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Home > Exhibition > Special Exhibition > The Flavours of Everyday Life in China - Memories from the Past Half Century
  The Flavours of Everyday Life in China - Memories from the Past Half Century

6 July - 26 September 2011

Special Exhibition Gallery

Jointly presented by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department and the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing
Organised by the Hong Kong Museum of History


Admission Fee (including "The Hong Kong Story" permanent exhibition):
Standard¡GHK$10
Group of 20 or more¡GHK$7
Full-time students / senior citizens / people with disabilities¡GHK$5

Free Admission on Wednesdays

Free Admission for holders of Museum Pass and Weekly Pass


Showcasing over 200 images and some 290 sets of everyday objects used by people of China between the 1950s and 1990s, this exhibition introduces aspects of daily life of the Chinese during this period. It also illustrates the material changes people have undergone in their lives since economic reform and the opening up policy were implemented in China in the late 1970s.

The exhibits, most of them were provided by the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing, include ration coupons and ration books in use between the 1960s and 1990s, including coupons for food, rice, flour, fabric and industrial goods rations. There are also children¡¦s toys like lamb guai bones, tops and iron toys, all sorts of utensils and objects printed with the portrait of Mao Zedong and lines from the Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, false collars that were intended to save fabric when supply was scarce, the ¡§three important objects¡¨ required for weddings in the 1970s, and popular electrical appliances that became available when economic reform and the opening up policy were first implemented. The exhibition provides visitors with a new perspective to help understand the changes in people¡¦s everyday life in mainland China over the past half century. At the same time, this exhibition illustrates that even common everyday objects can tell stories and encapsulate a part of history.

Special Exhibition Lectures

Programmes for Special Exhibition

Activity Card of "The Flavours of Everyday Life in China - Memories from the Past Half Century"

Visitors' Messages

 
The use of ration coupons and ration books depicts the limited supply of food and everyday goods.

(Upper) National food ration coupon, 1965.
(Middle) Beijing fabric ration coupons, 1983.
(Lower) Beijing industrial goods ration coupon, 1972.

Collection of the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing
Photographed by Bian Qun
   
 
Iron case for warming flask, 1980.
This case allows the user to carry a hot warming flask by the handle when fetching hot water.

Collection of the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing
Photographed by Bian Qun
   
 
Before the economic reform and opening up policy were adopted in the late 1970s, almost all clothes were in blue, grey, black and green as shown in the photo. Tianjin, 1972.

Courtesy of Prof William A. Joseph

   
 
Xiaorenshu, or comic strips, tell a story with a sequence of drawings. Between the 1950s and 1980s, when entertainment was rather monotonous, comic strips provided many people with a sort of spiritual nourishment. Children, as well as grown-ups, loved to read them.

Collection of the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing
Photographed by Bian Qun

   
 
Tea mug, 1960s to 1970s.
The face of this mug carries the message, ¡§Serve the people.¡¨

Collection of the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing

   
 
The Little Red Book and badges featuring the portrait of Mao Zedong were standard props for photo shoots during the Cultural Revolution. Fushun, Liaoning province, 1967.

© Guangzhou Integrated Image Co., Ltd./
Photographed by Bu Pingyuan

   
 
Due to material and ideological constraints, weddings in the olden days were simple and carried remarkable traces of revolution. Beijing, 1953.

© Guangzhou Integrated Image Co., Ltd./
Photographed by Wu Baoji

   
 
After economic reform and the opening up policy were implemented in the late 1970s, all kinds of electrical appliances entered tens of thousands of households. This is the brick-shaped cassette recorder which rose to popularity in the 1980s.

Collection of the Chaoyang District Culture Center, Beijing
Photographed by Bian Qun

   

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