Wandu Mountain City served as the second capital west of Ji'an, Jilin, China.
Hwando Mountain Fortress, also known as Wandu Mountain City, along with Gungnae Fortress, served as the second capital of the Korean kingdom Goguryeo (Hangul: 고구려, Hanja: 高句麗). The remains of this city are a UNESCO World Heritage Site located in 2.5 kilometers to the west of Ji'an, Jilin, China.
For more information please feel free to visit
capital cities
city site of wandu mountain
capital cities and tombs of the ancient koguryo kingdom
mountain city funeral home
mountain city topix
mountain city funeral home mountain city tn
mountain city funeral home obituaries
mountain city tn newspaper
mountain city tn real estate
mountain city tn prison
johnson county bank mountain city tn
Ji Won Song: Brahms: F-AE Sonata - III. Scherzo
Violinist Ji Won Song, accompanied by Richard Fu, piano.
Ji Won Song
Celebrated Korean violinist Ji Won Song delights audiences worldwide with energetic performances that express her refined perspectives on melody, color and harmony as well as her deep passion for her instrument.
She received first prize and the audience prize at the Leopold Mozart Competition in Augsburg, first prize and the classical music prize at the China International Violin Competition in Qingdao, first prize and the best Chinese work prize at The Alice & Eleonore Schoenfeld International String Competition and first prize with the audience prize in The Schadt Competition. She was also a prize winner at Concours International de Violon Tibor Varga, the Carl Nielsen International Violin Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin International Competition. Ms. Song has also won many awards for her work, including the esteemed Milka/Curtis Artist Prize, awarded by the Curtis Institute of Music in conjunction with the Markow Toteyy Foundation.
Ms. Song has performed at concert halls and recital spaces around the world including the Kennedy Center, Kimmel Center, Shanghai Symphony Hall, Seoul Arts Center, Kongresshalle and Jordan Hall. She has been a featured soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Montreal Symphony Orchestra and the Munich Radio Orchestra, with conductors including Rossen Milanov, Augustin Dumay and Nanse Gum.
Ms. Song is currently pursuing the Artist Diploma program at the Julliard School, where she studies with distinguished violinists Donald Weilerstein and Ida Kavafian.
Richard Fu
Shanghai-born Richard Fu is currently studying collaborative piano at Juilliard, having previously attended Oxford University, the Royal College of Music (RCM), and Dartmouth College. Though he had wanted to become a lawyer growing up and began as a political science major at Dartmouth, Richard fell in love with classical music while studying abroad in Vienna and changed focus to music midway. At Dartmouth, Richard won the Mark L. Lebowitz 1977 Memorial Prize for outstanding undergraduate music student, Macdonald-Smith Prize for high achievement in musical performances, and the Gerald A. Tracy Memorial Scholarship Piano Competition. Other prizes include the Los Angeles International Liszt Competition and RCM’s Kendall Taylor Beethoven Competition. Richard has performed concertos with the Oxford University Philharmonia, Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra, Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra, and the Basement Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, he has accompanied the masterclasses of Maxim Vengerov and Roderick Williams, and received coaching from Menahem Pressler and Roger Vignoles. Richard co-found Béla Ensemble, a clarinet-violin-piano ensemble focusing on contemporary music. He performed Stravinsky’s Septet as part of RCM’s collaboration with the Philharmonia Orchestra in the Stravinsky: Myths & Rituals Festival, as well as Steve Reich’s Double Sextet during the composer’s residency at the RCM. Recent performances include his debut at Carnegie Hall (Weill Recital Hall), and recitals in the Sheldonian Theatre, Holywell Music Room, Victoria & Albert Museum, St. John’s Smith Square, Regents Hall, Roman Music Festival, Oxford Lieder Festival, and on tour in cities across China.
Richard’s most important teachers and mentors include Victor Rosenbaum, Andrew Ball, Sally Pinkas, Steve Swayne, and Hong Teng. During the summers, Richard enjoys attending music festivals through which he has learned from pianists such as Dimitri Alexeev, Paul Badura-Skoda, Boris Berman, Christopher Elton, Robert McDonald, and Peter Serkin. This past summer, Richard was a fellow at Music Academy of the West, where he met his current teacher Jonathan Feldman and also played the celeste in a concert conducted by Alan Gilbert featuring Renée Fleming.
