China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cultural connection­s gain fresh life

With touring exhibition­s, museums play role in deepening mutual understand­ing

- By CHEN YINGQUN chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn Yang Ran and Wang Kaihao contribute­d to this story.

Editor’s note: People-to-people exchanges are deepening the connection­s between countries participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative. This column celebrates the efforts of those working toward a shared future.

When Maryam Mohsin Hassan Abdalla visited Gansu Provincial Museum in 2016, she was impressed by its exotic charm and mixture of Eastern and Western cultures.

The 23-year-old Sudanese, from Khartoum, recalls she was enchanted by a series of exhibition­s at the museum in Lanzhou, in China’s Northwest. These included the Silk Road Exhibition and the Buddhist Art of Gansu. Also catching her eye was the famous bronze sculpture Galloping Horse Treading on a Flying Swallow.

“Gansu struck me as a special place where Chinese culture interacted with the Western culture,” she says of the province’s location on the ancient Silk Road. “Its cultural relics also demonstrat­ed a diversity of cultures, including Muslim culture and Arabic cultures. I was also impressed by the magnificen­ce of the Mogao Grottoes of Dunhuang, which helped me learn more about Buddhism.”

Abdalla is far from alone in valuing the learning experience to be gained from museums.

President Xi Jinping, in an address to the 20th meeting of the Council of Heads of State of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, called for the world to nourish people-to-people amity and build a community of cultural exchanges for us all.

“Each civilizati­on is distinct and none is superior to others. We need to promote mutual learning between our civilizati­ons and enhance goodneighb­orliness and friendship between our countries,” he said via video in November last year.

Museums of countries involved in the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, or BRI, have increased the frequency of exhibition­s on the cultural relics of other participat­ing nations since the initiative was unveiled in 2013, museum insiders say. In doing, so they have strengthen­ed people-to-people exchanges and mutual understand­ing.

The BRI focuses on promoting policy coordinati­on, connectivi­ty of infrastruc­ture and facilities, unimpeded trade, financial integratio­n, and closer people-to-people ties through extensive consultati­on, joint contributi­ons, and shared gains, with the goal of bringing benefits to all.

Manuel Rabate, director of Louvre Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, says the museum has a number of important Chinese works in its collection, including the Winged Dragon, a sculpture from the Chinese Warring States Period (475-221 BC).

“Our dragon is actually a hybrid made up of various animals, with the hindquarte­rs of a feline, the forequarte­rs of an alligator, the antlers of a stag and the wings of a bird,” he says. “It is also one of the largest free-standing sculptures of a dragon known to date in Chinese art. It is extremely popular with our audiences and we often see visitors taking selfies with it.”

Rabate says that cultural exchange is a critical factor in the success of humanity and it is Louvre Abu Dhabi’s main mission to tell stories of cultural connection­s.

He says the museum benefits from the UAE’s unique position at the crossroads of East and West and that the country maintains strong historical and contempora­ry links with China. This contribute­s to a strong relationsh­ip with China, he says.

“We share a known history of mutual trade and commerce dating back over a thousand years and indeed several of the displays in our permanent galleries look at cultural and artistic exchanges along the Silk Road, for example,” Rabate says.

He says Chinese visitors have always been very important and the museum has a Mandarin-speaking guide on the staff. Before the pandemic, China was the top source of the museum’s visitors, with Chinese making up 9.4 percent of them in 2019.

Rabate says the museum’s next internatio­nal exhibition will look at eight centuries of artistic and cultural exchanges between China and the Islamic world.

“I’m looking forward to how it will spotlight the many existing cultural and artistic exchanges between our home region and China,” he says.

Xu He, the project leader of the Internatio­nal Liaison Office of Art Exhibition­s China, says that in the years before the pandemic forced the closure of borders, the organizati­on had brought an increasing number of art exhibits to audiences in countries involved in the BRI. In 2014, the exhibition Treasures of China was held in Tanzania and, in the following year, the center curated exhibition­s on China’s general history in Latvia, Lithuania and Cyprus.

In 2016, the Treasures of China exhibition was taken to the Museum of Islamic Art in Qatar, bringing China’s Terracotta Warriors to people in the Gulf state for the first time. Over 70,000 visitors flocked to the exhibition in three months, and children created clay sculptures based on the warriors in workshops after seeing the exhibition.

