A Beijing community finds solace in artistic endeavors. There's no lack of dreams and passion in Picun village, a migrant workers' community 30 kilometers northeast of the bustling center of Beijing, beyond the repetition of day-to-day life.
One of the first things about Shanghai that Lee Parks says he liked when he first settled down in the city's Pudong New Area in 2004 was "green planning".
Many citizens in Qingdao, Shandong province, were familiar with a certain traffic policeman who eased congestion at the busiest crossroads in Shibei district with his high-spirited gesticulations.
A park in Shanghai, with its water-retention system, is setting an example. When Typhoon In-fa pelted Shanghai with heavy rains in July, Xu Jingxin was worried about the "sponge park" he had been working on for the past two years.
Encounters with the creatures confirm their intelligence and ability to communicate. The story started with the killing of a 19-year-old elephant at the hands of poachers in Samburu National Reserve in northern Kenya in 2016.
China is known for its time-honored tea culture, but it's intriguing that in this very country there is a county that wakes up to the aroma of coffee every day.
The "Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics Night" gala was held on Monday in Rome.
China Media Group - the country's largest broadcasting system - launched its Olympic Channel, known as CCTV-16, on Oct 25.
Hosted by Beijing's Dongcheng District Intangible Cultural Heritage Protection Center, a series of culinary experience activities has been held this month to charm participants with the city's unique cuisine.
He Xiangning and China Women Artists Association introduces a booming art movement promoted by women painters in the early 20th-century China.
Lingering Appeal of Changzhou Painting School, now running at the National Art Museum of China through Dec 5, brings together iconic paintings from Yun's oeuvre from the collections of National Art Museum and Nanjing Museum, in Nanjing, Jiangsu, as well as works by other painters from the school.
For many young people in China, playing with smartphones has become as natural as breathing or drinking water.