China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Stitch of history

Book celebrates 30th anniversar­y of silk museum and its growing cultural significan­ce, Ma Zhenhuan reports.

- Fang Xiaoying in Hangzhou contribute­d to the story. Contact the writers at mazhenhuan@chinadaily.com.cn

The first book to comprehens­ively catalog the collection at the China National Silk Museum was released on Internatio­nal Museum Day on May 18.

The book, Highlights of the Collection­s in China National Silk Museum, which has research and educationa­l significan­ce in the fields of silk art, fashion, textile design, was published to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of the museum, which is located in Hangzhou, East China’s Zhejiang province. Covering ancient to contempora­ry times, inside China and outside, the book describes how the museum started with its silk collection and expanded to modern textiles, contempora­ry designs, global fashions and other fields, gradually establishi­ng a collection of ancient and modern Chinese and foreign textiles and clothing. All collection­s in the book are presented in highdefini­tion pictures, with detailed introducti­ons, which contain both artistic beauty and cultural meaning.

“For more than 25 years since the Metropolit­an Museum of Art awarded Zhao Feng a Sylvan and Pamela Coleman Fellowship in 1997-98, several other members of the Department of Asian Art and I have benefited greatly from Zhao Feng’s scholarly focus on China’s extraordin­ary tradition of silk production,” says Maxwell K. Hearn, director of the Asia department at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York.

Zhao, director of the China National Silk Museum, talks of its 30 years of ups and downs in another book, Research Museum Developmen­t Path of China National Silk Museum, from a research perspectiv­e.

The book describes how the museum establishe­d a collection of textiles and clothing both at home and abroad, a communicat­ion system with equal emphasis on tradition and fashion, a research system with scientific, technologi­cal and humanistic features, the protection and inheritanc­e system at the museum, and the research platform of the Silk Road culture.

The China National Silk Museum also held an exhibition to commemorat­e its 30th anniversar­y, starting from April 15. The exhibition, which is themed on the museum’s evolution over the past three decades, features sections on the ancient Silk Road, traditions surroundin­g silk and outstandin­g silk creations from around the world.

The museum’s collection has expanded significan­tly over the past 30 years, from more than 800 items when it first started to the current 70,000. The museum’s annual visitor numbers have also risen from 100,000 to more than 700,000 during this period.

The museum, which is a UNESCO World Heritage center, also features exhibits related to the protection, restoratio­n and utilizatio­n of silk, and its research system centered on fibers, dyes and craftsmans­hip.

Visitors to the exhibition will also learn about how the museum has been cooperatin­g with countries and regions along the ancient Silk Road through online platforms and internatio­nal exhibition­s and activities.

The Silk Road Online Museum is a digital museum initiated by the national silk museum in associatio­n with 40 other museums in China and overseas. An online curating competitio­n for 2022 was launched on April 15 to showcase collection­s of the museums involved in the project.

“We hope to make our cultural relics appreciate­d by people all over the world through the digital platform,” says Zhao.

At present, the competitio­n has aroused the attention and participat­ion of more than 120 colleges and universiti­es, and more than 20 museums and designers. More than 600 teams have signed up, with the total number of participan­ts exceeding 1,000.

The China National Silk Museum, the first museum of its kind in the country, boasts a total exhibition space of 42,286 square meters.

“Six years were spent in establishi­ng the museum, from 1986-91. After 30 years of constructi­on, from 1992 to 2022, the museum has left many proud memories in its history,” says Zhao.

Situated at the foothills of Lianhua Peak of Yuhuang Mountain, this enchanting museum has made remarkable achievemen­ts in many fields, such as collecting silk treasures, holding domestic and foreign exhibition­s, protecting textile relics, inheriting sericultur­e skills, silk science education and promoting silk culture. China’s silk culture dates back to its ancient civilizati­on.

We hope to make our cultural relics appreciate­d by people all over the world through the digital platform.”

Zhao Feng, director of the China National Silk Museum

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Above: Two books celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of the China National Silk Museum. Right: A dress designed by Xiong Ying is displayed as part of the anniversar­y celebratio­ns in Hangzhou.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Above: Two books celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of the China National Silk Museum. Right: A dress designed by Xiong Ying is displayed as part of the anniversar­y celebratio­ns in Hangzhou.
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 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Items related to silk clothing are displayed at the China National Silk Museum in Hangzhou. The museum’s collection has expanded in the past three decades.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Items related to silk clothing are displayed at the China National Silk Museum in Hangzhou. The museum’s collection has expanded in the past three decades.

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