"Photogenic Olympians" - the people and the city in Beijing Olympics 2008
"Olympians are the product of the Movement, and to get them to the stadiums, pools andplaying fields, it takes the actions of legions of people who might not be Olympians."
Bill Toomey, 1968 Olympic decathlon champion
The Beijing Olympic in the summer of 2008 is unarguably the largest Olympic everhappened, in terms of the number of people or money involved, in the history of themodern Olympic. Many may still remember its spectacular and spellbinding openingceremony, or the problematic torch relay. And it's also be a special one. For the Chinesegovernment, the Olympic events, as well as the medals won by Chinese athletes, were agreat source of national pride. It's a way for general publics to channel their patriotism, orone may say, recovered the loss of the Sichuan Earthquake which happened monthsbefore the game.
The series portraits of citizens from different places of China were done outside thevenues of the games. Many of them just couldnʼt afford tickets of the game, they just camethere and hang around. They treated the venues which were built with billions of dollars,notably Beijing National Stadium, a.k.a. "Bird's Nest" and Beijing National Aquatics Centera.k.a. "Water Cube, as other historical monuments in Beijing. Or as I mentioned above,they came there for the feeling of "national pride". These venues together with the nearlyecstasy atmosphere in beijing city, worked like a magnet to draw huge number of peoplefrom different provinces of China to the capital city. They behave in the same collectivemanner, they show their pride as if the state built the whole Olympic for them. However inreality they were not being a part of it and they didnʼt have a single complaint.
At the same time the cityscape of Beijing spoke for itself. While there were massive effortsto facelift the city, there is hardly a harmony between the space and the people itself. Thisambiguous relation sounds like telling the other side of the story in which the propagandanever covers. I may say the Chinese people themselves are the real "Olympians",investing their hopes on the event, and they know they have little chance to be rewarded.
Dustin Shum
Jan, 2009