The Chinese Pen (Taiwan); no. 136 (vol. 34, no. 2), 2006. Ed. Tien-en Kao.
Taipei
Taipei Chinese Center, International PEN
2006
40-63
sc.
ill.
Zeitrschriftenbeitrag
Nebeneintrag. - Text chin., engl. - Translated by David van der Peet. Originally published in chin. in Hsien-tai mei-shu (Modern Art bimonthly), vol. 110, Oct. 2003.
incl. 23 mounted calotypes (in 2 sizes: 13 large 16.9x20.8cm, 10 small ca. 7.5x10.7cm)
Buch
Incl. no text except the list of plates, plus a pasted-in piece of paper reading „Notice to the reader: The plates of the present work are impressed by the agency of Light alone, without any aid whatever from the artist’s pencil. They are the sun pictures themselves, and not, as some persons have imagined, engravings in imitation.“
Text engl. - Other edition: Chinese edition (ISBN 978-7510038068). - The 1911 Revolution ended dynastic rule in China and paved the way for the founding of Asias first republic. Triggered by an accidental bomb explosion in Wuchang (modern-day Wuhan), the revolution marked the culminating point of decades of internal rebellion, foreign aggression and political decline; its leaders drew on a ferment of reformist and revolutionary ideas produced by some of Chinas greatest modern thinkers. Although the 1911 Revolution did not resolve Chinas problems, it changed the country for ever, clearing a path for modernization, and making possible the more decisive revolution of 1949. From the Opium War to the Warlord Era assembles a remarkable survey of historical photographs from leading collections around the world. The images stretch from the Second Opium War to the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895, from the Boxer Rebellion to the Russo-Japanese War and the outbreak of revolution, through the rise and fall of Yuan Shikai and the ensuing Warlord Era. Accompanying an introductory essay by the editor Liu Heung Shing are essays from three scholars of revolutionary China Joseph Esherick of UC San Diego, Max K. W. Huang of the Academia Sinica, and Zhang Haipeng of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences reflecting on the causes, achievements and failures of the 1911 Revolution, and its enduring meaning.“ (amazon.com).
Text engl. - „Hong Kong-born Liu Heung Shing held posts from Beijing to Los Angeles and New Delhi to Moscow for the Associated Press. He was named Best Photographer by the Associated Press Managing Editors, and was awarded Picture of the Year by the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri for recording the Tiananmen turmoil in 1989. In 1992, he shared a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage on Soviet Union’s collapse. [He is] now living and working in Beijing.“ (http://asiasociety.org/calendars/road-1911). - Nur Kurztitelaufnahme 12.2011.