Beijing International Sculpture Park - Beijing - China (1)
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Beijing International Sculpture Park - Beijing - China (2 last)
Facebook.com/tim.buktu.usa
Beijing International Sculpture Park Beijing China (1)
Facebook.com/tim.buktu.usa.
Facebook.com/tim.buktu.usa.
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai. If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi,.
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai. If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi,.
Han Meilin, Speed, International Sculpture Park, Beijing
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai.
If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi, New York, San Francisco etc. choose the YouTube channel Art AtSite.
wikipedia.org:
Han Meilin (simplified Chinese: 韓美林; traditional Chinese: 韩美林; pinyin: Hán Měilín; born 1936 in Jinan, Shandong) is a Chinese artist most recognized today for his creation of the Fuwa dolls for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Han is also known to have lived through hard times during the Cultural Revolution.
In 2015, on October 15 at the UNESCO Headquarters, he was named the UNESCO Artist For Peace. “In recognition of his long-term commitment to promoting art and artistic education in China, his support to providing quality education to young people, notably through projects led by the Han Meilin Art Foundation, and his dedication to the ideals and aims of the Organization.” He has also announced plans to donate a 7-meter-tall bronze statue entitled Guardian of Peace, to UNESCO on the occasion of the Organization’s 70th anniversary.
bradshawfoundation.com:
Han Meilin was born in 1936 in Jinan, Shandong. He was admitted to the Central Academy of Arts and Design in 1955. He has had a prolific artistic career of painting and sculpture. He was commissioned to create the 10 meter high Five Dragon Clock Tower for the 26th Olympic Games held in Atlanta in 1996. Other monumental sculptures include ‘Tigers’ for Dalian in Liaoning Province, ‘The Bull’ for Jinan, ‘Cock Crows to Herald the Break of Day’ for Zibo in Shandong Province, and ‘Sacred Bull’ for Shekou. Han Meilin also created the Fuwa doll mascots for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
tripadvisor.nl:
This is a most remarkable museum of Han Meilin which includes sculpture, porcelain, and paintings. The sculpture series of mother and child is not to be missed. He did the logo for the Olympics and his magnificent massive sculptures are now found throughout China (and one in Atlanta, Georgia too!).
Han Meilin Art Museum, Adres: No. 68 Jiukeshu Donglu, Beijing, China.
tour-beijing.com:
Shijingshan District is one of the six uraban districts under the administration of Beijing. As an international traveler first time visiting Beijing, you would rarely think of visiting this unknown district on the west edge of Beijing city proper. Shijingshan District is not a place rich in historical sites or natural landscapes.
But if you are interested in arts and sculpture, Shijingshan is worth visiting, mainly due to the unique Beijing International Sculpture Park in the district. It is a multi-function park focused on arts appreciation, research, travel and entertainment. The natural landscape and man-made arts and sculpture are perfectly merged here in the park.
There are over 200 sculptures from over 40 countries, dotted in the park create a paradise for people seeking the mixture of arts and natural beauty. In the middle of the park, there is a Yulan Magnolia Garden planted with hundreds of Yulan Magnolia trees of 9 species, a highlight during the spring time when all the Yulan Magnolia trees are in full bloom.
The Beijing International Sculpture Park gives space to the WTCF.
en.wtcf.org.cn:
WTCF is the first city-based international tourism organization in the world. Guided by the vision of Better City Life through Tourism, it is committed to facilitating exchanges and cooperations between members and promoting sustainable growth in the tourism sector. WTCF aims to increase the appeal of tourism cities as international destinations, enhance the quality and efficiency of their services, boost the brand images of tourism cities and promote balanced economic and social progress in tourism cities and regions.
Van Lau, Wen Lou, Facing the Wind, International Sculpture Park, Beijing
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai.
If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi, New York, San Francisco etc. choose the YouTube channel Art AtSite.
finearts.hku.hk:
Name in pinyin: Wen Lou, Place of birth: China, Born: 1933.
Van Lau graduated from the Fine Arts Department in National Taiwan Normal University in 1959.
