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  • A typical factory town building leased out to migrant workers seen in a village in Qingxi Township, Dongguan, Guangdong Province, China, on July 28, 2010. Like many towns in the Pearl River Delta region, Qingxi was a sleepy town surrounded by farms before economic reforms but is now the home to hundreds of factories. Photographer: Qilai Shen
    QS100730Dongguan015.jpg
  • Lin Tiangui, a representative of Winston Wine, looks ar a bottles of wine produced from Winston Wine's own Australian winery at one of its stores in Shanghai, China on 18 October, 2011. Photographer: Qilai Shen/BloombergLin Tiangui, a representative for Australia's Winston Wines Pty, examines a bottle of wine at the company's store in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. Australian vineyards, facing slumping exports and rising competition, are turning to China as Chinese buyers creating surging demand among the nation's rich, who are developing a taste for wine and the expression of wealth and class it conveys.
    ChinaWine_08.jpg
  • Lin Tiangui, a representative of Winston Wine, shares a glass of wine with Huang Yongqiang, a store manger, at one of its stores in Shanghai, China on 18 October, 2011. Photographer: Qilai Shen/BloombergLin Tiangui, a representative for Australia's Winston Wines Pty, left, and Huang Yongqiang, a store manger for Winston Wines, sample wine at the company's store in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. Australian vineyards, facing slumping exports and rising competition, are turning to China as Chinese buyers creating surging demand among the nation's rich, who are developing a taste for wine and the expression of wealth and class it conveys.
    ChinaWine_18.jpg
  • Lin Tiangui, a representative of Winston Wine, pours a glass of wine at one of its stores in Shanghai, China on 18 October, 2011. Photographer: Qilai Shen/BloombergLin Tiangui, a representative for Australia's Winston Wines Pty, pours a glass of wine at the company's store in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. Australian vineyards, facing slumping exports and rising competition, are turning to China as Chinese buyers creating surging demand among the nation's rich, who are developing a taste for wine and the expression of wealth and class it conveys.
    ChinaWine_16.jpg
  • A woman walks past a roller skate rink graffiti with the worlds "Handsome Stud, It's Love at First Sight" at a village in Qingxi Township, Dongguan, Guangdong Province, China, on July 28, 2010. Like many towns in the Pearl River Delta region, Qingxi was a sleepy town surrounded by farms before economic reforms but is now the home to hundreds of factories. Photographer: Qilai Shen
    QS100730Dongguan013.jpg
  • A man walks past a shelf of wines produced from Winston Wine's own Australian winery at one of its stores in Shanghai, China on 18 October, 2011. Photographer: Qilai Shen/BloombergA staff member walks past a rack of wine at Australia's Winston Wines Pty's store in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. Australian vineyards, facing slumping exports and rising competition, are turning to China as Chinese buyers creating surging demand among the nation's rich, who are developing a taste for wine and the expression of wealth and class it conveys.
    ChinaWine_14.jpg
  • Lin Tiangui, a representative of Winston Wine, train a sales cleark at one of its stores in Shanghai, China on 18 October, 2011. Photographer: Qilai Shen/BloombergLin Tiangui, a representative for Australia's Winston Wines Pty, examines a bottle of wine with a staff member at the company's store in Shanghai, China, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011. Australian vineyards, facing slumping exports and rising competition, are turning to China as Chinese buyers creating surging demand among the nation's rich, who are developing a taste for wine and the expression of wealth and class it conveys.
    ChinaWine_12.jpg
  • Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who sells almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.
    QS090206Guangzhou016.jpg
  • Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who sells almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.
    QS090206Guangzhou011.jpg
  • Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who sells almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.
    QS090206Guangzhou006.jpg
  • Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who sells almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.
    QS090206Guangzhou009.jpg
  • The Old Jazz Band playing at the Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai055_1_1.jpg
  • People dance at Fuxin Park in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013.
    QS131115Shanghai008_1_1.jpg
  • Old Town ShanghaiA view of the Yuyuan Gardens in Shanghai, China on 13 October 2013. Yuyuan and the surrounding Chenghuangmiao area represent the oldest vestige of Shanghai, having existed long before the British made Shanghai a treaty port and the most important economic hub in China.
