating an Uncertain World was published in Chinese recently, following the success of her last work, in which she introduced the concept of "gray rhino".
The adorable Snow Child flies down a hill in his skis, winning the praise of the mighty Monkey King. The invincible Nezha spins on an icy river on his skates, while the Gourd Brothers race to goal in an ice hockey match. Animated characters that have entertained a generation of Chinese people are now rooting for the coming Winter Olympic Games in Beijing.
The Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, released its themed calendar for the year 2022 on Monday.
An exhibitor demonstrates paper-cutting skills at the booth of Shanxi province during the China International Fair for Trade in Services (CIFTIS) in Beijng, capital of China, Sept 6, 2021.
White Dew indicates the real beginning of cool autumn. The temperature declines gradually and vapors in the air often condense into white dew on the grass and trees at night.
I was always a bit of a weather nerd.In the United States, I would tune in regularly to the Weather Channel.
The Yu Kwang-chung Poetry Award was launched on Sept 1 in memory of the late Taiwan poet and his contributions to modern Chinese poetry and cross-Straits cultural communication and exchanges.
For more than 10 years, Monique Barbut, a former executive secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification and special envoy for biodiversity to the French president, has been committed to making the Earth a better place by tackling environmental problems.
The Subash Buddhist Ruins stand like sandcastles washed over by the waves of entropy in the seas of sand and time.
Among the first visitors to Surging Forward, a Yellow River-themed exhibition that opened at the National Art Museum of China on Aug 13, was Huang Jincheng, a 75-year-old painter, who stood in front of an ink-water landscape titled Longmen, Yellow River, quite excited.
In 2020, the State Council, China's Cabinet, issued the first national-level and long-term guideline specifically for the protection and study of grotto temples in China. China Daily journalists talk with researchers and conservators to showcase the cultural splendor and how people take care of them.