He held an exhibition at the Hong Kong City Hall in 1964. In 1965, he obtained a grant to visit the United States from the Institute of International Education, U.S.A. In 1968, his sculpture Exhibition was held in LUZ Gallery, Manila.
He was awarded SFBM Medal in the 145th Annual exhibition of the National Academy of Design, N. Y., U.S.A. in 1970.
An exhibition of his work was sponsored by the Hong Kong Arts Centre in 1979. In 1984, he organized the first Hong Kong Open-Air Sculptures Exhibition. A major exhibition, 'The Art of Van Lau' was presented by the Hong Kong Museum of Art in 1987. In 1992, 'The Exhibition of Sculpture by Van Lau' was presented by the Hsiung Shih Gallery in Taipei. 'Van Lau Sculptures Exhibition' was presented by the Sichuan Gallery in 1992.
He is now the Chairman of the Hong Kong Artists Association and the President of the Hong Kong Sculptors Association.
aaa.org.hk:
Title: The Art of Van Lau
Description: Van Lau is one of the leading sculptors in Hong Kong who has also contributed a great deal to the development of art education over the past decades through teaching, lecturing and publishing. This catalogue was published on the occasion of his solo exhibition at the Hong Kong Museum of Art in 1987. The presentation of his body of work, including paintings, is divided into three sections, providing a glimpse of the evolution of his art. Artist’s biography is included.
Publicer: Hong Kong Museum of Art
tour-beijing.com:
Shijingshan District is one of the six uraban districts under the administration of Beijing. As an international traveler first time visiting Beijing, you would rarely think of visiting this unknown district on the west edge of Beijing city proper. Shijingshan District is not a place rich in historical sites or natural landscapes.
But if you are interested in arts and sculpture, Shijingshan is worth visiting, mainly due to the unique Beijing International Sculpture Park in the district. It is a multi-function park focused on arts appreciation, research, travel and entertainment. The natural landscape and man-made arts and sculpture are perfectly merged here in the park.
There are over 200 sculptures from over 40 countries, dotted in the park create a paradise for people seeking the mixture of arts and natural beauty. In the middle of the park, there is a Yulan Magnolia Garden planted with hundreds of Yulan Magnolia trees of 9 species, a highlight during the spring time when all the Yulan Magnolia trees are in full bloom.
The Beijing International Sculpture Park gives space to the WTCF.
en.wtcf.org.cn:
WTCF is the first city-based international tourism organization in the world. Guided by the vision of Better City Life through Tourism, it is committed to facilitating exchanges and cooperations between members and promoting sustainable growth in the tourism sector. WTCF aims to increase the appeal of tourism cities as international destinations, enhance the quality and efficiency of their services, boost the brand images of tourism cities and promote balanced economic and social progress in tourism cities and regions.
Shi Xiangdong, Marching, Proceeding, International Sculpture Park, Beijing
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai.
If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi, New York, San Francisco etc. choose the YouTube channel Art AtSite.
artsalesindex.artinfo.com:
Shi Xiangdong (born 1967)
The name of this artwork is Proceeding
2008
Type: Contemporary Chinese Sculpture
Auction house: Xiling Yinshe
xlysauc.com:
Bronze sculpture
Published: The cover of the opening issue of Sculpture Magazine.
Sculpture Magazine, the 1st issue of 2008.
50 Years of Chinese Urban Sculpture, Chinese Sculpture Collection, etc.
Note: 1.Awarded the Excellent Prize of “The 8th National Fine Art Exhibition” in 1994.
Collected by PLA University of National Defence and Beijing Yuquan International Sculpture Garden.
142×100×46cm
RMB:80,000-100,000
tour-beijing.com:
Shijingshan District is one of the six uraban districts under the administration of Beijing. As an international traveler first time visiting Beijing, you would rarely think of visiting this unknown district on the west edge of Beijing city proper. Shijingshan District is not a place rich in historical sites or natural landscapes.
But if you are interested in arts and sculpture, Shijingshan is worth visiting, mainly due to the unique Beijing International Sculpture Park in the district. It is a multi-function park focused on arts appreciation, research, travel and entertainment. The natural landscape and man-made arts and sculpture are perfectly merged here in the park.
