Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Beijing Day 5: Walking through a Hutong (Last Day) 北京第五天:胡同的散步(最后一天)

After waking up pretty early on the last day of our Beijing trip, we all (Diego, Ms. Ma, and I) decided to go visit a near by famous Lhama Buddhist temple called "Yonghe Gong" [yohng huh gong]. To do that we had to walk through the narrow streets of Beijing's 胡同[hoo-tohng]. 胡同s are the streets between the old fashioned courtyard style houses that once dominated Beijing's living quarters. Lately they have been torn down and replaced by space-efficient apartment blocks. But some 胡同s are being preserved now.
It was a freezing cold morning that day, and not a soul was moving about the 胡同 that we were walking down (save a few bundled up people on bikes). Inside the 胡同 it was less windy though because the streets are so narrow that wind is blocked by the houses. The weather made this walk a bit miserable at first, but the movement kept us warm. I enjoyed taking pictures of the entrances to the courtyard-style homes. Ihope to go back to another 胡同 one day, because during this trip we only saw one! There are many famous 胡同s throughout Beijing!





(Looking down the 胡同.)


(After coming out of the neighborhood we caught a glimpse of the Temple, which we visited after a warm breakfast.)



Sunday, February 8, 2009

Beijing Day 4: Summer Palace 北京第四天:颐和园儿

The Summer Palace was probably one of the prettier palaces we visited in Beijing. While the Forbidden City was for business and Imperial get-togethers, The Summer Palace was for leisure and admiring nature.

The day we went to The Summer Palace most of the water was frozen over, and the wind was really harsh. But it didn't take away from the intrigue that surrounded the palace.

(The doors to the throne room.)

(The Summer Palace has the longest covered walkway out of all of the palaces in China.)
(At many touristy places throughout China you can pay to dress up as an ancient figure/hero and have your picture taken. While we were buying water bottles I spotted this little girl having her picture taken.)

(A pavilion near the restrooms.)
(The bedroom of The Dowager Empress. A bit sparser than I expected actually. The Dowager Empress kept her nephew in this palace so he wouldn't have a chance to usurp her authority. She sent him a clock. Which is an extreme insult in Chinese culture. The word 送钟 [song-jong] to give a clock sounds the same as to see someone to their death. Even today if you give a Chinese person a clock it is basically treated as a death wish.)
(昆明湖 Kunming Hu [kwin-ming hoo] surrounds the palace. Most of it was frozen over that day! The weather was freezing!)
(Just after entering the gate you come up on this courtyard.)
(The front gate, actually the name in Chinese doesn't actually mean "Summer Palace" I would ask around if anybody could tell me what it meant exactly but no one really could say. The characters literally mean "check peace garden." Go figure!)
(Approaching the main entrance of The Summer Palace)










Friday, February 6, 2009

Update 新闻

Sorry! I haven't posted in a while! It is because I am traveling and I haven't had the means/time to upload photos. I will make posts as soon as I return to Chongqing! On the 8th of February!
对不起!不好意思,最近没有时间/机会把照片放在博客里。我二月八号才回去重庆。八号之后我会写一篇文章。
谢谢合作

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Beijing Day 3: Great Wall 北京第三天:撞道口长城

(View of the village from one of the tower's on the wall.)
(Look at how steep it is! It looks as though it's a straight drop, but looks can be deceiving!)
(A part of the wall photographed from the collapsed tower in the top of the lower photo.)


(On the wall!)
(A frozen part of the nearby river that runs along the village below the Wall.)
(The gate in the wall that the village of 撞道口[joo-ahng dao koh] is famous for.)
(This is a little street in the practically empty village near the Great Wall, this sign says "May Mao Live for 10,000 Years!" It is probably still left over from the Cultural Revolution days.)


This part of our travels through Beijing was incredible! We couldn't believe that we had actually CLIMBED the Great Wall! Because the part of the wall we went to was less traveled (no one was on the wall but us!) there weren't any stairs leading up to it. Diego, Taotao, Carina, and I walked through the tiny cluster of houses (past big scary barking dogs, thankfully they were chained up!) then hiked up a mountain pass to the gate in the wall (pictured above). The gate in the wall is what this little village is famous for apparently.
The feeling that I experienced when I mounted the wall was breathtaking. I was a part of a huge feat that stretches across the better part of China. Also the sky was clear and not so cold. Taotao took many pictures of us with his fancy camera. We left him where we mounted the wall (his legs are bad). In total we explored two little towers of the wall. One tower had completely collapsed! Most of the time we didn't speak, just admired the wall and the view from it.
An hour or two passed....we hiked down the pass, got into the car and fell asleep. The day was quite exhausting!

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Beijing Day 3: 798 Modern Art Factory 第三天:七九八艺术中心

This part of my Beijing Extravaganza deserves its own post! The 798 Modern Art factory was at first a government owned factory. Maybe a weapons factory, I am not entirely sure. It was abandoned after a while and was later rediscovered by modern artists. It was taken over and turned upsidedown into a sort of underground-modern art-escapade! Now it is officially recognized by the government. However it still remains a creative hub and has an alluring artistic feel. This was one of my favorite parts of this trip. I have been wanting to go here forever! Another caption and picture post! We went early one cold Beijing morning. I was armed with jackets and my camera, ready to experience Chinese modern art up close.

