The electronic version of "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" at the Shanghai World Expo will be exhibited in Taiwan (picture)
The electronic version of "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" at the Shanghai World Expo will be exhibited in Taiwan (picture) China Taiwan Net Huang Jianzhi signed a contract with Yang Renfeng (Photography by Chang Zhikang) In 2010...
The signing ceremony for the electronic dynamic version of "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" to be exhibited in Taiwan at the China Pavilion at the 2010 Shanghai World Expo was held on May 28 at the Shanghai World Expo Bureau. Huang Jianzhi, deputy director of the Shanghai World Expo Bureau, and Yang Renfeng, president of Taiwan's United Daily News and Economic Daily, signed the agreement respectively. According to the agreement, the electronic dynamic version of "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" at the China Pavilion at the 2010 Shanghai World Expo will be displayed at the Zhengyan Pavilion of the Taipei Flower Expo from July 1 to September 4.
> Yang Renfeng said that although more than 1.3 million people from Taiwan came to Shanghai to visit the World Expo, there were still only a few people who had the opportunity to enter the museum to appreciate "Along the River During the Qingming Festival". More Taiwanese people hope to have the opportunity to see her in person.
The electronic dynamic version of "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" of the China Pavilion at the Shanghai World Expo is based on the "Along the River During the Qingming Festival" painted by the Northern Song Dynasty painter Zhang Zeduan. It uses computer technology and cutting-edge projection equipment to enlarge the original work, which is 24.8 centimeters wide and 528.7 centimeters long, 30 times and "move" on a huge screen that is 6 meters high and 110 meters long. In this classic painting that can "move", there are porters driving donkeys forward slowly, and there is an endless stream of merchants and workers on Hongqiao. The sound of boatmen's horns on the river and the shouts of businessmen on the shore are all in my ears. As many as 691 characters appear during the day, and 377 at night. Sand and stones are laid in front of the screen, and the projected image is sparkling, adding to the sense of reality. The entire picture takes four minutes as a cycle, with day and night scenes alternating, vividly presenting the prosperous style of Bianjing, the capital of the Northern Song Dynasty 900 years ago, before the visitors' eyes.
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