Arts, Culture & History

Leveraging Beijing's rich cultural heritage and our Center’s extensive network of artistic luminaries, the Beijing Global Center serves as a vibrant platform for fostering new perspectives and promoting art and cultural exchanges.

By collaborating with the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University Press, and many other campus units, the Beijing Center fosters collaborative programs that enhance engagement between the University and China, broadening global understanding.

We regularly host a diverse array of seminars, panel discussions, and workshops covering topics such as film and theater, fostering storytelling and performance skills; design and architecture, encouraging innovative thinking and aesthetic appreciation; and cultural heritage and artistic expression, nurturing intellectual and creative discovery.

RELATED NEWS

Mike He, from Columbia's Department of Sociology, was named a scholar-in-residence at the Beijing Global Center for summer 2024.

Joanna Lee, a Columbia Ph.D. student, shares insightful reflections on her residency experience at the Beijing Global Center.

Tenggeer Hao GSAS'24, a resident scholar at the Beijing Center, explores the unexpected intersection of Chinese wisdom and cinematic expression.

The inaugural group of scholars-in-residence include Wolfgang R. Mann, Lauran Hartley and Tenggeer Hao.

On July 10th, the "1 Tree, 1 World" immersive parent-child exhibition, jointly created by artists from multiple countries and Chinese children, opened at the China Millennium Monument in Beijing. Through immersive and interactive experiences, the collection guides children and their parents in exploring together, as they gain insights into the growth process of a tree and explore their own life experiences.

Featuring the book and facilitating exchanges on an alternative framework, Columbia Global Centers | Beijing, in partnership with Princeton University Press and the School of International Studies at Peking University, invited Keren Yarhi-Milo, the dean of Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) and Public Affairs and the Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Relations, and senior scholars from China——Jiwu Yin, Qingmin Zhang, and Tiejun Yu to join a book talk and discussion.

The author argues that China's hopes for legitimacy and acceptance provide a crucial rationale for refraining from coercive measures.

Columbia Global Centers | Beijing and Columbia University Press co-hosted a virtual book talk and panel discussion for The Wuhan Lockdown, a new book by Professor Guobin Yang of the University of Pennsylvania.