China Daily

Many museums overseas celebrate Lunar New Year

- By KONG WENZHENG in New York and BO LEUNG in London

With Chinese New Year almost here, museums abroad have been eager to celebrate.

Spring Festival is widely celebrated by museums as a chance to attract broader audiences and invite visitors to learn more about China.

The Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York has hosted a Lunar New Year festival for nine years. Last year, 89 percent of all attendees indicated that they went to The Met specifical­ly for the festival, according to Julie Marie Seibert, assistant educator for family programs at the museum.

The celebratio­ns usually feature family-friendly performanc­es and art workshops. Lion dances, traditiona­l Chinese music and dance, paper-cutting, red envelopes, scrolls and the Chinese zodiac are among the favorites.

“For each festival, we develop unexpected, multimodal activities with artists, performers and arts organizati­ons to connect visitors to a broader cultural community,”

Seibert said.

The Met also plans an annual exhibition for the year’s correspond­ing Chinese zodiac symbol. This year, a six-month exhibition features pigs created by Chinese artists over the past 2,000 years.

Museums look at Chinese New Year as a great educationa­l opportunit­y. “We hope that families from Philadelph­ia’s Asian communitie­s make our Lunar New Year celebratio­n a part of theirs,” said Elizabeth Baill, manager of family programs at the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art, which has been hosting such celebratio­ns for over 20 years.

The Art Institute of Chicago has hosted Lunar New Year celebratio­ns for five years. It saw attendance increase 24 percent during the 2018 Chinese New Year celebratio­n.

“Our hope is for visitors to engage in cultural exchanges through a variety of activities to gain a better understand­ing of Chinese arts and culture,” said Nora Gainer, its director of tourism marketing.

Museums across the United Kingdom will be celebratin­g Chinese New Year with activities and performanc­es throughout February to welcome the Year of the Pig.

In London, the Science Museum has had a Chinese-themed evening event. The Museum of the Docklands has an area where children can practice ribbon twirling and martial arts and also play traditiona­l percussion instrument­s. Lion dances will be performed at the front of the museum.

In Greenwich, an art workshop is to be held aboard the inspired by the ship’s historic travels, and the National Maritime Museum will host children’s activities, including lion dancing, arts and storytelli­ng.

In East London at the V&A Museum of Childhood, visitors can explore Chinese crafts and calligraph­y and watch live entertainm­ent. Other activities include making Chinese opera masks and costumes and attending calligraph­y workshops.

At the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, Spring Festival celebratio­ns will begin with performanc­es, stalls, workshops and activities. Stalls will feature elements of Chinese culture, and there will be a Chinese-inspired menu in the cafe and Chinese goods for sale in the shop. Visitors can search for pigs throughout the museum.

Elsewhere, there will be a wide range of activities organized by the National Museums Liverpool, including arts and crafts and lion dances.

Billy Hui, presenter of BBC Radio Merseyside’s Orient Express program, will discuss Chinese New Year at the Lady Lever Art Gallery.

 ?? HANYAN / XINHUA ?? London Science Museum hosts an event on China.
HANYAN / XINHUA London Science Museum hosts an event on China.

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