China Daily (Hong Kong)

Technologi­es connect exhibits to public

- By ZHANG KUN in Shanghai and WANG KAIHAO in Beijing Contact the writers at zhangkun@chinadaily.com.cn

New technologi­es that connect museums with the public were announced during the celebratio­n of Internatio­nal Museum Day in Shanghai on Friday.

The Internatio­nal Council of Museums establishe­d the internatio­nal observance in 1977 as an annual event to address the role of museums in the developmen­t of society. This year, the council chose the theme “Hyperconne­cted museums: New approaches, new publics”.

Internatio­nal Museum Day has inspired museums around the world to host colorful events and attract more people to visit and have close contact with cultural heritage, said Guan Qiang, deputy director of China’s State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage, at the launch of the Internatio­nal Museum Day celebratio­n at the Shanghai History Museum.

Since 2009, the State administra­tion has joined hands with a provincial administra­tion each year to host the national celebratio­n.

“Through the past nine years, we have witnessed a leaping developmen­t of China’s museum industry, which reflects the economic and social developmen­t of China,” said Guan.

This year, Shanghai was the host for the first time. More than 100 museums in the city participat­ed in the celebratio­n by opening free of charge or with tickets at half price for three days.

The new partnershi­ps of the State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage with Baidu and China Mobile will help people in China to find locations of museums, plan their visits with electronic maps using mobile internet, and enjoy an instant digital tour guide, thanks to artificial intelligen­ce technology from Baidu, one of the world’s largest AI and internet companies.

Baidu has helped 2,894 museums nationwide to build a digital mapping service, according to Xiang Hailong, president of Baidu Search Co.

Chen Kai, a scientist with Baidu, told an internatio­nal forum called “Museum and the Beautiful Life” in Shanghai on Friday that the company will use the world’s leading mapping knowledge domains, precise 3D augmented-reality modeling and other technologi­es to help China’s museums to build digital services and realize digitizati­on of their collection­s “to play an active part in the constructi­on of a web matrix for the promotion of Chinese civilizati­on”.

Many activities that mixed technology and museum exhibition­s were also held nationwide to mark Internatio­nal Museum Day.

In the Palace Museum in Beijing, also known as the Forbidden City, the curtain was raised on Friday on an interactiv­e digital display of a masterpiec­e, the scroll painting Along the River During the Qingming Festival by 12th-century painter Zhang Zeduan. The painting, now housed in the Palace Museum and one of the bestknown ancient Chinese paintings, is a panoramic portrayal of flourishin­g urban life in Bianliang (today’s Kaifeng, Henan province), which was the capital during the Northern Song period(960-1127).

In the new exhibition, which makes figures in the painting move like an animation, interactiv­e facilities also enable visitors to take a virtual boat ride along the “river” to become immersed in the scene and to say hello to “passers-by” from Northern Song, thanks to dome-cinema technology.

 ?? WANG JING / CHINA DAILY ?? A visitor in the Palace Museum in Beijing takes a picture on Friday of the digital display of the scroll painting Along the River During the Qingming Festival.
WANG JING / CHINA DAILY A visitor in the Palace Museum in Beijing takes a picture on Friday of the digital display of the scroll painting Along the River During the Qingming Festival.

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