Q&A with China Photographer & Backpacker Savant Tom Carter

For the portraits, it just takes a sincere interest in your subjects to get that close. I don’t believe in hiding behind a zoom lens; I was actually as near to all those people as you see in the pictures, sometimes just inches away. The candid life shots, which comprise a good third of the book, were actually more of a challenge. As a foreigner walking down the street in China, all activity stops the moment you are seen, so it’s tricky to photograph life before life stops to stare at you.
I don’t believe any book can capture the true spirit of a country with only pictures of places. Sure, a photo of a sunset over the Great Wall is nice, but what do you really learn from it? I wanted to show the people, and dispel the stereotype of the Chinese as a homogeneous single nationality.
For example, for the three single frames of coal miners with soot-covered faces that appear in this book, I and my Chinese travelling companion had to spend several days in the mountains of South Shanxi before we were able to sneak into a coal mine, grab a few shots then get the hell out before being caught. Mining is one of the most dangerous and controversial occupations in China, and is entirely off limits to journalists. Some of my best photos are hit-and-run like that.
I have no desire to make something palatable, even if it means not getting on Getty. On the other hand, any of my photos that are considered beautiful I credit entirely to my subjects. They are the ones who deserve the compliments.
China expert and photojournalist Tom Carter spent 2 years backpacking to all 33 provinces in China to compile the photographs in his groundbreaking, 600-page tribute CHINA: Portrait of a People, the most comprehensive book of photography on modern China ever published by a single author, available directly from Blacksmith Books.
CHINA: Portrait of a People, by Tom Carter
Genre: Travel / Photography / Art / China
ISBN: 978-988-99799-42
Size: 15cm x 15cm, soft cover, 640 pages, 800 full color images, with maps of each province
Published: Summer 2008 by Blacksmith Books, Hong Kong, in association with Haven Books
Price: US$35.95
Also for sale: Tom's super cool China postcards.
Reviews:
China Portrait of a People
China Portrait of a People
China Portrait of a People
China Portrait of a People
China Portrait of a People
China Portrait of a People
Tom Carter on TV Thomas Carter on TV Photography Books video China Village video China Backpacker blog China Travel blog China Portrait of a Country review China Portrait review