alaungphaya
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Reminds me of Star Wars.
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BBC News - Chinese families' worldly goods in Huang Qingjun's pictures
Chinese families' worldly goods in Huang Qingjun's pictures
By Angus FosterBBC News, Beijing
Amid China's tumultuous dash to become rich, one man's photographs of families posing with their worldly goods will soon seem like records from a distant era.
Huang Qingjun has spent nearly a decade travelling to remote parts of China to persuade people who have sometimes never been photographed to carry outside all their household possessions and pose for him.
The results offer glimpses of the utilitarian lives of millions of ordinary Chinese who, at first glance, appear not to have been swept up by the same modernisation that has seen hundreds of millions of others leave for the cities.
But seen more closely, they also show the enormous social change that has come in a generation. So the photo of an elderly couple of farmers outside their mud house reveals a satellite dish, DVD player and phone.
"People's lives have changed enormously. Maybe their incomes haven't been affected as much as in the cities, but their thinking has," says Huang, 42, who was born in the oil-frontier town of Daqing and now lives in Beijing.
“Start Quote
Most people thought what I was proposing was not normal”
Huang Qingjun
Huang took his first pictures as a teenager, inspired by an uncle in an era when the obvious hobbies for the young were calligraphy and singing. His first proper camera, bought when he was 18, was the most valuable item in the family home.
The idea for the series about people's material goods, now called Jiadang (Family Stuff), came in 2003 with some photos he took for the magazine Chinese National Geography. But the project didn't really get under way until three years later, when Huang started travelling around China looking for suitable places and people.
"Most people thought what I was proposing was not normal. When I explained I wanted to set up a photo, that it would involve taking everything out of their house and setting it up outside, that took quite a lot of explaining," he says.
"But almost all of them, when they realised what I was trying to do, they understood the point."
One advantage of travelling to remote, poor areas was that people didn't have many possessions.
"They're not like people from the city, who have so much stuff that if you asked them to do it they'd reply it was too much effort," he says.
Some of the projects took a couple of days, others several months as he waited for one couple to move house. Their home, like millions of others, had been slated for demolition to make way for tower blocks or offices. As they sit on their bed, the wall behind them is marked with the Chinese character chai, meaning "tear down."
But it was a happy day, because the couple had received the compensation they had asked for.
Huang's project has taken him to 14 of China's 33 provinces, giving him an unusually broad perspective of how the country is changing. He is optimistic about the process, and where it will lead.
Four Big Things
"In lots of Chinese villages, the government has delivered roads and connected them with electricity. This has been a huge change. If you've a road, you can move about. If you've got electricity you can have TV, you get the news and ideas about what the outside world is thinking.
- Phrase dating from 1950s for most sought-after goods for newly married couples: sewing machine, bicycle, watch, radio
- It's since come to refer to whatever is most fashionable at the time
- By 1980s the four big things were: TV, washing machine, rice cooker, fridge
- Now consumer goods flood China's cities, it tends to be used to describe people's aspirations for the latest thing
"The biggest problems in rural areas now are how people can get better education for their children, and healthcare," he says.
Many photos appear to capture something that is about to be lost. Families camp as if about to move on. They are framed by houses that have just been expensively renovated or are about to be pulled down. The preponderance of cooking utensils, the paucity of clothes and items of leisure suggest a lifestyle that is about to be upended.
Most families have already acquired a TV, a few have washing machines. The pedal-driven sewing machine which in their parents' generation was every housewife's dream - known as one of the "four big things" - is pushed to the back of a few pictures.
A newly renovated house and a washing machine show the real change in a small Guizhou village.
1/7
It can't be long before the consumer goods, brand names and luxury goods that have been voraciously snapped up by China's urban middle class begin to sneak in to the pictures. A BMW car and flat-screen TV can already be seen in his portrait of film director Zhang Yuan, outside his home in Beijing.
Chinese spending habits
The Family Stuff pictures have not been widely seen outside China, though some have been shown at exhibitions in Paris and New York.
- Government has tried in recent years to boost consumer spending with discount vouchers on appliances, furniture and cars
- Many aspire to material goods, but a 2010 survey found they were more concerned with saving for education, healthcare and retirement
Next year marks the 10th anniversary of the first photograph, and Huang plans to mark it by returning to the places he visited - or those that are still recognisable - to see what has changed.
"In the last 10 years, China has seen such a fast rate of growth, I want to go back and see what the effects have been on their lives," he says.
He also hopes to broaden the project's range, including people from a wider range of backgrounds, like entrepreneurs and government officials. He's even thinking about asking Jack Ma, an internet entrepreneur and one of China's richest men.
"Those pictures probably couldn't manage to contain all of their possessions. But it could include the things they use every day.
"From the possessions each family uses in their daily lives, you get a good sense of the real levels of life for China's people."
Reminds me of Star Wars.
You'd be surprised what people can do with car batteries.just wondering how those Herdsman get electricity access.
The grassfield is so big and ppl are so sparsely located......
why?
why do you laugh?
the $0.5/day is according to the government data, which is submitted to IMF/World bank as statistics
I think esolve wanted to compare the poor in China with the middle income from india.This only shows that the poors in India are much poorer than the poors in China.
Seriously what a shame india still wants to brag about their space program and want to compete with Pakistan on a military/nuclear technology but at home hundreds die from starvation and poverty on daily basis.In an age of internet, it is easy to get the information you want. I will post some pictures, instead, of poor Indians or lower middle class Indians. The family are living in a house of 7,8 square meters in New Delhi, with a monthly income about 6000 rupees(year of 2012 or before).
View attachment 156974
host and hostess and their two boys by the door
View attachment 156949
a TV set and a washing machine
View attachment 156950
Two youngsters are preparing for taking bath
View attachment 156953
pictures on the wall, showing a happy family life.
View attachment 156955
rich or poor, each indian family has a shrine
View attachment 156963 View attachment 156964
neighborhood,women are gossiping.
New Recruit
内蒙古牧民的电力来源主要是太阳能电池还有小型风力发电机just wondering how those Herdsman get electricity access.
The grassfield is so big and ppl are so sparsely located......
hard to believe right?lol less than 1 dollar but still own LCD displays?
maybe because Chinese like to save income for some big spend or emergency.lol less than 1 dollar but still own LCD displays?