The press conference for the 2023 Happy Chinese New Year celebrations in the UK was held by the Cultural Section of the Chinese Embassy in London, on Tuesday.
A recent report by tourism website Qyer unveiled that most Chinese visitors have a plan to travel overseas within a year, as the country's adjusted COVID-19 response has lifted restrictions on overseas trips.
Zhang Yimou, one of China's most prominent and prolific directors, has returned to the fiercely competitive Spring Festival holiday box office with his latest directorial effort, Full River Red.
As one of the most popular sports in China, ping-pong will become the "protagonist" on the silver screen during the forthcoming Spring Festival.
Deep Sea, one of the most anticipated blockbusters in the forthcoming Spring Festival, has earned a nomination during the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival.
With the Spring Festival around the corner, Feng Shiping, a paper-cut artist based in Weifang, Shandong province, has spent over 20 days carving out various paper-cutting artworks themed on the Chinese zodiac rabbit. More than 150 rabbit paper-cuts, vivid and lifelike as they are, delivers the artist's sincere wishes for the Year of the Rabbit.
London Eye, the iconic ferris wheel in London, turned its purple lights into red to welcome Chinese Lunar New Year on Jan 13, unveiling 2023 Happy Chinese New Year celebrations in Britain.
In Chinese traditional culture, the Spring Festival is the biggest festival of the year for the Chinese people. As one of the twelve Chinese zodiac animals, the rabbit is not only cute, but also holds many interesting implications.
Shanghai Grand Theatre released its new season slogan 'Go Live!' and call on people to enjoy live art in the new season.
An exhibition of artworks about rabbits is taking place at Shanghai Library Pudong Branch from Jan 18 to Feb 19.
Kids look on as a calligrapher writes Spring Festival couplets for residents during a couplets writing activity in Yongchuan district, Southwest China's Chongqing, Jan 16.
The winter of our discontent has been taunting us here in North China with the mercury dipping daily below zero with no fluffy stuff to show for the shivering. Tantalizingly close are recent news clips showing tourists atop Bactrians huddled against deep desert snows in Dunhuang, portions of the Great Wall beckoning visitors with frigid fresh white layers and children skittering across a frozen lake in the nearby Chengde mountain resort, which in imperial times, oddly enough, was a highly coveted getaway destination for members of the royal court seeking cooler climes in summer months.