CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

83F Hi 94F
Lo 76F

Recent Blog Posts

Terra-Cotta Warriors Come to America

By Associated Press | May 16, 2008

More than a dozen Chinese terra-cotta warriors crafted more than 2,000 years ago to protect their emperor in the afterlife have arrived in America with a very different mission: to be cultural ambassadors.

As China gears up for the 2008 Olympics, the ancient, life-size clay statues of warriors, archers, and chariot drivers go on display at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, Calif., as the largest loan of the warriors in American history.

"Terra Cotta Warriors: Guardians of China's First Emperor" opens Sunday and runs for five months before the warriors travel to Houston, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C., over the next two years. It's a debut timed to the Beijing Olympics that was millions of dollars and four years in the making, the Bowers Museum's president, Peter Keller, said.

Curators hope the show will pique the interest of Americans who are inundated with news of lead-contaminated Chinese toys, human rights violations in Tibet, and rapid economic expansion, but who know nothing of the nation's ancient and storied past.


Powered by Inform

RELATED SUN TOPICS ›

Dog Days of Summer
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

Tax Rates For New Yorkers Would Top 50% Under Obama

Paterson Implies 'Accidental' Racism

Merrill Lynch Move Could Spark Silverstein-Port Authority Battle

Obama Is Right About Something

Donor Sought for Visitor Center To Be Built at Lincoln Center

Columbia Wins Expansion Round Amid Opposition

NATIONAL ›

Obama Visits U.S. Forces in Kuwait, Afghanistan

US, Iraq Seek 'General Time Horizon' on Troop Cuts

Bloomberg Backs Paterson on the Amazon Tax Question

Guns Ruling Spawns Challenges by Felons

Bush Library Project Clears an Important Methodist Hurdle

Human Trial of AIDS Vaccine Canceled

ARTS+ ›

Produce & Public Art at Port Authority

Midnight Stampede to 'The Dark Knight' Sets Record

It's Our Earth, Now What Do We Do With It?

The World Inside Our Heads: 'Human' by Michael Gazzaniga

Man-Eaters: Carole Travis-Henikoff's 'Dinner With a Cannibal'

'The Human Condition' — in 10 Hours