The Gateway to Music festival, one of Beijing's biggest children's arts festivals, kicks off on July 23, offering seven courses including the traditional Chinese musical instruments pipa, guqin and xiao as well as vocal performance. The courses will be available online through Aug 21.
The China Cultural Center and China Tourism Office in Sydney jointly launched another video show on internet and social media platforms on July 22.
Amazing Veterinarians, a documentary produced by Phoenix Satellite Television which features veterinarians for small animals, was released on Wednesday.
The China National Silk Museum, the UNESCO World Heritage Centre, and the UNESCO Silk Roads Programme jointly organized a webinar to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Silk Roads expeditions.
The 2020 Cultures of China-Water Cube Cup, the Chinese song contest for overseas Chinese and youth of Hong Kong and Macao, kicked off in Beijing on July 22.
The local government of Quting township in Hongtong built munian workshops in seven villages, offering job opportunities to 40 local women.
Hong Kong PolyU BA fashion students will stage a graduation exhibition of their work on campus from August 4.
In July, thousands of acres of lotus are blooming at Wild Duck Lake in Yaoguan town of Shidian county in Yunnan province, attracting tourists and providing families all over the country the ingredients for local specialties.
Before the day is even over, residents in Wantang village eagerly wait for night to fall. That is when Liu Liang's mobile cinema opens and begins screening movies.
"When I was 13, I watched a film for the first time, and the images of tall buildings in a big city couldn't go away. Now I'm also living in one, filled with high-tech household appliances, just like in the film," says Ji Binghao, a 75-year-old man of the Korean (Chosen) ethnic group residing in Xin
Had Shen Xiaoying not run away from her remote village in Southwest China's Sichuan province more than 30 years ago, she would have married one of her cousins-a child betrothal arranged by her parents-and probably spent the rest of her life deep in the mountains.
Experts and scholars gathered at Hainan University on July 18 for a seminar and book launch ceremony on the subject of Su Shi, also called Su Dongpo, a literary giant of the Song Dynasty (960-1279).