There are over 200 sculptures from over 40 countries, dotted in the park create a paradise for people seeking the mixture of arts and natural beauty. In the middle of the park, there is a Yulan Magnolia Garden planted with hundreds of Yulan Magnolia trees of 9 species, a highlight during the spring time when all the Yulan Magnolia trees are in full bloom.
The Beijing International Sculpture Park gives space to the WTCF.
wwwen.wtcf.org.cn
WTCF is the first city-based international tourism organization in the world. Guided by the vision of Better City Life through Tourism, it is committed to facilitating exchanges and cooperations between members and promoting sustainable growth in the tourism sector. WTCF aims to increase the appeal of tourism cities as international destinations, enhance the quality and efficiency of their services, boost the brand images of tourism cities and promote balanced economic and social progress in tourism cities and regions.
China Millenium Monument & Beijing World Art Museum - Beijing - China (1)
Facebook.com/tim.buktu.usa
Mitko Dinev, Head, International Sculpture Park, Beijing
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai.
If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi, New York, San Francisco etc. choose the YouTube channel Art AtSite.
mitkodinev.com:
Education:
Master of Fine Art - National Academy of Arts in Sofia, Bulgaria
High Art School in Sofia, Bulgaria
Current employment:
Professor in National Art Academy in Sofia, Bulgaria;
A visitor Professor in Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design-1999.
Awards / Grants:
The Grand Prize for Sculpture in stone in the International Symposium in Bourgas, Bulgaria;
A Gold Medal for Sculpture in Ravenna, Italy;
National Prize for Monumental Sculpture;
Third Prize in the International Snow Sculpture Contest - Milwaukee, USA.
The Prize Juan Alberto Garcia and the Prize Reinaldo Martinez from First International Biennial for Sculpture – Chaco, Argentina.
Certificate for excellent sculpture - China International Exhibition and Symposium - Beijing,2002.
tour-beijing.com:
Shijingshan District is one of the six uraban districts under the administration of Beijing. As an international traveler first time visiting Beijing, you would rarely think of visiting this unknown district on the west edge of Beijing city proper. Shijingshan District is not a place rich in historical sites or natural landscapes.
But if you are interested in arts and sculpture, Shijingshan is worth visiting, mainly due to the unique Beijing International Sculpture Park in the district. It is a multi-function park focused on arts appreciation, research, travel and entertainment. The natural landscape and man-made arts and sculpture are perfectly merged here in the park.
There are over 200 sculptures from over 40 countries, dotted in the park create a paradise for people seeking the mixture of arts and natural beauty. In the middle of the park, there is a Yulan Magnolia Garden planted with hundreds of Yulan Magnolia trees of 9 species, a highlight during the spring time when all the Yulan Magnolia trees are in full bloom.
The Beijing International Sculpture Park gives space to the WTCF. wwwen.wtcf.org.cn:
WTCF is the first city-based international tourism organization in the world. Guided by the vision of Better City Life through Tourism, it is committed to facilitating exchanges and cooperations between members and promoting sustainable growth in the tourism sector. WTCF aims to increase the appeal of tourism cities as international destinations, enhance the quality and efficiency of their services, boost the brand images of tourism cities and promote balanced economic and social progress in tourism cities and regions.
Ice festival in Harbin China with Shanghai and Beijing
2 weeks in China. We visited the famous snow and ice festival in freezing Harbin and also Shanghai and Beijing
Murry Dewart, Merging Water, International Sculpture Park, Beijing
You can find more information at beijingart.info and shanghaiart.org about art in public space in Beijing and Shanghai.
If you like to see statues in cities like Amsterdam, London, New Delhi, New York, San Francisco etc. choose the YouTube channel Art AtSite.
harvardmagazine.com:
“In sculpture, you are always fighting the deadness of a thing,” says Murray Dewart ’70, paraphrasing Victorian critic Walter Pater. “The secret of sculpture is getting the feeling that the life force is pushing from the inside out. You get it in bread.” He picks up a fresh baguette. “This has risen two or three times,” he explains. “The form is being inflated from the inside out. That is what great sculpture does. [Alexander] Calder or George Rickey wanted to get things moving in the sunlight—the spark is the reflection of light as the thing turns. It has to come alive.”
