China's Ministry of Culture on Tuesday announced a list of 551
artists with the official responsibility of carrying forward the
country's intangible cultural heritage, including Peking Opera and
Mongolian Pastoral Song.
Peking Opera master Mei Baojiu, 73, was one of those enlisted.
His father, the late Mei Lanfang, a performer of the traditional
art form, was one of the country's most respected artists in the
20th century.
Peking Opera is taken as one of China's most important
traditional theater genres and has been proclaimed an intangible
cultural heritage enjoying state-level protection.
Comedian Zhao Benshan, 51, a household name in the country, was
conferred as a chief inheritor of "Er Ren Zhuan", a traditional
song-and-dance duet popular in northeast China.
Zhao is always an attraction at the annual Spring Festival
Evening Gala on China Central Television (CCTV) on the Chinese New
Year's eve.
According to the ministry, enlisted artists had to undergo a
series of procedures, including recommendation by local cultural
departments, assessment by an expert judging panel, public review
and re-examination.
This was the second batch of artists conferred such a title. In
June, the ministry designated 226 artists to help in the
preservation of the country's intangible cultural heritage.
Vice Cultural Minister Zhou Heping said local governments should
provide convenience for inheritors to pass on their art forms and
more artists would be appointed.
"Inheritors having financial difficulties are entitled to
government subsidies," Zhou said, adding the ministry was mulling a
detailed measure in supporting inheritors to spread their art.
The State Council, China's Cabinet, has included 518 items in 10
categories, such as folk literature, folk music and dance,
traditional opera, ballad singing, cross-talk, acrobatics, folk
fine arts, traditional handicraft, traditional medicine and folk
customs, as intangible cultural heritage.
Four items from China have been listed by UNESCO as world
intangible cultural heritage. They are the 500-year-old Kunqu
Opera, known for its graceful movements and poetic lyrics; the
3,000-year-old guqin seven-string zither; the Twelve Mukams, a
12-part suite of ancient Uygur music; and the Pastoral Song sung by
a Mongolian ethnic group.
(Xinhua News Agency February 20, 2008)