Logo Die Sachsen News
News / Culture

Drawings from the Dresden Collection to Be Exhibited Back in China

Drawings from the Dresden Collection to Be Exhibited Back in China
The Museum of Ethnology is located in the Japanese Palace in Dresden. (File photo) / Photo: Robert Michael/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Colorful scenes from 19th-century life: 500 rare drawings are returning to their place of origin in China for an exhibition.

Back to the Roots: 500 drawings from the collection of the Dresden Museum of Ethnology are temporarily returning to their place of origin, Ningbo, China, for an exhibition. Through November 1, the Ningbo Museum in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang is presenting so-called “export paintings” from the Dresden museum’s collection. The colorful brush drawings are part of a body of work that is now virtually impossible to find in China itself, according to the museum.

More from this category

Drawings offer a glimpse into everyday life in Ningbo

Titled “Insight and Resonance: Scenes of Eastern Life in 19th-Century Export Paintings from Ningbo,” the exhibition provides insights into everyday life during that period. The drawings on paper document trade and commerce, working environments, and customs in detail. The works consist of a selection of 50 sketchbooks from the collection of Paul Georg von Möllendorff (1847–1901), a German resident of Ningbo. His daughter donated a portion of the collection to the Ethnological Museum; the remainder was purchased.

Cooperation between Dresden and Partners in China

The current exhibition is part of a collaboration that began last year between the Dresden State Art Collections (SKD) and partners in Ningbo. The albums are to be digitized and cataloged as part of this project. SKD Director General Bernd Ebert will attend the exhibition opening and plans to sign a cooperation agreement with the Palace Museum in Beijing afterward. 

“The presentation of the Dresden collection in Ningbo offers the SKD the opportunity to give something back to Chinese society—something that was lost locally and represents an important cultural-historical source,” Ebert emphasized.

Copyright 2026, dpa (www.dpa.de). All rights reserved

The translations are automated with the help of AI. We look forward to your feedback and your help in improving our multilingual service. Write to us at: language@diesachsen.com.
Sachsen News
Article from

Sachsen News

Sachsen News is responsible for the content itself. The platform's code of conduct applies. The platform checks and treats content in accordance with the legal requirements, in particular the NetzDG.

Social Media