30 August 2006

The Lin Family Garden


Built since 1847, the Lin Family Mansion and Garden is one of the most famous historical spot in Taipei area. The Lin family was among the richest family in Taiwan in late Ching Dynasty, who made a huge fortune by trading rice and salt. The mansion and garden's name, Lin "Ben Yuan," was not the name of a single person but the name of the Lin's business, edifying "indigenous to the origin." Total construction expense was a wholap half million taels of silver (each tael equals 1.3 ounce), compared to only 200,000 taels to build the then-Taipei fortress.

Wars desolated the mansion and garden in the early 20th century. So the Lin Family decided to endow most of the complex to Taipei County Government in 1977, along with NT$10 million to help recover the buildings. The renovation was thus started in 1982 and, for four years and NT$156 million and under the supervision of a group of experts, it was restored to how it looked a hundred years ago.

The pictures are all taken by Xpan II and 45/4 lens on Fuji NPH 400 film.

Colorful antefix
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Back of the Mansion
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The Study ("to absorb ancestral knowledge", as written on the inscribed board)
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A closer look
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A corner of the Garden and banyan trees
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Water lily in a big tub
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In the study
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Alameda and the pavilion
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Wooden portals
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Decorations for simulation of an ancient wedding
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Water lily #2
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Colored carvings on the door planks
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Potted plants
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The weathering
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Baluster
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Pagoda of Respect to Lettering, which is to edify the family not to waste paper by lettering prudently...
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Cornice
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Bus stop decoration outside the Garden, which I think is pretty cute...
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Here is the official web site of the Lin Family Mansion and Garden:
http://www.linfamily.tpc.gov.tw/index.asp
Given this is one of the most magnificent historical places and representative South-Fukien style architectures in Taiwan, it is really a pity that it doesn't have an English version.

NTU


Some photos I took at or around National Taiwan University using Xpan II and 45/4 lens, on Kodak Tmax 100 film, as a composition drill...

Flamegold
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Grapefruits at "Welcome" supermarket
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Looking down the presidential palace from NTU hospital
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Bushes
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Japalura swinhonis Gunther on a Paper-bark tree
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It's probably very stupid to shoot such small subject using a wide-angle lens and black-and-white film... :-(

NTU's mini-dome (Sports Center)
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Its right hand side is the Center for Condensed Matter Sciences, which also accommodates the Institute of Physics and the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Academia Sinica.

Another angle of the mini-dome
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Old gym (outdoor swimming pool)
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Artificial climbing-rock
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Lake of "Intoxicated Moon"
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Water Hyacinths bloom
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Pavilion on the lake
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28 August 2006

Boa-an Temple at rainy night


Bao-an Temple is one of the oldest temples in Taiwan. It was originally a wooden joss house from 1742, and then rebuilt in 1805 into a temple. The name Bao-an was given to "bao"-yu (meaning blessing, Deo gratias) Tung-"an" (a Chinese place where the founder of the temple was from). The temple shrines a Chinese doctor, Wu Tao, who was also born in Tung-an a thousand years ago (979 AC).

The temple went through seven major renovations during its 200-year history, the latest starting 1995 until 2002 for six million US dollars. And because of its effort of successful restoration, UNESCO gave a special award to this historical place.

Here is the temple's official web-site: http://www.baoan.org.tw/

The pictures were shot at a rainy night using Xpan II and 45mm lens (as usual) and Ilford XP2 Super. I did not bring a tripod so all the pictures were hand-held shots using shutter speeds of 1/6 to 1/10, with a couple of 1/15s. I am very surprised there doesn't seem to be much vibration in the pictures. Nonetheless, quality of the photos is generally poor, as contrast was too high under that light condition. But a special aura did exist...

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Here are some pictures I took the other night using Leica M.