Xiaoliang, the artist who did this warm digital rendering of Peng Lifa based on a photograph, is reportedly himself in trouble. This now famous picture, posted on Oct 15, was his last post.
He is said to be in detention for "picking quarrels and making trouble"
Xiao Liang, an artist from Nanchang, was arrested.
Xiao Liang's Twitter account contains some beautiful digital renderings of famous people and interesting faces.
Xiao Liang's support for Ukraine, which conflicts with Beijing's policy, and his opposition to Russian invasion, which Beijing has yet to acknowledge, is plain to see.
As with the now-famous portrait of the unknown hero of Sitong Bridge, Peng Lifa, this familiar face, a much better known hero, is rendered in warm, emotional tones.
Another lovely portrait. There are many more, and some of them just go to prove that politics makes for strange bedfellows.
But here's hoping the artist, who was, from within the confines of unfree China trying to understand the world outside, is released from detention.
And it's somehow fitting this day that Jimmy Lai, who just got slapped with over five years in jail (technically for lease technicalities) but everyone knows it's about free expression, was portrayed by Xiao Liang in 2020.
Take a look at Xiao Liang's Twitter account in case it gets taken down, as was the case with Peng Lifa
Xiao retweets numerous archly conservative posts about the US, and does some US portraits, too, but one suspects something was lost in translation.
Lots of cute cat pics, too
Many of his retweets were animal shots...
Xiao also showed a strong curiosity about politics...ranging from Soviet seizure of Chinese territory, to Hong Kong's basic law, to US domestic mayhem to historic figures like MacArthur...
Unusual for a citizen of China where anti-Japan movies are regular entertainment, he expressed sadness at Abe's death, sympathy for his wife, and rendered a digitized portrait of the fallen Japanese leader.
He was also curious about life in Japan and was impressed at the good manners, with a video vignette of a Japanese mother rushing to the school bus and bowing to greet it.
He retweeted a story about Li Rui, Mao's former secretary who later fell out with the CCP brass, and some negative posts about Mao.
He reposted material about Huawei's Meng Wanzhou and her father Ren Zhengfei; apparently not a fan.
He retweeted stories about human rights abuses in Burma and also stories of police bullying in China. In the still from the video on the right, the woman in red is tackled and detained for not wearing a mask.
His digital portraiture included various art teachers, writers and some rather controversial Americans. ;-)
Like any Twitter account used to scan information from a variety of sources outside the firewall, he retweeted all kinds of things. His "retweets" don't necessarily tell us what he thought, but are rather an indication of things that perked his interest.
Reminiscent of Peng Lifa, whose portrait he so brilliantly rendered, Xiao Liang's Twitter record is a mix of sweet and silly shots cut with hard politics and human rights commentary.
During this time of trouble, the restive populace is sure to be calmed by this new publication highlighting Xi Jinping's penetrating insights into high-level science
Yet another publication by the world's greatest freelance writer:
Xi Jinping Thought on Strong Military
Why read it once when you can read it three times?
The next ten minutes is devoted to some reassuring, inspirational shots of Xi Jinping who has total control of the military and wants the world to know it.
Patrick Chovanec, a consultant at Silvercrest Asset Mgmt has done some China virtue-signaling by compiling photos about the 1989 Tiananmen demonstrations, an event he evidently knows little about.
(a thread)
To do this, he compiled over a dozen of my photos on his blog , and when I brought this to his attention, he made no effort to credit the photos or reveal where he got them from. patrickchovanec.com/about/
Some of the photos now have a life of their own on the internet, including the above photo, (caption by Chovanec) which has been used by conspiratorial pro-China bloggers as proof of a "color revolution."
;-)
A political bible with quasi-religious overtones is unveiled like a holy relic.
A book by Xi Jinping! In English!
CCTV news shows the entire table of contents
Wow. It sure looks like a gripping read. Find a comfy chair, put the kettle on and settle for a long enlightening read.
CCTV FOLLIES: 5.26
China state TV doubles down on dubious Russia claims about "secret" US bio-labs in Ukraine.
(from May 26 Xinwen Lianbo)
Anchor Li Zimeng couches the accusations in the language of Russia's Defense Ministry, but the CCTV editors like the story enough for it to get major airtime.
The Russia Defense Ministry, solid architectural monolith that it is, is portrayed as a presumably authoritative source.
Read all about it! Top of the news! Yet another much-heralded publication by the indefatigable freelance writer Xi Jinping, whose excessive narcissism is nicely balanced with pictures of himself.
Up next, a nostalgic look back to 2017 when this man was laying the foundation of today's greatness.
Among many, many other incredible, almost super-human accomplishments, he created a city out of dust.