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          Business Week (A truly sublime photo book)             | 
          DECEMBER 5, 2005            | 
         
       
       
      Celestial Realm: The Yellow Mountains  of China 
          photographs by Wang Wusheng,  
          essay by Seigo Matsuoka, Damian Harper & Wu Hung 
           
      
      A lavishly  produced volume featuring stunning duotone images of China's  fabled Yellow Mountains by the celebrated photographer  Wang Wusheng. 
      For more  than three decades, Wang Wusheng has been captivated by the beauty of Mount Huangshan,  also known as the Yellow   Mountains. Located in the  southern part of the Anhui province in  northern China, Mount Huangshan  has often been described as the world's most beautiful and enchanting mountain.  Over the centuries this mountain with its seventy-two peaks has been the  subject of Chinese landscape painters, whose singular works are so haunting it  seems impossible that these mountains exist in nature. Inspired by the legacy  of these paintings, Wang Wusheng has sought to portray this scenic wonder. As  shown in the collection of ninety photographs in this extraordinary volume,  here are mist-shrouded, granite peaks emerging from an ever-changing veil of  clouds, sculptural craggy rocks, on lofty cliffs, and weathered, oddly-shaped  pine trees, depicted in all seasons and at various times of day. Wang Wusheng's  images are so exceptional that they look like paintings. 
      Accompanying  the photographs are two fascinating essays about the art history and natural  history of the Yellow   Mountains. Art historian  Wu Hung provides an eloquent, comprehensive survey of the region's artistic,  literary, and photographic tradition, relating how Wang Wusheng's work is an  important part of this notable legacy. 
      In a second  essay, Damian Harper presents an authoritative account of the geology,  geography, and natural history of this legendary place. In addition, there is  an introduction by the Japanese critic Seigo Matsuoka, who contributes an  insightful appraisal of Wang Wusheng's work.  |