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Vatican’s Chinese Christian artworks go on display at Beijing’s Palace Museum

  • Gradual thaw in relations allows works from Holy See’s collection to feature in exhibition inside the Forbidden City

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The works include Chinese depictions of Christian stories, such as the Last Supper. Photo: Thepaper.cn
Laurie Chen

Chinese artworks owned by the Vatican Museums have gone on display at the Palace Museum inside Beijing’s Forbidden City.

Titled “Beauty Unites Us: Chinese Art from the Vatican Museums”, the exhibition opened on Tuesday and will run until July 14 in the first such cultural collaboration between China and the Holy See.

Among the 78 items on display are a painting of the Last Supper by the early 20th century Chinese artist Ren Yifang as well as a painting of the Madonna from the same period by Wang Suda.

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The exhibition also contains Buddhist and secular art.

The Catholic paintings depict scenes from the Bible featuring ethnically Chinese characters wearing traditional clothing in Chinese surroundings.

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A Chinese-style Virgin and Child is among the artworks to feature. Photo: Thepaper.cn
A Chinese-style Virgin and Child is among the artworks to feature. Photo: Thepaper.cn

These exhibition is intended to shed light on the fruitful intercultural exchanges between China and Western Christianity over the previous centuries.

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