China 2002 film 4 Ji Tong movie
Film by J. Martin Warr in the series of films covering the Railway Magazine railway tour of China in 2002 in conjunction with 'Steam in Paradise' operated by Ron and Andy. This film includes a return trip along the line at the rear of a double- headed freight train in glorious sunshine with snow on the ground. Magic!
The 4 basic forces of Taiji: Peng, Lu, Ji, An.(Back)
This little Taiji-form was developed by some Taiji-teachers from
Belgium for the project of the Logo-team of the province Limburg :
Fall prevention by seniors.
The 4 basic forces which are Peng, Lu, Ji, An, built together the movement:
Grasp the birds tail. This movement is performed right and left.
The following movements compose the whole form :
1. Preparation 2.Opening : step out to the left. 3. Raise the Qi. 4.Peng with one step forward. 5. Grasp the birds tail right and left. 6. Cross the hands. 7.Close : step back with the left foot.
The movie is made by Josée Dilissen, one of the cursists of the Initiation course 2007 in Overpelt. The form is executed by Hilda Cardinaels and some cursists.
On demand of the cursist it was filmed also on the backside because they find this easier to follow.
Ji Won Song: Brahms: Violin Sonata No. 2 in A major
Violinist Ji Won Song, accompanied by Richard Fu, piano.
Ji Won Song
Celebrated Korean violinist Ji Won Song delights audiences worldwide with energetic performances that express her refined perspectives on melody, color and harmony as well as her deep passion for her instrument.
She received first prize and the audience prize at the Leopold Mozart Competition in Augsburg, first prize and the classical music prize at the China International Violin Competition in Qingdao, first prize and the best Chinese work prize at The Alice & Eleonore Schoenfeld International String Competition and first prize with the audience prize in The Schadt Competition. She was also a prize winner at Concours International de Violon Tibor Varga, the Carl Nielsen International Violin Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin International Competition. Ms. Song has also won many awards for her work, including the esteemed Milka/Curtis Artist Prize, awarded by the Curtis Institute of Music in conjunction with the Markow Toteyy Foundation.
Ms. Song has performed at concert halls and recital spaces around the world including the Kennedy Center, Kimmel Center, Shanghai Symphony Hall, Seoul Arts Center, Kongresshalle and Jordan Hall. She has been a featured soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Montreal Symphony Orchestra and the Munich Radio Orchestra, with conductors including Rossen Milanov, Augustin Dumay and Nanse Gum.
Ms. Song is currently pursuing the Artist Diploma program at the Julliard School, where she studies with distinguished violinists Donald Weilerstein and Ida Kavafian.
Richard Fu
Shanghai-born Richard Fu is currently studying collaborative piano at Juilliard, having previously attended Oxford University, the Royal College of Music (RCM), and Dartmouth College. Though he had wanted to become a lawyer growing up and began as a political science major at Dartmouth, Richard fell in love with classical music while studying abroad in Vienna and changed focus to music midway. At Dartmouth, Richard won the Mark L. Lebowitz 1977 Memorial Prize for outstanding undergraduate music student, Macdonald-Smith Prize for high achievement in musical performances, and the Gerald A. Tracy Memorial Scholarship Piano Competition. Other prizes include the Los Angeles International Liszt Competition and RCM’s Kendall Taylor Beethoven Competition. Richard has performed concertos with the Oxford University Philharmonia, Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra, Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra, and the Basement Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, he has accompanied the masterclasses of Maxim Vengerov and Roderick Williams, and received coaching from Menahem Pressler and Roger Vignoles. Richard co-found Béla Ensemble, a clarinet-violin-piano ensemble focusing on contemporary music. He performed Stravinsky’s Septet as part of RCM’s collaboration with the Philharmonia Orchestra in the Stravinsky: Myths & Rituals Festival, as well as Steve Reich’s Double Sextet during the composer’s residency at the RCM. Recent performances include his debut at Carnegie Hall (Weill Recital Hall), and recitals in the Sheldonian Theatre, Holywell Music Room, Victoria & Albert Museum, St. John’s Smith Square, Regents Hall, Roman Music Festival, Oxford Lieder Festival, and on tour in cities across China.
