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China closes Int’l arts festival
SHANGHAI—The Czech
Philharmonic Orchestra, the indisputable authority playing the music by
Slav maestros like Antonin Dvorak, made its Shanghai debut on Sunday
night, closing the 9th China Shanghai International Arts Festival, the
largest event of the kind in the country.
Having just celebrated its 110th birthday, the orchestra, well-known for
its elegant and classical string ensemble and its unique Czech-style
acoustics, was currently on its Asian performance tour.
“The month-long festival provided a communication platform for cultural
dialogue among different countries and prominently displayed both
classic and modern Chinese arts,” said Culture Minister Sun Jiazheng at
the closing ceremony before the Czech performance.
Sun said the festival, as the “busiest, largest and most prosperous
performance season in China”, would continue to contribute to the “great
development and prosperity of the socialist culture”.
The annual festival this year featured 55 performances, including
symphony orchestras, dances, musicals and ballets from both home and
abroad over the past month, with an audience totaling 400,000, said Chen
Shenglai, president of the arts festival center at Sunday’s press
conference. Chen said 18 paintings and artifacts exhibitions from more
than140 arts institutions of 17 countries, including works by Rembrandt
and selected artifacts from Spain’s Prado Museums, were held during the
festival, attracting more than 200,000 visits.
International artists were also invited to more than 3,000 street
activities, carnivals and school arts events, attracting more than 1.5
million audience home and abroad, making the general public, especially
children, can truly participate in the activities and enjoy arts, he
said.
—Xinhua |