Despite the global pandemic, the China Shanghai International Arts Festival is slated to go ahead, with online contracts penned in late March, Zhang Kun reports in Shanghai.
Facing major revenue loss and an almost broken funding chain caused by the COVID-19 outbreak, a program to support physical bookstores in Beijing was launched by the local government.
A new specification details procedures for individual diners, shared dishes, and personal and serving chopsticks at restaurants, Li Yingxue reports.
Shops and eateries have reopened and roads are bustling again after hundreds of millions of people nationwide spent weeks confined to their homes or neighborhoods.
Tsinghua University's Tour-Portrait exhibition may be over, but the show's culturally diverse works can still be experienced virtually, Lin Qi reports.
According to a recent report from the Center for Exhibition Industry, 50 business-to-business (B2B) exhibitions in the US had been canceled as of March 15, which resulted in a loss of $318 million in show organizer revenue.
The special exhibition A Blessing over the Sea: Cultural Relics on Jianzhen and Murals by Higashiyama Kaii from Toshodaiji will extend its duration until April 5.
A group of young people working online track the global route of COVID-19 and provide a valuable insight as they chart its direction and intensity, Xing Wen reports.
A new documentary series explores the relationship between individuals and books, from readers and writers, to editors and translators, Li Yingxue reports.
The work of Danish author Hans Christian Andersen can inspire people today, be they young or old, says Beijing-based director, Wang Kaihao reports.
Now is the best time to see the blooming cherry blossoms at Lanyang Cherry Blossom Park in Danzhou, Hainan province. Make sure to visit during the trees’ two-month flowering period.
Sculptors from a creative group at the National Art Museum of China released recent works based on the current fight against the COVID-19 outbreak.