Richard’s most important teachers and mentors include Victor Rosenbaum, Andrew Ball, Sally Pinkas, Steve Swayne, and Hong Teng. During the summers, Richard enjoys attending music festivals through which he has learned from pianists such as Dimitri Alexeev, Paul Badura-Skoda, Boris Berman, Christopher Elton, Robert McDonald, and Peter Serkin. This past summer, Richard was a fellow at Music Academy of the West, where he met his current teacher Jonathan Feldman and also played the celeste in a concert conducted by Alan Gilbert featuring Renée Fleming.
160312 Sso & Ji Yeon at Ao Dai museum Vietnam
桃花源记 Tao Hua Yuan Ji, Source of the Peach Blossoms
On view at the Taubman Museum till Sep 8, 2019.
Tao Yuanming, a Jin Dynasty (317-420 CE) poet, wrote of a traveler who came upon an isolated peach blossom valley beyond a cave where people seeking political refuge lived an ideal, harmonic life with nature and each other. Although villagers told the traveler not to tell of their location, he vainly marked his path and sent government officials who were unable to find it. To the Chinese, this story is metaphoric to an imaginary unattainable Utopia where the peach blossom symbolizes luck, love, and longevity, and to some – immortality.
The Zhuang people of Southwest Yunnan Province claim that they are the village depicted in Tao Yuanming’s story. I traveled there in 2008 and have not told anyone how to get there.
Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe
Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe
Curated by Johnson-Pote Director Tracy L. Adler
Video created by: Ben Salzman
Organized by the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art, Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe is the Beijing-born artist’s largest solo exhibition to date in the United States, featuring a selection of work from 2006 to the present, including new scrolls, sculptures, and drawings never before exhibited. Taking on the thousand-year-old practice of Chinese scroll painting, Yun-Fei Ji employs ink on paper as his primary medium and landscape as his central subject. However, rather than adopting the idealism characteristic of traditional scroll painting, Ji’s work presents the gritty reality of life in China today. Ji emphasizes the critical relationship between the land and its people and how that balance is being challenged by current social, political, ecological, and economic shifts. His compositions are inspired by his own fieldwork in rural areas throughout China’s countryside, where entire villages face forced relocation to make way for ambitious infrastructural projects such as the Three Gorges Dam, and where climate change has compromised the natural environment. The resulting artworks are populated by individualized, present-day figures inhabiting land in various stages of transition. Poised between modernity and tradition, the village becomes a metaphor for community, and the dislocation and environmental deterioration become specters of geographic disenfranchisement. Embedded within the compositions alongside the villagers, ghosts of ancestors and animal-like folkloric figures act as powerful reminders of the longstanding cultural traditions at risk. With their impressionistic brushwork and original subject matter, Ji’s paintings possess an immediacy and urgency that suggest a fragmented, at times surreal, contemporary landscape.
Born in Beijing (1963), Yun-Fei Ji received a BFA from Beijing’s Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1982 and an MFA from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville in 1989. His work has been shown extensively, most recently at the Grand Rapids Art Museum in Michigan; the University Museum of Contemporary Art in Amherst, Massachusetts; the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada; and in the 2014 New Orleans biennial Prospect.3: Notes for Now. In 2012, Ji presented his first Beijing solo exhibition at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art. He received the Rome Prize in 2006 from the American Academy in Rome, Italy.
This survey of the artist’s work will be followed by a major monographic publication that includes essays by Tracy L. Adler, Director, Wellin Museum of Art; Steven J. Goldberg, Associate Professor of Art History at Hamilton College; and Robert Morgan, noted critic and curator; co-published with DelMonico Books/Prestel, New York.
JI Hotel Chongqing Shangqing Temple - Chongqing - China
Book now:
JI Hotel Chongqing Shangqing Temple hotel city: Chongqing - Country: China
Address: No. 2 Jialingqiao West Village Shangqing Temple; zip code: 404100
Only 500 metres from China Three Gorges Museum, JI Hotel features guestrooms with free WiFi throughout the property. It houses a shared lounge, a 24-hour front desk and an on-site restaurant. JI Hotel is 800 metres from downtown area.
