
Beijing Week of China Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka Kansai Japan Held
OSAKA, Japan, May 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- From May 8 to 10, the Beijing Week of China Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka was held at the China Pavilion in the Expo Park. Under the theme "Beautiful Beijing Shining at the Expo," the event showcased rich Chinese cultural elements and distinctive features of the capital city.
At the opening ceremony, a vibrant dance performance took place in front of the China Pavilion's main entrance, followed by a collective rendition of Welcome to Beijing sung across the entire venue. Chinese and Japanese artists performed together on stage, creating a lively and festive atmosphere. A series of featured events - including the "Hello, Beijing" Culture and Tourism Promotion, the "Invest in Beijing, Win the Future" Special Promotion Event in Osaka, and the 2025 Urban New Energy Forum - highlighted Beijing's abundant resources, business-friendly policies, and attractive investment environment, offering a wealth of cooperation opportunities. At the "Invest in Beijing, Win the Future" event, the three leading industries, biomedicine and health, advanced energy, and advanced manufacturing, were promoted alongside the development of the Future Science City located in Beijing's Changping District, fostering cooperation and exchange between Chinese and Japanese enterprises.
At the "Brushing Together - Chinese and Japanese Calligraphers Ink Up" event, calligraphers from both countries shared the stage, using brush and ink to celebrate the enduring friendship between the Chinese and Japanese peoples. The Beijing Central Axis Exhibition offered visitors an immersive experience of the panoramic cultural landscape of this UNESCO World Heritage site. The "Hello, Beijing" Photography Exhibition captured stories of the capital through the lens, showcasing the city's rich cultural and tourism resources. Visitors also enjoyed interactive experience of traditional Chinese intangible cultural heritage, including dough modeling, Has' Kite, and traditional brush-making by Yubi Fang (Imperial Brush Workshop), as well as small-scale performances such as the Kunqu Opera Legend of the White Snake: Touring the West Lake. Themed photo spots featuring characters like LABUBU further took guests to explore and engage with the charm of China's capital city.
Looking ahead, the China Pavilion will continue to present dozens of captivating themed shows about Chinese provinces, autonomous regions, and cities, as well as a variety of cultural exchange events and enterprise-themed days in the following weeks.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
a day ago
- Korea Herald
Say 'kimchi': How photobooths have filled Korean streets
With tiny photos, Koreans turn moments into memories "Look at the camera and pose within 10 seconds after you hear the sound beep." After the countdown cue begins, put on your best smile, strike a pose, switch it up and let your best angle shine. And get ready for the next shot. After the minute-long shoot, flip through the snap photos, pick your favorites and print them out to take home. This is a scene at a self-service photo booth where anyone can snap fun shots and instantly print out bookmark-sized keepsakes that capture the moment. The photos are taken using automated cameras, lighting and backdrops. These unmanned photo "studios" are open 24 hours, meaning you can pop in whenever it strikes your fancy. Instructions are available in English, Japanese and Chinese as well. Walk through Seongsu-dong or Hongdae and you will be struck by how many of these unmanned photo studios there are, usually crowded with people casually stepping inside to snap memories as if it were a daily routine. Among the many studio booths, global selfie brand Life Four Cuts leads the pack. The name is a reference to its "four-cut" photo service — similar to traditional passport photos, with four snapshots framed in a vertical strip, with two printed copies costing 4,000 won ($2.91), 8,000 won for four copies and 12,000 won for six prints. Ha Yoo-ra, 20, a university student in Seoul, is among those who stepped into a four-cut photo booth with two friends for a fun memory. "(The three of us) have been friends since elementary school, but somehow never took a nice photo together, believe it or not, until now. So we decided to have a little makeover and dress nicely to mark our years of friendship. One day, I hope we will reminisce about the memories of the day we took the photo, what we ate and how we looked," Ha told The Korea Herald. "Also, the self-photo booths edit the pictures by making our skin look better and brighter, which is cost-friendly for college students," Ha added. To stand out in the fast-growing photo booth market, many brands are teaming up with K-pop stars, actors, popular cartoon characters and even sports figures. These time-limited designs add to the appeal by creating a one-of-a-kind experience. For example, Photoism opened an artist frame on May 26 that allows users to take photos with a frame featuring singer-songwriter IU to mark the release of her new EP "A Flower Bookmark, Pt. 3." The special edition frame will only be available until June 30. Yoshi from the K-pop group Treasure is another frame option available at Photoism. Released to mark his May 15 birthday, the frame will be available through June 15. Park Jun-seo, a college graduate who is an avid fan of boy band Enhypen, visited Photoism in November last year to to be in the same frame as her favorite idol. "Honestly, I think it is embarrassing to enter a self-studio photo booth to take a picture of yourself, but I wanted to be in the same picture with my idol. It wasn't about how pretty I looked in the picture but about the fact that I printed a photo of me standing next to my favorite singer, even if it was just a photo frame," Park explained. For sports fans, exclusive photo frames featuring baseball players from all 10 KBO teams are available through a partnership with the Korea Baseball Organization during the baseball season. During the baseball sesason fans can capture fun and personalized memories, posing "next" to their favorite player. The special edition frames are available through October. The photo-booth craze has also spread overseas. Korea's Life Four Cuts and Photomatic are now available in Singapore and London while local companies have jumped in on the market in Indonesia with homegrown brands like Photograms and Palette ID making big waves. "These pictures come with great quality at a budget-friendly price, which is why the MZ generation are preferring self-photo studios," a senior official overseeing marketing at Life Four Cuts told The Korea Herald. A total of 120 million visits have been made to Life Four Cuts since its launch in 2017 and the company runs around 410 stores in Korea, according to the company. Another reason driving the trend is that the pictures come out in formats that are easy to share on social media, according to the official. Also, limited-edition photo frames could trigger FOMO among people and lead to more repeat visits for photos with different celebrities in the frame. "The trend also aligns with the desire to capture and document everyday moments. With stylish frames and creative setups, these photo booths let anyone step in, take photos and express themselves comfortably and without feeling self-conscious," the official said.