请从下面开始读。Read from the bottom and make you're way up!



(A garden/park next to the factory.)
(Statue.)

(We happened to run into a film crew! They were recording an advertisement for cameras I think. Because the man and the woman [foreigners] walk up to each other and comment [in English] on a camera that the woman is holding.)


(Graffiti.)



(More ice made from dripping pipes.)




(Road through 798.)




(Support the People's Revolution Against the Capitalist Art World! Just kidding, just kidding. I don't know if this statue was made by artists or by the government when the factories were built.)



(More graffiti. What I think is interesting is that I hardly saw any graffiti that used Chinese, most was in English or Scribbles.)



(Two fashionably dressed mysterious individuals standing in front of a very big brick wall. I like this picture.)



(Water dripping from a pipe has slowly created a stalagmite of ice! Natural art!)



(The main factory hall that started it all. I don't know why there aren't any paintings up. This is the most famous part of 798. The red writing at the top of the picture says "May Chairman Mao live to be 10,000 years old!" and then it goes on too say "and then 20,000 more years!")



(All over 798 graffiti is the main form of decoration. It doesn't look anything like graffiti one sees in the USA. Maybe because this graffiti is for different purposes? Such as art.)



(I don't really even know what is going on here. This building was just on the way to one of the main galleries we were going to see.)


("Originality Square" factory-esque buildings to the side. Would Andy Warhol be jealous? I am.)



(The main drag of 798 still has that factory feel to it. The center used to be a factory, then it was abandoned, later modern artists took it over for work space. Now it is an art center. Still really cool.) (Giant near the main drag of 798.)

(This painting, yes painting, brought back many memories of playing Super Mario Bros with my dad when I was little. I would have bought this!)

(Making a disapproving face at a slightly risque statue.)


(Painting in one of the galleries, the background is the Forbidden City. It looks like a hand that has somehow found a hole in our demention.)

(From left to right: Our financial sponsor/friend Taotao, his girlfriend/our friend Lulu, Ms. Ma my AFS teacher)

(Our breakfast that morning consisted of bread-cakes and pork dumplings. You dip the pork dumplings in vinegar and it is just heavenly! Especially when restaurants have poor heating!)

Beijing Day 2 Part 2 北京第二天,第二部分

After the Forbidden City we were invited to dinner by fairly well-off Chinese factory owners. We had our own private room for dinner and had a glass wall to view the performances in the main hall. The dinner was full of mirth and laughter. Many jokes about Chinese people and foreigners alike. After dinner we were taken to the Water Cube and the Bird's Nest to be touristy! It was a lot of fun. Took many silly photos (see below). Soon after they whisked us off to Beijing's best bar (Mix) that is owned by one of the factory owner's friends. It was a lot of fun, and even better that other people were treating us.

(Puppet performance at the restaurant, telling the story of the courting of two lovers.)
(BIRD'S NEST!)

(Water Cube! Dragon Ball Z pose.)
don't worry a more serious post to follow ^.^


Friday, January 23, 2009

Beijing Day 2 (Forbidden City) 北京第二天 (故宫)

请从下面开始读。Start reading from the bottom!

Unfortunately the Forbidden City is too amazing and all too beautiful to describe with words. So this blog post will be picture and caption oriented! I hope you enjoy it regardless of its lack of text! I had a great time here, and if you ever have a chance to visit Beijing, go!



(One of the seats for the Emperor, just for watching Peiking Opera.)
(Ceremonial crown of the Emperor it weighs 2kg. Which is like 5 pounds-ish.)

(Alleyway in the Forbidden City, long long long!)
(View from the main buildings from a less important courtyard, can you see the smog?)




(With our tour guide. English name: Aleen.)



(Dragon wall, the maker of this wall was only given a limited time by one of the Emperors. Right before the completion date one of the ceramic slabs fell off. Painted wood replicas replaced it, luckily the Emperor didn't find out or it would have been off with the craftman's head!)



(Bedroom of the Dowager Empress, Suxi [su-shi] or Dragon Lady. She ruled for 48 years.)



(An interesting doorway in one of the courtyards that housed the concubines.)



(Beautiful gate coming out of one of the courtyards that housed some of the Emperor's concubines. I think one of thos children in the background is sneaking a picture of me!)



(The back garden. Located behind all the buildings that were used for official business. Here the Emperor and people who were allowed in could stroll around the garden. The last emperor to live in the Forbidden City was the first to begin learning English, he was also the first to ride a bike. His English name was Henry. His wife? Elizabeth.)



(Throne room where all the official business went down!)



(These dragon heads served as gutters, in Ancient China it was believed that dragons breathed water. When it was raining the Emperor would come outside to admire these fountain heads that doubled as gutters. This is all according to our English/Chinese speaking tour guide we hired for 200 yuan.)



(Voila! The Forbidden City! Breathtaking!)




(In front of one of the buildings used for formal ceremonies such as announcing imperial exam results, throwing banquets for officials, etc. From left to right: Diego (from Brazil, also live in Chongqing), Me, and Ms. Ma. The hall behind us is called the Hall of Supreme Harmony. 太和门 tai-huh-men)




(Through one of the gates in the city, note the cieling!)




(After breakfast of beef noodles, we walked a 5-10 minute walk to the entrance of the Forbidden City! I was super excited and my hunger was quelled!)