Photos show how it was - and how it has changed
By Tan Yingzi (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-12-18 07:44

Photos show how it was - and how it has changed

Students from Beijing Nationality University pose for pictures at a photo exhibition in the capital city's Wangfujing area yesterday. The show features about 800 photos taken across the country during the past three decades to highlight the major changes China has gone through since 1978. [China Daily]

It was freezing and windy yesterday but visitors to the Beijing downtown area did not seem to be seeking the warmth of Wangfujing's famed malls.

 Full Coverage:Photos show how it was - and how it has changed

30 Years of Reforms

Related readings:
Photos show how it was - and how it has changedPhoto exhibition marks changes
Photos show how it was - and how it has changedOn population scale of social development
Photos show how it was - and how it has changedThree amazing decades
Photos show how it was - and how it has changed
The Way We Were
Photos show how it was - and how it has changedHow 30 years changed my view of the world
Photos show how it was - and how it has changedGuangdong pays tribute to reformPhotos show how it was - and how it has changedMedia more open after reform

Their interest was focused outdoors - on a 200-m long photo exhibition featuring 800 pictures to mark the 30th anniversary of China's reform and opening up.

They had plenty to attract their attention: Images from the last three decades; and were just as keen to photograph the photos, which encapsulate the startling changes in people's lives.

Cao Xufang, a 57-year-old migrant worker, seemed lost as he contemplated life in the 1970s reflected in a black-and-white photo.

The driver of a State-owned food company got laid off in 1992; and like many other people in the rural areas,left to work in the capital.

"Of course our life is much better now," Cao told China Daily. "I have been working almost everywhere in Beijing and seen the rapid growth in suburban areas such as Shunyi and Tongzhou."

Xu Dongdong was born just five years before 1978 and has a clear memory of what life was like 30 years ago.

"When I was little, we could not afford to eat rice; only corn cakes," the doctor from Heilongjiang province said.

The generation born after the 1980s also found the photos captivating. Du Xiaomin, a 22-year-old saleswoman who was there with a friend, said: "Our life cannot be better When I was a child, I used to feel excited for days after eating out at KFC. But now KFC is just like a canteen to me."