    QS131030Shanghai021_1_1.jpg
  • Attendees look at artworks on display during a Christie's preview event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai034_1_1.jpg
  • Projections adorn the dining room wall of Chef Paul Pairet's Ultra Violet (UV) restaurant in Shanghai, China on 28 September 2013. Serving only a dozen patrons per meal, UV is quickly making a reputation for itself as it combines the senses of taste, sound, and sight to the extreme.
    QS130928Shanghai006_1_1.jpg
  • An elderly man bikes passed rolls of newly built houses, mostly shuttered and empty as their younger owners work in the cities,  at a rural village near Fuyang, Anhui Province,  China on 28 August  2013.  As able-bodied adults seek work in cities in hopes of better income, more and more villages in China are inhabited mostly by the elderly and children.
    QS130829Fuyang045_1_1.jpg
  • Children take a Kangaroo themed amusement ride on Tianjin city's own Bund, with a view of the Binhai New Development Zone's Yujiapu and Xiangluowan  districts in Tianjin, China on 16 July 2013. The districts had the ambition of becoming China's newest financial center to rival Shanghai's Pudong, and dubbed by some "the Manhattan of the East",  however as the country tries to steer away from an investment driven economy, such projects are facing increasing scrutiny.
    QS130716Tianjin055_1_1.jpg
  • A view of the Sifang Art Museum, designed by architect Steven Holl, in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province,  China on 28 June  2013.
    QS130628Nanjing020_1_1.jpg
  • Residents fish on a frozen lake in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China on 21 December  2012.  With its dry climates and ample sunshine, and encouraged by the huge boom in Chinese consumer's demand for wine, Ningxia is quickly becoming one of the biggest wine producing regions in China.
    QS121221Yingchuan020_1_1.jpg
  • A man walks through the grounds of the Chateau Changyu Moser XV, which will be open to the public next May, in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China on 21 December  2012.  With its dry climates and ample sunshine, and encouraged by the huge boom in Chinese consumer's demand for wine, Ningxia is quickly becoming one of the biggest wine producing regions in China.
    QS121221Yingchuan016_1_1.jpg
  • A view of Chandon, a joint venture winery developed by LVMH and Xixia King, in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China on 20 December  2012.  With its dry climates and ample sunshine, and encouraged by the huge boom in Chinese consumer's demand for wine, Ningxia is quickly becoming one of the biggest wine producing regions in China.
    QS121220Yinchuan036_1_1.jpg
  • Workers operate on the production floor of a rubber products factory in Wux, Jiangsu iProvince, China on 14 December  2012.  The performance of the Chinese manufacturing sector is increasingly becoming a key indicator for the health of the world economy as a whole.
    QS121214Suzhou005_1_1.jpg
  • A man rides his bike through the construction site of a new housing development  in Yangzhou, Jiangsu Province, China on 19 July 2012. While the Chinese government has tried various ways to cool down the property market, real estate prices have still seen a steady increase in recent years, proving hard for the country to move away from an investment driven economy.
    QS120719Yangzhou037_1_1.jpg
  • A view of the FO-SHOU by Mansilla + Tunon, at the China International Practical Exhibition of Architecture (CIPEA) in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China on 10 October,  2013. The CIPEA has 20 buildings each designed by a different architect / artist.
    CIPEA_FoShou_001_1_1.jpg
  • A worker looks up after finishing his shift at the China State Shipbuilding Corp.'s (CSSC) Longxue Shipyard in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on Sunday, Nov. 13, 2011. China is the world's biggest shipbuilder, however recent economic downturns have caused a glut in supplies.
    QS111113Guangdong064.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong032.jpg
  • A view of an artist's impressions of Duke University's China campus in Kunshan, China, on October 01, 2011.  Duke University has started it's campus abroad as a way to capitalize on the increasing demand for Western university degrees in China, however the plan has drawn many critics at home as it drains resources from the home campus while opening the possibility of compromising on academic standards.
    QS111025Kunshan025.jpg
  • A woman sits in her stall selling plastic flowers at the Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China on Sunday, 11 September 2011.   As the trading hub for small and medium manufacturers and exporters in the Yangtze River Delta region, Yiwu faces an uncertain future as export orders decline due to the slow economic recoveries of China's two largest trading partners, Europe and the United States
    QS110910Yiwu044.jpg
  • A warehouse employee work to fill an oder at the Yihaodian warehouse and logistics center in Shanghai, China on 23 August, 2011. As online supermarkets is attracting a rapidly increasing number of young consumers, especially women, U.S. giant Walmart has acquired a minority stake in Yihaodian, or "The Store", a young but very successful E-Commerce company that sells and delivers everything from food, daily household  items, electronics, and clothing.
