Lianzhou International Photo Festival
"The 6th edition of the Lianzhou International Photo Festival will
take place till the 26th of december. The theme choosen thise year by
curator Fei Dawei is “Is the world real ?” The Festival gathers 70
exhibitions of young, not very well known, contemporary chinese
photographers."
THEME- Is The World Real?
"Political consciousness and commercialism, in order to achieve their
propagandistic aims, have made full use of photography’s “objective”
characteristics. On many occasions, photography has unobtrusively
conveyed various ideological messages; in this respect its function
surpasses that of slogans and written language. Nothing can lure us into
a conceptual trap more easily than photography.
For a long time
the field of photography in China was deeply influenced by pragmatism.
Language was broken down into two parts, namely form and content, and
only when the former “served” the latter could photography achieve
legitimacy. Regardless of whether it was in the name of “correct”
ideology or in the name of a “rebellion of language,” photographic works
were functionally reduced to tools for conveying certain concepts. Thus
photography became diagrammatic treatment of concepts; it became a
means of incitement. Quality of expression was thrown aside, and
photography became a servant, with no dignity of its own. And precisely
in this sense, photography created an illusory screen between ourselves
and the world.
The actuality of the world is called into question,
because the world expressed through language is not reliable. The world
we see through photography is a filtered world, a partial
representation. After the invention of digital technology, photography
lost even more of its identity as witness to the actual world. The world
became a picture which could be altered at will, and photography became
a tool which can be impinge toxically on awareness.
Thus the
relation between the world’s existence and photographic language has
become a paradox that needs to be worked out in current criticism of
visual culture. Only the mouse that tied the bell around the cat’s neck
can untie that bell. The problems brought about by photography can only
be solved by reflectively approaching photographic language. Can
photographic language break through the pitfalls that it itself has
imposed? Can it bring forth the motivation to keep creating and making
discoveries? Can it stir the imagination in broader ways? Can it become
open-ended language which points toward expansive possibilities of
meaning? Can its it be in alignment with the world rather than at odds
with it? We have chosen the theme “Is the world real?” in hopes of
displaying, through the works here, how these photographers have
penetrated language in their own unique ways to re-constitute a freer,
more intense, more meaningful world."
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