logo
This week in PostMag: China's salt capital and a cruise on the mighty Mekong River

This week in PostMag: China's salt capital and a cruise on the mighty Mekong River

I was scrolling through Instagram, as one does, when a particularly arresting image stopped me. Roughly hewn wooden beams and rafters holding up a high ceiling. Puffs of steam caught in the light. A floor blanketed in white snow-like powder. 'I really thought this was AI or game art' read one comment.
Advertisement
In fact, it was a photograph of a salt well in Sichuan province posted by Shanghai-based writer Christopher St. Cavish – the first in a carousel of photos from a week-long research trip to Zigong, once known as China's 'salt capital', for an episode to air on his newly launched YouTube channel with photographer Graeme Kennedy. I messaged him immediately. It sounded like a story too good to miss, an expertly woven tale of how centuries of history can shape the way we eat today. The piece that came from it – this issue's cover feature – is accompanied by a striking image of Sichuan's salt drilling fields, taken by Swiss geologist Arnold Heim in 1929, along with photos of contemporary Zigong that Kennedy shot earlier this year.
Bibek Bhandari transports us to the Chinese capital (and back to the mid-noughties) as he chats with Glen Loveland, the American author of the recently published Beijing Bound. In 2007, Loveland moved to Beijing, which he describes as unexpectedly open. My first visit there was three years later and it was exactly that feeling that convinced me to make the move from New York. For Loveland, this openness led to a self-described gay awakening, and while I didn't have the same story, reading his made me recall my own early years in the city and the particular energy of mainland China at that moment.
The rest of the issue takes us on a tour around Asia. Traversing Cambodia and Vietnam, David Swanson takes a cruise down the Mekong on the AmaDara where he reckons the region's violent past with its present. It's a beautiful and powerful journey that juxtaposes megacities against bucolic rural scenes.
In Osaka, Julian Ryall gets a sneak peek of the Expo 2025. He previews its many pavilions – I'm particularly intrigued by the Saudi Arabian one, which Ryall describes as 'a tangle of alleyways, sheltered courtyards and water features like oases'. I've never been to a World Expo, but it turns out this is my year. I'll be in Osaka in May. And you?
Advertisement

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China's AI-generated pet dramas take the internet by storm, with one amassing 100 million views.
China's AI-generated pet dramas take the internet by storm, with one amassing 100 million views.

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China's AI-generated pet dramas take the internet by storm, with one amassing 100 million views.

Pet dramas generated by artificial intelligence (AI) have become a fresh hit on short video social media platforms, with many clips attracting millions of views. Advertisement In April, an AI-generated video of a ginger cat took one platform by storm. It had amassed almost 150 million views by the time of writing. The 59-second video tells the story of a poor ginger cat that is laughed at by a white cat and her rich dog boyfriend. The artificial intelligence-generated clips place cute animals in human situations. Photo: handout However, the put-upon pussy works hard as a construction worker and window cleaner, becomes rich and shocks the mocking pair. The account attracted more than a million followers in less than two months. The person who runs the account, a Chinese man who goes by the name Ansheng, said he owns several AI-generated cat drama accounts, two of which have more than a million followers and several others with 500,000. Advertisement He said he could make between 1,200 and 2,000 yuan (US$170 and US$280) from one video with more than 10 million views, generating an income of 20,000 yuan (US$3,000) a month.

Thousands evacuated as Typhoon Wutip nears south China, state media report
Thousands evacuated as Typhoon Wutip nears south China, state media report

