The Bolshoi Ballet has returned to the National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing after a five-year hiatus.
The new building of the Sanxingdui Museum in Southwest China's Sichuan province started trial operation on Thursday, with nearly 600 relics unearthed from the renowned Sanxingdui Ruins displayed to the public for the first time.
In his recent published work, The Book of Diancha, Guanhe summarizes what he's learned after years of examining the ways of drinking tea that have long disappeared from daily life but been rediscovered and brought under the limelight by hit TV series A Dream of Splendor.
The epic Manas appeared in the 9th to 10th centuries. It tells the story of the extraordinary life of Manas, the hero, and his seven generations of descendants who led the Kirgiz people to fight against invaders and other evil forces.
Chinese Arts From the Literati Studio, an exhibition through Aug 6 at the Chinese Traditional Culture Museum, takes the audience into the quiet, elegant time of reading and thinking of a scholar from the past, which is enriched with dozens of works of art and crafts. That is not only decorated with the well-known "four treasures of the study" — ink brushes, ink cakes, ink stones and paper — but also other objects like engraved seals, brush holders and rests, incense burners and musical instruments.
The 60th "Seghizzi" International Choral Singing Competition took place in Gorizia, Italy, from July 20 to 24.
A weeklong summer camp aimed at training children to be songwriters ended with a performance at the Forbidden City Concert Hall in Beijing on July 24.
An exhibition at the Shanghai Korean Cultural Center (SKCC) has brought together the intangible cultural heritages of China and South Korea.
A new biography, Edison, with its Chinese version recently published by Beijing-based CITIC Press Group, tries to portray the famous scientist and inventor.
Audience favorite, Romance of the Western Chamber, set to charm a new generation.
The Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, spreads across 720,000 square meters in the heart of Beijing.
Relic restorer Fang Beisong has spent his career developing special techniques to revive ancient texts inscribed on bamboo and wooden strips.