Tag Archive | "Photos"

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Bao’an: Out with the (sort of) old


Shenzhen, as a modern city, is only 28 years old. In 1980, Deng Xiao Ping, then China’ s leader, said, “I want a city here!”  The fishing village of 300,000 was transformed into a special economic zone after the army corp of engineers co-ordinated the building of what came to be the city with the fastest growing economy.

From 300,000 to 12 million in 28 years, it’s staggering to consider. Buildings are now coming down, making way for the new. A block in my downtown area is being torn down  (above) to make way for something else. My beloved computer market has been relocated across the street. It took a day of wandering (and the almost impulse buy of a 22-inch monitor) to find my favorite vendors.

Captured: March 29, 2008.

Posted in China, Culture, Photos, Shenzhen, TravelComments (2)

photos of dante’s chinese gridlock


I spent an hour and a half sitting in the back of a taxi Saturday afternoon. It wasn’t by choice. The entire trip should have taken 30 minutes. I found myself mired a mile from home, watching the meter click over every three minutes, adding more jiao to my fare. Why? Three lanes of traffic had been reduced to one. There were no warning signs for motorists, just a traffic snarl akin to the gridlocks found in one of Dante’s circles of hell (if a modern version was written).

I did what any photographer would do: Pulled out my axe and tried to amuse myself. Shooting photos from the back of a taxi isn’t easy. What did I see? Read the full story

Posted in China, Culture, Life, Photos, TravelComments (9)

shout out for the feet


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There has been a remarkable lack of feet in the blogosphere lately. Where are you Robin? Bibliomom zai nar? Where are feet photos we know and love?

To fill this obvious void I have posted this photo of Mrs. Stevo. No, the feet are not really that big. It’s the perspective, baby. Please ignore the God-awful cover on the sofa. Mrs. Stevo is a little like Annette Funicello. (I need a retro floor lamp to go with the sofa.)

Captured: January 20, 2008

Posted in Humour, Photography, Photos, PhotoshopComments (10)

following the follower


It was a special day at the temple. (What I like about China Travel, is amazing Chinese temples.) I never learned which one, which deity from the pantheon I know little about was being feted for supernatural feats. People from across the city of 12 million had gathered at the largest temple in the region. Fridays are not usually busy days for religious observance in boomtown.

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I love old things. Maybe that’s my attraction to China, and China Travel. Temples, tombs, and houses that hold the energy of the generations that have lived within their walls, fascinate me. I’m far from spiritual, professing only a belief in the FSM, having been touched by His Noodly Appendage.

Chinese Temples, large or small, ancient or recent, give me reason to pause. The incense in the air, the chanting, the devotion, contrasted with running children, men on cell phones, and lovers holding hands and snapping photos, make temples a place for me to both reflect and people watch. They are a microcosm of Chinese society, ancient beliefs still observed in a nation economically bursting at the seams.

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The monk was standing by a table full of offerings: Fruits, vegetables, flowers and cooking oil. I have a friend that professes the ability to see auras. While I call that new-age claptrap, for a moment, the briefest one, I thought I saw him surrounded by white light. He smiled benevolently, like the golden idols behind him. Serenity rolled from him in waves. His eyes were clear and kind, but with a glint, a small spark, of something that made me wonder what he did in his life before he donned the robe.

He saw me, standing in the afternoon sun, a camera in hand. A smile and he waved me over. No pause, no dropping jaw, something I often experience. He had seen enough foreigners at this place, his home, to be unshocked by my presence. The temple doves watched us from their perch above the religious chaos.

I froze. I didn’t understand his beliefs, or his language. My camera in my hand, I wanted to raise it to my eye and freeze the moment, the smile, and the calmness I knew my CCD couldn’t possibly capture. He smiled a little wider before turning away. After wiping some dust from the offering table, and looked at the group kneeling in prayer before leaving the main courtyard.

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He meandered, moving in stops and starts. At the shrines, he looked at those offering their thoughts to the ancient Gods. I followed, waiting for an opportunity.

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I hate posed shots. You see only a facade. There is enough posing in the world, people keeping up appearance for friends and neighbors.

The China Travel guidebooks say not to take photographs of monks. Since guidebooks are usually wrong, I wasn’t worried about causing offence. (Maybe a little, the thought of a thrashing from a monk trained in Shaolin gongfu isn’t appealing.) I could tell by his demeanor that he wouldn’t have minded a photo, he probably would have posed with me if someone else held the camera.

I’ve done some sleazy things with a camera. A newspaper photographer is not everyone’s friend. Standing at the side of a road snapping photos of mangled bodies covered in bloody blankets isn’t pleasant, nor is the feeling in your gut afterwards. A drink can make you forget for a time but doesn’t erase the act, the utter invasion of privacy.

No, he wouldn’t mind. My motives were pure. I wanted to capture him, who he was.

A moment.

A feeling.

He stopped by a pillar. The sun cast the last of its golden light over the courtyard. He turned a little, away from the shrine. I raised my camera.

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Posted in China, Culture, Photographs, Photos, Portrait, TravelComments (13)

ocular fluid and thirsty umbrellas


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I hated winters when I lived in Canada. I feared the winter. Now, I have a fear of umbrellas.

The people that wax romantic about winter wonderlands are deluded. During my exile in Northern Ontario my cabin was wood-heated. When I awoke in that drafty little building, and the outside temperature hovered around -30° C, I could see my breath. Yes, I hate winters.

My Chinese existence has taught me to love winter. Yes, it’s cloudy and dreary for weeks on end, but the searing 40° C temperatures are replaced with a Canadian-like autumn. And, except for rainy days, there is a distinct lack of umbrellas.

The ubiquitous umbrella, invented in China in the days of yore and a still-used daily accessory, held aloft by women shielding themselves from the sun. Dark skin is considered low-class in China, one look at the cosmetic counters and the plethora of skin whitening creams attests to that. As do the endless infomercials with dramatic before-and-after images of newly nearly Caucasian-Asian women.

Women, and there obsession with light skin, doesn’t cause me concern. If I had some spare bucks I would open an umbrella factory to feed the frenzy and line my pockets. My difficulty with umbrellas is the possibility of umbrella-induced blindness. Yes, you read that correctly. I have a fear of umbrellas.

Read the full story

Posted in China, Humour, Reflections, TravelComments (12)

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