Break in Transmission
Posted: February 4th, 2010 | No Comments »Apologies for lack of posting I’m in London for a bit…

Apologies for lack of posting I’m in London for a bit…

Today an ad from 1928 featuring the rather nice Joint Savings Society Building on the corner of Szechuen and Hankow Roads (now Sichuan Middle Road and Hankou Road). The Joint Savings Society was formed by the Yienyieh, Kincheng, Continental and China & South Sea Banks and also had branches in Tientsin and Hankow. After the ad, a couple of pictures of the building as it looks today.

And today -

And a little closer on the lobby which is still quite grand -

I note that Percy Cradock died on January 22nd, age 86. Cradock is now best known for his role in the negotiations for the handover of Hong Kong and was the Foreign Office’s premier Sinologist for many years. He also famously worked in the British Embassy in Peking during the Cultural Revolution when the Embassy was attacked. He naturally later became known for his public sniping over the run up to the handover with last Governor Chris Patten.
John Gittings has written an interesting and lengthy obituary of Cradock in The Guardian that doesn’t need repeating here.
As it’s been reprinted nicely recently I’d thought I’d plug the reprint with an old ad from the 1920s when Ivon A Donnelly’s Chinese Junks and Other Native Craft was first issued. Good old Kelly & Walsh, the best English language publishers in the East (who live on with a couple of chaotically organised bookshops in Hong Kong) ran the ad and everyone seemed to like Mr Donnelly’s tome. They were right and it has justly become a classic.

Strapped for time today so here’s an ad from the 1970s for a cartoon show that looks nice and doesn’t require me to try and say anything knowledgable about it.

Peking famously had Hartung’s photography studios, Shanghai had MacTavish’s. Photography caught on fast in Shanghai obviously and there were any number of foreign and Chinese run studios – Chinese studios like the well known Ah Fung’s apparently did a good job but MacTavish’s highlighted that everything in their darkrooms was done ‘under foreign supervision’. The Garden Bridge remains of course (now with a silly light show nightly), MacTavish’s has gone.

A quick plug for the latest edition of China Ethos magazine which is a quarterly publication in the UK about all things China. Apparently you can buy it at some newsagents and it’s all over the first and business class lounges for half a dozen airlines or so for those who travel that way.
Anyway, there’s a longish piece by me about the life and (China related) work of the great Peter Fleming, as well as a kind review of my Through the Looking Glass book. It’s also a chance to stick up a picture of Zhang Ziyi – I’m aware my celebrity culture pictures usually involve Marlene Dietrich or Anna May Wong and that occasionally one must opt for something a little more current.

One of the architectural nerds of Shanghai today. An ad for Texaco Roofing materials from the 1920s. You’ll note that these were the products used on a variety of well known buildings including the Allen Memorial Church, Shanghai General Hospital, the Dah Fong Cotton Mill (gone), Chekiang Road Theatre (gone), the Wing On Textile Mill (gone) and Maclean’s Church at Sunkiang.
