Hong Kong Palace Museum
Welcome to the Hong Kong Palace Museum. This guide will show you around this extraordinary place and facilitate your future visit.
Starting from the first floor, we can first visit the exhibition hall number two, from dawn to dust, from which we could learn about the people's life in the forbidden city through different objects and spaces in the past. The exhibition shows significant events from morning to bedtime of people in the Qing dynasty. You could see the moments that illustrate color, texture, Joy and sorrow of life in the forbidden city.
Coming bace to the first exhibition. It presents the forbidden city through showing the architecture, collections and heritage of the time. Basically, it introduces the heritage of the forbidden city, which carries on the legacy of the past while looking forward to the future.
Going up to the second floor, we have the exhibition number three: "clay to treasure", which shows the ceramic from the palace museum collection.From this exhibitions, you can see the history of Chinese ceramics in miniature. In addition to being widely used as fog daily instruments by people there were also. You can also see. You can also feel the status and taste of the ruler and AR aristocrats at of the time.
The exhibition number four is temporarily closed and we could continue our visit to the hall number five: "The quest for originality", which shows the contemporary design and traditional crafts in dialogue. This exhibition presents selections from the palace museum's collections of decorative art and exams. These objects from the perspective of contemporary design, theory and production.
Exhibition hall number six, seven and eight are on the third floor and hall number eight is for special exhibitions which has introduced in the previous post. Exhibition number six shows the collection history in Hong Kong. It traces the history of Chinese art collection in Hong Kong for more than a century, charges the trajectory of the development of museums in Hong Kong, and pays tribute to collectors, scholars, museum workers and other interested people who have been promoting the essence of Chinese culture for Hong Kong and overseas audience.