Tian Lin
Portrait and wedding photography was just catching on in Ürümchi at that time. For many Han migrants to the province it was novelty. Tian Lin had always loved art, so he was immediately intrigued. He decided to take the course and open his own photo studio. But after he opened his shop he found himself right back where he started: without an income. His dreams were fading fast. As a photographer he found that he could only make around $50.00 per month. He considered returning to his home on a Han settler farm in the northwest borderlands with Russia and Central Asia, but then he discovered another way forward.
In the midst of this failure he began to take up the study of Buddhism and to treat photography as part of his Buddhist practice. Like many young people unsettled by China’s social transformation, Tian Lin turned to religious practice as a way of reframing his life in urban Xinjiang.