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Take That's image man has China in his sights

Celebrated photographer Nadav Kander on his Far East project.

November 15, 2010 14:42
Nadav Kander’s photos of China show the country’s “relentless” growth

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

2 min read

David Cameron spent last week in China trying to stake Britain's claim to a piece of the Chinese ecomonic boom. One man who knows all about China's rapid industrial growth is the acclaimed Israel-born, UK-based photographer, Nadav Kander.

His prize-winning series of photos, Yangtze, The Long River Series, 2006-07, which document the rapidly changing landscape and communities along the Yangtze, from its mouth to source, is currently on show in London. They were taken during five trips to the Far East in 2006-7. "Each trip lasted about two weeks," says Kander. "Had I travelled most of the 4,000 miles in one trip I would have come back with National Geographic-type pictures, which was not my intention. I wanted to keep my eyes fresh. You feel such an outsider in China and I wanted to capture that feeling."

The photos reflect on the pace of development along the river, on whose banks more people live than in the entire United States. What were Kander's aims in taking them? "I am never interested in beauty for its own sake," he admits. "I am conscious of the palm print of man on his environment. In China I could record the unbelievable, unrelenting pace of movement forward in this troubled land where people have been pushed aside in turmoil. It was the perfect place to find beauty in the banal. Those are the sorts of landscapes I enjoy."

Kander was born in 1961 in Tel Aviv, but raised in South Africa after his family emigrated there when he was three. His interest in photography started when he was a small boy. "I can remember a cupboard on the landing," he recalls. "Inside was a beautiful leather case containing a cine camera with its chrome knobs. You would wind it up and hear it whirr. I was struck by the beauty of the mechanics, the watch-like precision. It was the workings of the cameras that I loved and that was how I got interested."