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The Ghost of the Garden: Photography as a Bridge to 180 Years of Memory

Time has a way of smoothing over the jagged edges of history, but some wounds remain forever suspended in the landscape. The recent dedicated to the Old Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan) is more than just a gallery of ruins. it is an exercise in "resurrecting" what was lost through the lens of a camera. The Lens as a Time Machine The Ghost of the Garden: Photography as a

For over a century, the Old Summer Palace has existed in the global consciousness as a series of skeletal stone arches and scattered marble. However, before the fire of 1860, it was the "Garden of Gardens"—a pinnacle of architectural harmony. Photography, in this context, serves two opposing masters: The Lens as a Time Machine For over

Capturing the stark, tragic beauty of the ruins as they stand today. Here is a deep blog post exploring the

Here is a deep blog post exploring the intersection of photography, historical trauma, and the preservation of memory based on those themes.

Why does 180 years matter? It represents a span of time just long enough for direct memory to fade, leaving only the "inherited memory" of a nation. The exhibition uses high-definition photography to force us to look closer at the details—the intricate carvings that survived the flames and the moss that now claims the stone.