One of Dewart’s sculptures, Sabbath Loaf (2005)—installed this summer at The Mount, Edith Wharton’s home in Lenox, Massachusetts—in fact resembles a bronze loaf of challah, halved and standing vertically, like a sandwich with a filling of smooth river stones. Much of his work is in bronze and granite: the forms are simple, often resembling gates, and they feel rooted, like the five-foot-tall Sun Gate installed in the McKinlock courtyard of Harvard’s Leverett House. Across the planet, in the International Sculpture Park of Fuzhou, China, the 12-foot Earth House Hold (2003) uses two massive granite pillars to support a bronze grid with a bronze arch surmounting. “When the granite is rough-cut in the right way,” Dewart says, “you can still feel the mountain speak.”
Dewart (rhymes with Stuart; dewartsculpture.com) makes sculptures that often occupy gardens, where their simplicity both contrasts and harmonizes with the live landscape. Many viewers find an Asian sensibility in his works. “There’s a spiritual component in me, as there is in old stone and forms coming out of China and Japan,” he explains. “Their central element has a balanced, harmonic kind of equilibrium, an emblem of what I am yearning for, not necessarily of what I’ve found.” Some Chinese buyers apparently do appreciate his efforts; Beijing also has two of his works in its international sculpture park.
After college (where he concentrated in English but did some seminal sculpting in Carpenter Center), Dewart returned to his home state of Vermont, where he and his wife, Mary, lived on a remote, 100-acre farm at the end of a road near Lake Champlain. Over seven years, he taught himself sculpture, beginning with wood carving, which he practiced for two decades. He recalls having “a great adventurous, independent youth,” doing things like working as a roustabout in a Wyoming oil field. “If you didn’t take risks early,” he says, “you’d never be crazy enough to do something as dangerous and financially risky as becoming an artist.”
He notes also that “you have to be clever to survive as an artist.” His works began selling only about 20 years ago, so Dewart has held many day jobs. He has taught sculpture often, including 10 years at Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire. He recalls attending a black-tie dinner at the Fogg Museum where, poignantly, he locked eyes with a neighbor and fellow artist who was serving him. Yet, “if you ask your art to support you early in your career, you’ll probably be doing fairly stupid things as an artist,” he says. “When you burden your art with ulterior motives, you can ruin it.”
In 1978, just before their second son was born, the Dewarts abandoned their rural isolation for Boston, where he vowed “never to be cut off again.” He started organizing sculptors’ dinners to offset “the loneliness of being an artist. Art grows from nature, and it also grows from other artists, both long-dead and living ones.” The dinners grew into the Boston Sculptors Gallery, now 20 years old, with 36 members, half male, half female. They’ve staged shows all over the world, from Peru to Paris, including a major assemblage of works installed at the Christian Science Plaza in Boston this year. “It’s the community I wanted,” Dewart says.
But the sculptor’s process requires solitude, too. Each day begins with a blank sheet of paper at dawn; Dewart writes or draws whatever comes to him. He’s now on his sixty-fifth volume of this daily journal. “I am trying to please something in the eye and the heart,” he says. “You have to come into the studio and have something powerful happen to you.” When he enters his studio, “there’s a certain amount of chaos,” he says, and you never know when something will trigger an idea. It might, for example, be a fragrant baguette.
Beijing's Longtan (Dragon Temple) Park
This video is about Beijing's Longtan (Dragon Temple) Park
Running boom: Beijing Olympic park sparks China’s running wave | Coming of Age
Mass participation sports were rare in China, until 2008. The Beijing Olympic Forest Park has been at the forefront of China’s running boom.
Find out more about China's Sports Industry Development in the Coming of Age: China After Beijing 2008 series:
Subscribe to the official Olympic channel here:
Unbelievable Ice City! CHINA
I have NEVER seen anything like this.
I explore an ice city, get frostbite (for real, unfortunately), and continue the hunt for a mysterious hidden ice bar.
WATERFLY:
Check out Bekah's channel about life in China!
