新闻摄影在中国:改变的十年(一) 2007-11-26 10:35:13
When the media environment started to change in China, spot news photos became more eye-catching on the pages and have played more and more important role in media. All newspapers, especially the metropolitan newspapers, offer fat cash to encourage tips for spot news information. Xin-Jing-Bao ran an advertisement offering payment for such tips up to 10,000 RMB (1,250 US dollar) on Nov. 11, 2003, the first day the paper was launched. Xu Zugen, director of the Photography Department of Xinhua News Agency, wrote in 2003 to the hundreds of photographers and picture editors working with him: as one of the global wire services, Xinhua’s photo reportage should cover every big spot event. With the support of five-line resources -- Xinhua photographers, Xinhua reporters, 3,000 stringers around the country to be recruited in three years, photo exchanges between agencies, and TV images, Xu believed the goal could be achieved. “No matter other media have it or not, Xinhua should have the story,” Xu said.
Besides spot news, feature photos, illustrations, photo essays (as well as picture stories), which were never seen before 1995, have taken more and more spaces in the newspaper and magazine pages, since housing, fashion, car, furniture, traveling, health are becoming hot topics in the society. When serving as a judge for a national press photo competition, Wang Wenlan, director of photography at China Daily and a senior photojournalist in his early 50s, sighed: “You can see almost everything here now which you could never imagine a few years ago.”
Using a larger picture in the front page to appeal to buyers’ visual attention at newsstands became a common trick used by the newspapers and magazines in China. Not just the spot news showed up on the front page, but also breaking international news. In fact, international news photos were never highlighted in front pages or covers in China’s print media until recent years. It made a history in China’s photojournalism in 2003 as two fringe local newspaper photographers, from Modern Express in Nanjing and Chinese Business Daily in Xi’an, were assigned to cover Iraqi crisis. More than ten fringe newspapers in China also dispatched photographers to cover the recent tsunami that hit a number of countries in Southeast and South Asia. An American photographer should expect to meet more and more Chinese counterparts at international hot spots in the near future.
Documentary photography, started in the mid 1990s, is the most popular and vivid with fewer limitations in today’s China. Yang Yankang, who is now France’s VU photographer, documented the Catholic Church in the remote countryside, and put up a show at the 2003 VISA Photographic Festival. His documentation was run by the Newsweek and Paris Match. Zhou Hai’s documentation of workers in traditional industry was picked up by the New York Times on August 3, 2003. Yuan Dongping, photographer of Minority Pictorial who documented China’s mental patients, won 1993 POY in the NPPA competition. James Zeng-Huang, photographer for China Features / Sygma who documented family planning and children’s life in remote areas, projected his photo essays at the 2003 Arles Photographic Festival, France.
|