I paid homage to Ai Weiwei, the Chinese installation artist and all-round provocateur, in one of my web-talks a few months ago. Despite being one of the most celebrated and successful of contemporary Chinese artists, possibly more outside his home country than within it, he's constantly getting into trouble with the Chinese authorities. It seems that he refuses to play the assigned role of an artist in modern China: a few gestures towards revolution in art, while staying quite safely within well-trodden paths of Western art, but otherwise keeping away from making real trouble in the political sphere. Well, the government evidently grew tired of him, and they sent in the bulldozers in the last few days to completely demolish his large studio buildings in Shanghai.
Here is an interview he gave to the Tate Channel about a year ago, in which he talked about the time he spent in New York City as a young man.
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Here is an interview he gave to the Tate Channel about a year ago, in which he talked about the time he spent in New York City as a young man.
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