Exhibit | February 5, 2020

First Exhibition of Nineteenth-Century Chinese Photographer Lai Fong Opens in Ithaca

Courtesy of the Loewentheil Collection

Lai Fong's Chinese Junks, Hong Kong. 1870s.

Ithaca, NY — Rare early photographs of China by the Chinese photographer Lai Fong, from the Loewentheil Photography of China Collection, will be exhibited for the first time at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University.

The landmark exhibition, Lai Fong (c.1839–1890): Photographer of China presents nearly 50 Lai Fong photographs made in the 1870s and 1880s of China. The photographs have been selected from the renowned Loewentheil Collection, which includes more than 21,000 early photographs of China. The exhibition features magnificent views of a rapidly growing Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Beijing, Shanghai, Fuzhou, and Xiamen, and important early portraits of the diverse people of late Qing Dynasty China.

The leading Chinese photographer of the 19th century, Lai likely began his photographic career in Hong Kong in 1859. His professional studio, Afong opened in 1870 and operated for nearly a century. Lai established and ran his studio for decades until his death when he passed the studio on to his son and daughter in-law. Its artistic legacy, grounded in traditional Chinese art, influenced generations of photographers including contemporary Chinese image-makers.

黎芳 Lai Fong (c.1839–1890): Photographer of China presents a unique glimpse of China’s rich past through these early photographic masterpieces depicting the people, landscapes, cities, architecture, monuments and culture of China. This unprecedented exhibition provides a rare opportunity to see China and its people through the lens of the Chinese master photographer at the historical moment before the epochal transformations of the 20th century.

黎芳 Lai Fong (c.1839–1890): Photographer of China runs from 6 February 2020 to 14 June 2020. Admission is free.

This exhibition was curated by Kate Addleman-Frankel and Stacey Lambrow. Kate Addleman-Frankel, the Gary and Ellen Davis Curator of Photography at the Johnson Stacey Lambrow, Curator of the Loewentheil Photography of China Collection. It is supported in part by the Helen and Robert J. Appel Exhibition Endowment.

In addition to the exhibition in the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Lai Fong and Thomas Child: Photographs of Late Qing Dynasty Chinese Street Life will be held in the Rotunda Gallery in the Rare and Manuscript Collection at Cornell University Libraries, Ithaca, New York, February 6 - April 18, 2020.

Lai Fong and Thomas Child: Photographs of Late Qing Dynasty Chinese Street Life is the first exhibition devoted to 19th-century photographs of street life in Chinese cities. The show will feature images of the streets of Beijing and Hong Kong by the 19th-century master photographers Lai Fong and Thomas Child. Street photography has evolved as a unique and enduring art form since photography’s invention in the second half of the 19th century. Both Lai Fong and Thomas Child created systematic photographic portfolios of the Chinese cities in which they lived and worked. Each of their portfolios, most often collected and arranged in albums, contained some of the earliest photographs of Chinese street scenes. The photographs made by Lai Fong and Thomas Child of Beijing and Hong Kong are at once works of art and fascinating glimpses of everyday life for people living in 19th-century China
 
Jacob Loewentheil curated the concurrent Library exhibition, Lai Fong and Thomas Child: Photographs of Late Qing Dynasty Chinese Street Life, on view at Cornell’s Carl A. Kroch Library from February 7 to April 17, 2020.

About the Stephan Loewentheil China Photography Collection

The Stephan Loewentheil China Photography Collection of more than 21,000 photographs, based in New York, is the largest holding of historical photographs of China in private hands. For more information on the collection go to www.loewentheilcollection.com