Mo Yan (2nd R), the winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize for Literature, signs autographs forhis local readers in Stockholm on Thursday. [Photo/Xinhua] |
"I resent all kinds of censorship just like I don't like the security check before entering embassies and boarding planes. They even require you to take off your shoes and belts. But I think censorship, just like security checks, is necessary. I think news censorship virtually exists in every country, even though the criteria and standard may vary," he said.
"The shirt is designed with a pattern stamped from a Chinese seal with the characters for Mo Yan, his pen name," Chen Bei, creator and designer with leading fashion brand Beistyle, told China Daily. Chen designed all the clothes for Mo and his family for the Stockholm trip.
"The seemingly casual combination of numerous seals on hemp cloth actually follows a design," Chen said, adding she believed clothes speak their own language.
"To Mo, the language is simple and intelligent, it's both international and Chinese, and with great taste," Chen said.
The Beijing-based Chinese designer has spent a decade in Paris and counts French writers, actresses and politicians as her clients.
Chen is adept at combining Chinese elements to Western cuts, which she hopes will send out welcoming signals to the international audience.
She has applied the language of design to Mo and also to outfits for Mo's wife and daughter who traveled with him. Mo is to deliver a keynote lecture on Friday.
He said he spent two days writing his speech, and he plans to "talk about truth and talk about himself".
Contact the writers at meijia@chinadaily.com.cn