Background information
"With the lifestory of a single woman, the out-of-print photographic volume 'Combing for Ice and Jace' by British-Hong Kong photographer Kurt TONG traces the history of one of China’s oldest feminist movements.
'Combing up' – a ceremony involving the braiding of one’s hair and a ritual bath – for women in the Qin Dynasty meant freedom: freedom from obligations towards their parents, freedom from marriage, and freedom to earn their own living, thanks to the booming silk trade. The silk trade lost significance in the following decades, but there were still women combing up in the 20th century. The life of one of them, his grandmother, is portrayed in this fascinating photo volume 'Combing for Ice and Jade.'
“[S]he kept her family alive through the great famine in 1950s, paid for all her nephews and nieces educations, built several houses in her home village for her aunts, brothers and nephews and supported several of her nephews businesses, one of which flourished into a very successful business employing over 350 workers. Yet through all this, she has retained a very simple lifestyle. […]
Both biographical and anthropological, her story will be the starting point to explore generations of comb up women, giving a voice to generations of unsung heroines who are might otherwise be ignored and forgotten.” (© Kurt TONG)
Content
The photographic volume 'Combing for Ice and Jace' by Kurt TONG opens with the only eight photographs that she has of herself, for the hong Kong photographer to then explore her rich and extraordinary life. Pictures from the family archive, found photographs, magazines, propaganda leaflets and newly taken photographs weave a thick image of China’s history of the past 6 decades.