Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Ryan Pyle Blog: BBC.com Wine in China


Hello.

I've put together a few stories about Wine in China over the last few years and today the BBC ran a small series of the work. See below.

The Chinese can drink with the best of them, a fact to which western beer producers have known for decades. But apart from local "rice wines" and beer, a taste for fine wine is building slowly, and both customers and investors are answering the call. As the New York Times stated back in 2008, China could, within a decade, become the "next Chile"; a destination for affordable and quality wine production. As wages rise and more and more Chinese look to acquire the fixings of the the upper class and those associated with a luxurious lifestyle, they will consume finer wines, many of which could be home grown in the future. While much of the landscape of wine growing in China is government run through State Owned Enterprises, there has been an opening for foreign investors and joint ventures. The landscape is littered by privately owned and funded wineries; and among them one of the industry leaders is the Hong Kong based Grace Vineyards who run and operate a handful of vineyards in China; but whose largest operation is the one I visited in Shanxi province.

My production of this work was a truely remarkable experience. The grape vineyards in Shanxi were well maintained and well tended to, the harvasting season was exciting and full of rich visual moments. I think what's important about Grace Vineyards is that they've full embraced the local community, which was obviously a stated goal by the government when considering this type of foreign investment in the region. The Vineyard works with local farmers for maintaining and harvesting, the grape pickers, and women sorted grapes are all hired from nearby villages and towns. It's not only providing an income and training for those involved but it's laying the foundations for future generations of wine development in the region. I wonder what Italian red wine tasted like after only the fifth year in production? That's where much of China is today in production.

In Shanghai there is a real focus on consumption and education. And this is where foreign brands dominate, as schools and importers are setting up shop in an effort to educate the upper reaches of society on the wines of the world. Will China's wine drinking masses follow suit? That's anyone's guess. Is there room for the wine industry to grow? Absolutely, but much of the initial growth is because the industry has started from scratch. Sustainable development will only come in time. Many are watching to see if this industry takes shape to become a global player. Only time will tell. Ryan Pyle - Shanghai, China.

Click here for the BBC LINK.

--
Ryan Pyle
Photographer
ryan@ryanpyle.com
Website: www.ryanpyle.com
Archive: http://archive.ryanpyle.com
_______________________________________

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Ryan Pyle Blog: Uzbek Photographer Jailed

Hello.

Well, most of us photographers out there know that things can be tough, really tough. But few of us ever are at risk from our home governments for documenting the lives of our common citizens.

Umida Akhmedova has been sentenced to jail for three years for showing her common countrymen as being backwards and poor. Yes, this is a shocking judgement; and one that only shows the true backwards way of thinking that exists within the government itself. Painful. Original story is below:

Copywrite BBC.com
Original LINK
___________________________
Uzbek photographer found guilty
A prominent photographer and film-maker in Uzbekistan has been found guilty of slandering the nation through her work.

Umida Akhmedova had been facing up to three years in prison for a series of photos and a film portraying people in Uzbekistan as backward and poor.

But after announcing the guilty verdict, the judge said the photographer would automatically be pardoned under an amnesty.

Ms Akhmedova said she would still appeal against the conviction.

Her work, funded by the Swiss embassy in Tashkent, focused on women's rights.

Last month the Uzbek government decided to prosecute the photographer for an album of work, published in 2007, depicting rural life scenes in Uzbekistan, and for a documentary film.

The film, The Burden of Virginity, focused on the experiences of young women immediately before and after marriage.

But a panel of experts appointed by the government ruled that her work would damage Uzbekistan's spiritual values.

'Aesthetic demands'

An exhausted-looking Ms Akhmedova, 54, had pleaded not guilty to all charges.

"I feel bad. I am a creative person, and sitting in this courtroom like a criminal is very unpleasant," she told AFP.

"I feel like I am the one being slandered," she added.

Ms Akhmedova put the blame for the trial not on the government, but on the expert panel it had convened to analyse her work.

