After its debut in Hong Kong early September last year, the
exhibition entitled "East meets West-cultural relics from the Pearl
River Delta region" returned to Guangzhou on January 18.
Through some 200 cultural relics from 20 museums in Guangdong,
Hong Kong and Macao, the exhibition attempts to unfold the
commercial and cultural contact between China and the West over two
thousands years.
"By studying the design of export wares in ancient times, the
spread of Christianity, the introduction of scientific knowledge
and the materialization of cultural synthesis, visitors are able to
learn about the specific roles that the Pearl River Delta region
played in the history of Sino-Western commercial and cultural
exchanges," said Tao Cheng, director of the Guangzhou Municipal
Bureau of Culture.
According to Tao, the Pearl River Delta region has long been an
important link between China and the Western countries.
The foreign trade of Guangdong Province developed in the Qin
(221-206 BC) and Han (206 BC-AD220) dynasties, and reached its peak
from the Tang (618-907) to Qing (1644-1911) dynasties.
Hong Kong and Macao, situated strategically near the Pearl River
Estuary, guarded the waterway to Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong
Province, and prospered in different periods under the Maritime
Silk Route.
"The roles of the Pearl River Delta region in the East-West
cultural exchanges since the early 17th century via the Maritime
Silk Route are explicit in the design of export commodities," Tao
said.
According to Tao, the Maritime Silk Route one that linked China
with Southeast Asia, the Indian sub-continent, the Middle East and
eastern Africa, helped the Pearl River Delta region further
strengthen its commercial and cultural contacts with the overseas
countries.
Jointly organized by the Guangdong Cultural Department, the
Guangzhou Municipal Bureau of Culture, the Home Affairs Bureau of
Hong Kong and the Cultural Affairs Bureau of Macao, the
exhibition's debut in Hong Kong from September last year to January
2 featured about 160 cultural relics from the Pearl River Delta
region.
In the running Guangzhou tour, it will display some 60 more
relics, which specially reflect Guangdong's contact with the West
in ancient times.
The salvaged wares from the Nanhai No 1, a commercial ship of
the Song Dynasty (960-1279) discovered in 1987 in the South China
Sea, will be showcased for the first time in Guangzhou.
Early in 2002, Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao signed an
agreement to establish a foundation for cultural collaboration.
Part of the cultural exchange and co-operation within the
region, the exhibition runs until April at the Guangzhou Museum of
Art and will then be moved to Macao.
"Since the Pearl River Delta region was the melting pot where
East meets West, co-operation of diversified cultures will bring
vitality to the region and fuel their economic growth as well," Tao
said.
(China Daily February 5, 2006)