    QS110823Shanghai019.jpg
  • Visitors, mostly curious tourists and migrant workers, watch a grand lights and fountain show near the artificial lake in Kangbashi New District of Ordos City, Inner Mongolia, China on 16 August, 2011. With an investment of over 161billion USD from the local government and revenue from the region's rich coal deposits, enough buildings have risen on the site of an old desert village to hold at least 300,000 residents, complete with ultra modern facilities and grand plazas. The district however is less than 10% occupied, dubbed the "ghost city", Kangbashi epitomizes China's real estate bubble and dangers in mindless investment fueled economic  growth. In 2011, the real estate price of Ordos city has dropped over 70%.
    QS110816Ordos075.jpg
  • Empty electric buggies wait for customers in Kangbashi New District of Ordos City, Inner Mongolia, China on 16 August, 2011. With an investment of over 161billion USD from the local government and revenue from the region's rich coal deposits, enough buildings have risen on the site of an old desert village to hold at least 300,000 residents, complete with ultra modern facilities and grand plazas. The district however is less than 10% occupied, dubbed the "ghost city", Kangbashi epitomizes China's real estate bubble and dangers in mindless investment fueled economic  growth. In 2011, the real estate price of Ordos city has dropped over 70%.
    QS110816Ordos018.jpg
  • A medicine seller counts his money at a traditional Chinese medicine market in Bozhou, Anhui Province, China on 02 August, 2011. The birth place of legendary doctor Hua Tuo, Bozhou is now one of the four major trading centers in China for traditional Chinese medicine.
    QS110802Bozhou024.jpg
  • Cosplay performers apply make up and wait for their turn at the ChinaJoy Expo, also know as the China Digital Entertainment Expo and Conference,  in Shanghai, China on 29 July, 2011. Online and social network games have become hugely popular in China as Chinese children lack the space and facility require for sports, spurning worries from parents and government officials on internet addiction.
    QS110729SHANGHAI030.jpg
  • Pedestrians walk past an advert for Disney in Shanghai, China on 10 March, 2011. Shanghai mayor Han Zhen recently announced that the investment for the first phase of Disney's mainland China theme park, located in Pudong Shanghai, will cost 24.5 billion yuan (2.7 billion euros) and will cover an area of 2.7 square miles. The park is expected to attract 7.3 million visitors a year when it opens in 2015 in the Pudong area, the city government said in a statement on March 3.
    QS110310Shanghai002.jpg
  • A man steams dumplings at a market in Zhujiao Township, Chuzhou, Anhui Province, China on 02 March, 2011.  Chuzhou is the city where Dongdaxu Village is located, the ancestral home of current Chinese vice premier Li Keqiang, slated to be the next premier and the man in charge of China's economic transformation
    QS110302Chuzhou038.jpg
  • Employees put on clean suits before entering the wafer FAB of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp in Shanghai, China on 18 February, 2011.  The Taiwan based manufacturer is one of the largest chip foundries in the world.
    QS110218Shanghai024.jpg
  • Francis Lui, deputy chairman of the Galaxy Entertainment Group, poses for photos in a VIP card room at Galaxy's Starworld Casino in Macau, China on 27 January 2011. A relative newcomer to the rapidly expanding Macau gambling scene, the Galaxy hopes its new casino will hold up its own against the likes of the Venetian, Wynn, MGM, and the Lisboa.
    QS110127Macau039.jpg
  • A casino dealer arranges chips at the Galaxy's Starworld Casino in Macau, China on 27 January 2011. A relative newcomer to the rapidly expanding Macau gambling scene, the Galaxy hopes its new casino will hold up its own against the likes of the Venetian, Wynn, MGM, and the Lisboa.
    QS110127Macau023.jpg
  • Traffic move through downtown Shanghai, China on Thursday, 13 january 2011. Shanghai will likely levy a 0.4-0.8 percent property tax next year to second homes and new homes exceeding a preset space limit, as another attempt to adjust growth and close wealth gap.
