

Other rare works on display
The Stone Moat, known in Chinese as Shiqu Baoji, is a royal inventory complied by 31 top-level scholars and art appraisers during the reign of Emperor Qianlong (1736-96).
It records about 11,000 paintings and works of calligraphy the emperor collected. After a seven-year investigation, 1,001 paintings and 228 works of calligraphy were found in today's museum collections.
Other must-see exhibits:
Letter to Boyuan, by Wang Xun (349-400), the only surviving calligraphy from the Jin Dynasty (265-420) with an authentic signature by the writer.
Five Oxen, by Han Huang (723-787), the earliest surviving Chinese painting drawn on paper Spring Excursion, by Zhan Ziqian (545-618), one of the oldest surviving Chinese landscape paintings.
![]() |
Models change clothes on street in Hangzhou
Charming iron ladies in China's upcoming V-Day celebrations
In pics: armaments displyed in massive military parade
Charming Chinese female soldiers
Volunteers required not taller than 5ft 5in
Czech pole dancing master teaches in Xi'an
Shocked! PLA smokescreen vehicle drill
Foreigners experience tranditional Chinese wedding
Blind date with bikini girls in Nanjing
Daily life of a living Buddha
Where are Beijing's livehouses going?
Real Tibet can’t be concealed by Dalai’s lies
Sino-Israeli trade and tech transfer heightened amid Western nations’ export restrictions Day|Week