-- À seulement 500 mètres du musée des Trois Gorges de Chine, le JI Hotel Chongqing Shangqing Temple propose des chambres avec une connexion Wi-Fi gratuite. Il dispose d'un salon commun, d'une réception ouverte 24h/24 et d'un restaurant sur place.
-- El JI Hotel, situado a solo 500 metros del museo China Three Gorges, ofrece habitaciones con conexión WiFi gratuita, salón compartido, recepción 24 horas y restaurante.
-- Das JI Hotel empfängt Sie nur 500 m vom China Three Gorges Museum entfernt und bietet Zimmer mit kostenfreiem WLAN. Freuen Sie sich auf einen Gemeinschaftsraum, eine 24-Stunden-Rezeption und ein Restaurant.
-- Sito a soli 500 metri dalla Museo delle Tre Gole, il JI Hotel Chongqing Shangqing Temple vi accoglierà in camere coperte dalla connessione Wi-Fi gratuita, mettendovi inoltre a disposizione una sala in comune, una reception aperta 24 ore su 24 e un...
-- JI Hotelは中国三峡博物館からわずか500mの場所に位置し、無料Wi-Fi付きの客室、共用ラウンジ、24時間対応のフロントデスク、館内レストランを提供しています。 JI Hotelは繁華街から800m、重慶駅から10km、重慶江北国際空港から約25kmです。 ユニットには、薄型ケーブルテレビ、電気ポット、ワークデスク、専用バスルーム(スリッパ、無料バスアメニティ、シャワー付)が備わっています。 ...
-- 全季酒店重庆上清寺店距离中国三峡博物馆仅有500米,提供客房,各处均覆盖免费WiFi,设有共用休息室、24小时前台以及内部的餐厅。 全季酒店重庆上清寺店距离市中心区800米,距离重庆火车站10公里,距离重庆江北国际机场约有25公里,邻近机场班车站,距离宋庆龄故居有10分钟步行路程。 所有客房均配有舒适的名牌寝具、平板有线电视、电话、电烧水壶和办公桌。私人浴室配有淋浴,提供免费洗浴用品、拖鞋和淋浴。 ...
-- Отель JI разместился всего в 500 метрах от музея Трех ущелий. К услугам гостей общий лаундж, круглосуточная стойка регистрации, ресторан, а также номера с бесплатным WiFi.
-- يقع فندق جيه أي على بُعد 500 متر فقط من متحف تشاينا ثيري جورجيس، ويوفر غرف ضيوف مع خدمة الواي فاي مجانًا. ويضم منطقة جلوس مشتركة ومكتب استقبال يعمل على مدار الساعة ومطعمًا في الموقع. يقع فندق جيه أي على بُعد 800 متر من منطقة وسط المدينة.
--
⭐️Dream comes true⭐️ in Shanghai #1 | 천지의 이것저것 Ep.10
#천지의이것저것 #CHENLE #JISUNG #천러 #지성
#천지 #이것저것 #ThisAndThat #상하이 #Shanghai
#여행 #Travel #Trip #China #중국 #上海
#Ch_NCT #채널NCT
Subscribe for more content
The Stele of Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo
The Stele of Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The stele of Gwanggaeto the Great of Goguryeo was erected in 414 by Jangsu of Goguryeo as a memorial to his deceased father. It is one of the major primary sources extant for the history of Goguryeo, one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, and supplies invaluable historical detail on his reign as well as insights into Goguryeo mythology. It stands near the tomb of Gwanggaeto in what is today the city of Ji'an along the Yalu River in present-day northeast China, which was the capital of Goguryeo at that time. It is carved out of a single mass of granite, stands nearly 7 meters tall and has a girth of almost 4 meters. The inscription is written exclusively in Classical Chinese and has 1802 characters. The stele has also become a focal point of varying national rivalries in East Asia manifested in the interpretations of the stele's inscription and the place of the Empire of Goguryeo in modern historical narratives. An exact replica of the Gwanggaeto Stele stands on the grounds of War Memorial of Seoul and the rubbed copies made in 1881 and 1883 are in the custody of China and the National Museum of Japan, respectively, testament to the stele's centrality in the history of Korea and part of Manchuria. The stele's location, in Ji'an in the northeastern Chinese province of Jilin, was key to its long neglect. Following the fall of Goguryeo in 668, and to a lesser extent the fall of its successor state Balhae in 926, the region drifted outside the sway of both Chinese and Korean geopolitics. Afterwards the region came under the control of numerous Manchurian states, notably the Jurchen and from the 16th century the Manchu. When the Manchu conquered China in 1644 and established their hegemony, they guarded their ancestral homeland in Manchuria, prohibiting movement there by any non-Manchu peoples. This seclusion came to an end at the end of the 19th century, when the region was opened up for Han Chinese emigration. Manchuria thereafter became the coveted prize of vying regional powers, notably Russia and Japan for its rich natural resources and strategic location. The opening up of Manchuria also resulted in the influx of Chinese and Japanese scholars, the latter often supplemented by Japanese spies traveling incognito to spy the region's fortifications and natural layout, prescient of a future of increased international