24 Funny Illustrations That Show The Cultural Differences Between The East And The West Made By This Artist
Since we can travel around the world and visit different countries, people noticed cultural differences that are here to this day. That is what makes traveling fun, to change your usual setting with something new and unexplored.
Yang Liu a young artist from Beijing currently living in Germany illustrates the social and cultural differences between her Eastern and Western worlds in her project “Ost trifft West,” or “East Meets West,” which conveys a strong message on the differences she personally experienced.
"Ost trifft West" is a series of infographic posters that compare German and Chinese people in accurate and humorous ways. The infographics highlight important human elements such as self-perception, opinion expression, and mood.
So without further ado, we invite you to explore the differences captured by this incredibly observant artist.
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The Boss
Meanwhile in China: "Sorry, you're just not tall enough to get promoted "
If you wonder how Yang Liu gathered information, such as whether she used interviews, research, or theories, her reply is this: “The fact is that every single illustration is my very personal experience in the past 13-17 years, and this work was made as a documentation of my own life,” she said. As an artist who was raised in multiple cultures, she doesn’t feel like she belongs to any of them: “I am feeling myself more as a person who belongs to all the places I have been,” says Liu.
Means Of Transportation
Expressing Opinion
Sure, we are all aware of cultural differences around the world, such as social norms, family structure, religion, cuisine, and the more day-to-day ones that Liu has depicted in her illustrations. Historical, geographic, economic, and social factors are just some of the ones that form differences in the way we perceive and interact with the world around us.
Standing In A Line
Attitude Towards Punctuality
When moving to a new country, no matter how close or far from your home, the beginning can be quite challenging and time-consuming. In order to adapt might require some adjusting to a new culture and adopting its values, beliefs, customs, and behaviors. Building new relationships and keeping an open mind is the right way to start.
Dealing With Problems
Expressing Feelings
In Liu’s illustrations’ on one side, we might recognize ourselves more than on the other one, and it might raise questions: what else is different? How does that affect our mental health? Could I maybe learn new things and include them in my life to make it easier?
What do you, Pandas, think when seeing Liu’s depiction? Share your thoughts in the comments.
Traveling
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Noise Level At The Restaurant
*noise level everywhere in China. Chinese cities are full of sounds coming out of absolutely everywhere.
Everyday Life Of Elderly
Mood And Weather
Self Perception
People, this isn't saying that Chinese have low self-esteem or don't value themselves. It's comparing the individualism of the West to the collective mindset of the East. To a westerner the self is the primary consideration; in the east the self is a small part of the wider community
Cultural Perceptions: Germans vs. Chinese
I mean the Chinese one is not wrong. Saying as someone who lived in Germany
At A Party
I'm one of the little lonely dots on the German side. I would say I wish I lived on the circle side, but I would probably get overwhelmed by my nearest dots and try to leave early.
Children In The Family
Three Meals A Day
More variety in Germany? Oh no, I get it. Cold and hot meals. Ok.
Contacts And Connections
Cure For Stomach Ache
Sundays On The Streets
Lifestyle: Independent vs. Dependent
So basically "disappoint your family in any way and be disowned" in China. No real chance to develop your own genuine personality in a world like that
Ideal Of Beauty
Is this to do with skin colour or tone? Germans prefer darker skin and Chinese prefer lighter skin tones? If it is not, I don’t get it.
It is. Asian beauty ideals (including Korea, Japan etc ) say that lighter, whiter skin tones are more beautiful (though it is, albeit slowly, starting to change)
Load More Replies...In Asia if you have darker skin (even if genetically) it’s implied that you’re a manual laborer like a farmer who works outside. So that’s looked down before, nowadays I don’t think it’s a think but young women will avoid direct sunlight and you will rarely find people sunbathing like us westerners.
Am I the only one that sees an angry face with the bikinis? Time for me to visit the psychologist for this LOL
That was the 1st thing I saw and i thought i was just cranky but it turns out im cranky AND bitter.
Load More Replies...At Great Wall, Chinese teen boys asked to pose with my blond wife, 3 times their age.
It's about tanning. Tanned skin used to be a sign of working class labour (in the sun) in the 19th century: only rich ppl could keep their skin pale. Then when foreign holidays became popular with air travel in the C.20th, a tan became a sign of wealth. Unfortunately,in many countries where darker skin is the norm , young women risk all sorts of damage to lighten their skin.
