Serenade of Peaceful Joy (Qing Ping Yue), a historical TV drama about the life of an emperor of the Song Dynasty (960-1279), has become an unexpected hit among viewers of the Chinese mainland.
A micro-documentary that went online on Friday showed students and scholars from various cities in China singing in Bengali and Indian students and academics doing the same in Mandarin. They were marking the 159th birth anniversary of the poet Rabindranath Tagore and the 70th anniversary of the esta
Kishore Mahbubani insists Western commentary on China fails to acknowledge that Chinese people are experiencing the biggest rise in their living standards in the past 4,000 years.
A comprehensive Chinese culture and tourism promotion program "China Weeks: When Culture and Tourism Blend" has been launched online in Britain, offering Britons under the COVID-19 lockdown a closer look at the Chinese culture at home.
Archaeologists recently unveiled newly discovered city ruins in Central China, which reveal an ancient state dating back 5,300 years.
The National Art Museum of China will reopen from Wednesday with a daily cap of 500 visitors, as the country is opening up its public venues in an orderly manner after the coronavirus epidemic eases.
The China Cultural Center in Mauritius recently launched a series of online exhibitions and film shows about Beijing.
On May 10, the China Cultural Center in Bangkok launched an online Mandarin class on Facebook, Line, WeChat and other social media platforms.
Every spring, the National Ballet of China holds its annual ballet creative workshop, which brings together young choreographers with their original works.
Chinese singer Gong Linna has been forced to cancel or postpone all of her upcoming shows due to the coronavirus pandemic, including an April concert at Stanford University in the United States, which has been postponed until early 2021.
The National Centre for the Performing Arts has launched a series of online concerts, which kicks off on May 9.
A long-awaited heavy rain is moistening the dry and thirsty red earth beneath his feet. Patrick Nijs couldn't hold back his joy."I feel that my land and crops are very happy," he says. Those thirsty corn sprouts have had their share of "drinking" at last.