The Hong Kong Photographer

Price: $62.00
Pre-order Only

HK311M

King & Country

Not yet Released - expected in mid to late-July.

This latest addition to the ‘Streets’ series portrays a young Hong Kong photographer going about his business. Although dressed in the simple but practical Chinese fashion of the day he still wears his hair long in a ‘queue’. This featured a long braid of hair at the back of the head while the top of the scalp is shaved back.
As a nod to modernity this young Hong Kong photographer is also wearing a Western-style ‘Straw Boater’. These hats were a semi-formal summer hat for men and were popular from the late 19th century until the early 20th century. They first arrived in China and Hong Kong on the heads of Westerners as a lighter alternative to the ‘Solar Topee’ or sun helmet. While in some Asian societies the ‘Solar Topee’ was seen as representing foreign colonialism the more modern ‘boater’ was more acceptable and more widely worn by Asians of all classes.
Here our Hong Kong photographer is about to take a photo with his glass plate camera mounted on a simple wooden tripod.
These vintage, large-format cameras used a coated sheet of glass as the negative or positive instead of flexible film. The entire process required photographers to coat, sensitize, expose and develop the plate – a highly tactile process much-prized today for its exceptional detail and unique aesthetic.
On the ground, at his feet, is a large travelling box containing additional glass plates and a selection of chemicals to be utilized in this process.