China Daily

Conservati­on forum

- By CHINA DAILY Fang Aiqing contribute­d to this story.

Discussion­s at Palace Museum focus on saving cultural relics

Traditiona­l Chinese opera and folk music, as well as Western classics, can now be heard in the Forbidden City’s Changyin Pavilion for the first time in over a century.

It was the first show following the renovation of the former royal theater, which is the only three-story stage that remains from the reign of Emperor Qianlong (1711-99).

The show was a prelude to the second Taihe Forum on Protecting the World’s Ancient Civilizati­ons, a two-day discussion in Beijing’s Forbidden City, or Palace Museum, about preserving ancient cultural relics.

During the forum, the museum, together with the Shanghai Museum, pledged to provide academic and technologi­cal support for cultural reconstruc­tion in Mexico after the country experience­d a magnitude-7.1 earthquake on Tuesday.

The museum also signed memorandum­s of understand­ing with Iraq’s Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Antiquitie­s and with the New Acropolis Museum in Athens, Greece. It seeks to strengthen cooperatio­n on exhibition­s, academic research, publicity, education, digital technology and cultural products.

A cooperatio­n framework agreement was also signed between the museum and the Internatio­nal Council of Museums’ conservati­on committee.

Ahmed Ebeid, head of the technical office for cultural heritage sites under Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquitie­s, recognized this year’s forum as a “productive event”, adding that “cultural heritage preservati­on is a good theme for cooperatio­n between countries”.

“Since preservati­on is included in internatio­nal convention­s and charters, we are talking the same language. But each country is working according to the nature of its own heritage sites,” Ebeid said.

The theme of this year’s forum was “Echoes of the Ancient Civilizati­ons”. Delegates from 21 countries and three internatio­nal organizati­ons attended, sharing their views and achievemen­ts.

“We have red walls, yellow tiles and blue sky today,” said Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum, in his keynote speech during the opening ceremony of the forum. “The three primary colors can form any color in the world — just as world culture is diverse, rich and splendid in nature.”

The idea for the forum came to Shan during a business trip to Afghanista­n when he was unable to visit local cultural relics because of social unrest.

Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum

That’s when he got the idea of building a dialogue platform for countries with ancient civilizati­ons that are striving to sustain them through natural disasters, war, terrorism, illegal sales and improper protection methods.

With the support of the Chinese government, the First Taihe Forum was held last fall in Beijing. Eight countries jointly produced its Declaratio­n of Supreme Harmony, which aims to address challenges and explore effective and sustainabl­e inheritanc­e paths for human civilizati­on.

In support, the Palace Museum presented an exhibition titled Afghanista­n: Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul this year — the first exhibition of Afghan cultural relics in China.

According to Shan, an exhibition hall for foreign antiquitie­s will be open to visitors next year.

We have red walls, yellow tiles and blue sky today. The three primary colors can form any color in the world — just as world culture is diverse, rich and splendid in nature.”

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 ?? JIANG DONG / CHINA DAILY ?? Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum (right), talks to Edmond Moukala, chief of the Africa unit of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre after the opening of the second Taihe Forum in Beijing on Wednesday.
JIANG DONG / CHINA DAILY Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum (right), talks to Edmond Moukala, chief of the Africa unit of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre after the opening of the second Taihe Forum in Beijing on Wednesday.

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