Modern China
- Beijing
- 1910
Join the hustle and bustle of Peking and Shanghai city life with this richly detailed 1930s home movie.
Opening in Beijing - known to westerners as Peking until the 1970s - this rich amateur film explores a busy market in the Outer City. Cyclists weave their way between traders, horses and carts. Carved pailous (traditional ceremonial archways) mark this out as an important street. The closing scenes of a similar market were probably shot in Shanghai, with a barber at work among a cornucopia of goods.
The film was shot by Dr Reginald Clay, a London teacher who travelled to China after his retirement in the early 1930s. Dr Clay visited Peking before staying with his daughter, a medical missionary, in Shanghai.
Beijing has been at the heart of China's political and cultural life for almost a thousand years. Though much of its ancient fabric is preserved, swathes of the city were lost in decades of urban regeneration projects. So these films from the first half of the 20th century open a window on to the city's lost past. Chinese filmmakers weren't active when the earliest films of Beijing (then known as Peking) were made, so these British and European films are among the only moving images of that time.
Thanks to these pioneering cameramen, we can witness everyday life in the last years of the Qing dynasty, make our way from the European quarter of the city to the magnificent Forbidden Palace and the bustling Grand Canal, or roam the streets around the Qianmen gate. These often amateur cinematographers offer us a fresh look at a majestic and complex city, from the palaces and pagodas of Beihai Park, a trek around the Great Wall with intrepid honeymooners, to a cruise down the Grand Canal to Shanghai. This may be a Beijing seen through western eyes, but they are the eyes of a rapt enthusiast, not a jaded tour guide.