Mama Jiabao will show you how to make chicken soup.
What defines luxury and wealth when it comes to tableware?
Dings were used by nobility as a way to capture all of life's special moments.
Making bronzeware is an arduous and involved process, and its usage has a strict hierarchy.
Yi Gongzi details the long and involved process of making bronzeware.
Yi Gongzi explains how bronze was discovered and formed in ancient China.
As Yi Gongzi explains, ancient bronze tableware isn't for just anyone to use.
In this episode, Yi Gongzi introduces the often overlooked museum specialty: ancient Chinese bronze ware.
In the end our host gives us the message that we should try our best to change the things we can and not over think the things we can't change about ourselves.
The artist explains more of his life philosophy and our inherent contradictions.
After the host finishes her painting the artist interprets in in relation to her life. He tells her that her life will move in one particular direction but She will have some difficulty right in the middle. In this way his work becomes a type of fortune telling.
Our host can't wait to try painting and she goes about choosing her ink. The artist describes the process that needs to be unlearned in order for us to let out what's truly in our hearts. We should disregard our training and just paint.
The host puts the artists work in perspective and the artist tells us that we can never really understand ourselves until we project ourselves outwardly.
The artist based on the fact that young Japanese people who participated in his art project didn't take up most of the page when they were drawing, makes broad assumptions about Japanese society.
The artist shows that in our myths it is preordained that our advancements are all in service of returning to our mythological paradise.
The artist explains his works. He describes how all of the paintings he does are really just free form and they come from the heart.
The artist describes how legends and myths are the blueprints for our future development.
Our host introduces "500 strokes" the work of a Beijing artist. This piece incorporates 500 different single calligraphy brush strokes, each with it's own inspiration.
The artist talks about how in the future the things that we see as science they will see as legends.
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