Same in Africa. White people tan themselves to look brown, and African people use skin lighteners on themselves to look whiter. Sad how we can't accept ourselves as we are, and how we as Africans idealise whiteness. https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2022-02-15-beyond-the-pale-the-noxious-history-of-skin-lightening-creams-in-south-africa-still-haunts-us/
Reverse racism is still racism. The correct analogy would have both puppets the same colour, but the Chinese one in a one-piece bathingsuit.
in Chin light, Shiny skin apparently makes you better. and in Germany most Germans love dark skin and tans.
Right! The Chinese who are pale are viewed as higher class because they don't have to work in the fields, or outside. In most of the US and European countries, we view vacations and suntans for people who can afford lavish trips and beach vacations. I worked in China for a year and would go help families working outside to show my appreciation for them taking me in and showing me around! The families would get me sunscreen, using their hard earned money on me! They would spend their money on me versus on their family to try to keep me looking like upper class! It took me a while to figure out why they did that! They were very special and kind people!!
I agree with the Germans. Light bikini reflects back the sunlight so that the heat isn't absorbed 👏
In China and other Asian countries women like to keep their skin pale and pearly. No tan!
Hmmmm. Everyone saying this has to do with tans....I think this could mean Germans wear clothing and expect that others recognize their outer appearance over their true selves. Chinese wear clothing as a necessity, their true beauty is underneath. The facade is not as important? Lol it's a stretch
it's not the skin color, it's just the contrast of the colors. it means that it is the same beauty standards
The only way I think that the Germans would prefer a darker skin tone was if that skin is usually fair - but now tanned due to a Suncation!
Tanned skin is beautiful vs. keeping skin creamy white out of the sun is beautiful.
Tan is beautiful vs. keeping skin creamy white out of the sun is beautiful
It's about beauty perception. Europeans like tanned skin, Asians like it fair. It's reflected in the cosmetics industry. Products to bleach your skin are still quite popular in Asia (not only China). For Asians used to show social status- if dark, you're a field worker.
As a dark skinned African woman, I have been warned that if i travel to Asian or middle eastern countries i will experience significant racism 😞😞
I think this refers to the fact that westerners like to get tans. Like as in at the beach. Tanning salons. In the east they definitely do not, at least amongst the higher class.
I thought this was about whether people like bodies or the clothes better lol
I think it means that Germans prefer fuller bodies (while the Chinese prefer slimmer, lithe bodies). The former tend to go for less "skimpy" bikini bottoms, while the Chinese prefer more "thong-like" ones?
Chinese ppl will literally have an umbrella out on a cloudy day while in the shade of a tree: reason as explained to me by a Chinese person: "because darker skin means peasantry and lower class" it's literally about racism. Don't believe me? Read a Chinese newspaper and look for the comics section. They... Hate... Dark... Skinned... People. Don't know why. They just do. And I mean haaaate...
Dude, that’s a pretty messed up perception and stereotype of EVERY single Chinese person.
Load More Replies...Shower Time
Novelties
Attention trolls: please stop calling this Beijing-born Chinese artist a racist, or that she is stereotyping her own country
I love her (accurate) take on things and I think it's so true that it actually makes it humourous. ..... I haven't read every comment but a lot of them seem to be 'defending' the west! Why?? These pics are just some general sweeping statements to make us smile .... Well it worked for me! Happy Tuesday 😉
Load More Replies...Just goes to show there are things to be learned from both (and other) cultures. Once we get further down our shared timeline, hopefully we can choose the best of all and further humankind.
Again, wish I could upvote this comment at least 100 times. (Hopefully, fingers crossed, but not holding my breath 😪)
Load More Replies...I feel like this should be titled differences in China and Germany rather than East and West. Both areas are culturally diverse enough that using one country as a metric isn't really fair.
I relate completely as a middle eastern living in the west.
Load More Replies...Yep. Acknowledging differences between cultures is the exact opposite of racist unless it's done with a disdainful or xenophobic undertone. It's so gross that it's become the norm to cry racism for any humor relating to or observations of CULTURAL variations. Hell, it is almost never coming from a racist place when people make jokes or discuss differences between actual races in today's day. 99.999% of what many people have tantrums about and call racist only shows their inability to process the literal definition of the term. It's basically always about their fragile egos being damaged due to a lifetime of privilege making them weak, narcissistic and simple enough to still do something so obviously embarrassing, wrong, dividing and...just f****n gross. It's regressive fragility masquerading as progressive. I can't imagine anyone is still so enslaved by their delusion as to believe this contemporary bastardized version of social consciousness and tolerance is progressive.