Korea Herald
2 days ago
- Korea Herald
Annual Culture Communication Forum to crown winners of sustainable K-Style contest
International gathering showcases finalists with creative takes on Korean tradition The Corea Image Communication Institute will hold its 16th annual Culture Communication Forum on Thursday at the Grand Hyatt Seoul, wrapping up a monthslong global contest centered on "sustainable K-style." The event will bring together senior diplomatic and business leaders for a ceremony recognizing the competition's finalists and winners. KAIST President Lee Kwang-hyung will deliver opening remarks, with congratulatory messages from Italian Ambassador Emilia Gatto and Japanese Ambassador Koichi Mizushima. EU Ambassador Maria Castillo Fernandez will join around 10 other ambassadors in attendance. Corporate attendees include Seo Jung-ho, chair of the Ambassador Hotel Group; Cho Jung-il, chair of The Hanok Heritage; and Sean Blakeley, chair of the British Chamber of Commerce in Korea and Honorary Ambassador of Foreign Investment Promotion for Korea. Franz Hotten, president of Pernod Ricard Korea, will also attend alongside some 60 guests. The forum's centerpiece will be a live vote to determine the winners among 12 finalists, selected from entries submitted between March 20 and May 30. Participants submitted ideas for reimagining Korean cultural traditions through a sustainability lens, exploring how K-style can evolve for future generations across music, cuisine, film and fashion. Finalists will present their entries, ranging from video clips to spoken presentations in Korean, during Thursday's event. The video competition features long- and short-form categories, each with four finalists. The grand prize winner in the long-form category will receive a prize package worth 3 million won (around $2,213), including 1 million won in cash. The short-form winner will receive a 2 million won package, with 700,000 won in cash. For the Korean speech segment, contestants from the United States, Spain, China, France and Egypt will compete for the grand prize. Each will deliver a three-minute speech on sustainable K-style, with the winners determined by real-time audience voting. The top prize is valued at 3 million won, including 1.5 million won in cash. The forum begins with registration at 4:40 p.m., followed by the main program at 5 p.m. A special pansori performance by French artist Mapo Lor will round out the ceremony. Founded in 2003 and officially registered with the Foreign Ministry, CICI promotes Korea's global image through cultural exchange. Since 2010, its annual CCF has served as a global platform for dialogue among cultural and diplomatic leaders.


Korea Herald
2 days ago
- Korea Herald
SHINee's Taemin announces Japan arena tour
Taemin to hold 11 shows across Japan Taemin, the youngest member of veteran K-pop group SHINee and a successful soloist, is set to embark on a new arena tour in Japan, just five months after wrapping up his first solo world tour. The upcoming tour will kick off with three nights at Pia Arena MM in Kanagawa from Sept. 13 to 15. It will then continue across five Japanese cities, including Saga on Sept. 20 and 21, Shizuoka on Oct. 4 and 5, Chiba on Nov. 29 and 30 and Hyogo on Dec. 24 and 25, for a total of 11 shows. Eariler this year, Taemin successfully completed his first solo world tour 'Ephemeral Gaze,' which began in August 2024 on Korea's Yeongjongdo in Incheon at Inspire Arena and concluded with final shows in KSPO Dome in Seoul this April. The tour spanned 29 cities in 20 countries, marking a major milestone in his solo career. The upcoming Japan arena tour will include stops in cities that were not part of the world tour, offering new opportunities to connect with local fans. Meanwhile, SHINee recently celebrated its 17th anniversary with the release of the latest album "Poet | Artist." The group also held a three-day concert, 'SHINee WORLD Ⅶ [E.S.S.A.Y] (Every Stage Shines Around You),' at KSPO Dome in Seoul from May 23-25.