Inspired by the reform movements in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe,
student protests began to form in China in the spring of 1989. They made
Tiananmen square their central meeting place. Unsettled by this public
display of dissent, on 3 and 4 June the Chinese army violently crushed
the protests. There are no official figures for the number of victims.
2600 people are estimated to have been killed, and 7000 injured. The
photographer Xu Yong, aged 35 at the time, was among the survivors. He
captured the chaotic scenes on celluloid. In 2014, he published his
photos in a book that was banned by the board of censors. This new
edition, published by Verlag Kettler, makes the book available to the
public. Xu has not retouched the photographs. He reproduces the
negatives with inverted colours, which can only be deciphered once the
colour inversion function on mobile phones or tablets is activated.
Consequently, his work represents an eerie yet authentic perspective on
this watershed moment in Chinese history. Text in English and Chinese.