Change LanguageSearch
Menu
  • Who We Are
  • What We Do
  • How We Work
  • Newsroom
  • Donate
  • Apply

Who We Are

  • Who We Are
    • Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche
    • Team
    • Annual Reports
    • Khyentse Network

What We Do

  • What We Do
    • Core Activities
      • Academia
      • Education for Children
      • Monastics
      • Practitioner Support
      • Teacher Training
      • Text Preservation
      • Tradition and Legacy
      • Translation
    • Supported Initiatives
      • Khyentse Vision Project
      • The Kumarajiva Project

How We Work

  • How We Work

Where We Work

Additional

  • Newsroom
  • Events
  • Grants & Scholarships
  • Awards & Prizes
  • Donations
  • Contact
  • Newsroom
  • /
  • It's Fantastic Series
  • Newsroom
  • /
  • It's Fantastic Series
It's Fantastic SeriesNo. 11

Zhu Xianmin

Photographer

setembro 13, 2024
setembro 13, 2024
By maryann

Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche shares another of his favorite photographers.

Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche shares another of his favorite photographers.

“There’s many, many photographers, but one that’s really been coming up in my head quite a lot for a long, long time, … I don’t really know how to pronounce his name—Zhu Xianmin—or something like that, Chinese, I believe—wow! His photos, it just, I don’t know … there’s so much compassion, there’s so much sadness, so much story … I saw this picture in Beijing a long time ago and I just took a snap with my camera because I wanted to really know more about whoever took this photo, but it took me a long time to find the photographer’s name. This one is just so special.”

Zhu Xianmin was born in Pucheng in China’s Shandong Province in 1943. One of the most influential photographers in China today and the founder and pioneer of documentary photography in China, since the 1960s and ’70s Zhu Xianmin has employed the creative path of documentary photography to explore the vicissitudes of daily life, devoting himself to capturing the lives of ordinary people on film.

The internationally renowned French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson once referred to Zhu Xianmin’s works as “the eye of truth, forever confronting life.” Expressed in the emotive language of photography, they integrate the relationships between people and the city and with each other, as well as seemingly uncontrived dramatic storylines and symbolic meaning. Under Zhu Xianmin’s lens, the common people, whether rich or poor, are portrayed without the slightest exaggeration, deformation, or distortion. His works show respect for every single person he photographs, displaying a natural affinity and emotional tension. (Source: sznews.com)

Post navigation

Previous in series
  • It's Fantastic Series
No.10

A book …

abril 16, 2024
By maryann
Rinpoche wishes to share with you a book he is reading at the moment. Guess which book!
Read More
Next in series
  • It's Fantastic Series
No.12

Millennium Mambo and Hou Hsiao-hsien

novembro 27, 2024
By maryann
A stylish and seductive submersion into the techno-scored neon nightlife of Taipei, Millennium Mambo is a transfixing trance-out of a movie.
Read More
  • Tara Altar
  • Khyentse Network
  • KF India
  • Contact
  • Donations
  • Grants & Scholarships

Languages

  • English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Português
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
© 2025 Khyentse Foundation
Close Menu
Close

Choose Language

  • English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Português
Close

Choose Language

  • English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Português
  • Donate
  • Apply
Close
Close
Close