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avotius — Cheap Labor

Published: 2008-03-04 16:40:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 4934; Favourites: 138; Downloads: 91
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Description China’s biggest product without a doubt is its people. There are so many people here that work is not always easy to come by. So many people competing for top spots in companies and with few really great jobs out there you fall to the middle and lower end of the scale. The majority of people in China are from the highly undeveloped county side, migrant workers coming to the cities looking for wages a few dollars a day more then they earned growing vegetables and tending livestock have turned some large cities such as Shanghai and Chongqing into parodies of the modern world. Migrant workers often bring their habits with them, many of which are totally unacceptable in a city, for instance having a poo in the middle of the street at the city center, a common sight.

Despite some very…questionable tendencies, migrant workers in China make up a huge portion of the economy and is one of the reason city life here can seem so laid back. Many people, some who would consider rather ignorantly and incorrectly, migrant workers are a major wart on Chinese modern society. Others see that if it was not for these people so many of the luxuries they take for granted would easily spill out in the fragile balance that exists here between waste and environment. Labor and dirty jobs make up most of what they do, and as salaries are always very poor, in the area of 700 Yuan a month (not even 100 dollars) it may be more then they made in the country side and many families are willing to sacrifice a “cleaner” life for more money.

At this anonymous workshop stuck in the side of an old building these ladies are making metal joints by the hundreds. Machines in the room screech as the drill bits hit metal, the creative wiring that runs along the walls is quite typical in a scene like this. I quite like the fact that to save room for a corner workstation one person must sit on top of the concrete workbench. Such quirky details are to be expected where efficiency and productivity is key to keeping your job in a country where replacing you is not difficult.

Voigtlander Bessa R2A, Leitz 50mm f3.5 Elmar, Fuji Superia 400
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Comments: 27

Hydrangeas [2008-10-11 22:08:51 +0000 UTC]

I always reading the stories with your photos.but unfortunatelly my English is poor;therefore i can't understand excatly. thanks for showing and telling us about it... sad reality!...
(I went to Beijing and Shanghai on 2001...they were very interesting and fantastic! I loved sooo much and i wish to go again..)

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bloppyblue [2008-09-02 00:03:57 +0000 UTC]

Makes me feel sad... And it makes me really appreciate how much my grandparents had to work when they were back in Asia. Im surprised they allowed you in lol.

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OneBloomPhotography [2008-06-29 02:31:56 +0000 UTC]

you left out how you got there?

I love your descriptions by the way - the best photos are the ones that come with a story.

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fleetfoot [2008-03-26 22:46:52 +0000 UTC]

Grungy.

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bluenote70 [2008-03-25 23:22:08 +0000 UTC]

looks impressive

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MAgoFotografo [2008-03-10 11:15:34 +0000 UTC]

beautiful..... XD

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3ar1 [2008-03-07 09:46:13 +0000 UTC]

The lights and colors...it's brilliant!

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aliledesma [2008-03-07 05:10:11 +0000 UTC]

This picture is REALLY excellent! My only complaint is that I'd like it to be larger in order to see the details better... You are an amazing artist!

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-poetic-tragedy- [2008-03-06 19:52:27 +0000 UTC]

Wow... sitting in that room for hours like that would be awful.
The quality of this is so weird, it looks like a painting, when I first saw it I was like "what, has he taken up painting too?! What a talented fellow!!"
Very nice, love the lighting.

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avotius In reply to -poetic-tragedy- [2008-03-07 19:02:21 +0000 UTC]

Not to toot my own horn, but I do paint as well, although my gallery might not reflect that and yes I dont paint a lot (especially lately with jobs and stuff) but its something I always intended to pick up again!

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-poetic-tragedy- In reply to avotius [2008-03-08 01:33:20 +0000 UTC]

Haha, well you should upload something! I'm very interested to see now!

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yellowcrane [2008-03-05 14:51:10 +0000 UTC]

This is like a piece of oil painting!