It took me 4 pictures to realize that this wasn't talking about the East and West coast of the U.S 🤦🏻♀️
well you DO live in a country that calls its indigenous sport tournament the "world series" so we're quite used to you guys thinking usa is the world ;-) /jk
Load More Replies...The art is neat, but most seem more like judgements than observations. Very interesting.
It seems to me that a lot of the negative reactions are to Yet Another BP Post That Lacks Subtlety. It's strange to me that the title of the series was painted is such broad strokes: Berlin vs. Beijing would have been more poetic and reflective of the observed differences, and it would also recognize that painting something like half of all humans vs the other almost half of all humans is probably too broad of a stroke. I also, personally, dislike this from an infographic perspective because a good graphic condenses complicated information while making it more accessible and the graphics... do the opposite? These observations, without cultural context, and presented as a full card each seem to be adding space and removing information, and I can tell from other comments that I wasn't the only one who found some of these counterintuitive or confusing.
It's quite odd, as this infographic could almost be used for the opposite East/West scenario if you were to swap countries. Japan would easily take the place of Germany, and the US would easily take the place of China in pretty much every one of these infographic situations.
well yes but Japan was colonised by America in the 1800s (Perry et al) so it's pretty much following western standards on most things except humility and manners, where it's more eastern.
Load More Replies...There's a lot to be said about a "we" mind set and "me" mind set. I remember how people took what they needed from the stores for their families to eat after the earthquake/tsunami. I wondered if in western culture if people would just raid everything for themselves. I don't operate on a "me" mentality and people will take advantage of your lack of selfishness. It's sad.
Blue vs. Red? I couldn’t find anywhere an explanation as to which was East and which is West. Being from neither country/region/nationality/compass point, I am not familiar enough with either culture to recognize them. A simple key statement would have been helpful.
I don't think any of them were designed to make either side seem preferable. For most of them, I personally liked the West becuase that's what I'm used to. It's just meant to show the contrast between different cultures.
Load More Replies...Most of these could just as easily be the difference between Northern and Southern Europe, so the title is wildly inaccurate.
She is a racist because she has claimed Chinese cultural habits as the same for all of Asia.......... The article is labeled wrong. It should be the EU and China not west and east
So, are you racist for saying all of the EU is one cultural block? Because all of the EU is not the same, so you would be incorrect to say that. You could ask for clarification rather than assuming the worst.
Load More Replies...It's also important to recognize generalities. For example, the west queuing and the eastern cluster. Many Chinese tourists actually take a class which involves learning about queuing along with other things so that they are on the same page with others when they travel. I don't recommend going to a new country and assuming everyone is just as unique and independently minded as you. There is a thing called culture and it's not the same across the world lol..
Load More Replies...you need to substantiate your argument otherwise people downvote you.
Load More Replies...What the heck is this comment thread? Are you people tinfoil hat nutters?
Load More Replies...How do you know? Do you belong to both cultures?
Load More Replies...Seriously? How is it mean? How can you possibly take offence, and if you didn't, why are you taking offence on behalf of others when no one specific is being portrayed, and all of the comments from those of the portrayed nationalities are finding humour and things they can relate to, rather than taking offence? Not everything that isn't rainbows and sunshine needs to be seen as mean or offensive.
Load More Replies...The artist lives in Germany, where two cold meals a day are normal.
Load More Replies...Look up where the artist was born and where they live. Clues in the picture.
Load More Replies...Attention trolls: please stop calling this Beijing-born Chinese artist a racist, or that she is stereotyping her own country
I love her (accurate) take on things and I think it's so true that it actually makes it humourous. ..... I haven't read every comment but a lot of them seem to be 'defending' the west! Why?? These pics are just some general sweeping statements to make us smile .... Well it worked for me! Happy Tuesday 😉
Load More Replies...Just goes to show there are things to be learned from both (and other) cultures. Once we get further down our shared timeline, hopefully we can choose the best of all and further humankind.
Again, wish I could upvote this comment at least 100 times. (Hopefully, fingers crossed, but not holding my breath 😪)
Load More Replies...I feel like this should be titled differences in China and Germany rather than East and West. Both areas are culturally diverse enough that using one country as a metric isn't really fair.
