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Category: Arts and culture

Italian Students Arrive in Sanya, Six Weeks After Hainan...

Six weeks after a Hainan children's choir performed in Rome, 30 Italian teachers and students have opened a two-week exchange in Sanya, a working two-way channel in the province's youth diplomacy circuit …

Chunyun: 40 Days, Millions of Journeys, the World’s Largest...

Forty days. Hundreds of millions of journeys. The world’s largest annual travel rush, and what those numbers actually mean ...

Sanya: Watch Authentic Mongolian Song and Dance for Free...

Two free outdoor performances in Sanya showcase authentic Mongolian song and dance on January 13 and 15 ...

Experience Hainan’s Intangible Heritage, One Weekend at a Time

Explore Hainan’s intangible heritage through weekend workshops, traditional music, local crafts, and immersive cultural experiences across the island ...

China Post Releases 2026 Year of the Horse Zodiac...

China Post has officially issued its 2026 Bingwu Year (丙午年) zodiac stamps, marking the arrival of the Year of the Horse with a two-stamp special set ...

“Our Expression” – Li Ethnic Plant Dye & Rattan...

Explore "Our Expression," a showcase of Li ethnic plant dye and rattan weaving from Wuzhishan’s Maodao Township. Open until July 14, 2025, at the Hainan Provincial Cultural Center in Haikou. Includes workshops and activities on June 21–22 …

First Paleolithic Open-Air Site Discovered in Hainan

The Nanhuo River site, the most comprehensive Paleolithic site ever found on Hainan, challenges the long-held belief that the island had limited prehistoric occupation. Its discovery reshapes our understanding of early human activity in southern China ...

Chubaocun: A Cultural Village at the Heart of Hainan’s...

Chubaocun Village in Wuzhishan is a living testament to the rich cultural heritage of the Li minority on Hainan Island. And it is poised to become a must-visit destination for those seeking an authentic cultural experience ...

The “Art of Sand & Fire”, Hainan Museum Silk...

Glass making, the “Art of Sand and Fire”, is thought to have first originated in Mesopotamia, which roughly corresponds to modern-day Iraq. The ancient Silk Road played an important role in the spread of the skills and techniques of glass making along with glass artifacts, as it was a major trade route that connected the East and West for centuries.