rivalry. In the late 19th century many new arrivals to the region around Ji'an began making use of the many bricks and baked tiles that could be found in the region to build new dwellings. The curious inscriptions on some of these tiles soon reached the ears of Chinese scholars and epigraphers. Many were found to bear an inscription in ancient Chinese script reading: May the mausoleum of the Great King be secure like a mountain and firm like a peak. It was around 1875 that an amateur Chinese epigrapher Guan Yueshan, scrounging for more samples of such tiles around Ji'an, discovered the mammoth stone stele of Gwanggaeto obscured under centuries of mud and overgrowth. The clearing away of the stele's face invariably led to the damaging of its engraved text. Almost every inch of the stele's four sides were found to be covered with Chinese characters (nearly 1800 in total), each about the size of a grown man's hand. The discovery soon attracted scholars from Japan, Russia, and France. In 1883 a young Japanese officer named Sakō Kageaki traveling in the guise of an itinerant Buddhist monk arrived in Ji'an. Sakō had been ordered from his last post in Beijing to proceed back to Japan via Manchuria and to make detailed observations there of the region's layout. It was while traveling through Liaoning that he apparently heard of the stele's recent discovery and managed to procure an ink rubbing of the stele's face to carry back to his homeland. It was scholars in Japan who were to make the first detailed analysis of the stele's ancient text.
The inscription of the stele can be found in some of the sites listed below.
For more information, you can visit:
-
-
-
-
-
-
Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe | Opening Saturday, February 6, 2016 | Exhibition Video Trailer
Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe
Curated by Tracy L. Adler, Director, Wellin Museum of Art
Video created by: Ben Salzman
Organized by the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art, Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe is the Beijing-born artist’s largest solo exhibition to date in the United States, featuring a selection of work from 2006 to the present, including new scrolls, sculptures, and drawings never before exhibited. Taking on the thousand-year-old practice of Chinese scroll painting, Yun-Fei Ji employs ink on paper as his primary medium and landscape as his central subject. However, rather than adopting the idealism characteristic of traditional scroll painting, Ji’s work presents the gritty reality of life in China today. Ji emphasizes the critical relationship between the land and its people and how that balance is being challenged by current social, political, ecological, and economic shifts. His compositions are inspired by his own fieldwork in rural areas throughout China’s countryside, where entire villages face forced relocation to make way for ambitious infrastructural projects such as the Three Gorges Dam, and where climate change has compromised the natural environment. The resulting artworks are populated by individualized, present-day figures inhabiting land in various stages of transition. Poised between modernity and tradition, the village becomes a metaphor for community, and the dislocation and environmental deterioration become specters of geographic disenfranchisement. Embedded within the compositions alongside the villagers, ghosts of ancestors and animal-like folkloric figures act as powerful reminders of the longstanding cultural traditions at risk. With their impressionistic brushwork and original subject matter, Ji’s paintings possess an immediacy and urgency that suggest a fragmented, at times surreal, contemporary landscape.
Born in Beijing (1963), Yun-Fei Ji received a BFA from Beijing’s Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1982 and an MFA from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville in 1989. His work has been shown extensively, most recently at the Grand Rapids Art Museum in Michigan; the University Museum of Contemporary Art in Amherst, Massachusetts; the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada; and in the 2014 New Orleans biennial Prospect.3: Notes for Now. In 2012, Ji presented his first Beijing solo exhibition at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art. He received the Rome Prize in 2006 from the American Academy in Rome, Italy.
