Wednesday, June 22, 2011

X- boy, X- girl. ARE we living around the mutants?

I am amazed with this boy my husband shot in the tibetan village on our latest trip to Grand Shangri-la.




The boy is a one of twin brothers; strangely, his twin brother has dark brown eyes, but he has bright blue eyes.(click to see the larger picture)

A recent Danish science study suggest blue-eyed humans have a single, common ancestor, perhaps this Tibetan boy and the Geisha in Japan are relatives?




The origin of Tibetan people is a subject of hard study. Some suggest that the majority of Tibetan gene pool may have diverged from the Han around 3,000 years ago. However, there are evidences of much earlier human inhabitation of Tibet. The distribution of Haplogroup D-M174 is found among all the populations of Central Asia and Northeast Asia south of Russian border, although generally at a low frequency of 2% or less. A dramatic spike in the frequency of D-M174 occurs as one approach the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau of western China. D-M174 is also found at high frequencies in Japanese people but it fades into low frequencies in the Han populated Mainland

by KanJANA

Saturday, June 11, 2011

What and Why Taipei beats Singapore, Hong Kong and Bangkok

1.Taipei has a great MRT and mass transportation system with hi speed train.





2.There are priority seats on bus and train and they seriously promoting the idea of being aware of the needed one.



3.Taipei street food is good , clean, various choices and cheap.






4.Taipei city is super clean without public bin.
5.Taiwanese has freedom of speech and TV host,hostess ask tough direct questions.








6.Taipei people amazingly stand to one side when riding escalators.And naturally stay in line when waiting for bus and train.






Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The rule of "NOs" in Lijieng

The last spot of my Grand Shangri-la photo trip was "LiJieng"
The ancient water city turned touristy. Personally,I am not a fan of touristy places but it was nice to end the long,tiring trip here. We were able to relax and spent more non-shooting time with our van crews in this spot.




We,Thai crews invited Eric,Huang Cherng(aka A-Pae) and Becky (our tour guide) to go out clubbing. Going out at night in Li Jieng is normal, everyone does it here. The city turned from ancient at day to night bar,dance show and lots of drinks. There are new things I learned this trip while yelling "Tui Tui Tui" and hit the table with the wooden block they gave us.



There are some rules in Li Jieng. The rule of NOs.
Never say "NO"
"No" shy
"No" regret
"No" string attach

All these NOs lead to one universal act. Casual Sex, and one night stand.
Then I realized how much this city has changed and drink to that they said it so out loud. Again everyone in the club shout back together. This is like making a group vow to have irresponsible sex. Then come another round of NOs rule and I see my group shouting "TUI TUI TUI" meaning "YES YES YES" to these "NOs"

Chinese formula

In the past three years, from traveling for photography trip in China with Chinese, got me to understand how do they prefer to shoot their landscape pictures. There is formula, Chinese formula;
The perfect landscape picture(for Chinese),needs the perfect light, and it has to be the side light, better to have some clouds as a contrast to the deep blue sky, and farm houses – best if there are cooking smokes, and don’t forget the birds, and buffalo (of course it can be Yak, horse, deer…..), and of course the water.....lake...steam....
They will frame their picture the same way and wait for the light. You literally would see Chinese queue up to shoot at the exact same spot. It is bizarre!



I was recently in Taipei, Taiwan and took a day off to visit the Palace Museum where the famous painting by Huang Gongwang 黃公望 “Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains” (painted between 1347-1350) displayed.
The famous painting was burnt into 2 halves in 1650 and since then collected/preserved by and through separated routes are reunited again.



And now "landscape reunited" is the current themed exhibition in the museum.
What I learned from the museum get me understand how Chinese think about landscape.
Landscape usually referred as “Mountain-Water” 山水 [shān shuǐ] in China, for thousand of years, the beautiful Chinese landscape is the popular theme for painting, mostly in ink, more on state of mind than realistic painting so therefore the perfect landscape is born – beautiful mountains, fog, a few birds, the fisherman or boatman, ripples of water, perhaps the farmers, buffalo, pine or plum tress, often some cooking smokes……Déjà vu, right?

This is the formula that they have been practicing for hundred of years.

Chinese is a special language, and it is an art by itself, and of course the language affects its culture, and history. For thousands of years, the masters have set the standard, and generations after the master, follow the master, there is no shame to copy, in fact, it is encouraged to get as close (similar) as possible, for Chinese – it is learning, and that was then. Now, most of the Chinese photographers travel to the great locations to try to duplicate the image on the postcards, or on the books, is not to be mistaken as “copy”, it is “tradition”!
So, when they copy iPad or BMW, it is flattering, they thought these products are great design as master pieces, so their tradition is to produce as close or same as the master did.

Captured by KanJANA
Location: Xinduqiao, Sichuan, China.

Shoot-a-thon

5 hrs to spend shooting on the same location! I felt like they cheated my time and let me work desperately on one mountain, one lake, one monastery, and few Tibetan houses. What would I do with these 5 hrs? The question stuck in my mind while I was wandering the location and shot very carefully and slowly.
I became to understand later that the Chinese were waiting for the light so, the tour guide had set the time limit at 5 hrs. But this was not like spending your Saturday watching GLEE-a-thon. It requests patience, patience, and more patience which Chinese are famous for.
P'Thai had finished shooting since the first two hrs. And spent the rest of the time talking and tried to find something to eat to kill the time.

Let see what I got from this longest photography section!



















Captured by KanJANA
Location: Xinduqiao, Grand Shangri-la

Friday, June 3, 2011

Stylish Silent

I don't like my pictures to be too "LOUD"
Have you try to hear the pictures, paintings or sculptures? They all speak to you in different voice. I like soft, subtle and clean voice. Not over shouting!
These are shots from the Grand Shangri-La, May 2011 trip. They are quite quiet.
So Peaceful. So Serene. So Silent
They speak soft voice so, please click the picture if you want to hear them louder.








Captured by KanJANA

Subtle Spectacular

I always like sleek, clean cut and subtle element In my landscape pictures. Some think it is too simple, too plain and too boring. I would say, there is no right or wrong in photography as same as other art, it is the STYLE!
And here is my style "Subtle Spectacular"
Sometimes "lonely is beauty" and most of the time as the master put it "Less is More"
Please click each picture to view the enlarge size.







Captured by KanJANA