Sanne De Wilde: The Dwarf Empire

Sanne De Wilde (Belgium, 1987) explores the medium of photography and effectuates this in regards to subjects related to the role genetics, identity and perception play in people's lives and how this shapes and affects communities and makes people vulnerable in the eye of society.

China –

小人国

在中国云南、在昆明美丽的滇池湖边、在一片原始森林里,有一个由上百矮人族群组成的梦幻国度—它就是世界蝴蝶生态园·“小人国”。这里的小矮人们勤劳、善良、多才多艺、英勇无畏。他们拥有自己的国度,拥有自己的国王、自己的军队、外交部、御膳厨房和臣民

 

“In the Chinese province Yunnan, close to the beautiful Dianchi lake, exists a magic land in the ancient forest where the dwarves live. This is the Land of Dwarves in the World Ecological Garden of Butterfly. The dwarves are diligent, friendly, talented and brave. They have their own capital, their own king, Ministry of Foreign Affaires, Ministry of Public Health, Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Culture and their own army.”                                                                                    

In southern China, near Kunming -the city of eternal spring- exists a theme park that is home to 77 little people. The inhabitants present a song-and-dance show twice a day. This promised land was founded by a tall, rich man who was determined to ‘do something good’ for the little people. Chinese charity dressed in commercial attire. The façade of this empire, with its walls of synthetic material, permanently seems on the verge of collapse. Nevertheless, the empire holds its ground.

I embarked on an adventure with a handful of ethical questions about commercialising social care. Every story has two sides but in this place every question and every answer seemed contradictory.

My adventure ended up as a modern (anti)fairytale, a collection of images of my making, and theirs. My own trick forced upon myself.

 

Written and Photography by – Sanne De Wilde

 

Related Posts

Douglas Stockdale on Laia Abril “The Epilogue”

Laia Abril (b. 1986 Barcelona, Spain, currently resides in NYC and Barcelona) continues to develop narratives that probe identity issues ...

Colin Pantall on Lorenzo Vitturi’s Dalston Anatomy

United Kingdom – Every now and then, a photography book comes along that looks completely different. Dalston Anatomy by Lorenzo ...

Katja Stuke & Oliver Sieber: Nothing To My Name

China –  Music plays an important role in subcultures and protest movements. Music brings people together – both in clubs, ...

Thomas Mailaender: “Illustrated People” – 23 Original Negatives, Powerful UV Lamp and Painful-Looking Skin-Based Photos

France –  “Illustrated People” is the translation into book form of a performance by Thomas Mailaender. He applied to the ...

Emaho Foundation’s Emerging Asian Photography Grant Winner Announced

India –  We are delighted to announce that Tsunomu Yamagata has won the Emaho Foundation‘s Emerging Asian Photography Grant 2015 ...

Joan Fontcuberta: The Photography of Nature / The Nature of Photography

Catalan photographer Joan Fontcuberta is the 33rd recipient of the prestigious HasselbladFoundation International Award in Photography. To celebrate the award ...

Tatiana Tcherkezyan: Deep Inside

Russia – THIS STORY CONTAINS EXPLICIT CONTENT For more than 4 years I have been collecting the material for this ...

Maciej Pestka: The Life of Psy

Ireland –   “Representatives of major fashion brands went crazy, girls threw themselves into his arms, and drinks flower like waterfalls. ...

Douglas Stockdale on Sarah Malakoff’s Second Nature

USA – Sarah Malakoff (b. 1972 Wellesley, MA and resides in Boston, MA) chose to photograph a subject that she ...