This survey of the artist’s work will be followed by a major monographic publication that includes essays by Tracy L. Adler, Director, Wellin Museum of Art; Steven J. Goldberg, Associate Professor of Art History at Hamilton College; and Robert Morgan, noted critic and curator; co-published with DelMonico Books/Prestel, New York.
A Walk in Minzu University of China with Lina
In this video, I am going to walk around Minzu University of China.
MUC has students from different ethnic groups of China.
There is a Museum of Ethnic Cultures and some old buildings in the campus.
It's said that the famous architecht Liangsicheng did some design work of the school auditorium.
And the famous Peking Opera Master Meilanfang once performed there.
Let's walk around and have a look.
Hope that you will enjoy it.
Looking forward to your suggestions and comments.
Subscribe and get more videos from China.
Twitter:
Facebook:
English/Chinese subtitiles: By Lina
Related Channel:普通人商学院
Ji Won Song: Schumann: Violin Sonata No. 1 in A minor
Violinist Ji Won Song, accompanied by Richard Fu, piano.
Ji Won Song
Celebrated Korean violinist Ji Won Song delights audiences worldwide with energetic performances that express her refined perspectives on melody, color and harmony as well as her deep passion for her instrument.
She received first prize and the audience prize at the Leopold Mozart Competition in Augsburg, first prize and the classical music prize at the China International Violin Competition in Qingdao, first prize and the best Chinese work prize at The Alice & Eleonore Schoenfeld International String Competition and first prize with the audience prize in The Schadt Competition. She was also a prize winner at Concours International de Violon Tibor Varga, the Carl Nielsen International Violin Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin International Competition. Ms. Song has also won many awards for her work, including the esteemed Milka/Curtis Artist Prize, awarded by the Curtis Institute of Music in conjunction with the Markow Toteyy Foundation.
Ms. Song has performed at concert halls and recital spaces around the world including the Kennedy Center, Kimmel Center, Shanghai Symphony Hall, Seoul Arts Center, Kongresshalle and Jordan Hall. She has been a featured soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Montreal Symphony Orchestra and the Munich Radio Orchestra, with conductors including Rossen Milanov, Augustin Dumay and Nanse Gum.
Ms. Song is currently pursuing the Artist Diploma program at the Julliard School, where she studies with distinguished violinists Donald Weilerstein and Ida Kavafian.
Richard Fu
Shanghai-born Richard Fu is currently studying collaborative piano at Juilliard, having previously attended Oxford University, the Royal College of Music (RCM), and Dartmouth College. Though he had wanted to become a lawyer growing up and began as a political science major at Dartmouth, Richard fell in love with classical music while studying abroad in Vienna and changed focus to music midway. At Dartmouth, Richard won the Mark L. Lebowitz 1977 Memorial Prize for outstanding undergraduate music student, Macdonald-Smith Prize for high achievement in musical performances, and the Gerald A. Tracy Memorial Scholarship Piano Competition. Other prizes include the Los Angeles International Liszt Competition and RCM’s Kendall Taylor Beethoven Competition. Richard has performed concertos with the Oxford University Philharmonia, Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra, Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra, and the Basement Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, he has accompanied the masterclasses of Maxim Vengerov and Roderick Williams, and received coaching from Menahem Pressler and Roger Vignoles. Richard co-found Béla Ensemble, a clarinet-violin-piano ensemble focusing on contemporary music. He performed Stravinsky’s Septet as part of RCM’s collaboration with the Philharmonia Orchestra in the Stravinsky: Myths & Rituals Festival, as well as Steve Reich’s Double Sextet during the composer’s residency at the RCM. Recent performances include his debut at Carnegie Hall (Weill Recital Hall), and recitals in the Sheldonian Theatre, Holywell Music Room, Victoria & Albert Museum, St. John’s Smith Square, Regents Hall, Roman Music Festival, Oxford Lieder Festival, and on tour in cities across China.
Richard’s most important teachers and mentors include Victor Rosenbaum, Andrew Ball, Sally Pinkas, Steve Swayne, and Hong Teng. During the summers, Richard enjoys attending music festivals through which he has learned from pianists such as Dimitri Alexeev, Paul Badura-Skoda, Boris Berman, Christopher Elton, Robert McDonald, and Peter Serkin. This past summer, Richard was a fellow at Music Academy of the West, where he met his current teacher Jonathan Feldman and also played the celeste in a concert conducted by Alan Gilbert featuring Renée Fleming.
