At the end of August, I found myself winding through the cliffside mountain roads of Guilin in South China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. As I navigated the route, I rewatched a scene from Become a Farmer Season 3: the Shigeqintian team moving turnips across snow-covered fields in Northwest China's Qinghai province, preparing to load the regional specialty onto trucks bound for distant markets.
In the soft amber glow, a young woman stands draped in an emerald robe and crimson blouse, reminiscent of a vision from an ancient scroll. Over her arms hangs the peibo — a long silk scarf and traditional Chinese accessory — that infuses her silhouette with a graceful, timeless fluidity.
"You can try lying down," said Wang Zhigang, chief curator of Houses of Heaven: Immersive Chinese Caisson Digital Art Exhibition, to a mother and daughter visiting the show in Beijing.
Seven performing arts professionals, including theater directors, art advisors, and art festival managers from six European countries—France, Italy, Spain, Austria, Norway and Iceland, are visiting China from Oct 12 to 21.
After a full afternoon of sharing insights with scholars at Peking University and an intensive series of interviews, French actress Juliette Binoche had reason to look tired. Her schedule had been relentless — working until midnight before catching a 5 am flight out of Beijing.
On a crisp autumn afternoon in Beijing, French director Jean-Jacques Annaud settled into an exquisitely decorated room at Yishu 8, an art center housed in the former Franco-Chinese University of Beijing founded in 1920.
Dunhuang has long been a living testament to cultural exchange and artistic brilliance. Let’s hear from experts at home and abroad as they share their insights on Dunhuang — its culture, preservation and lasting influence.
On Friday night, the Changzhou Performance Hall in Chongqing hosted a captivating Sino-French cultural heritage exchange concert featuring a blend of ancient French and Chinese instruments.
The air hums with the rhythmic beats of Chinese drums and the crash of cymbals. Vibrant lion dancers, their manes flowing and eyes flickering, weave through the crowds.
Foreigners of various countries and fields receive high honors for bringing innovation, development and connection to their 'second home', Wang Xin reports.