Thomas Sauvin : Silvermine

Thomas Sauvin is a French photography collector and editor who lives in Beijing. Since 2006 he exclusively works as a consultant for the UK-based Archive of Modern Conflict, an independent archive and publisher, for whom he collects Chinese works, from contemporary photography to period publications to anonymous photography. Sauvin has had exhibitions of his work, and published through Archive of Modern Conflict.

China –

Silvermine is a set of five photo albums each containing 20 prints. The negatives were salvaged from a recycling plant on the edge of Beijing, where they had been sent to be filtered for their silver nitrate content. Between 2009 and 2013, Beijing-based collector Thomas Sauvin amassed, archived and edited more than half a million negatives destined for destruction.

• Nominated for Best Photobook 2013 at the 6th International Fotobook Festival, Kassel. 
• Shortlisted for the Paris Photo Aperture Foundation First Photobook Award 2013. 
• Nominated for the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2014

The Silvermine albums offer a unique photographic portrait of the Chinese capital and the lives of its inhabitants covering a period of 20 years – from 1985, when silver film came into widespread use in China, to 2005 when digital photography came to the fore. In these souvenir snapshots taken by anonymous and ordinary Chinese people, we are witnessing the birth of post-socialist China.

Each album focuses on a different theme:

Blue album: TVs and Fridges

Green album: One and Two

Orange album: Marilyn and Ronald

Pink album: Party and Transvestites

Yellow album: Leisure and Work

Silvermine, edited by Thomas Sauvin.

ISBN 978-0-9570490-1-7.

Five albums each containing 20 prints, 11 x 7.7cm.

Photography and Published June 2013 in a limited edition of 200.

Price -£150.00

Images©François Trézin

Photography

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