PHOTO / CHINA
Dunhuang art exhibition tours Taiwan
Published: May 29, 2019 01:54 PM

People take photos at an exhibition featuring ancient Buddhist art from Dunhuang in northwest China's Gansu Province in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, May 28, 2019. The exhibition opened in Taipei on Tuesday, the last stop of its three-leg tour across the island, and will run through June 21. Displays include high-definition replicas of the Dunhuang grotto murals, sculptures, musical equipment, models of Buddhist towers, and photos of the decades-long exploration of the Dunhuang grottos. (Xinhua/Zhang Guojun)


 

People visit an exhibition featuring ancient Buddhist art from Dunhuang in northwest China's Gansu Province in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, May 28, 2019. The exhibition opened in Taipei on Tuesday, the last stop of its three-leg tour across the island, and will run through June 21. Displays include high-definition replicas of the Dunhuang grotto murals, sculptures, musical equipment, models of Buddhist towers, and photos of the decades-long exploration of the Dunhuang grottos. (Xinhua/Zhang Guojun)


 

People visit an exhibition featuring ancient Buddhist art from Dunhuang in northwest China's Gansu Province in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, May 28, 2019. The exhibition opened in Taipei on Tuesday, the last stop of its three-leg tour across the island, and will run through June 21. Displays include high-definition replicas of the Dunhuang grotto murals, sculptures, musical equipment, models of Buddhist towers, and photos of the decades-long exploration of the Dunhuang grottos. (Xinhua/Zhang Guojun)


 
An exhibition featuring ancient Buddhist art from Dunhuang in northwest China's Gansu Province is touring Taiwan.

The exhibition opened in Taipei on Tuesday, the last stop of its three-leg tour across the island, and will run through June 21.

Displays include high-definition replicas of the Dunhuang grotto murals, sculptures, musical equipment, models of Buddhist towers, and photos of the decades-long exploration of the Dunhuang grottos.

Hou Liming, a fellow at Dunhuang Research Academy, said the items on show were chronologically organized and represent only a tiny part of the entire Dunhuang relic collection.

"Our friends from Taiwan are welcome to visit Dunhuang," he said.

Hou also gave a public lecture on Dunhuang art on the sidelines of the exhibition.

Since 2016, institutes across the Taiwan Strait have been cooperating to organize Dunhuang art exhibitions in Taiwan.