What's on (March 20, 2026)
China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-20 10:01
Shanghai School
By the 18th century, Shanghai had emerged as a thriving port and trade hub, its rapid growth in finance, industry and commerce shaping it into an international metropolis. This social prosperity, combined with an openness to fusing Eastern and Western cultures, drew artists from neighboring regions. Nourished by the city's booming art scene, they reworked traditional brush techniques to create the Shanghai School, a key reform movement in modern Chinese painting.
Convergence and Legacy, a long-term exhibition at Tianjin Museum, brings together dozens of Shanghai School paintings and archival materials from the Shanghai History Museum and Tianjin Museum. It traces the Shanghai School's evolution, highlighting its balance between refined and popular tastes through exquisite composition, vivid imagery and elegant colors. At its core is a spirit of openness, embracing differences, absorbing diverse elements, and pioneering artistic innovation.
9 am-5 pm, closed on Mondays. 62 Pingjiang Dao, Hexi district, Tianjin. 022-8388-3000.
Prehistoric pottery
Dialogue, part of the long-term Shandong Museum's Star Artifacts Exhibition series, honors one of the most celebrated pieces of the Jinan institution — the Eggshell Black Pottery Stemmed Cup of the Neolithic Longshan Culture — which flourished in the lower reaches of the Yellow River. Unearthed in 1973, the cup is famed for its brilliant craftsmanship: delicately thin as an eggshell with a lustrous black finish and an almost enigmatic presence.
The exhibition invites visitors to an in-depth conversation with this national treasure while surrounding it with a dozen other artifacts from several museums and cultural facilities in the province. Together, they offer a vivid picture of Longshan society thousands of years ago.
9 am-7 pm, closed on Mondays. 11899 Jingshi Lu, Lixia district, Jinan, Shandong province. 0531-8505-8201.
Floral patterns
Chunhua Zhuozhuo (Blooming Spring), on view at the Xinyou Archives of the China National Silk Museum, showcases textile designs created in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, between the 1960s and '90s — a period when the city continued its long-standing role as a center of textile production and trade. The works come from a recent donation by veteran designer Hua Sihong, featuring representative design drafts for a wide range of fabrics.
On show until June 7, the display spans realistic interpretations, geometric styles and abstract expressions. Carefully arranged lines depict the intricate layers of petals and leaves, capturing subtle contrasts of light and shadow, while reflecting the era's evolving fashion sensibilities.
9 am-5 pm, closed on Mondays. 73-1 Yuhuangshan Lu, Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. 0571-8703-5223.
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