BEST VPN (This link gives you 3 months free on a 12 month package)
SOCIALS
Instagram - travellight21
Facebook -
Twitter -
(I haven’t written on here in awhile, but I should)
**Try out Airbnb! You'll get a free night's stay anywhere in the world, and so will I! It's a win win. :D
PLACES
Harbin, Heilongjiang, China 哈尔滨
International Ice & Snow Sculpture Festival 哈尔滨国际冰雪节
Central St. (Zhongyangdajie) 中央大街
Zhaolin Park 兆麟公园
St. Sophia Cathedral 聖索菲亜教堂
New Jewish Synagogue 犹太新会堂旧址
Sun Island (Songbei) 太阳岛
Stalin Park 哈尔滨市斯大林公园
Songhua River 松花江
Shangri-la Hotel Harbin
MUSIC
A lot of the music used in this video is from Musicbed. Get your own account here:
first song (0:10): Anything You Want (instrumental) by The TVC
Provided by Musicbed
backing song (0:43): Days Like These by Lakey Inspired
Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
arrival song (1:53): Lightness by Nomyn, Audio Library
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Music promoted by Audio Library
cool song (2:38 & 5:15): Beautiful Woman by KSMK (Vlog No Copyright)
Music promoted by Vlog No Copyright Music.
Video Link:
Bekah song (3:37): One More Night by Dizaro
video link:
elusive song (4:52): Quietness by Kisnou
video link:
Music provided by Heroboard
build up song (4:59): Can You Feel It by T-Mass & Enthic
Music provided by NoCopyrightSounds (NCS)
watch:
Free Download / Stream:
going out song (5:24): Happy Feelings by Dj Quads
main song (7:18 & 16:20): Towers by JMR
Provided by Musicbed
happy song (10:26): Living Right by Lone Waves
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food song (16:37): See the Sky by Dizaro
video link:
discovery song (18:56): Meris by Jordan Critz
Provided by Musicbed
last song (21:21): A New Color in the Flame by JMR
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**Sorry for all of the links, but these artists deserve credit for their awesome work!
China 2016. Episode 1. Harbin - Beijing
23/01/16 Новосибирск - Харбин - Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival 2016
24/01/16 Пекин - площадь Тяньаньмэнь - Запретный город Гугун - Олимпийская деревня
Wu Guanzhen Contemporary Lacquer Art Exhibition 2018 (Beijing)
Project name: Exhibition Hall of Wu Guanzhen Contemporary Lacquer Art Exhibition 2018 (Beijing)
Exhibition time: October 14 - 28, 2018
Project location: Today Art Museum, Beijing, China
Interior design: WEN QU DESIGN
Chief designer: Lin Liqun
Project area: 913 sqm
Photography: WU GUANZHEN ART STUDIO
Wu Guanzhen Artwork Exhibition|Let lacquer breathe on cloth
Wu Guanzhen, an emerging artist from China, welcomes the first stop of his 2018-2019 Asian exhibition tour in Beijing Today Art Museum. The building combines industrial heritage with modern design, allowing the artworks to be displayed through a unique aesthetic expression.
In a pure white-toned atmosphere, elaborately arranged lighting hightlights Wu’s 5 series of works, including Weaving Recall, Dunhuang Scroll, Mountain Plan, Daydreaming Land and Microscopic Nature. These works witness his careful interpretation of traditional materials like lacquer and ramie, and also reflect the artist's inner insistence on natural materials and traditional craftsmanship.
China is one of the countries where natural lacquer originated. Wu thinks the natural transparence of lacquer will be covered up if it is attached to a lacquer board. When a leaf shines in the light, its both sides appear quite transparent. Is it possible for lacquer to be so light and transparent on both sides?
Wu takes the ground-breaking step to move lacquer art from heavy-weighted boards to light lawns, creating an ambience of lightness and grace. The semitransparent raw Chinese lacquer is the perfect material to recreate natural light, aesthetically bringing forth the “fragments of reminiscence”.
