Blacksmith Books
BOOK: Chungking Mansions: Photographs from Hong Kong’s last ghetto
BOOK: Chungking Mansions: Photographs from Hong Kong’s last ghetto
Sheung Wan
2-12 Queen's Road West
Unit 1005, Arion Commercial Centre
Sheung Wan
Hong Kong Island Hong Kong SAR
Squatting amid the luxury hotels and malls of modern Kowloon, Chungking Mansions resembles the dirty vent of a giant subterranean machine. This Hong Kong landmark is a hotbed of criminality and home to pimps, hookers, thieves and drug pushers. The five 17-storey towers also offer the city’s last low-rent refuge for asylum seekers and immigrants coming to start a new life. Nepalese guesthouse owners rent out rooms to Bangladeshi workers, and Pakistanis sell mobile phones to Nigerian traders who hire Indian cargo companies to ship them home. Food stalls fill the air with the savoury aromas of international cuisine, and more than 200 guesthouses, as well as two floors of shops selling black-market, counterfeit and bargain goods, establish this unique place as a global hub of trade and multiculturalism.
In 2009, shortly after a Canadian tourist disappeared from Chungking Mansions without a trace, photographer Nana Chen began wandering the corridors. Using her camera as a guide, she discovered the Chungking Mansions not visible to the naked eye: the beating pulse that gives this notorious destination its hypnotic appeal. With compassion and courage, Chen sought to craft a portrait of Hong Kong’s last ghetto and its inhabitants before its vibrant character is erased forever by the inevitable march of progress.
“Nana Chen is a magnificent photographer who captures the personalities of her subjects brilliantly.” – Ruaridh Nicoll, Editor, Observer Magazine
Details
- Pages: 96
- Binding: Paperback
- Illustration: Approximately 70 colour photographs