BEIJING, March 4 -- Commencing at the beginning of
this month, all national museums and provincial comprehensive museums in China
have ceased to charge admission.
 |
|
The China National Museum.Commencing at
the beginning of this month, all national museums and provincial
comprehensive museums in China have ceased to charge admission. (File
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
This is just the beginning of a program to open
Chinese art to a wider audience. Central and local governments continue to
invest more money into public cultural services and even more open policies are
anticipated.
Duan is a regular museum-goer in Beijing. She came to
the Military Museum for a regular Sunday morning visit.
Visitor, said, "I went up to buy a ticket. To my
surprise, they told me the museum is free now. It's great! "
More than 300 museums, libraries and galleries across
China have opened their doors to the public at no charge. In northeastern
Heilongjiang Province, four local museums have adopted the new policy. After
just a week the museums had drawn about 33 thousand visitors.
Free entry is attracting a lot of visitors. But the
larger crowds have also caused air quality to diminish. Some museums lack
climate control facilities. The only way to deal with the problem, for the time
being, is to open the windows. That however can change the relative humidity and
create a negative impact on some cultural relics.
Wang Zhenzhen, vice director, Cultural Dept.,
Heilongjiang provincial govt., said, "Free entry is not temporary - for just a
few days. It's a permanent policy. So visitors do not need to come rushing to
see the exhibits right away."
Close scrutiny by some visitors can also affect the
exhibits. There are concerns that visitors who insist on touching could damage
artifacts which are not protected in display cases. Many visitors simply do not
understand the basics of preserving cultural relics. So, creating greater
protection for the exhibits has become a matter of some urgency.
The early experiences of the free admission policy
have led some museums in Hunan, Chongqing, Liaoning and Zhejiang to limit the
number of visitors. The museums have also added new equipment to safeguard the
displays.
In the past five years, nearly 50 billion yuan has
been put into the Culture industry. Half of the money is invested in the
countryside and western China. The fundamental infrastructure cost about 13
billion yuan. Beijing admires its new National Grand Theatre and soon there will
be a new face on the National Museum of China. Artists and spectators already
feel the impact of the changes.
Nie Jianhua, singer, said, "Before the high-qualified
theatres and concert halls were almost all in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and
some other major cities. But now I find good ones in northwest Wuwei, in Gansu
Province."
Now more 80% of China's counties have public
libraries. There are nearly 7,000 service networks offering radio, TV, films and
Internet services, to over 100 million villagers. Another 300 million yuan will
be spent to buy a thousand large vans, for recording or broadcasting
performances between 2007 and 2010.
(Source: CCTV.com)