Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What is Sun Youbin's occupation?

What is Sun Youbin's occupation?

Sun youbin

Sun Youbin: Professional photographer and designer, member of China Photographers Association and China Industrial Design Association. His CI works won the "First World Chinese Graphic Design Competition" Excellence Award. The main photographic works include Tianwan River at the southern foot of Gongga Mountain, miyaluo, the Pearl of Tianquan Erlang Mountain and the photo collection of Kangding completed by Wang Jianjun, Hua Yang and Wei Xiaoyu.

Chinese name: Sun Youbin

Nationality: China.

Occupation: professional photographer

Representative works: Tianwan River at the southern foot of Gongga Mountain.

Recorded scenery

Throughout Sun Youbin's landscape photography works, many of them are shot with 6X 12 and 6X 17 cameras, and such pictures truly show the magnificence of nature's mountains and waters, and also express the photographer's sincere love for nature. But Sun Youbin prefers to call his photography a "record of scenery" and "a record of scenery, not light and shadow. The choice of light and shadow is to better realize the performance of the subject, not the theme itself. " Therefore, in his landscape works, he sees more pictures with medium gray tones. In that kind of tone that can make people feel quiet and elegant, the performance of the subject is more real, full and subtle, showing a different realm of landscape photography.

However, from Sun Youbin's works, I read his pure concept and rigorous attitude towards landscape photography creation-that is, everything is based on the subject of expression, using means of expression such as light and shadow, composition, and not tired of "aestheticism", thus making his works appear sincere, direct and atmospheric in the expression of connotation. For example, in a work with rhododendron bush as the object of expression, although there is no picturesque effect as we usually understand, on a cliff mountain, the tangled roots of rhododendron forest are struggling to stretch their posture in the rubble, which makes people shocked by the tenacious vitality and survival spirit of rhododendron at the first time when they contact the picture, and the profound connotation implied in the work is also revealed.

This profundity, or this keen observation of things, is related to the photographer's long-term concern for a theme. Mr. Sun said that even if it is about the theme of a scenic spot, it will take him at least one or two years to pay attention and explore. Perhaps it is because of his in-depth understanding and familiarity with one side of the land that he has gained insight into various changes in the ecological environment there, which has made him more and more determined to express the theme of environmental protection in landscape photography.