Showing posts with label beijing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beijing. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Zhang Jianhua's Coal Mine Workers



In Beijing, one cannot miss going to Great Wall of China, The Tian An Men Square, the forbidden city, the summer palace. In the other part of Beijing, the little known area in which Chinese Contemporary Art thrive and a must to visit for art lovers is the 798 factory. Many post cultural revolution Chinese artists host their art works there. However, even though so, many artists reknown internationally still remain ambigous to the locals. Such is the case for Zhang Jianhua, whose sculpture works are disturbing and profound, especially those he made: life size sculptures of Chinese coal miners

His life works depicts depict miners sitting on the ground in their black rubber boots wearing looks of sheer fatigue. Some stare blankly into the distance or prop up their heads with both hands, their faces fixed in nameless agony. Although seeing it, one might not feel any connection to it without before hand understanding the social issues in China, in which coal miners die in the thousand annually due to the hazardous working environment and poor safety issues. Little do the locals look upon the sculptures with interests, and silently, it also symbolizes the problems coal miners face in modern China, making them silent victims to disasters little known to people. Or simply, not many care about them.

The works of Zhang, now in his mid thirties, received many critical praises from the art industry. However, locally, no Chinese museum or established gallery is willing to take in his display of the coal miners entirety, even though he insists, due to the controversy and troubles it might bring from the local authorities. This can be seen clearly when his works was exhibited in 798 factory during April this year, but demanded by the censors to remove the six dead coal mine workers out of the show. They just do not wish to see it somehow.

If you look at it in a picture most Chinese in this era want to depict a progressive China, full of smiles and great improvements. No one like to look at the ugly side being depicted. Everything is good and merry, the air is tinged and filled with love songs. There is nothing "wrong" with China. There is no bubble reality at all.

Officially, 4,794 coal miners died in work-related accidents in China last year - more than 13 every day, on average, though many believe the official figures understate the real toll. But Zhang's temerity in representing the victims has won his work what might be called a soft ban.

And Zhang is not aiming to criticize the authorities. He would just like to see that from his works, he can change and affect the society, gaining awareness from the public, in which changes can happen to make his belove country more open and transparents about making changes possible, not with empty promises and propaganda. Everyone should know what is going on in the country. The thing is, a large majority do know, but they choose to leap into a safety zone of "i fuck care as long nothing disturb me" attitude.

Personally, I think people outside of China are more interested with the Chinese Contemporary Artists than the locals. If these artists did not gain International attention when they exhibited their works overseas, pressures forced upon China internationally, a lucrative art market in which China wants to put his paws upon, and also because of the WTO few years back, the voice of the artists locally will still remain unclear throughout the country.

more about the artist, extract

The artist's first taste of successful shock realism came with another series of sculptures four years ago in which he depicted the lives of peasants from his native Henan Province. The 12 figures in that series included an elderly woman sitting alone, threadbare migrant workers and rural schoolteachers.

The work drew critical praise when it was introduced at a gallery in Beijing. But when the show began touring other venues in the capital that year, displayed on the grounds of two middle-class housing developments and at China Agricultural University, it drew strong protests, with residents and students attacking it as vulgar, striking the artist and knocking over some of the figures.

The university exhibition had to be canceled after only two hours.

"These were beggars," said one commentator in a school newspaper. "It's sick." Another complained that "rural areas have progress, too, why not show that?"

Zhang's choice of topics is not the only thing that sets him apart from many contemporaries. He said that to prepare for his miner series, he made numerous trips to the coal country in Shanxi and Henan provinces, living with miners for weeks at a time, soaking up their hard-knocks culture while simultaneously observing the lives of the illegal mine owners, with their flashy, sudden wealth.

The artist grew particularly animated as he described the scenes of lavish weddings organized for the daughters of coal mine owners in Datong, one of China's most famous mining towns, of motorcades of stretched Cadillacs and Hummers and Mercedes-Benzes, festively honking their horns. "This is the kind of ostentation they want," he said. "Yet underneath the wheels are piles of white bones and pools of fresh blood."

For his next project, clearly another effort at unveiling a ubiquitous but officially invisible social problem, Zhang said he planned to portray the country's large numbers of prostitutes. "Not the prostitutes of the rich, but the ordinary, working-class prostitutes, who live in very difficult conditions."

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Weird buns that we put in our stomarchs...

Makers of the fake buns said they did not think customers could tell the difference

What is happening in China? There are a series of scandals in reactions to food management. Zheng Xiaoyu, former head of the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA), was executed on Tuesday for taking some $850,000 in bribes in return for approving the use of certain medicines.

Now, CCTV reported that in Beijing, people are selling buns mixed with up to 60% in content of waste paper cupboard with fatty meat, arousing safety alerts on what consumers should really expect the government do to deal with such unethical actions.


Few weeks ago, reports indicate that there were new examples of dangerous or below standard Chinese products being circulated globally for daily usage – from toxic toothpaste to children's toys painted with lead-based paint.

This brought about international outcry on countries pressuring China to enforce further measures to curb such incidents from happening.

Seriously, what is going on with the people in China. I do not think its a government issue. Rather, what is wrong with the people? As long can make money, as long they can earn, many can resort to doing such wrongs in which they can harm the majority of people; dead chickens, waste water pigs, fermented tofu in waste water, now what, buns..

My mindset now: fuck care what's the content. The less you know, the easier you can eat your meal in China now. Totally no security to the soul.. eat just because you need to eat, not because you enjoy...Zzzz

quoted:

The bao zi filling was made with 60% of waste paper materials

In the case of the fake buns the CCTV reporters used hidden cameras to show the lengths the bao zi producers were going to in order to cut costs.