    QS110113Shanghai006.jpg
  • Workers make socks at the Shuangjin Knitting & Textile Co. in Zhuji, Zhuji Province, China on 01 November 2010. The rising cost of labor and raw materials along with the rising Yuan have hurt China's export oriented manufacturers.
    QS101101Zhuji041.jpg
  • Workers gather before launching the 57,000 dead weigh ton bulk carrier Sabina Venture into the Yangzte River at the China CSSC Holdings Ltd. Chengxi Shipyard in Jiangyin, China, on Sunday, Sept. 12, 2010. China CSSC Holdings Ltd., the nation's biggest shipyard, sees orders surge as China's voracious appetite for commodities demands more fleets of large vessels.
    QS100913Jiangying025.jpg
  • Workers operate on a ship frame at the China CSSC Holdings Ltd. Chengxi Shipyard in Jiangyin, China, on Sunday, Sept. 12, 2010. China CSSC Holdings Ltd., the nation's biggest shipyard, sees orders surge as China's voracious appetite for commodities demands more fleets of large vessels.
    QS100913Jiangying007.jpg
  • Terry Gou, founder and chairman of Hon Hai Group and one of the richest man in Taiwan, speaks during a news conference at the company's Foxconn plant in Shenzhen, China, on Wednesday, May 26, 2010. Hon Hai is the parts supplier for many hi-tech companies around the world including Apple Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Inc. There have been 12 suicides at the company's 300 thousand employee strong factory complex in Shenzhen so far this year. Foxconn has since moved some of its operations further inland to be closer to labor pool as well as cut costs.
    QS100526Shenzhen039.jpg
  • The grieving parents and sisters of Ma Xiangqian, who fell to his death earlier this year, cry outside Hon Hai Group's Foxconn plant in Shenzhen, China, on Wednesday, May 26, 2010. Hon Hai is the parts supplier for many hi-tech companies around the world including Apple Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Inc. There have been 12 suicides at the company's 300 thousand employee strong factory complex in Shenzhen so far this year. Foxconn has since moved some of its operations further inland to be closer to labor pool as well as cut costs.
    QS100526Shenzhen006.jpg
  • A conveyer belts dumps iron ore onto a pile at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai049.jpg
  • Workers walk by piles of iron ore at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai020.jpg
  • The Pearl Oriental Tower seen from a gap in the scaffolding of a construction site in Shanghai, China on 15 January 2010. Shanghai is on its way of becoming one of the world's most important financial centers.
    QS100115Shanghai02.jpg
  • Workers gather for lunch at a makeshift eating area near a construction site in the Lujiazui Financial District of Shanghai, China on 29 December, 2009.  While China owes much of its recent economic revival to the vast and cheap labor force made up by hundreds of millions of migrant workers, it is facing an uncertain future as the number of able bodied workers have passed their peak and wage continues to rise.
    QS091229Shanghai043.jpg
  • Construction workers operate on a scaffolding in front of the Jin Mao Grand Hyatt in Shanghai, China on 18 December, 2009. Shanghai is on its way of becoming one of the world's most important financial centers.
    QS091218Shanghai061.jpg
  • A dog walks past a wall mural showing a beautiful Chinese landscape in Linfen, Shanxi Province, China on Thursday, 03 December, 2009. Linfen is one of the most polluted cities in the world as it turns readily available coal from the surrounding regions into coke that powers the steel mills.  Due to the heavy presence of coal mines and related industries, Linfen was named the world's most polluted city from 2004-2007.
    QS091203Linfen080.jpg
  • Two squatters, a man and his son, photographed at a half demolished building that serves as their home near Huzhou, China on 20 August 2009.
    QS090820Shanghai025.jpg
  • A guard walks through a Buick display at the Auto Shanghai 2009 in Shanghai, China, on Monday, April 20, 2009. Automakers from across the world are increasingly focusing their efforts on China, the largest auto market in the world and the only major market with prospects of high growth rate.
    QS090820Shanghai002.jpg
  • Tsai Eng Meng- Chairman of Want Want, photographed at his office in Shanghai, China on 19 August 2009.  Tsai is one of the richest man in Taiwan.
    QS090819Shanghai004.jpg
  • Tang Ruiren, founder of Mao's Family Restaurant chain, shows off some Mao souvenirs in one of her restaurants near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan045.jpg
  • A view of the main 2010 World Expo site under construction in Shanghai, China on 13 July 2009. The World Expo drew in over 70 million visitors during its six months duration.
