The Great Wall of China : photographs by Chen Changfen

Bibliographic Information

The Great Wall of China : photographs by Chen Changfen

Anne Wilkes Tucker ; foreword by Jonathan D. Spence

Yale University Press , In association with The Museum of Fine Arts, c2007

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Note

Exhibition catalogue

Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas, Apr. 1-Aug. 12, 2007

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Chen Changfen (b. 1941) began to photograph the Great Wall twenty years before the Chinese government officially adopted it as the national symbol in 1984. This fascinating book presents a small fraction of his decades-long study of the monumental form and conveys the fertile range of themes and ideas that Chen has investigated, each informed by traditional Chinese art, history, and philosophy. Combining a unique blend of traditional and contemporary technical processes, Chen's richly evocative photographs at once celebrate the remarkable series of building campaigns that produced the Wall and memorialize the thousands of conscripted labourers whose lives were sacrificed to its construction. One of the most striking features of Chen's photographs is their unexpected variety of perspectives and moods, capturing the vicissitudes of weather, time, and human history that have acted upon it. By excluding the people, highways, factories, and modern buildings that encroach on and daily destroy sections of the Wall, however, Chen eliminates major aspects of the Wall's present reality from his pictures. In a thoughtful essay and interview with the artist, Anne Wilkes Tucker probes the meanings of such omissions and guides the reader through Chen's extraordinary images. "The Great Wall of China" is essential reading for photographers, historians, and travellers.

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