To get the right consistency the cardboard was shown being soaked in caustic soda, a poisonous industrial solvent.

The owners told the reporter they then mixed it with about 40 per cent fatty meat and the flavour enhancer monosodium glutamate before selling the bao zi in nearby markets.

Despite discrepancies in colour and texture, the bun makers - who were shown wearing little more than boxer shorts and flip-flops - said they did not believe customers are able to tell the difference.

"Do you eat them?" the CCTV reporter asked the factory owner.

"No, I don't eat them," he replied.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

China Students Abusing Elderly 70 years old teacher

I remember there were news happening in Singapore these few years in which seems to be radical to asian values. Teachers were either complained and sued by Parents when their kids were disciplined involving physical contacts which they considered as physical abuse. At times, these teachers faced school administration problems of being disposed like tissue papers.

What's the problem with our these generation of parents and kids? The kids seemed so pampered.. no need to worry anything and just need to sit in front of the bloody Plasma Screen TV, happily triggering away on their PS3 machine. When their school holidays arrived around the corner, they whine to go overseas to some distant lands, so they can come back and boast to their classmates. If their parents settled anything like Johore Bahru, these kids will most probably end up screeching from Woodlands to Sentosa. I DUN WANT GO TIOOOOOMAAAAAAAAN IIIIIISSSSSSLANNND!!!!!

yuh yuh when your reach 18years old you got ur first babe girl friend, see you want to go a not.

siao eh, I think the first time i took a plane was when i was 15 years old, somemore not to have fun, but to visit relatives in china. My parents brought me up not to ask for things impossible. This generation of parents give to their kids the possible, but forget to equip these kids with the proper sanction of living with moral and values of what is right. So when they grew older, they think they are some big cocks, and they are always right.

Why is the situation reversed so much. If a kid whacks a teacher, it is because he is brought up wrongly, do not know rights from wrongs, at most he's being sent to some boy school to be brainwashed and curfewed. My secondary school teacher, whom we lovingly and fearfully known him as Tiger Tan, was physically attacked when he was out of school. He was my discipline master during my secondary school days. Was this reported in the news? No. Why, students all now big boss now?

Social Issues in our daily lifes to not revolve around what is the best selling stories that a newspaper can report. Sometimes, it is to raise an awareness on things ethical to living. I always feel that I am the last half breed man half breed kuniang army boy after i ORD. To me, all these bunch of kids now in this generation could be considered as kuniangs who complain and whine at the smallest things.. never satisfied.. want the most of out of the least..

A recent article on how students in a high school abused and show disrespect to a 70 yrs old elderly also brought back such thoughts. Maybe the world is rounder, but many kids do not behave properly, and do not understand what can be done and what cannot be done. What happened to the asian values of upbringing we believe in? Has the drive to keep ourselves materialistically rich left our souls empty?

You can blame the west to introduce the idea of capitalism and individualism into our society. But the westerns still do know how to live, and know what is right from wrong? Our generation of people only know how to look at MTVs and think whatever's from there is cool and right. What happened to our sensibility?

maybe because i want to see how people write, maybe because i really am interested in such news, i begin to realise that i had not been paying attention to what's going on in china. -.- below is an article in relation to the abuse of the 70 yrs old teaher in Haidian District, Beijing, China. Its good writing by shanghaiist and dongnanxibei. I hope one day I know what I can write just like them.


source: shanghaiist

The Beijing Haidian District Art Vocational School (北京市海淀区艺术职业学校) has found itself in the centre of a controversy when a video clip of several students abusing a 70-year teacher was circulated online on video sharing sites and enraged netizens across China, sparking a debate over the state of the morals of Chinese youths today. Angry netizens have overwhelmed the school's website (now inaccessible) with comments, and hackers have blacked out the website.

The 5-minute video shot a week ago shows a boy with an earring approach his teacher to pull his cap off, and another student throwing a bottle at the teacher (which missed), while the rest of the students were laughing away or sleeping. The clip also included very colourful language from the students, eg., "That is a stupid c*nt. Kill him!" [那是一傻比,弄死他!]

EastSouthWestNorth tells us of the ensuing manhunt, started by netizens on the Tianya and MOP forums:

On the afternoon of May 26, a campaign began to identify these students. Both the Tianya and MOP forums started their human flesh search engines (人肉搜索引擎). At 6pm, a Tianya netizen noted that the blackhoard had the national flag of Uzbekistan with words of welcome for the friends from there. This netizen searched for visits by Uzbekistan groups and found about the staff of the Ubzekistan embassy being invited to visit the Art School in Haidian district, Beijing. Meanwhile another netizen had broken the passwode of the female student who posted the video and found many photographs and related information. The netizens were able to pinpoint a particular class in the Haidian Art School. In the evening of May 26, the names and telephone numbers of several students in the video were published.

haidian.jpg

This online rage soon spilled over to the real world when a group of netizens took it upon themselves to hunt down the students. They went down to the school and stopped a school bus that was taking some of the above-mentioned students home, demanding that they step out of the bus. The confrontation only ended when the school security guards came over and enabled the bus to leave.

In the meanwhile, Jiefang Daily reports that the 70-year old teacher Sun Xinmao (孙辛卯), who was hired in 2003 and is paid RMB40 per lesson, said the students have already apologised, and there was no need to pursue the matter. He says that he was only verbally abused by the students and remained physically unharmed, and added, "The education of students takes place over a process. Teachers should bear some responsibility if the students remains uneducated." [学生的教育有一个过程。老师没有把学生教好,也是有责任的。]

*Image from EastSouthWestNorth.