Beginning in 1989, world renown photographer Lu Nan spent fifteen years completing his trilogy: Part One: The Forgotten People--Living Conditions of China's Psychiatric Patients; Part Two: On the Road--The Catholic Faith in China; Part Three: Four Seasons--Everyday Life of Tibetan Peasants. In this opus magnum of epic photography works, Nan affirms a richly human way of seeing.
Each photograph in the trilogy stands on its own, yet belonging inalienably to the whole. Each is a crystalline node that amplifies and extends the other; every individual moment is at the same time an empirical part of all other moments. The trilogy focuses on the human condition in three realms. Particles of substances are caught up in a web of light and shade, suggesting a state of moral elevation and ultimately guiding the viewer's gaze towards a secluded inner spiritual world in all of us.
From 1992 to 1996, Lu Nan photographed On the Road: The Catholic Faith in China, Part Two of the trilogy, across ten provinces and cities in China.