The article “Life on the South China Sea” was published on February 12,
2013 in “The Art Newsparer”. It discusses
Hong Kong’s maritime museum, which is going to be reopened on a pier in
Victoria Harbour. The author, Alexandra Seno, makes clear that Hong
Kong’s museum-in-the-making of contemporary visual culture, attracts
international attention, a museum that tells the history of the port city’s
rise to global importance is due to reopen on 26 February. It is an open secret
that The Hong Kong Maritime Museum is moving to a three-storey pier in the
city’s central business district. The space will boast coveted views of
Victoria Harbour and, at 35,000 sq. ft, will be six times bigger than the
museum’s previous home, a colonial building in Stanley, a suburb of Hong Kong.
It is necessary to mention that one of the highlights of the museum, which was
founded in 2003, is an exhibition created around Pacifying the South China Sea,
a rare and highly detailed Qing Dynasty scroll. It happens because historians
consider the event vital to the Qing Dynasty’s ability to exercise power in the
early 19th century.
It is pointed out that the work was acquired by the museum from a French
family’s collection in 2006. It was made by an unknown artist in the early
1800s, around the time of the campaign. Analyzing the situation it becomes
clear that other galleries will shed light on Hong Kong’s history as a world
maritime capital, the evolution of seafaring life through the centuries, and
the development of China’s export trade in ceramics and other coastal-based
trades and industries. Anthony Hardy says that the museum also plans to bring
at least two major exhibitions from world-class collections to Hong Kong in
2013. There are sighed that the new space will include 13 permanent galleries,
two spaces for visiting exhibitions, a cafe and two shops. Representatives
estimate that the museum, with its new, more convenient location and larger floor
plan, can attract at least 140,000 visitors in its first year—more than triple
the number it drew in Stanley.
In conclusion the author mentions that although the museum has the
backing of the government, it is a privately run institution, and will be financed
primarily by funding from the local shipping industry. Hardy, who is a
collector, was the chairman of the Wallem Group shipping company until 2006,
when he retired and focused his energy on the maritime museum. As for my
opinion, I think that it is good decision to reconstruct the museum because it
will help it to hold people’s attention and become more popular museum than
now.
More than 3 mistakes! Your slips:
ОтветитьУдалитьSentence №12, "There are sighed that..." - "There are signs that..."
Your opinion: "it is good decision..," "it will help it to hold..," "become more popular museum..." - "it is a good decision..," "it will help it hold..," "become a more popular museum / become more popular..."
I don't understand where the mistake is. "it will help it to hold..,". What's wrong and why?
Удалить