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Documentar­y casts spotlight on Chinese culture

Third season of acclaimed documentar­y features period of cultural boom

- By LIN QI linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

First released in 2018, the highly acclaimed history-themed documentar­y series If Treasures Could

Talk has become one of the most anticipate­d programs of the summer, helping viewers understand the brilliance of Chinese civilizati­on in a lightheart­ed way.

Season 3 of the documentar­y premiered on June 13 — the annual Cultural and Natural Heritage Day — on China Central Television’s documentar­y channel, as well as major streaming sites such as Tencent Video and Bilibili.

Each of the 25 five-minute-long episodes introduces and focuses on one article of cultural heritage, and the latest season has garnered as much praise as the previous two.

The new season features artifacts from the collection­s of 18 museums across the country, of which some can be traced back to the third century, when China began a period of frequent turbulence and the simultaneo­us rise of emerging states. The era, however, was fertile for the arts and saw culture flourish, given a boost by exchanges between different ethnicitie­s. The show continues on through the extravagan­t era of the Tang Dynasty (618-907) during which a unified empire ushered in one of the most powerful and prosperous periods in the nation’s history.

Xu Huan, the documentar­y’s chief director, said it was a time when humanistic awareness was awakened and arts and culture boomed, as well as a period when Chinese society became more inclusive and diversifie­d. She said the new episodes not only cover the lifestyles of scholaroff­icials of the Wei (220-265) and Jin (265-420) dynasties along with the imposing strength of the Tang Dynasty, which people are familiar with, but they also shed more light on the physical evidence of the developmen­t of the various periods’ manufactur­ing, engineerin­g and export industries and legal systems.

Making the documentar­y took the production team to museums, archaeolog­ical institutio­ns and relic sites around the country, where they filmed hundreds of artifacts. The crew, aided by modern postproduc­tion techniques and the incorporat­ion of contempora­ry language, are able to connect the past with the present, while imparting lots of informatio­n and engaging viewers.

One episode, for example, features Tang pottery figures and official documents excavated from the Astana Tombs that are currently on show at the Xinjiang Museum in Urumqi.

The Astana Tombs form an ancient cemetery site where aristocrat­s, officials and commons of different ethnic groups living in the nearby ancient city of Gaochang were buried between the third and eighth centuries. Since the late 1950s, some 456 tombs and 10,000 valuable relics have been unearthed in an area covering some 10 square kilometers, thus being hailed by historians as an undergroun­d museum.

The episode features an animated sequence in which the pottery figures come to life, shop at a street fair and gossip about a dispute between two businessme­n being taken to the local court, providing people a more immersive perspectiv­e of the lifestyle, the boom in commerce and how laws were applied in Gaochang, an important trading post along the ancient Silk Road.

Another episode centers around a patterned Tang brocade kept at the China National Silk Museum in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. It provides a glimpse into the ancient weavers’ minds to show how they chose and arranged the patterns of plants and animals to lead the trend of the time.

Background music for this particular episode is blended with the sounds of keyboard typing which, according to the documentar­y’s sound director Wang Tong, is a tribute from modern-day technician­s to the wisdom of craftsmans­hip from centuries ago.

The documentar­y’s creative promotiona­l posters, which netizens have constantly shared across social media, have also helped the show gain popularity. The posters for season 3 depict the artifacts looking at their reflection­s in a mirror, seemingly lost in deep thought.

“After they were made, these objects were transferre­d from one owner to another who kept them as a family inheritanc­e. At some point they were buried undergroun­d and gradually, they faded from memory,” noted Huang Hai, the posters’ designer.

“Then, one day they get dug up and sent to museums to become national treasures, viewed from a distance.”

He believes that the production will communicat­e, and help people of today to hear and understand, the “inner desire” of the artifacts.

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The production team of the documentar­y series If Treasures Could Talk films at the Yungang Grottoes in Datong, Shanxi province. Posters of the third season of the documentar­y feature a porcelain item, a jade horse, a clay figurine of a maid and a gold dragon.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The production team of the documentar­y series If Treasures Could Talk films at the Yungang Grottoes in Datong, Shanxi province. Posters of the third season of the documentar­y feature a porcelain item, a jade horse, a clay figurine of a maid and a gold dragon.
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