The Extraordinary Out of the Ordinary brings together dozens of prints, ink paintings and diaries from Li Pingfan in memory of the 100th anniversary of his birth.
The Ministry of Culture and Tourism has launched an art program for art students and amateur art lovers, offering a platform for young Chinese people to display their art and communicate with one another.
Online series Reset has recently accumulated over 2.1 billion views on the streaming site Tencent Video, propelling the 15-episode suspense drama to soar as one of the most popular hits in the first two months, said some critics at a recent symposium in Beijing.
A Feast for the Eyes from Europe, an exhibition running at the Hunan Museum throughout April 17, provides a glimpse into a unique collection of art which belonged to European royal families, aristocrats and prestigious figures built by Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert and now housed at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Requiem, a forthcoming movie bringing together Chinese and Japanese artists, is scheduled to open across domestic theaters on March 25.
The seventh season of the hit TV show Trump Card VS Trump Card recently aired on Zhejiang TV.
Exhibition Metaphor and Gaze features 17 female artists and includes works of installation, video, performance art, painting and fabric art.
ATHENS-A recently opened exhibition of 18 paintings by Greek artist Vassilis Perros takes visitors to a gallery in central Athens on a journey from darkness and depression to hope and light.
SHANGHAI-China saw a robust recovery in its tourism sector during the Spring Festival holiday, as both urban and rural residents found new destinations for their travels.
The spirit of providing timely help to those in need is manifested in the Chinese idiom xue zhong song tan, which literally means "to send charcoal in snowy weather".
Earlier last month, I attended a fascinating talk about the disappearing sounds of the hutong, auditory artifacts like the song of candied hawthorn vendors, the jingle of camel coal trains, the blind fortune-teller and his one-handed tongdian gong, and the ethereal, theremin-like sound of the pigeon whistle.
China's 5,000-year-old civilization cannot be understood by Western criteria, nor can it be judged by Western standards, according to Professor Wen Yang.