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yellowcrane [2008-03-05 14:30:15 +0000 UTC]

This is like a piece of oil painting!

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TARAIMAGES [2008-03-05 11:50:29 +0000 UTC]

A beautifull study on living reality.

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oliau [2008-03-05 09:10:41 +0000 UTC]

Fantastic story you've told. The scene really emphasises some points you have made in your story as well.

I think the anonymous figures we see here really reflect how these people are probably viewed by wealthier Chinese (those who have always been in the city) - and definitely how the West views them. That is, as a faceless entity who just churn out products for our consumption.

From a photographic perspective I think this capture is excellent as well. Are you pushing your film a few stops? I just ask because you often seem to be using relatively fast film (iso400) in what look like dark situations... I am just curious.

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avotius In reply to oliau [2008-03-05 09:51:24 +0000 UTC]

Thanks. The idea of the faceless workforce is what I saw here too. I did however take a lot of time to intermingle with these people, they are just like everyone else you see out there doing work like this. Its the same story I have heard hundreds of times.

As for the photographic perspective I always try to use 400 speed film because I find it to be the perfect balance between speed and grain. A lot of the places I shoot dont have what you can call great lighting and I have to cope with places where instance to instance is like walking from a sunny street to a dark alley. I dont push my 400, I shoot it at speed, although with this shot, I seem to remember it was taken around 1/8th of a second since the widest aperture on the lens is 3.5 (50 year old leicas...) that slow shutter speed can be seen a bit in the photo, but for the most part with color film I try not to push and keep things around iso400. Black and white I do the same, shoot 400, HP5, XP2, my ammunition of choice. Sometimes I will push 100 to 400 but then choose a low contrast lens such as the Leitz Elmar or Yashica GSN to even things out a bit. Then of course self development with low activity developers to gradually bring out details. Works well for me!

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oliau In reply to avotius [2008-03-06 10:10:50 +0000 UTC]

I think it's great that you are able to 'mingle' (as you say) with these different classes of Chinese society. It really helps your photography anyway, because it means you can tell a genuine story with your photos.

Thanks for clarifying your film choices/speed. I certainly wouldn't be complaining with a shot like this since you seem to have pulled it off perfectly at 1/8th of second (or whatever pretty slow speed it was)!

Keep it up! As far as insights into a foreign culture go I am not watching any other deviants who are presenting anything anywhere near as interesting as you are!

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gabbachoo [2008-03-05 01:01:26 +0000 UTC]

I always enjoy reading the stories you submit with your photos. Desperate times for a lot of people.
Your photo looks a lot like a painting.

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mod-juliet [2008-03-04 22:40:25 +0000 UTC]

this is really intense.

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iloveraspberrytea [2008-03-04 19:58:29 +0000 UTC]

undoubtedly rough truth
great shot, keep up the good work, especially that you're so much into social problems
xx

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y0j1m80 [2008-03-04 19:53:52 +0000 UTC]

great photo-journalism.

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ahavaboo [2008-03-04 18:19:23 +0000 UTC]

this is what i call misery, amazing pic

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steppeland [2008-03-04 17:52:32 +0000 UTC]

Aww... great picture, sad reality! What a hard life!
Thank you for showing and telling us about it!

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ThunderBearStudios [2008-03-04 16:47:46 +0000 UTC]

that's sad to know the truth but it's all around us.. peple just choose to hide it with their hollywood ideals. very nice picture and captures the deeper derisre in the picture well.. fantastic

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avotius In reply to ThunderBearStudios [2008-03-04 16:49:25 +0000 UTC]

just remember the next thing you handle that says made in China was most likely made by someone like this, just looking for a better tomorrow.

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ThunderBearStudios In reply to avotius [2008-03-04 17:49:30 +0000 UTC]

yupper! that's a great way ta look at it my frined a fabulous way... just wish others would too ya kno?.. especially the higher ups who cause this bull shit to happen most of the time!

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thepiggotout [2008-03-04 16:43:58 +0000 UTC]

This is great.

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