双喜 UNTIL DEATH DO US PART

双喜 UNTIL DEATH DO US PART


by Beijing Silvermine / Thomas Sauvin

published by Jiazazhi Press

Until Death Do Us Part [双喜] focuses on the unexpected role cigarettes play in Chinese weddings. As a token of appreciation, it is customary for the bride to light a cigarette for each and every man invited. The bride and the groom are then invited to play some cigarette-smoking games of an unprecedented ingenuousness. This publication pays homage to a tradition in which love and death walk hand in hand.

Until Death Do Us Part 双喜

All photos came from Thomas Sauvin's Beijing Silvermine (@beijing_silvermine) project - an archive of half a million negatives salvaged over the years from chemical recycling plants on the outskirts of Beijing.

Beijing Silvermine - Thomas Sauvin from Emiland Guillerme on Vimeo.

Thomas Sauvin is a French photo collector and curator who lives and works in China. While there, he started collecting photographic negatives, seeing them as a valuable intermediate medium between the camera and the print. In 2009, as he was looking to purchase negatives, he came across Xiao Ma who was buying negatives in bulk online. Ma worked at a chemical recycling plant located at the edge of Beijing and was using negatives (as well as X-rays from hospitals, CDs and other trash) as a source of silver salt, which he could then separate and resell to laboratories. Sauvin got interested in the stacks of discarded 35-mm negatives piled up at the plant. He negotiated a price of about $10 per kilogram, and he started buying 30 to 50 kilograms a month. Sauvin estimates that the collection he has now amassed has grown to somewhere near half a million images.