Salvador Dali's works exhibited in Beijing
A three-month exhibition of Spanish surrealistic master Salvador Dali's works is being held in Beijing.
Shi Jingsheng, the organizer of the exhibition, said the exhibition was the largest of its kind in Asia.
It features 374 works by the surrealistic master, including 344paintings, 37 sculptures, 13 artworks made of gold, bronze and glass, and 6 lamps and lanterns.
Dali, born in 1904, died in 1989.
The exhibits were shown earlier this year in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, south China, and will also be displayed in Shanghai and Hong Kong later this year.
Paintings by Monet and Van Gogh on show in Shanghai
An exhibition featuring two paintings from the impressionist masters, Claude Monet and Vincent Van Gogh, opened in Shanghai Tuesday to mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Shanghai Museum.
Water Lilies, one of the exhibits and one of Monet's most favored paintings, captures the charm and magical beauty of a lotus pond.
It was painted in 1917, and is larger in size and more delicately presented than another painting in Monet's Water Liliesseries which fetched US$20 million at a recent Sotheby's auction.
Also showing at the Shanghai Museum is a painting from Van Gogh's wheat field series, and from the Dutch master's later years. The painting vividly conveys a June harvest in a beautiful French village through its striking colors, coarse brushwork and contoured forms.
The two masterpieces are hung in a dimly lit exhibition hall, which has had wooden floors and tinted glass specially installed. All efforts have been made to enable viewers to have a good look at the two masterpieces, sources from the Shanghai Museum said.
Having only the two paintings in the exhibition will hopefully mean they will attract all the attention of viewers, said Chen Xiejun, curator of the Shanghai Museum.
The two paintings belong to Honolulu Gallery of the United States and will be exhibited in Shanghai for two months.
(Edited from Xinhua News Agency July 18, 2002)