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A mask unearthed in the
3,600-year-old Sanxingdui Ruins in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, is one of
the rare treasures on display at the National Museum of China in
Beijing.
BEIJING, Feb. 3 -- Art lovers in Beijing are set to
enjoy the upcoming Spring Festival with an exhibition of 90 Chinese cultural
relics that have been ranked "national treasures."
The artefacts on display at the exhibition, which is on at the National Museum of China until March 31, include the
best of relics unearthed in the 3,600-year-old Sanxingdui Ruins and
3,200-year-old Jinsha Ruins in Southwest China's Sichuan Province.
Some of the items were used by Emperor Kangxi
(1662-1722 in reign) including a delicate calculator and a globe, and ink
paintings collected by the Palace Museum, Shanghai Museum and Nanjing Museum are
also included at the show.
They are chosen from four exhibitions that travelled
to Paris between 2003 and 2004: "The Shu Kingdom," "The Confucius," "Holy
Mountains" and "Emperor Kangxi."
Each has been a great success with about 1 million
visitors passing through the display at the Paris City Hall, the Musee National
des Arts Asiatiques-Guimet, the Versailles Palace Museum and the Grand Palace
Museum, said Dong Baohua, deputy director of the State Administration of
Cultural Heritage, which organized the shows.
"The show at the Guimet, called 'The Confucius,'
attracted a record number of visitors in the history of the museum, which opened
to the public in 1882," he noted.
The exhibition in Beijing, a retrospect of the
Parisian shows, is divided into four sections.
The famous bronze mask with protruding eyes,
unearthed at the Sanxingdui Ruins in 1986, is among the 29 bronze, gold, jade
and ivory artifacts included in the first section about the Shu Kingdom.
The kingdom allegedly existed for more than a
millennium before the 3rd century BC in today's Sichuan.
It is widely speculated that the mask represented the
magical power of Chan Cong, who was in legends the first King of Shu, and also
showed the adoration for the sun by ancient residents in the misty, mountainous
province.
The second section tells of the life of Confucius
(551-479 BC), and how his philosophical thinking, which later developed into
Confucianism, has evolved throughout the history and dominated the Chinese's
ideological world until challenged by Western philosophies in the late 19th
century.
It features the most important relics in the
collection of the Shandong Museum and the municipal museum of Qufu, Shandong,
where Confucius was born and where his descendants have lived to date.
It includes portraits of Confucius, documents of his
teachings, bronzes that were used as ritual vessels at his time, bronze chimes,
books, paintings and sculptures that displayed the development of his philosophy
in the more than two millenniums after him.
The third section, entitled "Holy Mountains," tells
of the evolvement of Chinese landscape painting from its origin in the 3rd
century to its breakthroughs in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
It is especially worth a visit for those interested
in Chinese ink paintings because of the debut of most of the 19 fragile pieces,
which are highly valued in the art community and known to almost all Chinese art
lovers.
They include the 13-metre-long scroll "Pines and
Cypresses" by Zhu Da (1626-1704) and the "Endless Mountains and Rivers" by monk
artist Kun Can (1612-73), which are in the collection of the Shanghai Museum;
the 9-metre-long "Landscape of Yangtze River" by Wu Wei (1459-1508) in the
collection of the Palace Museum; and masterpieces by such important artists as
Ni Zan (1301-74), Shen Zhou (1427-1509) and Wang Shimin (1592-1680).
The fourth section, "Kangxi Emperor" is interesting
as it includes swords, guns, ceramics, mathematics books and items of
17th-century cutting edge technologies - a globe and a calculator.
The globe placed in the emperor's study much
resembles a modern one. On it one can find major continents on the earth,
navigational courses in parts of the Pacific, and sites marked with names such
as "Australia," "New Guinea" and "The Great Wall."
The bar-shaped copper calculator has on its surface
12 glass plates, which represent 12 digits. One can make calculations with it
when rotating a copper handle.
Meanwhile the National Art Museum of China is to hold
an exhibition of Renaissance and Baroque art, on loan from the national
collection in France, from February 5 to 20.
The French Government bought the 111 works from
private collections in 2003, through a sponsorship of 11 million euros (US$14.3
million) from the retail giant Carrefour Group.
The exhibition, also sponsored by the Carrefour,
includes works by such Renaissance masters as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci
and Raffael.
(Source: China Daily) |