🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Jocko Weyland - Geomancy

Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6
Product image 7
Product image 8

Jocko Weyland - Geomancy

Jocko Weyland - Geomancy

The photographs in Geomancy were taken from October 2007 to November 2008, using an Olympus Stylus with color film. I had left New York for Beijing, where I lived on Xindong Lu, sometimes tutored English, and occasionally wrote a column called ā€œRaw Chinaā€ for Vice. The city embodied an almost too good to be true clichĆ©d ā€œothernessā€ with an overabundance of literally foreign colors, textures, shapes, and structures. Put another way, China, and Beijing in particular, is extremely photogenic. The title comes from a reference to the Forbidden City in the accompanying story ā€œThe First Bus of Beijingā€ about riding the No. 1 bus. It couldn’t be more appropriate, as Geomancy is a concept taken very seriously in China that means ā€œthe art of placing or arranging buildings or other sites auspiciously.ā€ Whether that goal is attained or not is a matter open to interpretation. This selection is one person’s photographic odyssey into the sites, roads, byways and alleys, the in-between spaces, the objects and flora, their positioning and relationships to each other, that made greater Beijing a fascinating, bewildering, and close to overwhelming place.

- Jocko Weyland

Published by Dashwood Books (New York City).

96 pages, 12 x 18 cm, softcover, Dashwood Books (New York City).Ā 

$45.70
Jocko Weyland - Geomancy—
$45.70

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

The photographs in Geomancy were taken from October 2007 to November 2008, using an Olympus Stylus with color film. I had left New York for Beijing, where I lived on Xindong Lu, sometimes tutored English, and occasionally wrote a column called ā€œRaw Chinaā€ for Vice. The city embodied an almost too good to be true clichĆ©d ā€œothernessā€ with an overabundance of literally foreign colors, textures, shapes, and structures. Put another way, China, and Beijing in particular, is extremely photogenic. The title comes from a reference to the Forbidden City in the accompanying story ā€œThe First Bus of Beijingā€ about riding the No. 1 bus. It couldn’t be more appropriate, as Geomancy is a concept taken very seriously in China that means ā€œthe art of placing or arranging buildings or other sites auspiciously.ā€ Whether that goal is attained or not is a matter open to interpretation. This selection is one person’s photographic odyssey into the sites, roads, byways and alleys, the in-between spaces, the objects and flora, their positioning and relationships to each other, that made greater Beijing a fascinating, bewildering, and close to overwhelming place.

- Jocko Weyland

Published by Dashwood Books (New York City).

96 pages, 12 x 18 cm, softcover, Dashwood Books (New York City).Ā