    QS090713Shanghai036.jpg
  • Workers make petroleum resin based gift items and garden ornaments at the Chuan Sen Art & Design Factory on the outskirts of Guangzhou, in Guangdong Province, China on 04 February, 2009.  Orders at the factory, who exports almost all of their wares in North America and Europe, has declined drastically in the last two years due to the economic slowdown and western consumers' belt-tightening.
    QS090206Guangzhou002.jpg
  • An aerial view of Hong Kong Isalnd and Victorial Harbor in Hong Kong, China, on 10 April 2010. Hong Kong is one of the most crowded and expensive city in the world.
    HongkongAerial_100409_IFC_004.jpg
  • Visitors walk through the Power Station of Art, a contemporary art museum converted from a decommissioned power plant, in Shanghai, China on 07 March  2013.
    ShanghaiArt002_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou011_1_1.jpg
  • Li Songjiang, CEO of UPS China Group photographed at his office in Shanghai, China on 19 December 2013.
    QS131219Shanghai017_1_1.jpg
  • Li Songjiang, CEO of UPS China Group photographed at his office in Shanghai, China on 19 December 2013.
    QS131219Shanghai015_1_1.jpg
  • Li Songjiang, CEO of UPS China Group photographed at his office in Shanghai, China on 19 December 2013.
    QS131219Shanghai002_1_1.jpg
  • Bobby Lee of BTC China photographed at his office in Shanghai, China on 16 December 2013. BTC China is quickly becoming the world's largest Bitcoin exchange in the world.
    QS131216Shanghai014_1_1.jpg
  • A heavy poisonous haze hang over the mountains of northern Guangdong Province in China on 5 December 2013.  Air pollution in China is seriously threathening the health of its citizens with level surpassing the upper limits  of measuring devices sometimes.
    QS131205Guangzhou005_1_1.jpg
  • A heavy poisonous haze hang over the mountains of northern Guangdong Province in China on 5 December 2013.  Air pollution in China is seriously threathening the health of its citizens with level surpassing the upper limits  of measuring devices sometimes.
    QS131205Guangzhou002_1_1.jpg
  • Workers prepare for the next exhibition at the Power Station of Art in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013.
    QS131115Shanghai068_1_1.jpg
  • Workers prepare for the next exhibition at the Power Station of Art in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013.
    QS131115Shanghai064_1_1.jpg
  • The Old Jazz Band playing at the Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai054_1_1.jpg
  • Lobby of the renovated Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai049_1_1.jpg
  • East entrance of the renovated Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai048_1_1.jpg
  • View from the balcony of the renovated Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai043_1_1.jpg
  • View from the balcony of the renovated Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai040_1_1.jpg
  • View from the balcony of the renovated Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai037_1_1.jpg
  • Visitors looks at the scale model of the city at the Urban Planning Museum  in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013.
    QS131115Shanghai023_1_1.jpg
  • Guests attend the opening ceremony of the Sifang Art Museum in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China on 02 November, 2013.
    QS131102Nanjing023_1_1.jpg
  • Maurizio Cattelan's Untitled on display at the Sifang Art Museum in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China on 02 November, 2013.
    QS131102Nanjing016_1_1.jpg
  • Sam Walsh, chief executive officer of Rio Tinto, poses for photographs, with the China Central Television (CCTV) tower in the background in Beijing, China on 01 November 2013. China accounts for almost 30 percent of Rio Tinto's sales
    QS131101Beijing003_1_1.jpg
  • Sam Walsh, chief executive officer of Rio Tinto, poses for photographs, with the China Central Television (CCTV) tower in the background in Beijing, China on 01 November 2013. China accounts for almost 30 percent of Rio Tinto's sales
    QS131101Beijing001_1_1.jpg
  • Cows being milked on a circular machine at Austasia's No. 3 dairy farm in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying062_1_1.jpg
  • A worker makes a daily count of older calves kept in a pen at Austasia's No. 3 dairy farm in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying056_1_1.jpg
  • A man herds cows to and from milking at Austasia's No. 3 dairy farm in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying033_1_1.jpg
  • Edgar Collings, CEO of Austasia, poses for pictures while standing at his company's No. 4 dairy farm in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying004_1_1.jpg
  • Workers operate to construct the No. 4 dairy farm of Austaisa in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying003_1_1.jpg
  • Workers operate to construct the No. 4 dairy farm of Austaisa in Dongying, Shandong Province, China on 31 October, 2013. By the end of 2014, the pan-Asian diary group will have invested more than $US300 million in China and have around 55,000 cattle in its herd. The rapidly increasing dairy demand from China is pushing global prices higher, especially after food safety scandals have wrecked consumer confidence in local Chinese producers, spelling ample opportunity for global producers.
