Hao Rumeng, 17, has been practicing Dunhuang dance for two and a half years. Her morning often begins at 6:30 in the studio and wraps up after eight hours of practice. Sometimes she ties a 10-kilogram sandbag to her legs to train her muscles. "Dunhuang dance is a new genre of classical dance. It has distinct movements and requires systematic training every day," Jin said.
A prototype of Dunhuang dance was born 40 years ago in the performance of Silk Road-a dance drama to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China. Inspired by the drama, Gao Jinrong, then vice-president of a provincial art school, formulated Dunhuang mural dance a year later.
Since then, Dunhuang dance has become a popular major, with nearly 1,000 graduates. The Lanzhou University of Arts and Science alone recruits 25 students every year.