China News Service, Hong Kong, August 4th (Reporter Han Xingtong) The Hong Kong Palace Museum announced on the 4th that the special exhibition "Treasures of the Nation: Paintings and Calligraphy of Jin, Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties in the Palace Museum" in Hall 8 in the museum has been on display since the 3rd. In the second phase, a total of 15 famous ancient calligraphy and paintings were exhibited.

  According to the Hong Kong Palace Museum, the 15 exhibits on display are all famous masterpieces or classic copies in the history of Chinese painting and calligraphy. These national treasures reflect the outstanding artistic achievements of famous artists in the past, and they have also experienced hundreds of years or even more than a thousand years of circulation. Many of them are for the royal collection, and it is not easy to survive to this day.

  It is reported that the exhibits include the well-known masterpiece "Luo Shen Fu Tu", the original work is said to be made by Gu Kaizhi, and the "Running Script Copying Orchid Pavilion Preface" made by Yu Shinan, a calligrapher of the Tang Dynasty.

  The Hong Kong Palace Museum officially opened to the public on July 3, displaying more than 900 precious cultural relics selected from the collection of the Palace Museum in Beijing.

The exhibition "Treasures of the Nation: Paintings and Calligraphy of Jin, Tang, Song and Yuan Dynasties Collected by the Palace Museum" in Hall 8 is one of the special opening exhibitions of the Hong Kong Palace Museum. 35 pieces of Jin, Tang and Song Dynasty are carefully selected from the treasures of Chinese painting and calligraphy collected by the Palace Museum. , Yuan calligraphy and painting, exhibited in three periods, each period of one month.

  The Hong Kong Palace Museum stated that the 15 exhibits are all national first-class cultural relics, some of which have a history of more than a thousand years, and are the highest and most precious cultural relics among the more than 1.86 million cultural relics in the Palace Museum.

In order to protect these national treasures, they are only displayed in Hong Kong until September 4, after which they must be returned to the Palace Museum for at least three years of dormancy, during which they cannot be displayed again.

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