    QS131031Dongying002_1_1.jpg
  • Jing'an Temple on Nanjing West RoadBudhist monks walk through the Jing'an Temple in Shanghai, China on 30 October 2013.  The temple, now in the heart of Shanghai's commercial district, dates back to the late Han dynasty ago in 247 AD.
    QS131030Shanghai052_1_1.jpg
  • Jing'an Temple on Nanjing West RoadBudhist monks walk through the Jing'an Temple in Shanghai, China on 30 October 2013.  The temple, now in the heart of Shanghai's commercial district, dates back to the late Han dynasty ago in 247 AD.
    QS131030Shanghai049_1_1.jpg
  • Old Town ShanghaiAn intricate statue of a Chinese general adron the tip of the tiled roof at Chenghuangmiao (City God) Temple in Shanghai, China on 13 October 2013. Yuyuan and the surrounding Chenghuangmiao area represent the oldest vestige of Shanghai, having existed long before the British made Shanghai a treaty port and the most important economic hub in China.
    QS131030Shanghai024_1_1.jpg
  • Huxinting Tea HouseA man sit at a table at the Huxinting (Lake Center Pavilion) Tea House in the Yuyuan Gardens in Shanghai, China on 13 October 2013. Yuyuan and the surrounding Chenghuangmiao area represent the oldest vestige of Shanghai, having existed long before the British made Shanghai a treaty port and the most important economic hub in China.
    QS131030Shanghai020_1_1.jpg
  • Huxinting Tea HouseA view out of a window of the Huxinting (Lake Center Pavilion) Tea House in the Yuyuan Gardens in Shanghai, China on 13 October 2013. Yuyuan and the surrounding Chenghuangmiao area represent the oldest vestige of Shanghai, having existed long before the British made Shanghai a treaty port and the most important economic hub in China.
    QS131030Shanghai019_1_1.jpg
  • Old Town ShanghaiWorkers prepare and wrap Xiaolongbao at the Yuyuan Gardens in Shanghai, China on 13 October 2013. Xiaolongbao is one of the most famouse Shanghai food dishes and Yuyuan Garden claims to make the most original Xiaolongbao.
    QS131030Shanghai015_1_1.jpg
  • Staff members man the phone lines for overseas clients during Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai061_1_1.jpg
  • An auctioneer calls out during Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai058_1_1.jpg
  • Cai Jinqing, chief executive officer of Christie's China, poses for photographs after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai047_1_1.jpg
  • A Christie's doorman stands in front of the entrance to Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai038_1_1.jpg
  • Attendees look at artworks on display during a Christie's preview event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai035_1_1.jpg
  • Steven P. Murphy, chief executive officer of Christie's International, talks to the media after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai025_1_1.jpg
  • Employees practice serving patons at Chef Paul Pairet's Ultra Violet (UV) restaurant in Shanghai, China on 28 September 2013. Serving only a dozen patrons per meal, UV is quickly making a reputation for itself as it combines the senses of taste, sound, and sight to the extreme.
    QS130928Shanghai135_1_1.jpg
  • Food being prepared at Chef Paul Pairet's Ultra Violet (UV) restaurant in Shanghai, China on 28 September 2013. Serving only a dozen patrons per meal, UV is quickly making a reputation for itself as it combines the senses of taste, sound, and sight to the extreme.
    QS130928Shanghai054_1_1.jpg
  • Chef Paul Pairet poses for photographs at his Ultra Violet (UV) restaurant in Shanghai, China on 28 September 2013. Serving only a dozen patrons per meal, UV is quickly making a reputation for itself as it combines the senses of taste, sound, and sight to the extreme.
    QS130928Shanghai119_1_1.jpg
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