Search Results: 798 Art District
Beijing 798 Arts District
The capital’s premier art-commerce space housing museums, galleries, and shops Read MoreNew Ways of Traveling: Maintaining the Bond with Chinese Tourists | Part Two
Post-COVID, brands hoping to position themselves in China should either look to physically establishing their business on the mainland or implementing alternatives to engage audiences. Read MoreThe Exhibition Is You: How Selfies Effect China’s Art Culture
Leandro Erlich's selfie-friendly exhibition has been a big success in Beijing. In turn, CAFAM has been criticized for being overly focused on social-media. Read MoreThe JT Index: September 2020
The escalating tech-war on Chinese social media platforms may not have reached its conclusion, but it has forced cultural institutions to reassess their audience engagement tools. Read MoreThe JT Index: August 2020
The JT Index is a monthly roundup of how Chinese museums and western cultural institutions are performing on China’s top social platform. Read MoreEssential Strategies for Cultural Branding in China
London's National Gallery is brand building in China through pop-ups, e-commerce sales, and meeting young art lovers where they are; online. Read MoreThe Jing Travel WeChat Index: April 2020
The Jing Travel WeChat Index is a monthly roundup of how Chinese museums and western cultural institutions are performing on China’s top social platform. Read MoreHow Museums are Responding to Coronavirus: Reactions from UCCA and Centre Pompidou
How are leading global art institutions coping with closure? Museum directors discuss their approaches to the unprecedented crisis. Read MoreThe French Culture Wave Sweeping China
A Picasso and Giacometti Museum will launch in Beijing in 2020 — the latest in a series of high-profile French institutions opening branches in China. Read MoreThe Immersive Exhibition is Here to Stay
Having staged more than a dozen installations in China since 2016, teamLab opened its first permanent exhibition this November, a move pointing to the tastes of young Chinese art-lennials. Read More