Even rain and an approaching typhoon couldn't stop ardent classical music fans from heading to the Wuxi Grand Theater for a performance by renowned pianist Lang Lang on July 25, with the soloist treating the crowd to a thrilling recital of Bach's Goldberg Variations.
China Daily's Edgar Snow Newsroom is a new project exploring China's story in greater detail. For its latest release, we're taking a private tour of the National Art Museum of China, where a recent exhibition showed 100 years of the Communist Party of China as expressed through works of art.
Gabriel de Moras, aged 40, is a Brazilian from Rio de Janeiro. He is now working as a martial arts instructor in Nanning, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. Inspired by the internationally acclaimed kung fu star Bruce Lee, he has developed a genuine interest in martial arts and Chinese culture. He even has a Chinese name, "Mo Xiaolong".
Nearly one century after it was lost, a Buddha head statue repatriated from Japan finally returned to its home in the Tianlongshan Grottoes in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, on Saturday.
The 2021 Asia Digital Art Exhibition was unveiled last Friday at the museum, with over 50 pieces of digital art from more than 60 artists and art groups from seven countries on display. Themes of the exhibition range from artificial intelligence, robot art, encryption art to new material and biological art.
Tourists visit Hemu village at Kanas Nature Reserve, Altay prefecture, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
Book explores author's experience in the country and how it has lifted so many out of the clutches of poverty, Xing Yi reports in Shanghai.
"Quanzhou: Emporium of the World in Song-Yuan China" was inscribed onto the UNESCO World Heritage List on Sunday during the ongoing 44th Session of the World Heritage Committee, which is hosted in Fuzhou, Fujian province.
The National Center for the Performing Arts staged a classic opera titled "The Daughter of the Party" from Tuesday to Sunday to celebrate the centenary of the Communist Party of China (CPC).
With the rapid development of China's online literature landscape, Chinese online novels have created a huge fan base overseas.
Thousands of music fans descended on Fuxin in Northeast China's Liaoning province on Saturday for a music festival in an ecologically restored open-cast mine.
Novel's relatable characters paint realistic picture of city life, Fang Aiqing reports.