US donor of Japanese war crime photos experiences Kwon-glazed porcelain painting in Guangzhou
On April 22, Evan Kail, the U.S. donor of Japanese war crime photos to China, visited the century-old Chen Clan Academy (Ancestral Temple of the Chen Family) in Guangzhou.
Under the guidance of He Lifen, the provincial-level inheritor of Kwon-glazed porcelain, Evan Kail gained hands-on experience in the entire creative process of painting Guangzhou's city flower, the kapok flower on a plate and wrote “USA + China” on it.
Holding his works, Kail said in Chinese, “The U.S. and China are friends.”
Source: Guangzhou Daily
Video: Xia Ming, Wu Di, Wang Weixuan
Video editor: Zhang Meilun
English author & editor: Lyu Yun
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US donor of Japanese war crime photos experiences Kwon-glazed porcelain painting in Guangzhou
On April 22, Evan Kail, the U.S. donor of Japanese war crime photos to China, visited the century-old Chen Clan Academy (Ancestral Temple of the Chen Family) in Guangzhou.
Under the guidance of He Lifen, the provincial-level inheritor of Kwon-glazed porcelain, Evan Kail gained hands-on experience in the entire creative process of painting Guangzhou's city flower, the kapok flower on a plate and wrote “USA + China” on it.
Holding his works, Kail said in Chinese, “The U.S. and China are friends.”
Source: Guangzhou Daily
Video: Xia Ming, Wu Di, Wang Weixuan
Video editor: Zhang Meilun
English author & editor: Lyu Yun
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