Xu says that, in planning for exhibition­s in BRI countries, it is essential that curators bring over cultural relics with elements that local audiences will be familiar with, or connect with in some other way. In this spirit, she chose some plates with Arabic characters for the exhibition in Qatar. For Southeast Asia, it was the ornamentat­ion art from Beijing’s Summer Palace that people could relate to, as they understand more about Chinese culture.

“At present, the exhibition­s we have held in the BRI countries are mostly focusing on China’s iconic cultural exhibits and about general history to help the local audience gain a basic understand­ing of Chinese culture,” Xu says. “We would like to make more exhibition­s that can deepen their understand­ing.”

Xu says that Chinese audiences, in turn, have been increasing­ly interested in cultural relics and art from other BRI countries. For instance, the Splendor of Asia — An Exhibition of Asian Civilizati­ons in 2019 in Beijing, showcasing 451 items of cultural relics from all 47 countries in Asia, including China, as well as the ancient civilizati­ons of Greece and Egypt, proved a hit with Chinese audiences.

In a similar vein, cultural relics from Afghanista­n that were put on tour in China for two years from 2017 made an impact. When they were exhibited in the Forbidden City, more than 8,000 visitors came each day.

“We have a splendid plan of curating a series of exhibition­s of cultural relics and artworks that Chinese audience are not quite familiar with from BRI countries, including Pakistan, Iran, and Iraq,” says Xu, adding that the first exhibition from Syria will kick off a two-year tour from June, starting from Shenzhen in the south.

Xu says that while the COVID-19 pandemic has halted cross-border exhibition­s over the past year, other factors have in the past brought their own difficulti­es, such as transporta­tion, financing, and exhibits’ vulnerabil­ities. “I think that in the post-pandemic era, there will be more cultural relics exhibition­s from BRI countries in China, as Chinese audiences’ demand for such exhibition­s is getting stronger,” she says.

In 2016, more than 30 museums from countries participat­ing in the BRI formed an alliance under which they signed agreements on the protection and exchange of cultural relics, along with efforts to promote mutual learning among civilizati­ons and cultural coexistenc­e.

Han Bing, the chief researcher of culture and entertainm­ent practice of global consultanc­y Roland Berger, says cultural exchanges help people in BRI countries to understand each other.

“Museums are important carriers of culture and history, and every exhibit tells a story,” she says. “Cultural relics selected for exhibition should represent a country’s unique culture and history and the values of openness and inclusiven­ess of the BRI.”

She says the staging of cultural exhibition­s can also help BRI nations exchange experience­s on the operation and management of museums, taking in business models, fundraisin­g and management systems. Such shared knowledge can improve the management efficiency of these museums.

 ?? KAMRAN JEBREILI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Art lovers admire a Venus statue in the Louvre Abu Dhabi in December 2017. The artwork exemplifie­s the UAE’s position at the crossroads of East and West.
KAMRAN JEBREILI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Art lovers admire a Venus statue in the Louvre Abu Dhabi in December 2017. The artwork exemplifie­s the UAE’s position at the crossroads of East and West.
 ?? GAO ZHAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Tourists in Lanzhou, Gansu province, take in a copy of a mural from the Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes in May 2020.
GAO ZHAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Tourists in Lanzhou, Gansu province, take in a copy of a mural from the Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes in May 2020.
 ?? Galloping Horse Treading on a Flying Swallow on display YANG YANMIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? The sculpture at the Gansu Provincial Museum in June.
Galloping Horse Treading on a Flying Swallow on display YANG YANMIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE The sculpture at the Gansu Provincial Museum in June.
 ?? GAO ZHAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Visitors enjoy the cultural relics at the Gansu Provincial Museum in May last year.
GAO ZHAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Visitors enjoy the cultural relics at the Gansu Provincial Museum in May last year.
 ?? DU ZHEYU / XINHUA ?? Du Yongwei, an expert in traditiona­l art, paints a clay sculpture in his studio in April last year.
DU ZHEYU / XINHUA Du Yongwei, an expert in traditiona­l art, paints a clay sculpture in his studio in April last year.

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