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Nike Air Chinese Earthquake Max

What with the massive and terrible Earthquake devasting vast swathes of China, it seemed to some bright sparks like the right time for an exhibition of the new pre-Olympic Nike gear in the 798 Art District in Beijing. Eri and I visited the gallery when we were in Beijing earlier in the year and managed to have a wander round the (then) building site of the gallery before any of the migrant workers toiling there for less money-a-week-than-a-pair-of-the-shoes-on-display could be bothered to get us out. Of the new pieces on display, I like the Air Max 90 / Air Free mashup. It's nicer than the previous Wildwood versions that have appeared before and also preserves the Air Max bubble in the rear. I may have to pick a pair up when they are released. I also like the Octogon Dunks as a concept, but probably wouldn't wear them. Click for more pictures:

Also, in a stunning effort to create the most self-serving and pointless way to help the victims of the Chinese Earthquake, Japanese "style guru", Hiroshi Fujiwara, has announced a collaborative effort with Nike; The Fragment Design x Nike Sichuan Panda Court Traditions (unbelievably, that is the actual name - homeless Pandas're more important than people then, Hiroshi?). They will (to allow the tiniest modicum of humanity to be assigned to Fujiwara) be auctioned off to raise money for the victims, but considering how long it will take to make the shoes and how (comparatively) little money they will raise, this seems like the astonishingly offensive attempt to gain publicity through the deaths of 10,000 people who would never be able to afford anything from Fragment Design at the best of times. Poor, poor show Mr Fujiwara.

Tiananmen Square Panorama

Last Saturday in Tiananmen Square, I took this 360 degree panorama. It was quite a cloudy day and I was using a graduated filter so it came out looking quite dark. If you click in the Quicktime VR below and move around, you should be able to control the camera and whatnot. As it's zoomed in, you should be able to get a better look at the cool cat in the suit posing for his friends, soldiers and other interesting stuff. But nothing as good as the guy in the suit...

Beijing Day Three

After staying directly opposite Beijing Railway Station, waking up in our courtyard hotel in a quiet Hutong backstreet is pretty idyllic. The clouds from yesterday have gone and the room in dipped in sunlight. We set off early and wander down the street to see if the Nike exhibition is open. It isn't. Instead, we buy some breakfast from a little hole-in-the-wall and eat as we walk to the nearest subway entrance. We take the train and then a taxi to the 798 art district.

The Dashanzi Art District (know as 798 after the name of the factory that sits in its centre), is an area of Chaoyang in the north east of the city. It used to be an area of factories and military buildings, but now the whole area has been turned into art galleries and cafes. It's a little bit like areas in New York or London, but totally art related. There is graffiti all over the walls of the buildings. Plants and weeds push up through the cracks in the pavements. Old industrial cogs lie around the streets and huge pipes, now rusty, form a web above.

We wandered round for a while, taking photos of everything, people, walls, graffiti, statues, buildings, trees, and then found a cafe. Thinking it was about 11, we had a nice coffee and cheesecake and then realised it was actually 1.30. Strange lunch. After, we walked round some more. Stairways lead to strange design offices and tiny galleries. Fasionista girls sat looking bored waiting for customers. We found a bright shop where Eri bought some notepads. We saw a massive fist in the ground, the size of a car.

The biggest gallery is the 798 Space, in the old factory that gives the area its name. The building is pretty stunning - clearly designed practically, it is nonetheless pretty aesthetically amazing. Old Maoist slogans are still painted in massive characters on the walls. Glass windows in the floor show old industrial equipment. Old drills and lathes still stand around the space, like exhibits. The only exhibition on when we were there was some artist's (whose name, I annoyingly can't remember) stamps. They were politically pretty radical, mainly about the Chinese population living on their knees, depicting scenes like migrant workers forced to sell pirate DVDs on the streets of the capital to feed their children. The were really interesting, but you couldn't help notice the irony of the largest gallery in the whole area being used only to display a few sheets of stamps.

We left the area to go back to the centre of the city and try to find the Pyongyang Store. According to Lonely Planet, it was a store in the centre where you could buy stuff (t-shirts and the like), fresh from the Axis of Evil. Unfortunately, it had only been an exhibition and was long since finished. It's annoying when guide books make mistakes like this, confusing an exhibition for a store seems like a relatively easy distinction, but whatever. Back to our hotel's area to try out a restaurant for lunch (about 4.30pm) that we had seen the day before.

Not having a clue what we were ordering, we got far too much, and I was a little worried by what the Cow Balls was. Quite tasty though. Salty. Next Eri went for a massage and I went to buy myself some new sneakers! Yeah! It seems recently that wherever I go in Asia I can find sneakers in my size, just not in midget Japanland. Oh well. Got a nice pair of new Dunk for a little cheaper than they would have been in Japan (if they even had my size).

