In the beginning was an old photograph of the artist at Lushan Mountain in 1988. There’s nothing of the real Lushan in the photograph, as it has been taken in a photo studio. Romance in Lushan
Three-year-old Lei Lei and his mother are sitting in a cardboard car in a reconstituted Chinese traditional landscape. Using black-and-white amateur photos from flea markets, postcards, propaganda images from the Mao era, screenshots from the film Romance on Lushan Mountain (the first romance film made after the Cultural Revolution, in 1980, a blockbuster that has been watched by 400 million Chinese and was played daily in a Lushan cinema),
and photos turned up in Web searches, Lei Lei creates a video collage mixing individual and collective memory.
The artist’s nostalgia serves as the starting point of a quest for truth regarding history, family, and personal identity. Which is more significant nowadays, the photograph as work of art or as archival image? Which is more important, the picture or the process of image production; the fact that an image is viewed or the context in which it is viewed? It is also a reflection on the image and the status of the author.
Discover more on Romance in Lushan on the artist’s website
Read our interview with Lei Lei
Lei Lei, “Romance in Lushan Cinema”, 2018
Lei Lei, “Romance in Lushan Cinema”, 2018
Lei Lei, “Romance in Lushan Cinema”, 2018