A calligraphy exhibition jointly organized by Yale University and Shanghai Jiaotong University opened April 15 at the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University.
In celebration of the World Book Day which falls on April 23, the Chinese Cultural Center in Cairo held on Monday its fourth reading salon under the title "Travelling and Poetry."
The Beijing Film and TV International Show inaugurated in the Hungarian capital will enhance people-to-people bonds between Hungary and China.
The Belt and Road countries have carried out diplomatic activities and cultural exchanges of various forms in wide fields over the past five years or so, enhancing mutual understanding and laying a solid cultural foundation for furthering the initiative.
The program is the first of its kind to have been officially authorized by five world-renowned French museums, including the Louvre, the Orsay Museum, the Centre Pompidou, the French National Museum of Natural History and the Army Museum.
The ninth Beijing International Film Festival, to be held April 13-20, is set to feature a selection of exciting productions and highlight new ideas from film practitioners.
The 2019 Croisements Festival recently announced its repertoire, featuring 50 cultural events from April 26 to July 6 across 35 cities in China.
An intriguing exhibition shows the work of two Asian fashion photographers.
Gigi Chang published the second volume in English of the Legends of the Condor Heroes earlier this year. The book series was written in Chinese by Jin Yong (Louis Cha Leung-yung), who's known for his martial arts and gallantry stories.
Keen to build on the success of hit series like Blue Planet, BBC Studios has unveiled plans for five new natural-history shows scheduled to air in China.
In a comic book called Finnish Nightmares - A Different Kind of Social Guide to Finland, Finnish graphic designer Karoliina Korhonen shows the inner struggles of a typical Finn, a people who relish personal space and tend to avoid small talk if not forced.
Since ancient times in China, art forms involving ink and brushes such as calligraphy and paintings have been seen as highly desirable and have brought prestige to the artists who excelled at them.