The "chicken claw prints" on the wall of an air-raid shelter called Sharen in Geleshan National Forest Park in Southwest China's Chongqing, discovered by rock climbers in March 2019, turned out to be a group of dinosaur tracks, dating back 190 million years to the early Jurassic era and made by the
Chang Zhizhao turns on the camera on his smartphone, performs a Changquan routine and posts it online. Little did he know it would end up having such a wide reach.
With face masks and social distancing, these are tough times amid the novel coronavirus outbreak. But art student Liu Zhiwen has found a way to literally bring some color into our lives.
At a time when crossborder travel is strictly limited, China Hour, a program on Sky TV, has hit record high viewings in Britain, offering a window on the oriental country and its culture under COVID-19 lockdown.
A warm southerly breeze carries the scent of flowers, and Suzhou in Jiangsu province is back verdant in the extreme, amid hope and anticipation as long-awaited cultural performances are finally returning.
CHANGSHA-Along with the conducting of teacher Yan Haiming, more than 50 middle school students in a mountainous area in Central China's Hunan province picked up their bows and began to play the cello.
Being stuck in an apartment block for a month or so during the epidemic made me realize how much I would miss being able to walk around. Plus, it drove my dog into depression. I know these are trivial problems compared to the serious suffering of hundreds of thousands of people, but sometimes losing
HANGZHOU-Actors, camera operators and lighting engineers are busy in film studios. Internet celebrities hold up mobile phones to livestream on the street. Vendors set up food stands when night falls.
Imagine seeing China like a bird does. It is, indeed, a bird's-eye view that the popular documentary series Aerial China takes as its point of focus.
Cirque du Soleil's X: The Land of Fantasy, a resident show in Hangzhou, the capital city of East China's Zhejiang province, will be the first production by the Canadian circus company to resume performances on June 3.
As today marks this year’s International Children’s Day, it’s also the perfect opportunity to celebrate children’s creative potential through appreciating their artwork.
Ma, 36-year-old and of the Dongxiang ethnic group, is one of the female embroiderers working in a traditional embroidery workshop established by local government as an approach to poverty reduction.