(a) to master and inherit the national intangible cultural heritage;
(2) Being recognized as representative and influential in a certain region or field;
(3) Actively carry out inheritance activities and train successors.
Personnel engaged in the collection, collation and research of intangible cultural heritage materials shall not be recognized as the representative inheritors of national intangible cultural heritage projects. Article 5 Where a citizen applies for the representative inheritor of a national intangible cultural heritage project, he shall provide the following materials to the local cultural administrative department at or above the county level:
(a) the basic information of the applicant, including age, gender, education, occupation, work unit, etc. ;
(two) the project inheritance pedigree and the applicant's learning and practical experience;
(three) the applicant's technical characteristics, achievements and related certification materials;
(four) the applicant has the physical objects and materials related to the project;
(five) other materials that are helpful to explain the representativeness of the applicant.
The national intangible cultural heritage project protection unit may recommend the representative inheritor of the project to the local cultural administrative department at or above the county level, but it shall obtain the consent of the recommended person, and the recommended materials shall include the contents in the first paragraph.
If the project protection unit belongs to the unit directly under the provincial administrative department, it may directly submit the recommended materials to the provincial cultural administrative department; If the project protection unit belongs to the unit directly under the central department, the recommended materials can be directly submitted to the cultural administrative department of the State Council. Article 6 After receiving the application materials or recommended materials, the administrative department for culture shall organize experts to review them and report them step by step.
After receiving the above materials, the provincial cultural administrative department shall organize the provincial intangible cultural heritage expert committee to review, put forward the recommended list and audit opinions in combination with the distribution of the project within their respective administrative areas, and submit them to the cultural administrative department of the State Council together with the original application materials and expert review opinions. Article 7 After receiving the application materials submitted by the provincial cultural administrative department, the cultural administrative department of the State Council shall sort and classify the application projects according to the distribution of the projects in the whole country, and organize an expert group in this project field to conduct a preliminary evaluation, and the expert group shall put forward preliminary evaluation opinions. Article 8 The cultural administrative department of the State Council shall set up a national representative inheritor evaluation committee for intangible cultural heritage projects. The review committee shall review the preliminary opinions of each expert group and put forward a list of recommended representatives of national intangible cultural heritage projects. Article 9 The cultural administrative department of the State Council shall publicize the recommended list of representative inheritors put forward by the review committee to the public for 15 days. Article 10 The administrative department of culture of the State Council shall, according to the publicity results, examine and approve the list of representative inheritors of national intangible cultural heritage projects and publish it. Article 11 National intangible cultural heritage project protection units shall comprehensively record the expressions, skills and knowledge of intangible cultural heritage mastered by the representative inheritors of the project by means of words, pictures, audio recordings and videos, collect and preserve the representative works of the representative inheritors in a planned way, and establish relevant files. Twelfth cultural administrative departments at all levels should support the representative inheritors of national intangible cultural heritage projects with real difficulties to carry out learning activities, and the support methods mainly include:
(a) To finance apprenticeships or educational and training activities of the heirs;
(2) Providing necessary places for learning activities;
(three) funding the collation and publication of relevant technical materials;
(four) to provide demonstration, publicity and other assistance to the project inheritors.
For the representative inheritors of national intangible cultural heritage projects who have no source of economic income and have real difficulties in life, the local cultural administrative departments should actively create conditions to encourage social organizations and individuals to provide financial support to ensure their basic living needs. Thirteenth representative inheritors of national intangible cultural heritage projects shall undertake the following obligations:
(a) under the premise of not violating the relevant laws and regulations of the state, according to the requirements of the administrative department of culture, provide complete project operation procedures, technical specifications, raw material requirements, technical essentials, etc. ;
(two) to develop the project inheritance plan and specific objectives and tasks, and report to the administrative department of culture for the record;
(three) to carry out the inheritance work in the form of accepting students to run schools, to teach skills without reservation, and to train successors;
(four) actively participate in exhibitions, exhibitions, seminars, exchanges and other activities;
(five) regularly submit the project inheritance report to the local cultural administrative department.