男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Lifestyle
Home / Lifestyle / Z Weekly

Traditional Chinese art inspires climate conversation

By Jiang Xinyu | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-12-24 07:35
Share
Share - WeChat
Jiang Xinyu hosts one of the side events during the United Nations climate change conference held in Belem, Brazil, in November. CHINA DAILY

Diverse, dynamic, and alive. This was my first impression upon entering the venue of the United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP30, on Nov 10 in Belem, a city at the heart of the Brazilian Amazon.

Interactive displays of innovative achievements, corporate green project launches, youth-led roundtable discussions, and immersive cultural experiences all kept me constantly on the move, drifting from one pavilion to another.

Beyond the formal negotiations in the meeting rooms, various side events were held by different parties across the pavilions. With my lanyard loaded with pins and my heart full of excitement, I gradually made up my mind that it was time for me not just to participate, but to take on another role: organizing a side event of my own.

The idea of blending Chinese painting into the session then popped into my mind.

On the day of the event, as an image of a painting depicting spectacular landscapes in exuberant colors on a golden backdrop was projected onto the screen, the audience's eyes immediately fixed on it. It was A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains. "If you've seen this painting, please raise your hand," I asked. Only a few did. When I mentioned that the scroll spans over 10 meters — long enough to literally stretch across our pavilion — people instinctively looked from left to right and let out a gasp.

"Look closely," I said. "Though filled with vast mountains and rivers, the painting is dotted with traces of human life — fishing villages along the water, pavilions and bridges nestled in the terrain, and travelers and recluses moving quietly through the landscape." I explained the ideal of an inhabitable and traversable world, where humans are not the protagonists of nature but part of it.

I then shifted to how the painting was composed with the scattered perspective, or what some call a "God's-eye view".The artist adopted a panoramic, mobile viewpoint like a bird soaring above the world, compressing a long span of rivers and mountains into one single scroll. This perspective suggests that humans are both participants in and observers of nature, rather than its masters.

As we explored the history of Chinese painting and what it might offer to contemporary climate solutions, more people were drawn in. What unfolded in that room made clear that, even when unfamiliar, Chinese painting offers a unique language through which people can intuitively connect with nature. Rather than presenting a fixed image of the world, it opens a way of seeing — one that emphasizes perception, relationship, and resonance over mere representation.

A broader view

This perspective stayed with me as I moved from pavilion to pavilion. At the side event "Fostering South-South Collaboration: Scaling Climate Tech Solutions through Shared Innovation", I was encouraged to see that it is no longer a one-way process where the Global North delivers solutions and the Global South acts accordingly. Countries from the Global South are increasingly designing their own pathways, articulating their needs clearly, and seeking collaboration on their own terms.

A participant from Guyana shared that the country aims to source around 80 percent of its energy from renewables by 2030 — an ambitious goal that cannot be achieved without South-South cooperation, technology sharing, and capacity building.

Looking more closely also brought deeper questions into view. Behind technological progress often lie layers of structural inequality. When I asked Michal Nachmany, founder and CEO of Climate Policy Radar, how we might balance the benefits and energy costs of AI in climate adaptation, she noted that the impacts of AI extend far beyond energy use. They include geographic inequalities linked to data-center locations, biases embedded in training data, and hidden labor costs. The key issue, she emphasized, is not technology itself, but who controls it, how it is used, and whom it serves.

This is a lesson Chinese landscape painting has long offered: development is not only about expansion, but about knowing where to stop, where to leave space, and whom to make room for. It asks not only how high our peaks may rise, but whether we can still recognize ourselves as part of the rivers and mountains we depend on.

In Belem, bringing this perspective into COP30 felt like adding a single brushstroke to a vast global canvas — a reminder that as the world charts its climate path, it will also need the restraint, humility, and balance that have shaped Chinese understandings of landscape for centuries.

Written by Jiang Xinyu, 20, an undergraduate majoring in English at Tsinghua University.

Most Popular
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1994 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
 
主站蜘蛛池模板: 明溪县| 秦皇岛市| 盐亭县| 通榆县| 开封县| 多伦县| 丰宁| 府谷县| 嘉峪关市| 泽普县| 曲松县| 皋兰县| 石林| 麟游县| 华阴市| 托克托县| 重庆市| 临高县| 新乡县| 开江县| 五寨县| 孟津县| 乐业县| 麻阳| 甘泉县| 长海县| 敖汉旗| 蛟河市| 湖南省| 洪雅县| 梅河口市| 美姑县| 云林县| 盘山县| 潼关县| 天水市| 宜良县| 锡林郭勒盟| 汕尾市| 卢氏县| 华宁县| 天水市| 台北县| 兴业县| 九龙县| 吉首市| 南岸区| 治县。| 红安县| 清水河县| 西盟| 林芝县| 石家庄市| 湖北省| 大庆市| 马尔康县| 青岛市| 固安县| 环江| 民权县| 黎川县| 肥乡县| 拜城县| 阳朔县| 大悟县| 钟山县| 临沧市| 万全县| 霍林郭勒市| 华蓥市| 马公市| 永靖县| 苍溪县| 札达县| 宜川县| 开原市| 南投市| 阳山县| 宜春市| 临沧市| 建阳市| 乐业县|