| 'Forbidden garden' to be renovatedBy Wang Shanshan (China Daily)
 Updated: 2006-03-02 05:41
 
 
 The Qianlong Garden in the northeastern section of the Forbidden City will 
receive a US$12 million face-lift by the Palace Museum, administrative organ of 
the Forbidden City, and the New York-based World Monuments Fund, according to an 
agreement signed in the palace yesterday by the two sides.
 Experts involved will come from the Palace Museum, the Washington-based 
Smithsonian Institute and a few private institutes in the United States, Bonnie 
Burnham, president of the foundation, told China Daily.
 Houghton Freeman and his wife from the US have already sent the first 
donations. 
 A European Rococo mural depicting Qing royal concubines came into view, as 
the red-lacquered door opened to the dilapidated Lodge of Jade Purity in the 
still-forbidden part of the Forbidden City.
 Created with perfect perspective techniques, which originated in Europe 
during the Renaissance, the mural is one of the numerous treasures found in the 
230-year-old, 6,400-square-metre Qianlong Garden, which will open to the public 
in 2016 at the end of a 10-year conservation project undertaken by Chinese and 
US experts.
 "I was born in Beijing more than 80 years ago. After the Forbidden City 
opened to the public in 1925, my family and I visited it many times, but have 
never been to this part, so it is an honour for me to help show the garden to 
the public," Burnham said in the Lodge of Ancient Trees next door to the garden, 
where the signing ceremony was held.
 The Qianlong Garden, which Emperor Qianlong (reign 1736-1795) had built for 
his retirement in the early years of his enthronement, cost the royals 1.4 
million taels of silver by its completion in 1776, according to Li Ji, executive 
deputy director of the Palace Museum.
 It has remained virtually untouched since that time, while other parts of the 
Forbidden City underwent continuous changes throughout the Qing Dynasty 
(1644-1911).
 Besides the corridors, artificial hills and bridges placed artistically among 
the buildings, the Qianlong Garden is unique in the interior decorations of its 
buildings, according to Burnham of the American foundation.
 The designers used the best traditional material and techniques, together 
with tromp l'oeil paintings and perspective techniques from the West, to create 
a rich and elegant imperial interior space, while exemplifying the cultural 
differences between the East and the West.
 
 (China Daily 03/02/2006 page2)  
 
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