Evening and we went off to Nanluogu Xiang, a really cool little hutong street near our hotel and had a lovely coffee in a nice cafe that Eri's guide book recommended. A very nice family run place that did an excellent apple pie. Wandering down the alleyway, with little shops and bars, beautiful wooden lattice work in the windows and walls, the light from the shops is the only thing lighting the street outside. The end of the trip, back to the hotel to pack up and get to bed for our 4.30am start. Must come back to Beijing soon...

Beijing Day Two

Wake up early thanks to the traffic and crowds of people at the station across the street. Wait for Eri to get ready - imperceptible changes in makeup. We have a rushed breakfast in the hostel and check out of our room. We wait in the lobby for our tour guide. He is a young guy, about 32, good English. He tells us we are the only ones on our tour today. Lucky. We walk down the street to meet the driver in the minibus. He is chain smoking in the street. Unbelievably, people smoke more here than in Japan. I realise that today marks one year since I quit smoking. Blimey.

Highway out of the centre of Beijing. The height of buildings seems to increase, as does the dust on the roads. This is where most people live. The tour guide tells us about house prices. They are less the Japan, and the apartments are bigger. It doesn't really surprise me. We talk about language. He tells me Chinese is easier than English. No tenses. I am unconvinced. The minibus passes the Olympic martial arts stadium. All of that for Judo and wrestling? A lot of money has been spent on homoeroticism.

We arrive at our first stop, a government-run jade factory. It seems that a stop (or three) at government arts and craft factories is par-for-the-course in these kind of cheap tours. The government make money on everything sold. Only a fraction goes to the workers that slave here everday and live in the blocks of flats just visible from the tour guest toilet.  A lot of Russians wander round the showroom buying the largest and most gaudy jade sculptures imaginable: a row of three jade galleons, each about 6ft tall, a 10ft jade vase, an elephant carrying a monkey on its back, life size. Astonishing. We don't buy anything.

Next we move to the Ming Tombs. Very beautiful. All the tombs are arranged according to Chinese (nonsense) theories of Feng Shui; facing water, mountains to the side and back to the wall. The emperor was buried, with many precious items, by his loyal bodyguards. A huge artificial hill was built and the dead emperor was placed in a chamber inside. The entrance was then sealed, forever, by the bodyguards who proceed to die of oxygen starvation beside him. The guide informs us that they were proud to do so. I can almost believe it. A film could be made about them, I think. The tombs are dotted throughout the valley, the people collecting tickets and working in the fields are apparantly descendants of these bodyguards. I am sceptical. We exit through the Ghost gate, back into the world of the living.

Back to our minibus. Eri goes to sleep. I talk to the tour guide about Jackie Chan and Jet Lee. He informs me that Jet Lee's Kung Fu is superior to Jackie's. Who would have known? The next stop is at a Cloisonné factory. Cloisonné is apparantly a traditional Chinese art form where a copper vase/cup/etc is inlaid with intricate patterns of copper wire. Enamel glaze is then overlaid into the gaps in the wire to colour-in the pattern. It's quite beautiful although our attention is distracted by the tour guide from the museum who insists on leaning in towards us with every sentence. He smells a little of natto. He gets very close.

Lunch. A traditional Chinese meal. I think that the tradition of which they speak is the tradition of the Chinese takeaway in the west rather than one native to China. It's all food that I have seen not a trace of since ordering from the local in W6. Very nice though, and because there are only two of us at our table, we get extra large helpings. Back to the bus.

Finally, the Great Wall. It is big. One might even say, Great. We start to walk up the section we are in, Badaling. We wonder where the cable car that the guide book mentions is? We walk a little further. It's really steep. We wonder where the slide down that the guide book mentions is? We walk near the top, very steep and incredibly windy and cold. We wonder where the massive Beijing Olympics 2008 sign that the guide book mentions is? Despite how cool it is, we feel a little dissappointed that we can't slide down from the top. When we get to the bottom, I notice that on a dustbin it says "Juyongguan Great Wall". It's not Badaling at all, but the less interesting section 10 kms of mountain road closer to Beijing. We get back into the coach. I am fuming but we decide not to mention anything until we get back to our hostel.

Quickly sprint past the Olympic Birds' Nest stadium. It's impressive, but they are going to have to do a serious job of cleaning the vast building site around it. The water cube swimming stadium is impressive too. Will be very interesting to see them on TV looking pristine in 6 months. We are taken to a tea house (tea leaf shop), where after a brief demonstration of tea-tasting, we are followed round the shop for ten minutes by the shop assistant who urges us to buy things. Thanks to the immense pressure, we buy nothing, despite Eri wanting to buy souvenirs for her family.

