Not on display

We don’t have an image of this object online yet.

More about images

V&A Images may have a photograph that we can’t show online, but it may be possible to supply one to you. Email us at vaimages@vam.ac.uk for guidance about fees and timescales, quoting the accession number: CD.1-2014

Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen

Book
2013 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen, 2013 collected on the occasion of the exhibition V&A in Shenzhen: Rapid Response Collecting, staged at the 5th Bi-city Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture, The Value Factory, Shenzhen.

This book is intended to document and showcase a completely different aspect of a city best known across the world for its industrial output. This is the first book in China to document the flora and fauna of a major Chinese metropolis and the author was invited to write a weekly column for the Jing Bao newspaper to mark its publication.

Shenzhen, China’s first special Economic Zone is located at the tip of the Pearl River Delta. The city grew from a modest fishing town into a vast, sprawling metropolis of more than fifteen million in just thirty-five years, through manufacturing, trade and relentless commercial energy. Today Shenzhen is the world’s third busiest container port, with a population with an average age of the less than thirty and almost entirely composed of recent migrants.

The invitation to participate in the Bi-City Biennale enabled the museum to engage with this fast-changing city and to road test the recently introduced Rapid Response Collecting strand. The museum asked more than sixty people in Shenzhen to propose a design object that told a story about their city and the result was an exhibition of twenty-three things and twenty-three stories about the place. By exhibiting everyday objects, the show placed centre stage the realities of urban life, of industry and of commercial and social change.

Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen was suggested by the graphic designer of the book Han Zhanning. The book details the ecology of Shenzhen and the surrounding landscape, what Han Zhanning describes as ‘the natural ecosystem of the city’. Behind the book is a desire to shift perceptions of Shenzhen from being just a place of dirty industry, to an awareness of the maturing city’s landscape, flora and fauna.

The Shenzhen exhibition was the first opportunity to test Rapid Response Collecting. This new approach to collecting is intended to make museum collecting more responsive to global events, and to situate design in immediate relation to moments of political or social change. The museum opened its own space dedicated to Rapid Response Collecting in July 2014.

Object details

Category
Object type
TitleNotes of Landscape in Shenzhen (published title)
Materials and techniques
Paper
Brief description
Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen, Nan Zhao Xu, Shenzhen Press Group Publishing, 2013
Physical description
Book Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen, dust cover of book has illustrations of a kingfisher in the centre, there are illustrations of plantlife and other birds and insects. The jacket reads Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen and A new journey of natural wanders of Shenzhen.
Dimensions
  • Height: 270mm (Open dimensions at 45°)
  • Width: 280mm (Open dimensions at 45°)
  • Depth: 250mm (Open dimensions at 45°)
  • Height: 248mm
  • Open width: 350mm
Gallery label
(2013)
Nan Zhaoxu’s remarkable book Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen shows a completely different aspect of a city best known across the world for its industrial output. The ecology of Shenzhen and the surrounding landscape is plotted here, what graphic designer of the book Han Zhanning describes as ‘the natural ecosystem of the city’. Behind this book is a desire to shift perceptions of Shenzhen from being just a place of dirty industry, to an awareness of the maturing city’s landscape, flora and fauna.
Suggested by Han Zhanning, graphic designer
(2013)
Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen
Written by Nan Zhaoxu, 2013
This is the first book in China to document the flora and fauna of a major Chinese metropolis and the author has been invited to write a weekly column for Jing Bao newspaper to mark its publication.
Credit line
Given by Han Zhanning
Summary
Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen, 2013 collected on the occasion of the exhibition V&A in Shenzhen: Rapid Response Collecting, staged at the 5th Bi-city Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture, The Value Factory, Shenzhen.

This book is intended to document and showcase a completely different aspect of a city best known across the world for its industrial output. This is the first book in China to document the flora and fauna of a major Chinese metropolis and the author was invited to write a weekly column for the Jing Bao newspaper to mark its publication.

Shenzhen, China’s first special Economic Zone is located at the tip of the Pearl River Delta. The city grew from a modest fishing town into a vast, sprawling metropolis of more than fifteen million in just thirty-five years, through manufacturing, trade and relentless commercial energy. Today Shenzhen is the world’s third busiest container port, with a population with an average age of the less than thirty and almost entirely composed of recent migrants.

The invitation to participate in the Bi-City Biennale enabled the museum to engage with this fast-changing city and to road test the recently introduced Rapid Response Collecting strand. The museum asked more than sixty people in Shenzhen to propose a design object that told a story about their city and the result was an exhibition of twenty-three things and twenty-three stories about the place. By exhibiting everyday objects, the show placed centre stage the realities of urban life, of industry and of commercial and social change.

Notes of Landscape in Shenzhen was suggested by the graphic designer of the book Han Zhanning. The book details the ecology of Shenzhen and the surrounding landscape, what Han Zhanning describes as ‘the natural ecosystem of the city’. Behind the book is a desire to shift perceptions of Shenzhen from being just a place of dirty industry, to an awareness of the maturing city’s landscape, flora and fauna.

The Shenzhen exhibition was the first opportunity to test Rapid Response Collecting. This new approach to collecting is intended to make museum collecting more responsive to global events, and to situate design in immediate relation to moments of political or social change. The museum opened its own space dedicated to Rapid Response Collecting in July 2014.

Collection
Accession number
CD.1-2014

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdFebruary 17, 2014
Record URL
Download as: JSON