Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Seek the feeling of the National Palace Museum in Taipei, and hurry! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent!

Seek the feeling of the National Palace Museum in Taipei, and hurry! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent! Urgent!

The beauty of the stream, the fish know that the softness of the wind and the tears are inseparable, and the mountain knows that the story left after a thousand years is unforgettable. I laugh when I think about it in my dreams. I look forward to seeing your good thanks. God knows, what I want in my heart seems to be a long wait, but it is an eternal future. Your appearance will be the pride of my happiness. I just want to hug here, we are together. Autumn goes to winter, plum blossoms are fragrant, and spring goes to spring. It is difficult for people to continue a beautiful theme song title. After more than two years of filming, 12 episode, compatriots on both sides of the strait have a deeper understanding of the National Palace Museum in Taipei. Previously, the National Geographic Channel had made a special topic on the National Palace Museum in Taipei. Because westerners don't know much about China culture, it is difficult for them to explain the profoundness of China civilization, so they are more concerned about how to protect and study cultural relics by using modern scientific and technological means.

In the series "Walking Around China" in Taiwan Province Province, although an episode has been reserved for the National Palace Museum, it is difficult to fully show us this behemoth with the capacity of 650,000 national treasures and known as one of the five largest museums in the world. The National Palace Museum in Taipei just fills this gap. As the carrier of culture, cultural relics bear the bridge of cross-strait exchanges. It is not only a documentary of literature and history, but also exudes a tacit melancholy and expectation from the delicate commentary. Every episode of the National Palace Museum in Taipei is like telling a story, with one or two characters as the main line. Shooting and framing are not limited to Taipei, but interspersed with the original layout of the Forbidden City in Beijing, the creation and discovery of cultural relics, etc. Or tell the story of the National Palace Museum in Taipei in different historical periods according to a movie or news. While presenting and deeply interpreting the precious cultural relics hidden in the National Palace Museum in Taipei, it also reveals the real process of the unprecedented migration of cultural relics in that year.

I remember the first time in junior high school history class that there is also the Forbidden City in Taipei across the Taiwan Strait. Whenever a teacher introduces the artistic achievements of various historical periods, he always mentions the present hiding place of these works-the National Palace Museum in Taipei. The distant and mysterious National Palace Museum in Taipei has since become a sacred place in my heart. Sanxi Hall's Wang Xizhi's "Sunny Post on the Snow", 2/kloc-0 pieces of azure porcelain from Ruyao in the Northern Song Dynasty, and exquisite jade cabbage are all national treasures of dreams. I think there must be several people who have the same complex as me. There was such an old professor on the maiden voyage last year. He is very old, had a heart bypass operation, and his legs and feet are not very flexible. Due to physical reasons, he even gave up visiting natural scenery such as Mount Ali. Only the National Palace Museum in Taipei is his favorite place. During the visit, his attentive expression and happy smile seemed to hope that time would stop. We should envy our compatriots across the Taiwan Strait, because we are just passers-by, but they can be frequent visitors.

As expected in the film, when will the cultural relics of the two places get together again, the gathering of Sanxi Hall's three posts or the gathering of pairs of porcelain vases? Li Ao once compared the Forbidden City in Beijing and Taiwan Province to dumpling skin and stuffing, so when can the skin and stuffing be wrapped into a jiaozi? I dare not imagine, just as I dare not expect to go to the National Palace Museum in Taipei.