Outside the shop our tour guide informs us that we will have to take the subway back to our hostel as he has got a rush job to pick up VIPs at the airport. Like we aren't VIPs. Hmmm. I expect this might be the reason he took us to the nearest part of the Great Wall. He denies we missed Badaling. He says there was a cable-car, just one that I couldn't see. He fails to pay us the subway fare. Back at the hotel, I get into a huge argument with the tour desk, who refuse to refund our money despite our tour not going to the area we paid to go to and despite not being taken back to the hotel. After phoning our tour guide they start to deny that we were even in Juyongguan. Finally, after threatening to tell the Lonely Planet about their tours, we get our money back. I feel guilty. At one point they accused me of only kicking up a fuss to get a free tour. I am acutely aware of having more money that the average Chinese person, and I don't feel particularly great about it, but I refuse to pay to be ripped-off, especially when me and Eri are only here for 3 days and have no other chance to see the Wall. After looking on the internet later, I realise that we definitely did not go to Badaling, and it makes me feel a little better.

We move to our new hotel. 4 Banqiao Courtyard. It is an oasis of calm after the Youth Hostel. We are the only guests. It is a courtyard hotel in a hutong in the north of the centre of the city. A really nice neighbourhood. New subway lines. Really lovely family staff. An off-season discount means that the room is 500 yuan between us (about 40 quid). Amazingly cheap. After unpacking and relaxing we head to the Bar With No Name by the lake. It is cold, but the log fire warms us up. A long, tiring day. Apart from the massive argument, it was good fun. 798 tomorrow...

Beijing Day One

It was very tiring to fly at 6.30 and arrive in Beijing's new Olympic-ready airport at 9.30 and then at our Hotel at about 11pm. At least that's the only excuse I can think of for the map-reading error that lead Eri and I to wander almost all the way to Tiananmen Square in search of a district Eri wanted to visit that should've been just-a-little-further until we realised that the next page of the map was nothing to do with the previous one, and we had, in fact, been walking into the spine of the book for about 20 minutes. Still, it was a good way to wander through Beijing's pretty empty, wide dusty streets.

It's hard to overstate just how polluted Beijing is. The sky, on a cloudy day like the one we were greeted with on our first day, seems dark brown, and though this is partly due to the sand blowing from the Gobi, the pollution is more to blame. Things turn gray/black that should not be. Beijing seems vast after Tokyo. The communist planners lost nothing to their Moscovite comrades when designing the boulevards and public spaces of the city. They dwarf Tokyo's dense warren of streets. People gather. At the weekends, the migrant workers that have been the fuel for China's recent economic boom visit the free sites and congregate around the train station, ready to board trains back to distant villages. 80's eastern block suits rule here. The ubiquitous tricolour bags hold the hard-earned dreams of far-away families.

The crowds in Tiananmen Square. Everyone is watching everyone else. Mao watches over all. People try to sell watches and flags under his nose. Through a gate that would have meant death 100 years ago. A massive square. Another gate. People try to sell tickets that are not needed. Another gateway and then another vast square. Artificial streams. Bridges. One for the Emperor, flanked on either side by one for his soldiers and one for the politicians. Tour groups flow through, washing up at pre-agreed viewpoints and exhibits. Flashes in No-Flash-Photography areas. Americans can be overheard asking stupid questions "Where did they film Crouching Tiger?", "What's to eat around here anyway?". The usual concerns of the world leaders, Bread & Circuses. A small child is beautiful and poses like a professional.

A garden at the rear of the forbidden city. A man uses a spike at the end of a long pole to fish notes from the frozen water of an imperial pond. People watch. Trees, bent in old age are held up by arboreal canes. Coffee. Cake sticks. Leaving the Forbidden City. Walking through a Hutong. People live here. Bicycles, old men playing cards. No mahjong now that poker has arrived. Dirt and rubbish. Shirts that should have been thrown away are hanging to dry. Feet starting to hurt. Turn a few more corners. The Beijing Department Store. Communism in action. The night market isn't open. Not surprising, it's 4 pm. Go for lunch. Noodles, Gyoza - take that teachers at school in Japan. Spices. Walking through a (really quite touristy - but them who cares) market. Eating miniature toffee apples and toffee strawberries. Wander through a massive department stall. Marc Jacobs, Armani, Vuitton, the new cadre.

Home to change, book a tour and head back out. The subway is crowded, and old. Many people smell of piss. Semi-perms on beautiful girls. Night market at night this time. The food (if it can be called that) is amazing. Some of it isn't dead yet. It's not revolting. Interesting. Foreigners, experimenting with facial hair are the only ones that seem to be eating the stranger stuff. Eri won't let me. I'm glad. Subway, take away, shower, brownish water, chocolate, teeth, bed.