ACCLAIMED for its Terracotta Warriors, Xi’an is fast becoming the place to learn Chinese calligraphy.
Since July 2011, more than 300 foreigners have started Chinese calligraphy courses in the city’s Beilin Museum, which contains the largest and richest collection of ancient Chinese stone tablets, says Wu Ruchang, the museum’s calligrapher.
Most of the students are from the United States including high flyers such as Wall Street bankers, corporation CEOs, financial elites, writers, doctors, lawyers and cultural scholars.
As well as picking up the skill themselves, some adults also brought their children. The 10-year-old son of the Carter family from Massachussets in the United States is proud of being able to write a complete Chinese character after an hour of practicing.
“I like it very much and I will come back again to learn Chinese calligraphy at the museum when I grow up,” the boy says.
According to Wu, many foreigners find the origin of calligraphy and Chinese characters mysterious, and they are fascinated with pictographs such as inscriptions on oracle-bone, ancient bronze objects and seal scripts.
The edu-tourism package is organized by WildChina, a travel company based in Beijing. It was started in 2000 by Zhang Mei, a native of Yunnan Province, who holds a Harvard MBA. “At WildChina, cultural interaction is key to what we do. We encourage people to engage with locals and experience Chinese culture,” Zhang says.
Located in downtown Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi Province, the Beilin (forest of stone tablets) Museum was built in 1087. With more than 1,000 memorial tablets from the Western Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 24) to the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), it is considered a treasure trove of calligraphy and one of the 50 must-visit places in China.
(SD-Agencies)
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