Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Lang Jingshan, the head of "Top Ten Photographers in the World" in Youbu Town.

Lang Jingshan, the head of "Top Ten Photographers in the World" in Youbu Town.

Lang Jingshan (1892— 1995) is a native of Li Lang Village, Youbu Town, Lanxi, Zhejiang. His father likes collecting calligraphy and painting, singing opera and taking pictures, which influenced him since he was a child. /kloc-When he was 0/2 years old, Lang Jingshan went to Shanghai Nanyang Middle School to study, and he studied photography principles, developing and printing skills under the painting teacher Li Jinglan, which made him have an indissoluble bond with photography.

Later, Lang Jingshan entered Shanghai Shenbao and Shanghai Times successively, becoming the earliest photojournalist in China. Although a photojournalist, he is good at copying paintings. Drawing lessons from the "six methods" of traditional painting art, he devoted himself to studying and giving full play to it, and took many scenic photos with the charm of China ink painting, forming a unique and handsome style. These works have been criticized by people.

1928165438+10. After visiting the second China Social Film Festival, Zhou Shoujuan wrote: Lang Jingshan has a frame of bamboo sticks, mounted in yellow silk, and the title is Banqiao Picture Book. Its clear shadow is swaying, which seems to be written by Banqiao Taoist.

Since then, Lang Jingshan has focused on multi-bottom synthetic high-light photography. 1934, his first collection of photographs, Qifeng of Spring Trees, was selected for the British Photography Salon. Since then, Lang Jingshan's collection photography is unique in the world.

Langjingshan Memorial Hall is located in Langjia Village, Youbu Town.

In the late 1980s, Lang Gong led his descendants back to Sang Zi from Taiwan Province to worship their ancestors and donated money to repair the ancestral temple. Therefore, a wall exhibition of Lang Gong's works and historical materials was created to show the brilliance of the sages and inspire future generations. The ancestral temple is a building in the Qing dynasty, with three wells in two days. The pillars can be folded, the arches and arches are beautifully carved, but the paint has peeled off. Imagine, when the red paint was brilliant, the ancestors made three sacrifices here, gongs and drums roared to worship the ancestors of Langjia, and incense burners curled up smoke. The heads of many families lead dances and bow down, sons and nephews are awarded saints, and inferior ones are reprimanded. What a glorious crown!