HKFP

time2 days ago

  • HKFP

Thousands evacuated as Typhoon Wutip nears south China, state media report

Chinese authorities on the southern island of Hainan have evacuated thousands of people, closed schools and halted rail services ahead of the expected landfall of Typhoon Wutip later on Friday, state media said. More than 16,000 people have been moved from 'construction sites, low-lying flood-prone areas and regions at risk of flash floods', Xinhua news agency said, while over 40,000 working on boats had been moved ashore. Footage from state broadcaster CCTV showed palm trees in Hainan waving violently in the wind, while other trees had toppled onto deserted roads as workers raced to clear the debris amid pouring rain. Other images published by CCTV showed China National Offshore Oil Corporation workers with backpacks and other luggage leaving a ship and waiting at the port to board buses. Wutip is expected to bring torrential rain exceeding 100 millimetres across six cities and counties, as well as winds of up to 63 miles per hour (101 kmh), Xinhua said. Hainan has stopped high-speed rail services and its southernmost city of Sanya closed schools and tourist sites, as well as suspending all flights at its airport. Wutip, the first typhoon to make landfall in the country this year, formed over the South China Sea on Wednesday, the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) said. It may make landfall again along the coast from western Guangdong to Guangxi on Saturday, maintaining 'severe tropical storm intensity' before turning northeastward and gradually weakening, the CMA said. Guangdong raised its emergency response level on Friday morning, preparing rescue vessels and more than 30 tugboats for potential emergencies, Xinhua said. More than 49,000 fishing boats in the province have returned to ports, with 10,000 of their crew members coming ashore, it said. China has endured spates of extreme weather events from searing heat and drought to downpours and floods for several summers running. The country is the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter but also a renewable energy powerhouse, seeking to cut carbon dioxide emissions to net zero by 2060. Torrential rains last August triggered by Typhoon Gaemi, which moved from the Philippines and Taiwan to make landfall in eastern China, killed at least 30 people and left dozens missing.

Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction
Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction

RTHK

time2 days ago

  • RTHK

Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction

Art lovers set for feast in rare Picasso auction Bernard Piguet with some of the ceramic plates and dishes made by Pablo Picasso. Photo: AFP A clutch of one-off and hitherto unseen ceramic plates and dishes by Pablo Picasso are going under the hammer in Geneva on June 19. Emblematic motifs from Picasso's artistic universe – pigeons, fish, a goat, a bull and a bird adorn the colourful plates and dishes. "It's a truly exceptional collection," said Bernard Piguet, director of the Piguet auction house in Geneva. "The plates and dishes we have here are real Picasso works. "These unique pieces belonged to Picasso's estate, and in the early 1980s, his heirs gave them to one of their friends." The close friend, a French art lover whose name has not been revealed, kept them until his death. His heirs have decided to put the ceramics up for sale. Made between 1947 and 1963 in the Madoura workshop in Vallauris on the southeast French coast, the ceramic artworks are being exhibited to the general public for the first time ahead of Thursday's auction. The seven pieces are being sold in separate lots. Two large platters decorated with pigeons are both expected to fetch between 30,000 and 50,000 Swiss francs. A third plate depicting three blue, pink, and brick-coloured fish on a white background, resembling a child's drawing, is estimated at 20,000 to 30,000 francs. A thin brick, titled "Head of a Bearded Man", and painted with ceramic pastels in yellow, white, garnet, brown, blue orange and green, has the same estimate. Glazed on a painted background in shades of grey, brown, and black, a terracotta plate depicting a goat's head bears the prestigious stamp "Original Picasso print" on the back. It is valued at 20,000-30,000 francs. The two others feature a bull on a hexagonal terracotta tile and a stylised bird on a plate painted in black and white were valued at at least 15,000 francs each. "It's a lot," Piguet said of the price. "But don't forget that these are works of art in their own right and unique pieces" without replicas. "If you step back from Picasso's work and his drawings, which are becoming practically unaffordable today, you have here original works by Picasso that command a reasonable estimate." Picasso created thousands of plates, platters, vases, pitchers and other earthenware utensils in the Madoura ceramics studio, run by the pottery couple Georges and Suzanne Ramie. After World War II, "Picasso was already an internationally-renowned artist", said Adeline Bisch Balerna, head of paintings and sculptures at Piguet. "He had already opened up a huge number of avenues for all artists; the great, well-known works had been created, and he was seeking new means of expression for his art." Picasso would visit the Madoura studio, meet Georges Ranie, and be "captivated by all the possibilities offered" by this new artistic outlet, she explained. Piguet is also auctioning two Picasso works "never before seen on the art market", from the same family friend's collection: "Serenade" (1919), an Indian ink and watercolour painting estimated at 20,000-30,000 francs, and the pencil drawing "Famille balzacienne" (1962), valued at 80,000-120,000 francs. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store