Hong Kong Palace Museum’s new exhibit to showcase origins of Chinese civilisation

Published: 
Listen to this article
  • Opening on September 25, the show will commemorate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China
SCMP |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Hong Kong 47: opposition figures jailed in landmark national security trial

SOTY 2023/24: Teen tech prodigy wins Grand Prize for AI innovations

4 Hong Kong universities shine in global employability rankings

Beyond CO2: methane, nitrous oxide and the hidden climate crisis

Troupe sets the stage for young Hongkongers to enjoy Cantonese opera

The exhibition will feature nearly 110 treasures from the Neolithic period to the Xia dynasty spanning over 4,000 years. Photo: Handout

The Hong Kong Palace Museum will host a new exhibition next month that charts the origins of Chinese civilisation. The exhibit is to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in October.

The exhibition will open on September 25 and showcase more than 100 of the nation’s top archaeological finds and relics, with some dating as far back as 6,200BC.

The exhibits are on loan from 14 major cultural institutions in Hong Kong and mainland China, with the artefacts including 16 grade-one national treasures.

The museum said on Wednesday that nearly all of the pieces in the exhibition, titled “Bank of China (Hong Kong) Presents: The Origins of Chinese Civilisation”, will be shown in the city for the first time.

The exhibition “highlights the achievements of two decades of comprehensive research, which involved large-scale archaeological surveys and in-depth investigations into the origins, formation and development of Chinese civilisation”, it added.

The artefacts on show include ceramics, jades, stone sculptures and objects made from bone and bronze, covering the mid-to-late Neolithic period to the Xia dynasty, or from about 6,200BC to 1,500BC.

Hong Kong Palace Museum programme inspires youth to grow cultural ecosystem

Highlights of the exhibition are a cloud-shaped jade plaque from the Hongshan culture, which spanned 4,500BC to 3,000BC, and a bronze vessel from the Erlitou culture, which existed between 1,800BC and 1,500BC.

Other items on display are a jar from the Yangshao culture of 5,000BC to 3,000BC that features plant motifs and a Hongshan period jade dragon (4,500BC to 3,000BC), believed to be one of the earliest objects in China to depict the mythical creature.

The museum said the exhibits hailed from cultures spread across the country and discovered at nine major archaeological sites. They had been housed in museums in Beijing, Gansu, Liaoning, Anhui, Zhejiang, Shandong, Hubei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Henan and Hong Kong.

The exhibition will be divided into three sections, including a multimedia installation that transports visitors to the Shimao archaeological site dating back to between 2,300BC and 1,800BC, with relics from the Liangzhu culture.

The exhibition will include artefacts from the location, considered one of the country’s largest prehistoric stone cities.

The exhibition will run until February 7. Tickets will be priced at HK$100 (US$12.8) for adults, while concessionary ones will cost HK$50.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment