Mr Li, 60 and Mr Chen, 63, Wanderarbeiter aus der Provinz Anhui auf einer Baustelle in Shanghai. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Wanderarbeiterinnen in Shenzhen. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Eine Wanderarbeiterin sammelt Stahl zum Verkaufen. Ort: Die Industriestadt Dongguan. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Eine Wanderarbeiterin mit ihrer sechs Monate alten Tochter. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Wanderarbeiter vor einer Ziegelsteinfabrik in der Provinz Sichuan. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Wanderarbeiter haben kaum Zeit für ihre Kinder. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Mr Xian, 50, migrant rural worker from Sichuan province, works on one of the many construction sites in the city of Chongqing. Just as a hundred years ago, the houses are often demolished without the aid of machines, simply with sledge-hammers and muscle power. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
According to the World Bank, sixteen of the planet's twenty dirtiest cities are in China, and Chongqing is one of the worst. Every year, the choking atmosphere is responsible for thousands of premature deaths and tens of thousands of cases of chronic bronchitis. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Simple, temporary tin huts for migrant rural workers working on a highway construction site in the northern part of Guangzhou city. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Inside a simple, temporary tin hut used by migrant rural workers. Curtains in front of the individual sleeping places offer the only chance of a little privacy. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
All over China, more than 150 million people travel home over Chinese New Year, the majority being migrant rural workers. Scene in front of Guangzhou's main station. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
The vast majority of migrant rural workers returning home pack China's trains, in journeys that can easily last two days and more. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
Shortly before departure. A young man has struck it lucky: he's sitting by one of the few windows that are not broken and so can be opened. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
A group of men and women leaving Anhui province. They have nothing to do here, so are travelling to Ningbo in Zhejiang province, where they will work until June. The bus journey will take hours. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
At the Anyuan coal mine Mr Liang, 42, on his way to the shower. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
A man looking for firewood early morning in the wide open spaces of the steppes. (Andreas Seibert/LookatOnline)
"From Somewhere to Nowhere", eine Ausstellung und ein Buch.
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Der Schweizer Fotograf Andreas Seibert beschäftigt sich seit Jahren mit Thema der chinesischen Wanderarbeiter. Seine Bilder beschäftigen sich mit den Lebensbedingungen der Wanderarbeiter. Zurzeit werden sie in Winterthur ausgestellt und beim Lars Müller Verlag ist ein Buch erschienen.
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