Weekly culture& leisure(娱乐) guide (April 17-21)
Superstars of modern Chinese ink art shine in Nanjing
9:00-12:00, Monday; 9:00-17:00, Tuesday to Sunday
Nanjing Museum, Zhongshan Donglu, Xuanwu district, Nanjing
025-8480-7923
The exhibition presents 158 signature works by eight of the most influential ink painting masters of modern China, including Qi Baishi (1864-1957), Pan Tianshou (1897-1971), and Xu Beihong (1895-1953). Their works are officially rated as national treasures, and their painting styles and artistic thoughts have had a far-reaching impact on younger generations of Chinese ink painters.
Wu Guanzhong's grand survey exhibition at Tsinghua Art Museum
9:00-17:00, Tuesday to Sunday
NO. 1, Tsinghua University Campus, Haidian district, Beijing
010-6278-1012
Regarded as one of the most forward-looking artists in China, Wu first attended the China Academy of Art in the 1930s in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang province, and then lived and studied in France, where he was exposed to different art movements in Europe.
The exhibition ends on May 3, 2020.
Rhinoceros in Love celebrates its 20th birthday in Beijing
Apr. 10-March 5
Fengchao (Honeycomb) Theater, No 3, Xinzhongjie, Dongzhimenwai Dajie, Dongcheng district
86-10-6416-9253
Acclaimed as "the bible of love for young people", Rhinoceros in Love by China's avant-garde theater director Meng Jinghui will be staged in Beijing from Feb. 10 to March 5 to celebrate its 20th birthday since its 1999 premier in the Chinese capital.
As one of Meng's beloved experimental works, the play tells a triangle love story in which a young man named Ma Lu is falls in love with a woman named Mingming and tries everything he can to win her heart. But after he fails, Ma, like a stubborn rhinoceros(犀牛), goes to an extreme by kidnapping Mingming in the name of love.