Showing posts with label Year of Horse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Year of Horse. Show all posts

Monday, 31 March 2014

The Splendors of China, U.S Tour by Asian Art Museum -New York , Chicago and San Francisco

The  exhibition been organized by the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

It is supported in part by The Henry Luce Foundation, The Starr Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts, and an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Transportation assistance has been provided by China Airlines.

Support for local presentation has been generously provided in part by The Chase Manhattan Private Bank, the Bernard Osher Foundation, KGO-Newstalk AM 810, KGOTV Channel 7, The San Francisco Chronicle, and Grants for the Arts of the San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund.


"Two catalogue volumes have been published to commemorate the exhibit. The full catalogue, “Possessing the Past: Treasures from the National Palace Museum,Taipei,” by Wen C. Fong and James C.Y.Wyatt, is 648 pages long, and is priced at$85. “Splendors of Imperial China: Treasures from the National Palace Museum,Taipei,” by Maxwell K. Hearn, is a beautiful, shorter (144 page) report of the exhibit, priced at $35. Both volumes are published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, N.Y. and the National Palace Muse-um, Taipei, and may be available in local libraries."


China Treasure


An unsurpassed survey of Chinese art treasures from one of the greatest collections in the world will be on view at the Asian Art Museum in Golden Gate Park from October 14 to December 8, 1996. Heralded by scholars and critics as the greatest exhibition of Chinese art ever presented in America,Splendors of Imperial China: Treasures from the National Palace Museum, Taipei spans over 4.000 years of Chinese history and features nearly 350 of the finest and most famous works from the National Palace Museum, Taipei, whose holdings are based on the personal collections of China's emperors. Included in the exhibition are priceless paintings, jades, bronzes, ceramics, textiles and lacquerware which were passed among China's imperial rulers from century to century.

 China Bronze Artifact 


Splendors of Imperial China has been organized by the National Palace Museum, Taipei, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and is drawn entirely from the National Palace Museum, which possesses one of the world's richest and most renowned collections of Chinese art. On only two other occasions have exhibitions from the National Palace Museum been seen in the west - in London (1935-36) and in the United States (1961-62).

The works of art in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, are classified as national treasures; some have been passed down from dynasty to dynasty since the Northern Sung period (960-1127), the era when the foundation of the collection was amassed. The greater part of the Museum's vast collection entered the Palace during the reign of the Ch'ien-lung emperor (reigned 1736-95), and many of the objects, especially those in jade and bronze, are intimately connected with state rituals. Others have served as symbols of sovereign power such as the Emperor's jade seal, which in China is the equivalent of the crown of a European king.

Following the collapse of the Ch'ing dynasty in 1911 and the eventual expulsion of the last emperor from the Forbidden City in 1924, the Palace Museum opened in Peking in 1925. With the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and the imminent danger of an assault on northern China, the government took measures to safeguard the treasures in the Palace Museum. A large group of the finest objects was carefully placed into wooden crates and shipped south, beginning a 30-year odyssey that took the art over thousands of miles by train, boat, truck, and even hand towed barge, usually under the most adverse wartime conditions. At war's end, the nearly 20,000 crates, which had been divided into several shipments to avoid detection, were reunited in Nanking for a brief period before Chiang Kai-shek moved a selection of them containing more than 600,000 pieces to Taiwan in 1949. It was another 16 years - during which time the collection was stored first in sugar warehouses and then in specially constructed tunnels, before the National Palace Museum, Taipei, opened in 1965 and the public was again able to see this legacy of Chinese civilization.

Among the earliest treasures on view in Splendors of Imperial China are perforated discs (pi) of jade from the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC, and ancient bronze vessels from the Shang (c. 1600-1100 BC) and Chou (c. 1100-256 BC) dynasties. Remarkable examples of calligraphy, figure and landscape painting from the Sung dynasty (10th-13th century), and masterpieces by the creators and reformers of the literati (scholar-artist) tradition from the Sung through early Ch'ing periods (11th-18th century) are highlights.