He persists to express the conceptual artistic thinking with innovative ways of contemporary lacquer art, furthering revealing a unique perspective of the extraordinary characteristics in Eastern aesthetics. He handles such natural materials with care, and gives lacquer art new breath and extension by using threads to penetrate through the space.
The exhibiting way is as fantastic as the works. One end of the frame maintains an acute angular against the wall. Under the spotlight, scenes on the paintings are projected on the white wall, reflecting hidden rhythm of the entire space. Light is another material that adds mystique in the blending of lacquer and ramie. Under different light sources on the site, Wu's works provide visitors with an experience that is diverse yet harmonious, subtle yet touchable. The trip of lacquer art becomes a visual sense that is agile by light.
BEIJING CITY LIFE - Red Brick Art Museum - Chaoyang District
Beijing City Life è un progetto di ricerca, scoperta e mappatura della città di Beijing. Questo primo episodio vuole essere un'introduzione alla serie, girato a metà tra il Red Brick Museum e casa mia.
SITO RED BRICK MUSEUM:
ABCINA.IT:
INSTAGRAM:
Harbin & Beijing - Chinese New Year 2016
Harbin & Beijing - Chinese New Year 2016
Harbin Snow & Ice Festival
Harbin Tiger Park
Beijing City
Mutianyu Great Wall
Lü Peng,and Zhan Wang at #Galleriailly #Beijing
On the occasion of Charta's 20 years anniversary, Giuseppe Liverani, Charta's editor and founder, leads a conversation with Lü Peng, one of the most important contemporary art Chinese critics and author of the publishing house, and Zhan Wang, one of China's leading contemporary artists today, of whom Charta published many exhibitions' catalogues.
9 Dragon-Wall inside the Forbidden City - Beijing - China
This video shows you one of the 3 9 dragons walls that are left over in China. This one is located in the special area within the Forbidden City and it will cost you an additional 10 Yuan fee to get to that part. See the location for the exact place of this wall. This Nine-Dragon Wall was built in 1772 (the 38th year of Emperor Qianlong in the Qing Dynasty), when the palace Ningshou gong was converted. It's 67 feet long and 11.5 feet tall. That's 29.4 meters long, 3.5 meters high & 0.45 meter thick. In terms of its artistic value and architectural design, nothing better exists than this. Though this Nine-Dragon Wall is nothing but a screen wall, it fully demonstrates the magnificence of the Forbidden City, as well as the pride and honor of the imperial family. Ordinary people’s screen walls were generally built with bricks, but the Nine-Dragon Wall used colored glaze. What's most striking and magnificent about the wall is the nine dragons. In Chinese culture, dragons signify a supreme status, and are an extraordinary mascot. That’s why emperors in ancient times often referred to themselves as a true dragon, and a son of heaven. Only emperors were qualified wear robes with dragon-shaped designs, and use the anything with paintings of dragons. The other 2 existing 9 dragon-walls can be seen in Datong, in the Shanxi province, 800 miles away, and in the Beijing Beihai Park.
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這個視頻向您展示了中國留下的3“9龍牆”之一。這一個位於紫禁城的特殊區域,它將花費額外的10元費用到那部分。看到這個牆的確切位置的位置。這九龍牆建於1772年(清代的干隆皇帝38年),當宮殿玲瓏鑼被改造時。它是67英尺長和11.5英尺高。長29.4米,高3.5米,厚0.45米。在藝術價值和建築設計方面,沒有比這更好的存在。雖然這九龍牆只是一個屏風牆,它充分展示了紫禁城的壯麗,以及帝國家庭的傲慢和榮譽。普通人的屏幕牆一般用磚塊建造,但九龍牆使用彩色釉。牆上最醒目和壯麗的是九條龍。在中國文化中,龍代表著至高無上的地位,是一個非凡的吉祥物。這就是為什麼古代的皇帝經常把自己稱為真正的龍,和天堂的兒子。只有皇帝才是具有龍形設計的合格穿長袍,並使用任何與龍繪畫。其他2個現有的9龍牆可以在大同,800英里遠的山西省和北京北海公園看到。
