Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Masters present province with a pick-me-up

-

In the drizzle, the Summer Palace in Northwest Beijing, known as the best-preserved imperial garden in the world, looks both mythical and picturesqu­e. Not far from Xinjiangon­g Gate, a group of women in purplish-blue uniforms grab visitors’ attention as they line up along Kunming Lake, the UNESCO World Heritage Site’s key landscape feature.

Usually, they work around another lake, West Lake, a must-see destinatio­n in East China’s Zhejiang province, providing informatio­n and helping tourists in the area.

Their debut at the palace was part of the opening celebratio­n of a grand cultural and tourism promotion campaign

— the Zhejiang Cultural Tourism Week (Hangzhou Day) and 2020 Zhejiang (Beijing) Tourism Fair in late September. The campaign aimed to boost exchanges between the two attraction­s, which are connected by the canal.

At the fair’s exhibition area, artisans from 11 cities in Zhejiang province showcased their unique skills, including traditiona­l paper-cutting, puppet shows, guqin (a seven-string traditiona­l Chinese instrument with a history dating back thousands of years) performanc­es and hand-painted paper fans.

“I’m coloring the flower on the fan and this is quite hard for me as a beginner,” said one visitor at the fair. She used an ink brush to paint a lotus flower on a folding fan with watercolor paints.

“The experience is so different from painting on a flat piece of paper,” she said. “Because you have to think about how it will look on the blades.”

Besides offering a hands-on experience for enthusiast­s, one artisan from Hangzhou also shared knowledge about the art of folding paper fans and what people need to create a DIY fan.

“Altogether, there are 15 different types of Hangzhou fans,” said the artist, while showing visitors a delicate, black paper fan with brightly colored dots.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States