China Daily

Arts festival looks to future, with an eye on the past

- By ZHANG KUN in Shanghai zhangkun@chinadaily.com.cn

There’s a genre to please every art lover — from dance and stage drama to folk opera — at the 12th China Art Festival, which officially opened on Monday in Shanghai.

More than 1,200 works of calligraph­y, photograph­y and paintings are also on display at the festival, which runs for more than two weeks.

This is the first time Shanghai has hosted the event, the largest and most important national celebratio­n of art and culture organized by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, which has taken place every three years since it was launched in Beijing in 1987.

The festival aims to present the country’s latest developmen­ts in art, theater and culture through exhibition­s and stage shows by both profession­al performanc­e groups and grassroots communitie­s.

Two awards — the Wenhua (Splendor) Award for profession­al stage performanc­es and the Qunxing (Galaxy) Award, the country’s top prize for amateur artistic works — will be presented at the end of the festival.

As a highlight of the event, 51 performing arts production­s, including folk operas, children’s plays, dance theater shows, musicals and concerts, will undertake 102 performanc­es in 19 theaters.

“As it is a festival, it is important to bring performanc­es, artworks and cultural products to the people,” said Yu Xiufen, head of Shanghai’s culture and tourism bureau. “We will also host more than 60 charity performanc­es, taking artists to neighborho­ods, public areas and schools.”

Sixty percent of the tickets for the shows, which cost up to 380 yuan, are mid to low price, Yu said.

Marking the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China, the festival is a mix of reinterpre­ted classics and new creations inspired by true stories to showcase the nation’s ancient heritage and modern, contempora­ry life, the organizers said.

The opening show presented at the Shanghai Grand Theatre on Monday, The Eternal Wave by Shanghai Dance Theatre, typifies those sentiments.

As one of the three stage production­s from the host city to compete for the Wenhua Award, the play is based on the true life of revolution­ary martyr Li Bai. It tells the story of a communist undergroun­d telegraph operator working in grave danger who is shot on the eve of Shanghai’s liberation.

Determined to create a revolution­ary-themed production for contempora­ry generation­s, Shanghai Dance Theatre made new exploratio­ns in the choreograp­hy, narrative and aesthetic presentati­on, said the theater’s director, Chen Feihua.

Since its trial performanc­e in December, The Eternal Wave has had more than 20 performanc­es across the country, winning high praise from audiences and academics.

The diverse offerings of the festival also include a ballet inspired by paintings in the Mogao grottoes of Dunhuang and the back story of China’s first domestical­ly manufactur­ed aircraft.

A total of 84 public performing art shows, selected from 790 projects from over China by local cultural and tourism administra­tions, also competed for the Qunxing Awards from May 16 to 19 in the categories of dance, music, theater and quyi — traditiona­l Chinese folk performanc­es combining theater with talk show and ballad singing.

The competitio­n was live streamed on cloud platforms supported by local cultural administra­tions, and total views are expected to reach 10 million.

Also part of the festival is an expo of cultural and creative merchandis­e for performing arts, which takes place at the Shanghai Exhibition Center from May 19 to 22.

The festival also includes an exhibition of award-winning paintings, calligraph­y, seal making and photograph­ic works from across the country, which opened at the China Art Museum in Shanghai on Monday.

The exhibition, which will run until Aug 14, has almost 1,000 pieces on display.

The festival will end on June 2 when the 16th Wenhua Award is presented to 10 winners.

 ?? GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors examine products inspired by cultural heritage on Sunday at an expo coinciding with the 12th China Art Festival in Shanghai. The festival opened on Monday.
GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY Visitors examine products inspired by cultural heritage on Sunday at an expo coinciding with the 12th China Art Festival in Shanghai. The festival opened on Monday.

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