Photofusion is pleased to present the first
showing of new work by the London based Malaysian born photographer
Ian Teh, who has been documenting the building of the controversial
Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in China, which is the
largest hydroelectric power project in the world, costing an
estimated £14bn. Due for completion in 2009, the population
of over a million people are being displaced by the Chinese
government and Teh's photographs build a fascinating story
of the plight of the people whose lives are being affected.
Ian Teh has worked in many countries including Brazil, Cuba,
Thailand, Japan, Hong Kong, China, USA, Mexico and Europe
and has been represented
by Vu agency in Paris since 2001.
In 1993 he was Time Out Photographer of the Year and has won numerous awards
including the Joop World Press Masterclass in 2001. Alongside exhibiting in
Europe, his work has been commissioned by and represented
in various publications
including Independent Magazine, Time Out, Guardian Weekend, Newsweek, Creative
Review, Eye and The Sunday Times.
The Vanishing: Altered Landscapes and Displaced Lives
on the Yangtze River is a documentation of the recent
transformation to China's Yangtze River made by the construction
of the giant Three Gorges Dam. This project, first conceived
by Mao in the 1970s and due for completion in 2009, is
one of superlatives.
The dam will be 185m tall and 2km
long. Behind its vast walls, a reservoir will stretch over
650 kilometres to the port of Chongqing, forming the biggest
artificial lake in the world.
China is a nation whose leaders have always reached for
the grand vision. When the Chinese flood the famous Three
Gorges with thirty-nine billion cubic metres of water, thirteen
cities, 400 towns and 1,352 villages will be submerged. As
a result, two million people will eventually lose their homes
and in return, the Chinese are promised a 10 per cent increase
in energy supply and an end to the deadly floods that regularly
threaten millions of lives.
The project has an increasing number of opponents, many
of whom argue that the dam is not financially viable; that
it is being poorly constructed and that it threatens the
ecology of the region. Some experts believe it may even trigger
earthquakes. But the overriding concern is for the fate of
the millions of people who are to be displaced and relocated.
Teh's photo essay, The Vanishing: Altered Landscapes and
Displaced Lives
on the Yangtze River, travels 700 kilometres
from Chongqing in the west to Sandouping in the east, focussing
on the lives of those effected by the dam
and the landscape
that will eventually be submerged forever.
It documents the virtual ghost towns, inhabited by a handful of families left
temporarily destitute by local corruption and an inadequate resettlement programme.
Teh follows some of the ever-growing floating population of 150 million, many
of whom migrate to the cities of the Eastern seaboard in search
of a brighter
future and the prospect of higher paid work in the factories.
It shows the
exodus from old towns and cities to new accommodation specially constructed
as part of the worlds most ambitious resettlement programme.
The Vanishing: Altered Landscapes and Displaced Lives on the
Yangtze River also highlights the gradual, dramatic transformation
of these once vibrant places into broken communities, uncertain
what the future holds as the last vestiges of river life are
played out along the historical Three Gorges. |