The panel concluded in its report that the "photo album does not conform to aesthetic demands", a throwback to Soviet jargon, and that it would damage the country's "spiritual values".

Activists say the government uses its courts to silence critical voices.

'Chilling precedent'

The government denies the accusations and defends its tough policing policies as necessary to combat Islamist groups.

The trial sets a chilling precedent for artists, said Surat Ikramov, head of the Initiative Group of Independent Human Rights Defenders of Uzbekistan.

Analysts said Uzbekistan believes it can afford to ignore criticism of its handling of domestic issues given its strategic location on the northern border of Afghanistan.

It had been trying to repair ties with the United States and the European Union damaged by its brutal handling of an uprising in the city of Andizhan in 2005.
___________________________

--
Ryan Pyle
Photographer
ryan@ryanpyle.com
Website: www.ryanpyle.com
Archive: http://archive.ryanpyle.com
_______________________________________

Friday, January 15, 2010

Ryan Pyle Blog: BBC News / 20 Years in Pictures


Hello.

How vain are you? How often to do you "Google" your name? Honestly?

Sadly, I do it often. My reasoning might surprise you. I don't get any emotional boost from seeing how many google pages my name appears in; but I've found it an excellent way to see how my work is being used online. So each month I spend a bit of time, less than an hour, trolling through websites in which my name or pictures appear.

Often I am pleasantly surprised. For example Corbis put together a 12 picture slide show of the most commanding news photographs from the last 20 years in September 2009. The BBC News website ran the slide show and I'm very honored that one of my images from the Sichuan Earthquake in 2008 was included. Sadly I only figured it out by doing a Google search for my name in late December.

BBC News 20 Years of Photographs

The image include, see above, is of a woman who had lost her son in the collapse of a Middle School in Juyuan, Sichuan; about an hours drive from the provincial capital city of Chengdu. That shot was one of the toughest I've ever taken. The woman was hysterical and the moment was emotional. Some have said that images like this one are a gross violation of privacy, but I feel my images, and others like it, are an important documentation of history. The Chinese government has never fully answered questions about why schools collapsed in such great numbers. Families have been torn apart from shoddy construction, and sadly there is no one honest enough to take the blame or even admit that corruption in the construction of these schools was widely to blame. I was there, I was able to bend rebar (the steel wires that hold concrete in place) with my bare hands; clearly no match for a strong earthquake.

--
Ryan Pyle
Photographer
ryan@ryanpyle.com
Website: www.ryanpyle.com
Archive: http://archive.ryanpyle.com
_______________________________________

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Ryan Pyle Blog: Wild China

Hello,

I just wanted to write a quick note about a documentary I just watched, it's called WILD CHINA.

It's a BBC produced wild life documentary all about China, focusing not only on wild life but the relationship that wild life has with the modern and traditional lifestyles that exist in China.

Having lived in China since 2001 I can honestly say that I was blown away by the documentary. Not only did they focus on a few locations and traditions that I hadn't heard of before, they also presented the work in a very slick, objective style.

The camera work is really remarkable and the editing is clean and crisp. I think there are 4 parts in all, each is one hour long and well worth the time. Be sure to check it out. You won't be disappointed.

--
Ryan Pyle
Photographer
ryan@ryanpyle.com
Website: www.ryanpyle.com
Archive: http://archive.ryanpyle.com
_______________________________________

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Ryan Pyle Blog: How a Story Breaks in China by BBC

Hello,

I wanted to point to this excellent blog by James Reynolds, of the BBC, about how a story breaks in China. An excellent insight to journalism in China. The breaking story in question is in regards to a van that caught fire with three men in it today in Beijing near Tiananmen Square, Check the STORY HERE.

--
Ryan Pyle
Photographer
ryan@ryanpyle.com
Website: www.ryanpyle.com
Archive: http://archive.ryanpyle.com
_______________________________________