Visitors to the San Francisco presentation of Splendors will have the opportunity to view numerous works that have never been seen outside of China. Two life-size imperial portraits -- Portrait of Sung Jen-tsung (anonymous, 11th century) and Portrait of the Hungwu emperor (anonymous, 14th century), are among those showcased. The exhibition features a selection of the finest known examples of imperial ceramics from the Sung through Ch'ing periods, as well as stunning cloisonne, enamels, snuff bottles, and writing tools. Rare treasures in jade are complemented by an array of lacquerwares including boxes, trays, vases and screens. Of particular note are the exquisite treasure boxes of the Ch'ien-lung emperor that replicate in miniature his personal favorites from the imperial collection.




China Mystic Wealth Luck 


that delves into what a lot of us have been struggling with. Whether we are rich or we are struggling to pay the bills, everyone wants to know how to be prosperous; how to attract wealth and keep the wealth that we have attracted. This book explores that desire we all have and proffers real world and practical solutions that are rooted  since  ancient times

The secrets revealed in this book are those that have been practices in ancient China for thousands of years. These are the secrets that famously wealthy Asian business men have gotten hold of and used to build multi-billion dollar empires. The author dug into the myths and legends surrounding these secrets and has graciously shared her findings with us.



Many of these are rooted in spirituality. The ancient Chinese understood that the world was not one-dimensional and that the spiritual impacted on the physical. As such, this book shows us how we can tap into the wealth of the universe and make it ours. It is definitely worth the read.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Singapore Mega Wealth Development Plan for up to 2030 .

Small Country  Big Plans .
Recently , Singapore's  Government has  announced  its plan to allow for an increase in the city-state’s population to 6.9 million by 2030 which takes a span of at least  15 years from now . 
  The country's planners are already laying the groundwork to accommodate the increase. Housing,
 industrial properties  land transport and future amenities needs are being developed based on the new population estimates. Based on its previous target of 5.5 million, a  Revised new plan  will need to be well consider  to  make sure it will be sufficient to accommodate the amount of   people. So  some major
 changes are expected  to happen in  the near  future  as  they have to put  effort to ensure that there are sufficient resources for Singapore's residents. 

Compliment : Wikimedia Common 

The major  investment  will be very much focused   to Singapore Island  itself  , and these  new developments  plan  if realized  will foresee  Singapore creating local businesses  to thrive maintaining 
  jobs throughout Singapore for at least the next 20 years  and  it  is quite clear why  they  need to
 increase their population

As part of the  bigger picture,  yesterday ,  the Prime Minister  has  further disclose in  his National
 Day Rally speech  on Sunday  that ,  There are new  plans to upgrade the Changi  Airport  with  a
 Fourth runway , and a Sidelined  big  piece of land has been reserved to built another sister airport 
  , of which  will also  will   housed  a New Military  Airbase  with  a smaller runway for fighter jets .
Paya Lebar Airbase will be moved there later on. This will free up an area bigger than Bishan and 
Toa Payoh - around 800 ha - for new homes, offices, and factories ;
Relocating the airbase also removes height restrictions around Paya Lebar and frees up the authorities to develop new and exciting plans for the eastern part of Singapore , says PM lee
PM Lee also touched on other bold plans that are in progress.
These include building a new port in Tuas which is bigger and more efficient than current facilities, to
 maintain the country's premier position as one of the world's leading ports. This is  a Super Mega 
Value project ,and it  involves many heavy machineries and the cost could  exceed  even  those for the 
New Changi  airport upgrading

All container ports in Tanjong Pagar, Keppel, Brani and Pasir Panjang will be moved there when leases expire from 2027.This will also free up prime land in Tanjong Pagar, where a new southern waterfront
 city will be built. Occupying a space of about 1,000 ha, or 2.5 times the size of Marina Bay, it will stretch from Shenton Way to Pasir Panjang.

Compliment : Wikimedia Common

There will also be a fifth terminal at Changi Airport, to double its current capacity and the  Old Carpark  
next to the  present  Changi Tower  will be rebuilt into a Changi Recreation center ,with a futuristic 
Dome Design  look  building housing  full recreation  facilities , for both   visitors , tourist  and even for Singaporean
compliment : wikimedia common


PM Lee said the plans were examples of how Singapore needs to think and plan for the future.

"If we can carry off these plans, we will not have to worry about running out of space or possibilities in Singapore," he said.