While COVID-19 travel restrictions mean it could be sometime before Australians get to visit China in person, the next best thing could be a virtual experience provided by the China Cultural Centre (CCC) in Sydney.
Inspiring feat of engineering is being created by construction workers across the desert in Xinjiang
The success of Chinese efforts to bring back the disappearing crested ibis have paid respect both to nature and human intervention
Mary Shelley's little-known 1826 novel The Last Man, concerning a 21st-century plague, couldn't be more prescient.
Seventy years ago a young teacher in Japan began to chronicle the slow disappearance of an incredibly beautiful bird. It was a tale that seemed to have only one possible ending.
Leaders in tourism sectors from Shanghai Cooperation Organization member countries convened on Friday through a video conference to exchange ideas on further promoting exchanges in the field of tourism.
Saturnbird Coffee launched its second edition of Project Return in 24 cities across China on May 16 and 17.
In the fourth instalment of a series on how HK's creative industry people are adopting alternative strategies to reach out to audiences and creating new work in the time of a pandemic and where they stand compared to their counterparts elsewhere, Mathew Scott turns the spotlight on the spirit of sha
Life Tree Books is a charitable website for children to learn about the coronavirus through picture books.
As the series of Visiting China Online virtual shows were launched in March by many China Cultural Centers around the world, the exhibitions have explored a variety themes about China, including both natural and cultural heritage.
Memorabilia in the Earth, a novel for children, was written by Song Anna. The 67-year-old author and retired journalist, who has been committed to researching Jewish history in China, in particular in the city of Tianjin, for nearly 20 years, has had her work translated into 15 languages and publish
Chinese literati have a long history of appreciating small ornamental rocks and collecting them as accoutrements, but these objects, which are known as "scholars' rocks", have rarely joined museum collections in China.