The Internet red curtain in Wuhan will be collected by the Hubei Provincial Museum, and the owner of the curtain will also get a license with his girlfriend
Release time:
2021-07-30 09:38
Chutian metropolis daily news on May 17 (reporter man Da) this may be the most popular curtain in Wuhan. A neighbor took a video of a room in Hankou whose curtains had not been removed from the house for more than two months and posted it online, sparking concern among netizens and a search for the owner. Until the middle of April, the owner found that his curtain became an Internet celebrity, from the suburb of his home, the curtain into the house, finally let a lot of Internet users reassured. Now the curtain has a new home, as part of a special exhibition on fighting COVID-19, in the permanent collection of the Hubei Provincial Museum, where you're expected to encounter it in September.
This morning, the staff of hubei provincial museum came to the home of Mr. Wang, the owner of the curtain, remove this wine-red curtain, and measured the window size, will give Mr. Wang a new curtain. The museum staff also issued a collection certificate to Mr. Wang, and he will receive an official collection certificate when the curtain is displayed at the provincial Museum.
"What a surprise. What a privilege." This evening, when chutian metropolis daily reporter contacts Mr. Wang, he is collected by provincial museum to curtain to still feel very excited. About half a month ago, he said, he was contacted by staff at the provincial museum with the idea of collecting curtains as part of a special exhibition to fight COVID-19.
"It was quite unexpected at the time." Mr. Wang said he laughed off suggestions that the curtains be donated to the museum when they went viral online. "Because the level of curtains is not enough." Mr. Wang said with a smile that he had used the apartment to rent but had kept it empty during the outbreak. He and his girlfriend had originally planned to get the license on February 2, and the house was renovated as a wedding room, but it was postponed because of the epidemic. His idea was to keep the curtain as a family souvenir when he decorated his wedding room after the outbreak. The provincial museum proposed the collection, Although Mr. Wang's heart is not give up, but he did not hesitate, agreed. "This is the best place for curtains." Mr. Wang said.
As the epidemic has stabilized, Wang and his girlfriend's marriage is also on the agenda. He plans to go to her home to propose marriage, and then he and her to get a certificate. "May 20 is too late, not June 6." Mr. Wang said.
After the epidemic is over, hubei Provincial Museum plans to hold an exhibition on curtains in September this year. Mr. Wang will also be invited to visit the exhibition. "Definitely. I'll bring my family." Mr. Wang said.
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