Family Stuff

  • Dates
    2003 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Locations United States, Thailand, China, Switzerland

My long term project series has included 160 works so far from 2003 till now and it is still on-going. Robert Frank wrote to me in 2012: “Thank you for showing your photographs, your work is an open window to look at China”.

Family Stuff

I have been making the "Family Stuff" series for 21 years, which now includes 160 photographs. I gather a family’s belongings from different spaces in the home and arrange them in one place to take a photograph with the family members. Most of these photos are taken outdoors, with the home as the background. Ninety percent of my previous works were shot in China during a time of rapid economic development, modernization and globalization. I used this method of staged photographs to record history. In the photos, a household’s real interior space is briefly exposed in an external space; also can be seen are environment changes, urban expansion, technological advancements and shifts in people's lifestyles. Through static documentation of the above, I create a dynamic social panorama.

In 2023, I started photographing American families. The family is the smallest unit that forms society, and many such units make up this society. I continue to use the "Family Stuff" series to reflect the internal structure and diversity of contemporary American society. I have observed that among American families, whether they live in big cities or small townships, there isn't much difference in their basic material living standards. Therefore, I pay more attention to showcasing their cultural and spiritual life. I spend a significant amount of time preparing for each photo, getting to know the story of the subjects, visiting their rooms, contemplating the concept of the shoot, and carefully selecting the items for display. The concepts of these works cover the lifestyle of native-born Americans, immigrants' nostalgia for their homeland, as well as themes of love, work, identity, gender and the passage of time. Each material object is carefully chosen to reflect the subject’s interests and aspirations. I move these items and arrange them in overlapping frames, visually enhancing the familiar scenes and highlighting the current life status, beliefs and emotional memories of the family or individual. Through a single photograph, I depict both their external reality and their inner world. The images help viewers understand these families’ stories and often provoke contemplation.

I am thankful to those who were willing to face my camera, show their belongings and share their family stories.