A Mix of Science and Tradition Helps Restore Relics in China's Forbidden City

Visitors look at elaborate antique clocks displayed on the sprawling compound of the Forbidden City also known as the Palace Museum in Beijing, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Visitors look at elaborate antique clocks displayed on the sprawling compound of the Forbidden City also known as the Palace Museum in Beijing, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
TT
20

A Mix of Science and Tradition Helps Restore Relics in China's Forbidden City

Visitors look at elaborate antique clocks displayed on the sprawling compound of the Forbidden City also known as the Palace Museum in Beijing, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Visitors look at elaborate antique clocks displayed on the sprawling compound of the Forbidden City also known as the Palace Museum in Beijing, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

It's highly technical work in what looks more like a lab than a museum: A fragment of a glazed roof tile from Beijing’s Forbidden City is analyzed in a state-of-the-art X-ray diffraction machine that produces images, which are then projected onto computer screens.
The fragment being examined has a dark area on its surface that restorers want to understand. Their objective is to better preserve the artifacts at the sprawling imperial palace, the former home of China’s emperors and its seat of power for hundreds of years, The Associated Press reported.
“We want to learn what the black material is," said Kang Baoqiang, one of the restorers at the complex, today a museum that attracts tourists from all over the world. “Whether it’s atmospheric sediment or the result of substantial change from within.”
About 150 workers on the team fuse scientific analysis and traditional techniques to clean, patch up and otherwise revive the more than 1.8 million relics in the museum's collection.
They include scroll paintings, calligraphy, bronzes, ceramics — and, somewhat unexpectedly, ornate antique clocks that were gifted to emperors by early European visitors.
Down the hall from the X-ray room, two other restorers patch up holes on a panel of patterned green silk with the Chinese character for “longevity” sewn into it, carefully adding color in a process called “inpainting.”
The piece is believed to have been a birthday gift to Empress Dowager Cixi, the power behind the throne in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Much of the work is laborious and monotonous — and takes months to complete.
“I don’t have the big dreams of protecting traditional cultural heritage that people talk about," said Wang Nan, one of the restorers. "I simply enjoy the sense of achievement when an antique piece is fixed.”
Now a major tourist site in the heart of Beijing, the Forbidden City is the name that was given to the sprawling compound by foreigners in imperial times because entry was forbidden to most outsiders. It's formally known as the Palace Museum.
Many of its treasures were hurriedly taken away during World War II to keep them from falling into the hands of the invading Japanese army. During a civil war that brought the Communist Party to power in 1949, the defeated Nationalists took many of the most prized pieces to Taiwan, where they are now housed in the National Palace Museum.
Beijing's Palace Museum has since rebuilt its collection.
Restoration techniques have also evolved, said Qu Feng, head of the museum’s Conservation Department, though the old ways remain the foundation of the work.
When we preserve an antique piece, we “protect the cultural values it carries,” Qu said. "And that is our ultimate goal.”



Saudi Culture Ministry Signs Agreement with Saudi Downtown Company to Boost Cultural Cooperation

The partnership reflects the Saudi Ministry of Culture’s continued efforts to celebrate the diversity of local cultures and preserve the Kingdom’s national heritage. SPA
The partnership reflects the Saudi Ministry of Culture’s continued efforts to celebrate the diversity of local cultures and preserve the Kingdom’s national heritage. SPA
TT
20

Saudi Culture Ministry Signs Agreement with Saudi Downtown Company to Boost Cultural Cooperation

The partnership reflects the Saudi Ministry of Culture’s continued efforts to celebrate the diversity of local cultures and preserve the Kingdom’s national heritage. SPA
The partnership reflects the Saudi Ministry of Culture’s continued efforts to celebrate the diversity of local cultures and preserve the Kingdom’s national heritage. SPA

The Saudi Ministry of Culture has signed an agreement with the Saudi Downtown Company to strengthen cooperation in areas of mutual interest. The agreement focuses on several key areas, including inventorying and documenting cultural heritage, sharing data, studies, and statistics, and establishing a solid financial framework to encourage public and private sector support for cultural initiatives.

These initiatives aim to empower and develop cultural professions and assets, utilize underused resources to improve access to cultural sectors across regions, and incorporate cultural assets into the master plans for Saudi Downtown Company development projects.

Deputy Minister for National Partnerships and Development at the Ministry of Culture Noha Kattan signed the agreement, along with Chief Executive Officer of the Saudi Downtown Company Eng. Fahad Al-Hammad.

Among the agreement’s key provisions is the adoption of the King Salman Charter for Architecture and Urbanism as a guiding reference for the company’s projects. It also calls for participation in cultural awareness events and initiatives, the creation of investment opportunities for cultural assets in downtown areas, and the development of cultural talents and capabilities.

This partnership reflects the Ministry of Culture’s continued efforts, in collaboration with various government, private, and non-profit entities, to celebrate the diversity of local cultures, preserve the Kingdom’s national heritage, promote cultural projects and professions, foster artistic programming, and create a vibrant cultural environment that supports education and exploration.