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Artistic journey through Macau transcends time and space

Contemporary films, ancient Chinese legends, La Biennale Di Venezia and a sacred Christian procession provide a one-day itinerary in a multicultural city

In Partnership WithMacao Government Tourism Office
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The Macao Museum of Art will be running the Ceramics and Seals of 108 Heroes of Shui Hu Legend exhibition until mid-November

Cultural and artistic events highlight Macau’s multicultural environment over the next few weeks.

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Established to cultivate an appreciation of film, Cinematheque. Passion offers video storage, film journals, a book loan service and film screenings in its three-storey location. Film lovers will have the opportunity until Wednesday, May 17 to see Trainspotting, rated the 10th best British film of all-time by the British Film Institute, and its 2017 sequel T2 Trainspotting.

A 1996 British black comedy directed by Danny Boyle and starring Ewan McGregor, Kevin McKidd and Robert Carlyle, Trainspotting is based on Irvine Welsh’s novel of the same name and John Hodge’s Academy Award-nominated screenplay. It follows a group of heroin addicts living in a disenfranchised part of Edinburgh.

The sequel is based on Welsh’s follow-up work, Porno, featuring the same characters.

There will be a celebration of French-Canadian actor and award-winning Quebec director, Xavier Dolan, from May 20 to 31. After starting with the “Talk on Director in Focus: The Visual World of Xavier Dolan” on May 5, films directed by, and in one case, starring, Dolan will be screened, including I Killed My Mother, Tom at the Farm and Laurence Anyways.

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If you are familiar with the Shui Hu Legend (also known as The Water Margin), a written work from the Yuan dynasty and regarded as of one of the four greatest classical Chinese novels, you may want to check out the exhibition of Ceramics and Seals of 108 Heroes of Shui Hu Legend by the Macao Museum of Art, which will run until mid-November. The 180 ceramic figures and 194 seals in the collection were donated to the Macau government in 2000. 

The style of the ceramic figures, created by late Cantonese artist Li Ousheng, is inspired by traditional Chinese paintings, while the seals were made by three protégés of renowned late calligrapher Lin Jin. Admission is free. Call (853) 8791 9814 for more information.

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