Photographer Li Zhensheng Remembered For His Harrowing Images of the Cultural Revolution -

Gog & Magog

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https://www.cnn.com/style/article/li-zhensheng-cultural-revolution/index.html / archive.md/DdIpl
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Written by Oscar Holland, CNN

Tributes are flooding in for photographer Li Zhensheng, who documented the violent and tumultuous years of China's Cultural Revolution in the '60s and '70s.

A spokesperson for The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, which published a book containing sensitive images Li once kept hidden under his floorboards, this week confirmed his death at the age 79 and described his work as "incomparable." Li's photos represented "the most comprehensive and systematic visual archive" of Communist leader Mao Zedong's devastating campaign, the statement said, praising the photographer's ability to "generate a feeling of empathy about the disaster."

Li's agency, Contact Press Images, announced his death with an Instagrampost saying that he leaves behind "an inestimable photographic legacy," while the UK's Photographers' Gallery, one of the dozens of institutions to share his shocking pictures with the world, tweeted that his "important work had a lasting impact on everyone who saw it."

Li came to international prominence in the 1990s, when he began publishing harrowing photos from the Cultural Revolution in Western media outlets. Through a combination of reportage and street photography, he shone a new light on the decade-long political campaign responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people and the persecution of tens of millions more.

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A provincial governor in Heilongjiang has his hair brutally shaved and is forced to bow for hours after being accused of bearing a resemblance to Mao Zedong. Credit: © Li Zhensheng/Contact Press Images

A provincial governor in Heilongjiang has his hair brutally shaved and is forced to bow for hours after being accused of bearing a resemblance to Mao Zedong. Credit: © Li Zhensheng/Contact Press Images

As an accredited photographer for the Heilongjiang Daily newspaper, Li was tasked with documenting the revolutionary fervor that swept the nation from May 1966. As such, many of his images showed -- enthusiastic Chinese youth and Red Guards -- painting posters, waving banners and sporting political armbands and copies of Mao's "Little Red Book."

But he also captured examples of shocking violence committed against those denounced as public enemies or counterrevolutionaries, including scenes of public humiliation and torture (so-called "struggle sessions"), and even roadside executions. For years, he hid thousands of the negatives, before sharing them with the world in the decades following Mao's death in 1976.

According to his friend Liu Heung Shing, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer and founder of the Shanghai Center of Photography, Li's work not only shows him to be an accomplished photojournalist, it offers a visual record of a heavily-censored period of history.

"One thing that was very stark from Li Zhensheng's archive is all those executions and the purging of senior officials," Liu said in a phone interview. "The value of this work is self-evident, because there's not a body of work that properly documents the madness that Mao unleashed."

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Swimmers read from Mao's "Little Red Book" as they prepare to commemorate the second anniversary of the leader's famous swim in the Yangtze. Credit: © Li Zhensheng/Contact Press Images

Liu also sought to rebuke suggestions that his late friend somehow enabled or supported the Cultural Revolution by working in an official capacity during those years.

"If you were there without an official press card you would have been lynched by the mob," he said.

'Red-colored news soldier'

Li was born in 1940 in Dalian in northeastern China's Liaoning province, which was then under Japanese rule. He studied cinematography before joining Heilongjiang Daily as a photographer in 1963.

Like many young men at the time, he was sent to undergo "reeducation" in the countryside, returning to Heilongjiang province's capital, Harbin, just months before the Cultural Revolution was launched in 1966.

Li's position at a state-run newspaper gave him the freedom to capture the subsequent turmoil in rare detail, though a "lack of film, marauding Red Guards and a political dictate against photographing 'negative' scenes, all conspired to reduce him to the level of a propaganda functionary," wrote American writer and filmmaker Jacques Menasche in an official biography.

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A 2008 self-portrait taken by Li Zhensheng. Credit: © Li Zhensheng/Contact Press Images

He was later denounced and forced to undergo hard labor with his wife for two years. Yet, rather than destroying images that painted the period in a bad light, Li kept them stashed away in his apartment.

Among the most shocking was a photograph of seven men and a woman lined up on their knees in front of a firing squad, moments before their execution in 1968. Another showed a provincial governor, Li Fanwu, having his hair shaved in public as he was made to bow for hours underneath a portrait of Mao.

In the late 1980s, when China underwent a period of liberalization, he publicly exhibited a number of images in Beijing (to the shock of state-controlled newspapers) as open criticism of Mao became gradually more acceptable. With Liu's help, Li, who was then still living in Harbin, collaborated with Time magazine on a 1996 feature marking the 30th anniversary of the start of the Cultural Revolution.
 
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Chad Nasty

Optimus Faggot
True & Honest Fan
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Lol, liberalization. If thats the new standard i guess we're right on track in the states
 

beautiful person

vaccinated
True & Honest Fan
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With the shit that was going on in China at the time, this guy had to have balls of steel to covertly photograph what he did and keep the negatives hidden for as long as he did. I would think the people here would have a little more respect for a guy who literally risked his life to document and expose the evils of Communism.
 

McGregor

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His work is quite compelling, what of it I've seen that is. A shame it took the announcement of his death to bring that work to my attention. I'd have gladly had coffee with that man had the opportunity presented itself. Shame really. The CNN interview with him was pretty neat. Its in the OP but for ease of access: https://www.cnn.com/style/article/liu-heung-shing-photography/index.html
 

KimCoppolaAficionado

The most underrated actor of the 21st century
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With the shit that was going on in China at the time, this guy had to have balls of steel to covertly photograph what he did and keep the negatives hidden for as long as he did. I would think the people here would have a little more respect for a guy who literally risked his life to document and expose the evils of Communism.
The media is talking about him in a positive light, so that automatically triggers a knee-jerk bash response from a lot of people on this board.
 

Too Many Catgirls

are trained to kill
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What's your problem? Someone kick your puppy to death and send you a video of them fucking the corpse?

If I didn't know better, I'd think you were following me around.
You both can be right.

The guy happened to die now. It is also topical to CNN's narrative to bring this up and push it. And this guy is definitely following you around.
 

Doctor Placebo

Bloody, bloody 2020.
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The guy happened to die now. It is also topical to CNN's narrative to bring this up and push it.
It didn't work. It just serves as a contrasting reminder of what a bunch of pathetic snakes mainstream journos are these days, and how they got Twitter to ban accounts for Tweeting "learn 2 code" at them. They're not Li Zensheng. They're the Chinese Communist Party newspaper.
 

TaimuRadiu

Kaiserin
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> A provincial governor in Heilongjiang has his hair brutally shaved and is forced to bow for hours after being accused of bearing a resemblance to Mao Zedong.

I don't get it?
 

ConcernedAnon

Concerned and hopefully anonymous
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The original mirror selfie
1594160492167.png

I want to see more pictures that he took. For instance here's a better angle on that shaving
1594160556840.png

CNN really could have picked more demonstrative photos, but I guess they didn't want people juxtaposing our trajectory and reaching any problematic conclusions
1594160671434.png
 

soy_king

Rule of Daxquisition Number 817: Always be seethin
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Lol, liberalization. If thats the new standard i guess we're right on track in the states
Deng Jiaoping definitely liberalized the country in the 80s, until Tiananmen Square scared the CCP shitless. Since then they've been slowly tightening the screws
 

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