要以my city旅游写一篇英语作文

Newman Huo

WHAT is Shenzhen like in the eyes of professional photographers?

The exhibit “My City, My Hometown” at the Shenzhen Art Museum gives a range of answers. The exhibition runs through Sunday.

The show features more than 100 works by seven Shenzhen-based photographers and photojournalists, Yu Haibo, Zhang Xinmin, Jia Yuchuan, Ya Niu, Wang Fan, Luo Kaixing and Yang Junpo.

Zhang Xinmin, photojournalist with the community newspaper Shekou News, has been focusing on rural migrants from inland provinces for the past 15 years.

In 1989, one year after he moved from Sichuan Province to Shenzhen, Zhang lost his first job in the city.

Zhang said the experience motivated him to photograph rural migrants with whom he believed he shared the same background and destiny.

During the 1997 Chinese New Year holidays, Zhang shot a series of photographs of more than 1,800 migrant workers living in a row of 93 tiny ramshackle shanties in Wanfeng Village, Bao’an District.

Capturing a very different Shenzhen, Yu Haibo, photojournalist with the Shenzhen Economic Daily, is showing “The Impulse to Music of Shenzhen Youth.” The photographs won the gold prize for the Arts and Entertainment News (Series) in the first China International Press Photo Contest (CHIPP).

Taken in April 2004, Yu’s photographs show a concert featuring 12 bands from the city. Yu said he had been photographing these local bands for six years, spending weekends and holidays with them, experiencing their joys and sorrows.

Jia Yuchuan, photojournalist with the Daily Sunshine, shows his controversial photographs of a group of transsexuals living in Shenzhen.

Luo Kaixing took a very different approach to Shenzhen. As a photographer working for a local real-estate advertising company, Luo depicts his feelings of living in a burgeoning city of migrants by turning away from the city with a series of black and white landscape photographs