• lol are you mooters dominating the class? ;)


  • Tag: ‘China’



    Northern Bound

    Friday, January 22nd, 2010

    It is utterly unbelievable how time flies. Two days ago I sat my last final for the semester, and it feels like it started only a few weeks ago.

    In just about three hours, myself and nine other awesome friends are boarding a sleeper train and bound for Harbin, Heilongjiang. Otherwise known as China’s frozen tundra. The premise is to go check out the world famous ice festival, but also on the agenda is to feed a live chicken to Siberian tigers (not my idea…), go ice-sailing, and of course, snap some amazing night photography.

    It’s been a rather busy semester for me and hence, I haven’t traveled anywhere in particular. This will be a much needed break, not to mention a reminder of what frostbite feels like.

    Now that I’ve managed to get the internet working on my iPhone, I’ll be tweeting photos “live” from the trip (www.twitter.com/evaychan) and maybe even sneak in a blog entry or two.

    See you all on the flip side!

    Beijing through an iPhone (redux)

    Sunday, December 20th, 2009

    A while back I started capturing images from Beijing via my iPhone. Even though my Kalashnikov (my SLR) is my third hand, I don’t always have it on me. Enter the iPhone. It’s like a hidden pistol you surreptitiously sneak into a masked ball while on an under cover assignment. (Ok, maybe that’s a *bit* of a stretch)

    I’ve decided to create a project based upon this tool. Much of this is inspired by Chase Jarvis’ use of the iPhone as a photographic medium. I truly believe that a photographer shouldn’t be defined by what they use. Even a simple point and shoot can produce amazing images.

    This will be an on-going project as I finish out my year in Beijing. I want to capture more of the every day, the “only in Beijing” moments, and document some of the sights that have been such an integral part of my life here.

    Below is a sample of some of the images. Follow the on-going development on Facebook or “live” on my Twitter feed

    Wangfujing, Beijing.

    The Man. The Myth. The Legend.

    In search of the Beijing Underground City

    Window washers in Sanlituen

    Elderly Beijingers playing chess on the streets in winter

    Berlin Wall

    Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

    Some interesting links as follow up on my last post the fall of the Berlin Wall:

    Berlin Twitter Wall what netizens world wide are writing on the “wall”

    Keep Calm and Carry On
    Economist article on the fall of the Berlin Wall, it’s impact on China, and Obama’s visit this week.

    culture crab

    Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

    Above is an iPhone photo of a questionnaire I was recently given, which is supposed to help a facility improve its teaching and approach to students. At first, it looked harmless enough.. where have you been in China, what is your language proficiency.. etc. And then the questions got… stranger.

    What is your attitude towards Chinese people? Four answer choices given: admiration, contempt, envy, pity.

    Please rate the following statements according to the scale (how much you agree):

    1. I am certain that I can produce novel and appropriate ideas.
    2. The people in this country can handle whatever comes their way
    3. I like to live close to my good friends
    4. Aging parents should live at home with their children
    5. Children should live with their parents until they get married.

    … and so on.

    Along with 30 or so questions on (a foreigner’s) opinions on the individual characteristics of Chinese people, in four different formats.

    I really had to stretch my imagination on how any of these answers would help an institution tailor its teaching towards international students. Especially my personal favorite – the question on whether parents have the right to feel honored if their child wins the the Nobel Prize, pictured above.

    Parents?? Let’s not forget that most of America (and albeit, the world) is still flabbergasted by the latest Nobel Prize winner. I don’t think anyone’s given any serious thought to whether his parents have the right to feel honored.

    I would be remiss to make a mountain out of this molehill, but this was one of the daily reminders of the various culture shock(s) one is bound to face while living in China. I have long since come to the terms with being a global mutt. There are some serious perks. But then again, you’ll forever be standing in the divide between the nations of your birth, youth, and influence. Being asked these questions, however impersonally and far-removed, made me realize how stark the difference in thinking between the country of my ethnicity… and everything else that has been influential.

    To put it in broader strokes, I forget how important image is in China, once I get accustomed to the day-to-day details of living here. What foreigners think really seems to matter. This is what drives the censorship, which makes educational surveys come off as something entirely in it’s own category, and why there is no Freedom of Youtube. If I could write my own charter on the universal rights and freedoms of the intar-web, freedom of Youtube would definitely be one of the first articles. Broadly interpreted as the right to access what’s blocked by the Great Wall.

    But on a more cheery note, I bring you another iPhone picture, as part of my chronicles of the mundane that I find hilariously interesting.

    There you have it. A scene which perfectly expresses what I am feeling this particular day. I snapped this picture while grocery shopping this evening – a lone little crab, who had somehow managed to scramble out of the crowded tank, holding on by a claw – TO FREEDOM. :)

    Happy belated birthday, China!

    Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

    .. Well, better late than never, right?

    One of the things I’m really loving about having an iPhone 3Gs, is the built-in video camera. Which has let me play amateur film maker in such situations as trying to ride my bike and film at the same time (my rendition of panning, I guess.) More often than not, this leads to me careening into the nearest bush, or at best, some seriously shaky camera work. But now and then I see something interesting I’d like to share with those living outside the Middle Kingdom :D

    China’s 60th Anniversary is over, but here’s a glimpse of the preparations from within Tsinghua. I was out on the field with my kung fu class and couldn’t resist.