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CULTURE

CULTURE

Livestreaming museums awake sleeping relics

Xinhua????|???? Updated: 2020-04-20 09:30

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A live broadcast about the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Southwest China's Tibet autonomous region, on March 9, 2020.[Photo/Xinhua]

Facing a livestreaming camera, Gao Xiaolong, curator of the Beijing numismatic museum located at the historic Desheng Gate watchtower, narrated the millennia-old history of ancient coins with his vivid storytelling.

"With various shapes and textures, coins in ancient China bore profound cultural connotations and reflected social life and political changes in those days," Gao went into his long monologue in the empty exhibition hall.

To his surprise, the half-hour live broadcast attracted 150,000 online viewers, about five times the annual total amount of visitors to the museum in recent years.

As museums, monuments and historical sites across China embrace the digital age, a new upsurge in online exhibitions and live broadcasts has awoken the sleeping relics. Many that closed due to the COVID-19 epidemic have joined hands with livestreaming platforms to offer online guided tours for the public.

The Beijing Municipal Administration of Cultural Heritage has launched a special program that invites museum staff on duty during the closing period to make live broadcasts, with elite commentators, antique experts and sometimes the curators themselves coming out in front of the cameras and telling stories about the national treasures.

"One person, one mobile phone, a brand-new stage to exhibit," said Li Yang with the administration, noting that nearly 30 museums in Beijing have so far offered live "cultural feasts" with an average number of viewers reaching 200,000, and 500,000 for the most-watched ones.

The biggest names drew the greatest attention. The live broadcast of a two-hour guided tour of China's 600-year-old former imperial palace, the Forbidden City, racked up millions of views.

The online livestreaming session last week was the first such event about the Palace Museum during its closure, said curator Wang Xudong in a video message.

The Potala Palace, a landmark in Southwest China's Tibet autonomous region and a UNESCO World Heritage site, held a livestreaming tour session for the first time on China's popular e-commerce platform Taobao on March 1 and drew over 1 million viewers in less than an hour. A second livestreaming tour was held eight days later using 5G technology.

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