I relate completely as a middle eastern living in the west.
Load More Replies...Yep. Acknowledging differences between cultures is the exact opposite of racist unless it's done with a disdainful or xenophobic undertone. It's so gross that it's become the norm to cry racism for any humor relating to or observations of CULTURAL variations. Hell, it is almost never coming from a racist place when people make jokes or discuss differences between actual races in today's day. 99.999% of what many people have tantrums about and call racist only shows their inability to process the literal definition of the term. It's basically always about their fragile egos being damaged due to a lifetime of privilege making them weak, narcissistic and simple enough to still do something so obviously embarrassing, wrong, dividing and...just f****n gross. It's regressive fragility masquerading as progressive. I can't imagine anyone is still so enslaved by their delusion as to believe this contemporary bastardized version of social consciousness and tolerance is progressive.
It took me 4 pictures to realize that this wasn't talking about the East and West coast of the U.S 🤦🏻♀️
well you DO live in a country that calls its indigenous sport tournament the "world series" so we're quite used to you guys thinking usa is the world ;-) /jk
Load More Replies...The art is neat, but most seem more like judgements than observations. Very interesting.
It seems to me that a lot of the negative reactions are to Yet Another BP Post That Lacks Subtlety. It's strange to me that the title of the series was painted is such broad strokes: Berlin vs. Beijing would have been more poetic and reflective of the observed differences, and it would also recognize that painting something like half of all humans vs the other almost half of all humans is probably too broad of a stroke. I also, personally, dislike this from an infographic perspective because a good graphic condenses complicated information while making it more accessible and the graphics... do the opposite? These observations, without cultural context, and presented as a full card each seem to be adding space and removing information, and I can tell from other comments that I wasn't the only one who found some of these counterintuitive or confusing.
It's quite odd, as this infographic could almost be used for the opposite East/West scenario if you were to swap countries. Japan would easily take the place of Germany, and the US would easily take the place of China in pretty much every one of these infographic situations.
well yes but Japan was colonised by America in the 1800s (Perry et al) so it's pretty much following western standards on most things except humility and manners, where it's more eastern.
Load More Replies...There's a lot to be said about a "we" mind set and "me" mind set. I remember how people took what they needed from the stores for their families to eat after the earthquake/tsunami. I wondered if in western culture if people would just raid everything for themselves. I don't operate on a "me" mentality and people will take advantage of your lack of selfishness. It's sad.
Blue vs. Red? I couldn’t find anywhere an explanation as to which was East and which is West. Being from neither country/region/nationality/compass point, I am not familiar enough with either culture to recognize them. A simple key statement would have been helpful.
I don't think any of them were designed to make either side seem preferable. For most of them, I personally liked the West becuase that's what I'm used to. It's just meant to show the contrast between different cultures.
Load More Replies...Most of these could just as easily be the difference between Northern and Southern Europe, so the title is wildly inaccurate.
She is a racist because she has claimed Chinese cultural habits as the same for all of Asia.......... The article is labeled wrong. It should be the EU and China not west and east
So, are you racist for saying all of the EU is one cultural block? Because all of the EU is not the same, so you would be incorrect to say that. You could ask for clarification rather than assuming the worst.
Load More Replies...It's also important to recognize generalities. For example, the west queuing and the eastern cluster. Many Chinese tourists actually take a class which involves learning about queuing along with other things so that they are on the same page with others when they travel. I don't recommend going to a new country and assuming everyone is just as unique and independently minded as you. There is a thing called culture and it's not the same across the world lol..
Load More Replies...you need to substantiate your argument otherwise people downvote you.
Load More Replies...What the heck is this comment thread? Are you people tinfoil hat nutters?
Load More Replies...How do you know? Do you belong to both cultures?
Load More Replies...Seriously? How is it mean? How can you possibly take offence, and if you didn't, why are you taking offence on behalf of others when no one specific is being portrayed, and all of the comments from those of the portrayed nationalities are finding humour and things they can relate to, rather than taking offence? Not everything that isn't rainbows and sunshine needs to be seen as mean or offensive.
Load More Replies...The artist lives in Germany, where two cold meals a day are normal.
Load More Replies...Look up where the artist was born and where they live. Clues in the picture.
Load More Replies...