Photographie

Yan Wang Preston

Forest

2010–2017

The word for world is still forest*. In the age of anthropocene, the violent destruction of forests is one of the defining characteristics of our societies. Interestingly, forests are also deeply desirable for rapidly expanding urban environments around the world.

In the photographic project Forest, the British-Chinese artist Yan Wang Preston spent eight years (2010–2017) investigating the politics of recreating forests and the ‘natural’ environment in new Chinese cities. In Chongqing, China’s largest metropolis with thirty-million people, a policy of having a ‘Forest City’ is implemented. While saplings are a common choice, hundreds and thousands of mature trees are also purchased and transplanted into the city to make ‘readymade’ forests. Often the trees become trophies, decorations and a commodity to raise property prices with.

Their prices depend on their rarity, size and age. Their origins include demolished villages, newly deforested areas and beyond. Their futures are uncertain.

In Haidong Development Zone, Dali, Yunnan Province, a small rural area is being urbanised systematically to create ‘an international leisure town and an ecology model town’. In doing so, the top soil of the entire area is being replaced by a type of red semi-artificial soil, which forms the base for introduced, mostly non-indigenous plants, including thousands of mature trees. Meanwhile, green plastic netting is used to cover everything unappealing to the eye, from construction waste to disused quarries. The town’s objective here has shifted from an ‘ecological’ concern to a cosmetic one, of trying to be visually green. By 2017, seven years into its construction, Haidong is still a ‘ghost’ town with no permanent residents.

Yan Wang Preston started this project in Chongqing, by following the developments of the transplanted old trees, the concrete city and its people for eight years, documenting the changes, dramas and lives in the city. She then extended the project to Haidong, capturing the bizarre and wildly-coloured ecology-recovery landscapes. On the way, a series of stories are collected and narrated, that raise questions about the complexity of urban reforestation and nature re-construction in the contemporary era.

Forest
D18-Haidong North Mountain Forest Park construction site, Dali, China, 2017
Forest
D11-Puhejing Quarry Ecology Recovery Project, Dali, China, 2017
Forest
1-Central Park, University City, Chongqing, China, 2011
Forest
Frank-2, June 2013
Forest
D19-Haidong North Mountain Forest Park construction site, Dali, China, 2017
Forest
D9-Yunlang Quarry Ecology Recovery Project,Dali, Yunnan, China, 2017
Forest
19-Egongyan Park, Chongqing, China, 2017
Forest
D4-Haidong Development Zone, Dali, Yunnan, China, 2017
Forest
D2-Roadside Ecology Recovery Project, Dali, Yunnan, China, 2017
Forest
D8-Yunlang Quarry Ecology Recovery Project,Dali, Yunnan, China, 2017
Forest
D12-Puhejing Quarry Ecology Recovery Project, Dali, China, 2017
Forest
3-Yangtze Riverside Road, Chongqing, China, 2011
Forest
D10-Puhejing Quarry Ecology Recovery Project, Dali, China, 2017
Forest
D7-Yunlang Quarry Ecology Recovery Project,Dali, Yunnan, China, 2017

29°33'30.0"N 106°34'00.0"E

Lieu: Chongqing, China

Publié: Juillet 2018
Catégorie: Photographie

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