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Cette vidéo vous montre l'un des 3 9 dragons murs» qui sont laissés sur la Chine. Celui-ci est situé dans la zone spéciale dans la Cité Interdite et il vous en coûtera une taxe de 10 Yuan supplémentaire pour arriver à cette partie. Voir la localisation de l'endroit exact de ce mur. Ce mur Nine-Dragon a été construit en 1772 (l'année 38e de l'empereur Qianlong de la dynastie des Qing), quand le palais Ningshou gong a été converti. Il est 67 pieds de long et 11,5 pieds de haut. C'est de 29,4 mètres de long, 3,5 mètres de haut et 0,45 mètre d'épaisseur. En termes de sa valeur artistique et la conception architecturale, rien de mieux que cela existe. Bien que ce mur Nine-Dragon est rien, mais un mur d'écran, il démontre pleinement la magnificence de la Cité interdite, ainsi que la fierté et l'honneur de la famille impériale. Les murs des gens ordinaires d'écran ont été généralement construites avec des briques, mais le mur Nine-Dragon occasion glaçure colorée. Ce qui est le plus frappant et magnifique sur le mur est les neuf dragons. Dans la culture chinoise, les dragons signifient un statut suprême, et sont une mascotte extraordinaire. Voilà pourquoi souvent empereurs dans les temps anciens appelés eux-mêmes comme un véritable dragon, et un fils du ciel. Seuls les empereurs étaient qualifiés robes d'usure avec des motifs en forme de dragon, et utilisent la chose avec des peintures de dragons. Les 2 autres 9 dragons murs existants peuvent être vus à Datong, dans la province du Shanxi, à 800 miles de distance, et dans le parc Beihai de Beijing.
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यह वीडियो आपको 3 9 ड्रेगन दीवारों है कि चीन में पर छोड़ दिया जाता का पता चलता है। यह एक निषिद्ध शहर के भीतर विशेष क्षेत्र में स्थित है और यह आप उस हिस्से को पाने के लिए एक अतिरिक्त 10 युआन शुल्क खर्च होंगे। इस दीवार की सही जगह के लिए स्थान देखें। यह नौ ड्रैगन दीवार 1772 (किंग राजवंश के सम्राट क्वायान लांग के 38 वें वर्ष), जब महल Ningshou घडि़याल परिवर्तित कर दिया गया में बनाया गया था। यह 67 फुट लंबा और 11.5 फुट लंबा है। यही कारण है कि 29.4 मीटर, लंबी 3.5 मीटर ऊंची और 0.45 मीटर मोटी है। अपनी कलात्मक मूल्य और वास्तु डिजाइन के मामले में, कुछ भी बेहतर है इस से मौजूद है। हालांकि यह नौ ड्रैगन दीवार लेकिन एक स्क्रीन दीवार कुछ भी नहीं है, यह पूरी तरह निषिद्ध शहर की भव्यता, साथ ही गर्व और शाही परिवार के सम्मान को दर्शाता है। आम लोगों की स्क्रीन दीवारों आम तौर पर ईंटों से बनाया गया था, लेकिन नौ ड्रैगन दीवार शीशे का आवरण रंग का इस्तेमाल किया। क्या सबसे स्पष्ट और दीवार के बारे में शानदार नौ ड्रेगन है। चीनी संस्कृति में, ड्रेगन एक सर्वोच्च स्थिति को दर्शाता है, और एक असाधारण शुभंकर हैं। यही कारण है कि प्राचीन काल में सम्राट अक्सर एक सच्चे अजगर, और आकाश के एक बेटे के रूप में खुद के लिए भेजा है। केवल सम्राटों अजगर के आकार का डिजाइन के साथ पहनने के लिए वस्त्र योग्य, और ड्रेगन के चित्रों के साथ कुछ भी इस्तेमाल कर रहे थे। अन्य 2 9 मौजूदा ड्रैगन-दीवारों Datong में देखा जा सकता है, शांक्सी प्रांत में, 800 मील दूर, और बीजिंग Beihai पार्क में।
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Beijing unveils incredible ice sculptures
The enormous Longqing Gorge Ice Lantern Festival features 300 sculptures covering 500,000 square metres. Report by Sam Datta-Paulin. Like us on Facebook at and follow us on Twitter at