China News Agency, Beijing, July 20 (Reporter Ying Ni) 177 days after the closure, the Palace Museum's Treasure Museum, Watch Museum and other indoor exhibition halls will welcome the audience.

  The Palace Museum issued an announcement on the 20th. From July 21st, indoor exhibition halls including the Treasure Hall and the Clock and Watch Hall will be opened in an orderly manner in accordance with the principles of reservation, current limit and peak shift. This is 177 days after the National Palace Museum announced that it was closed on January 25 due to the need for epidemic prevention and control.

  Although the Palace Museum has been opened in order from May 1st, for the purpose of epidemic prevention and control, the Palace Museum has not opened indoor exhibition halls. Visitors can only visit the front three halls, back three palaces, royal garden, Cining Palace, The outdoor exhibition area in the Cining Palace Garden, Shoukang Palace area and some courtyards of the East and West Six Palaces.

  The reporter saw on the official website of the Palace Museum that the current exhibitions in the Palace Museum have ended, and the new exhibition has not been announced. However, according to the original plan, this year is 600 years since the Forbidden City was built. In the second half of the year, the Forbidden City will hold a series of large-scale exhibitions such as "Exhibition of Ancient Figures in the Palace Museum" and "Special Exhibition of Su Shi's Paintings and Calligraphy". Debut.

  It is worth mentioning that the National Museum of China across the Forbidden City across Chang’an Street has recently launched a series of new exhibitions to attract audiences, such as "Miao He Shen Xing-Exhibition of Ming and Qing Portraits in the National Museum of China" "Remember Nostalgia -"Shandong Folk Art Exhibition" "Carving Painting and Painting-Chaozhou Wood Carving Exhibition" and so on just opened last week.

  From 0:00 on July 20th, the emergency public health emergency response level in Beijing was adjusted from two to three. (Finish)