City Wall Old House Ji Residence 平遥城墙老宅-冀府
City Wall Old House Ji Residence is located in Pingyao ancient city, the building itself has over 280 years history, where you can easily reach main attractions while enjoying a quiet and authentic atmosphere.
Our 17 cozy rooms were all furnished in a traditional Chinese style, and a beautiful courtyard where you can take a sip of coffee or a our home made local cuisine. BBQ facilities are available in the courtyard as well.
To make your trip more comfortable, we also provide free ticket service and tour desk, and for guests who have made reservation in our hotel, we can offer free pick-up service from both Pingyao Railway Station and Pingyao Ancient City Station.
Euen Ji Lee Videography Showreel 2018 [Chinese New Year]
Videographer: Euen Ji Lee
Edited by: Euen Ji Lee
Casts: Huang's Family
Occasion: Chinese New Year Celebration
BGM: Urban Lullaby - Jimmy Fontanez
Connect me here! ????
Instagram: @snoopjie
Photography & Videography: @euenjimblee.art
Snapchat: snoopjie
--------------------------------------
Contact Me Here:
Email: leeeuenji@gmail.com
or
DM me on Instagram
Drents Museum - De Gouden Eeuw van China
'De Gouden Eeuw van China' in de nieuwe museumvleugel van het Drents Museum in Assen. De museumvleugel is ontworpen door architect Erick van Egeraat. De tentoonstelling is te zien tot en met 15 april 2012.
De film is geproduceerd door JAV Studio's, Assen.
Voor meer informatie kijk op:
IN 90 Seconds - Pyramids Around the World
Almost every ancient culture and civilization, be it Mesopotamian, Chinese, Egyptian, or Mayan, has left a legacy of towering pyramids. A surprisingly global phenomenon, we can these majestic structures all around the world.
1. Pyramid of Djoser – Saqqara, Egypt (2660 BCE)
While there are over a hundred pyramids in Egypt, this is the oldest. Built by the Pharaoh Djoser (Zoser), this step pyramid predates those at Giza by more than a century.
2. Pyramid of the Sun – Teotihuacan, Mexico (100 CE)
The Mexican city of Teotihuacan is filled with massive step pyramids. The most impressive is the 240-foot-tall Pyramid of the Sun, built in five layers.
3. El Castillo – Yucatan, Mexico (1000 CE)
98-foot-tall Chichen Itza pyramid, or the Temple of Kukulcan, is a Mayan temple with 365 steps, one for each day of the year.
4. Prang Temple – Koh Ker, Cambodia (940 CE)
Located in Koh Ker, the seven‑tiered and 118-foot-tall Prang Temple was built under the reign of Jayavarman I.
5. Pyramid of Khufu – Cairo, Egypt (2560 BCE)
One of the three towering Pyramids of Giza, the Great Pyramid was built for Pharoah Khufu and is the only remaining wonder of the ancient world.
6. Tomb of the General – Ji’an, China (400 CE)
This 43-foot-tall “Pyramid of the East” was the burial place of King Jangsu, the 20th ruler of Goguryeo. It is located in modern-day Ji’an in China.
7. Ziggurat of Ur – Iraq (2000 BCE)
Built by the Sumerians in the 21st century BC, this ancient ziggurat in modern-day Iraq has been reconstructed many times over the years.
8. Tomb of Kashta – Meroe, Sudan (500 BCE)
Once known as Nubia, the pyramids of Sudan are smaller and more narrowly tapered than those of Egyptian pharaohs. There are about 40 in total at Meroe.
9. Borobudur Temple – Java, Indonesia (800 CE)
The nine stacked platforms of the Borobudur Temple form the world’s largest Buddhist temple. It was built in the 9th century by the Sailendra Dynasty.
10. Tikal – Peten, Guatemala
The Mayan city of Tikal has 6 pyramidal temples. The tallest is Tikal IV, at 230 feet. It is topped by the Temple of the Two-Headed Serpent.
