DIGITAL innovation, spanning immersive exhibitions, artefact restoration and preventive conservation, is reinvigorating China’s museums and transforming historical treasures into interactive storytellers.

At the foothills of the Helan Mountains in northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, the Xixia imperial mausoleums complex and its accompanying museum captivate travellers exploring the mysterious Tangut (Dangxiang) culture.

The ethnic group thrived in parts of northwest China between the 11th and 13th centuries, controlling key trade routes.

Preserved in a vitrine, a green-glazed Kalavinka statue, a Buddhist mythological hybrid blending human facial features with a bird body, conceals intricate carvings along its plinth.

Upon pressing the cabinet’s interactive button, a magnified 3D hologram replicates every detail with vivid textual explanations of the treasure.

Visitors can manipulate the digital twin with gesture controls, rotating the virtual artifact to examine its craftsmanship from all angles and zooming in for a closer look.

“Through this device, I can magnify the details of cultural relics to see their intricate decorative patterns. It’s marvelous,” said a visitor from east China’s Hangzhou who only gave her surname, Zhu.

The smart cultural relic display cabinet, utilizing OLED screen systems, transforms static artifacts into interactive 3D holographic projections to create immersive viewing experiences, said Shi Peiyi, curator of the mausoleum museum.

“By revolutionizing static displays through digital innovation, we create interactive storytelling that empowers visitors to decode the history embedded within relics,” Shi said.

China’s cultural digitization agenda gained momentum in 2021 when the central government unveiled a plan to advance the preservation of cultural relics and related technological innovation during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025).

The policy document has driven transformative advancements. At the Sanxingdui Ruins, a Bronze Age marvel in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, digital technologies have revolutionized cultural relic restoration.

Among countless unearthed fragments, AI has assisted archaeologists in identifying compatible segments for restoration. A striking example of technological achievement is a bronze statue depicting a kneeling figure atop a beast, crowned with a ceremonial vessel.

By scanning fragments to create 3D models, archaeologists employed AI to analyze geometric patterns, calculate alignment probabilities and simulate structural stability.

Through this approach, researchers collected fragments from separate excavation sites to reconstruct this sculpture.

The digital revitalization of the Ya’er Lake Grottoes, a part of the Jiaohe Ruins along the ancient Silk Road in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, further exemplifies China’s efforts to preserve and display cultural relics.

Xinhua

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