The text you provided appears to be (likely Mojibake), where Chinese characters or other scripts were incorrectly interpreted as Latin/Cyrillic characters. When translated or decoded from its common underlying structure, it refers to "Summer Palace 180 Years Large-scale Photographic Art Exhibition" (圆明园 180 大大型摄影艺术展) and themes related to the history, destruction, and memory of the Old Summer Palace in Beijing.
The exhibition highlights a profound shift in how we view history. We are no longer looking at the Old Summer Palace through the eyes of the colonizers who photographed its downfall, but through the eyes of modern creators who seek to reclaim its narrative.
Here is a deep blog post exploring the intersection of photography, historical trauma, and the preservation of memory based on those themes.
In these photos, the ruins are not silent. They speak to the fragility of culture and the enduring nature of stone. The Ethics of the Image
Why does 180 years matter? It represents a span of time just long enough for direct memory to fade, leaving only the "inherited memory" of a nation. The exhibition uses high-definition photography to force us to look closer at the details—the intricate carvings that survived the flames and the moss that now claims the stone.
Capturing the stark, tragic beauty of the ruins as they stand today.