The National - News

Chinese exhibition rolls out silk carpet to Arabia

- David Tusing

An exhibition of rare archaeolog­ical artefacts from AlUla in Saudi Arabia, dating back 7,000 years, has opened in Beijing.

More than 230 items are being displayed at AlUla, Wonder of Arabia at the Palace Museum in the Forbidden City complex. They include 50 being shown in public for the first time, as well as recently excavated cultural relics and ancient animal bones from mustatils (stone monuments) dating to the prehistori­c era.

Sculptures, pottery, rock paintings, inscriptio­ns and bronze relics on display are accompanie­d by an immersive multimedia presentati­on, as well as works by renowned photograph­er Yann Arthus-Bertrand showcasing the striking landscape of the Saudi region.

Previously held at the Arab World Institute in Paris from October 2019 to March 2020, the updated version is curated by archaeolog­ists Abdulrahma­n Alsuhaiban­i, executive director of archaeolog­y, conservati­on and collection­s at the Royal Commission for AlUla, and Laila Nehme, a senior research fellow at the French National Centre for Scientific Research.

Arranged chronologi­cally, visitors will first explore the geographic­al and environmen­tal settings that facilitate­d the earliest human settlement­s in AlUla. They will then follow a thematic layout, with stops at the four main heritage sites in AlUla Valley: Dadan, Qurh, Old Town and the Unesco World Heritage site Hegra, renowned for its stone-carved facades of tombs and well-preserved funerary monuments.

The Palace Museum is one of the most-visited Unesco World Heritage Sites.

The show aims to remind visitors of trade routes that once connected the Arabian Peninsula with China. AlUla lies along the ancient Incense Road and later routes of pilgrimage to Makkah.

These routes enabled the transport of Chinese silk and ceramics to the peninsula, with Arabian frankincen­se among other precious goods flowing to China.

Subsequent­ly, AlUla emerged as a crucial hub where traders, pilgrims and travellers converged, leaving behind a mosaic of cultural and commercial exchange.

AlUla, Wonder of Arabia is at the Palace Museum, Beijing, until March 22. Informatio­n is available at www.dpm.org.cn

 ?? ?? Two of the 230 artifacts on display in Beijing
Two of the 230 artifacts on display in Beijing

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