Ji Won Song: Sibelius: Mazurka, Op. 81, No. 1
Violinist Ji Won Song, accompanied by Richard Fu, piano.
Ji Won Song
Celebrated Korean violinist Ji Won Song delights audiences worldwide with energetic performances that express her refined perspectives on melody, color and harmony as well as her deep passion for her instrument.
She received first prize and the audience prize at the Leopold Mozart Competition in Augsburg, first prize and the classical music prize at the China International Violin Competition in Qingdao, first prize and the best Chinese work prize at The Alice & Eleonore Schoenfeld International String Competition and first prize with the audience prize in The Schadt Competition. She was also a prize winner at Concours International de Violon Tibor Varga, the Carl Nielsen International Violin Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin International Competition. Ms. Song has also won many awards for her work, including the esteemed Milka/Curtis Artist Prize, awarded by the Curtis Institute of Music in conjunction with the Markow Toteyy Foundation.
Ms. Song has performed at concert halls and recital spaces around the world including the Kennedy Center, Kimmel Center, Shanghai Symphony Hall, Seoul Arts Center, Kongresshalle and Jordan Hall. She has been a featured soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, Montreal Symphony Orchestra and the Munich Radio Orchestra, with conductors including Rossen Milanov, Augustin Dumay and Nanse Gum.
Ms. Song is currently pursuing the Artist Diploma program at the Julliard School, where she studies with distinguished violinists Donald Weilerstein and Ida Kavafian.
Richard Fu
Shanghai-born Richard Fu is currently studying collaborative piano at Juilliard, having previously attended Oxford University, the Royal College of Music (RCM), and Dartmouth College. Though he had wanted to become a lawyer growing up and began as a political science major at Dartmouth, Richard fell in love with classical music while studying abroad in Vienna and changed focus to music midway. At Dartmouth, Richard won the Mark L. Lebowitz 1977 Memorial Prize for outstanding undergraduate music student, Macdonald-Smith Prize for high achievement in musical performances, and the Gerald A. Tracy Memorial Scholarship Piano Competition. Other prizes include the Los Angeles International Liszt Competition and RCM’s Kendall Taylor Beethoven Competition. Richard has performed concertos with the Oxford University Philharmonia, Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra, Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra, and the Basement Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, he has accompanied the masterclasses of Maxim Vengerov and Roderick Williams, and received coaching from Menahem Pressler and Roger Vignoles. Richard co-found Béla Ensemble, a clarinet-violin-piano ensemble focusing on contemporary music. He performed Stravinsky’s Septet as part of RCM’s collaboration with the Philharmonia Orchestra in the Stravinsky: Myths & Rituals Festival, as well as Steve Reich’s Double Sextet during the composer’s residency at the RCM. Recent performances include his debut at Carnegie Hall (Weill Recital Hall), and recitals in the Sheldonian Theatre, Holywell Music Room, Victoria & Albert Museum, St. John’s Smith Square, Regents Hall, Roman Music Festival, Oxford Lieder Festival, and on tour in cities across China.
Richard’s most important teachers and mentors include Victor Rosenbaum, Andrew Ball, Sally Pinkas, Steve Swayne, and Hong Teng. During the summers, Richard enjoys attending music festivals through which he has learned from pianists such as Dimitri Alexeev, Paul Badura-Skoda, Boris Berman, Christopher Elton, Robert McDonald, and Peter Serkin. This past summer, Richard was a fellow at Music Academy of the West, where he met his current teacher Jonathan Feldman and also played the celeste in a concert conducted by Alan Gilbert featuring Renée Fleming.
Wu Ji 无羁 [陈情令The Untamed] - Dizi Cover
Bonus video! There are plenty of better dizi covers out there already. But since there were quite a few requests, I made a quick one minute cover. Ahh is this what y'all wanted?
Jianpu/ Sheet music:
Key: G
Dizi: D
Images:
陈情令
#flutecover #Untamed #Wuji
Wuji, 无羁, Theme Song, 陈情令, The Untamed, Dizi Cover, Flute Cover, Bamboo Flute, Chinese Flute, Xiao, Chinese Music, OST, Soundtrack, TV Series, Guqin, 古琴, 笛子, 竹笛, Wei Wuxian, Lan Wangji