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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Coach on Aug 17, 2013 19:22:58 GMT 1, I learnt about Ai Weiwei's SACRED piece today, and was blown away by it.
Large boxes with viewing windows, depicting the artist's time as a political prisoner
To set it in a 17th Century church, was such a great idea. The juxtopostion between the beauty of the church and the stark prison scenes works really well.
the boxes are large, and extremley well made. This means that when the little shutters are opened and closed they make the same noise that a shutter on a real prison cell would make.
The artwork was exhibited at this years Venice Biennale.
Here is a feature from The Independant:
"A Chinese woman in her early eighties arrived at the beautiful 7th century Venetian church to a flurry of press taking her photo on their camera phones. She is Gao Ying, the mother of Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei, 56, who canโt attend his own exhibition because the Chinese authorities confiscated his passport following his 81 day detention for โtax evasionโ in 2011.
Qui was visibly upset as she observed her sonโs new installation, which she had never seen before. These six dioramas โ scaled-down scenes that recreate the exact interior of his cell โ show with grace and anger the daily humiliations of Weiweiโs life as a political prisoner.
The artist has stated that his experience still gives him nightmares. The works were made over a year and a half as a way of overcoming the trauma of incarceration. Including doll-like sculptures of the artist himself and the green uniformed prison guards who watched over him, they are exquisitely rendered yet not life-like enough to appear real. Weiwei is pointedly reminding the viewer that what he or she is seeing is a fake. This too is a political statement โ Weiwei is in the business of busting illusions and exploding myths.
Each diorama is housed in a large two and half ton iron box. The viewer must step on a block and peer inside in order to look at the scenes. This creates a sense of voyeurism โ the viewer is made complicit in the guardsโ surveillance of Weiwei. To look at these works is to become a peeping tom, a pseudo-spy in the service of โ what?
It is the contrast between the physical vulnerability of Weiwei and the sterility of his surroundings that makes these works so powerful. In Cleansing (2011-2013), a figure of the artist can be seen showering while two guards look on. They are fully clothed while he is naked, which dramatizes the power imbalance. The water that runs out of the tap is a thick, yellow, and mucus-like โ even the act of washing is contaminated. These are scenes of abjection, but they are executed with a sublime craftsmanship."
www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/reviews/venice-biennale-review-ai-weiweis--sacred-are-scenes-of-abjection-showing-sublime-craftmanship-8634800.html
Truely incredible art.
I learnt about Ai Weiwei's SACRED piece today, and was blown away by it. Large boxes with viewing windows, depicting the artist's time as a political prisoner To set it in a 17th Century church, was such a great idea. The juxtopostion between the beauty of the church and the stark prison scenes works really well. the boxes are large, and extremley well made. This means that when the little shutters are opened and closed they make the same noise that a shutter on a real prison cell would make. The artwork was exhibited at this years Venice Biennale. Here is a feature from The Independant: "A Chinese woman in her early eighties arrived at the beautiful 7th century Venetian church to a flurry of press taking her photo on their camera phones. She is Gao Ying, the mother of Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei, 56, who canโt attend his own exhibition because the Chinese authorities confiscated his passport following his 81 day detention for โtax evasionโ in 2011. Qui was visibly upset as she observed her sonโs new installation, which she had never seen before. These six dioramas โ scaled-down scenes that recreate the exact interior of his cell โ show with grace and anger the daily humiliations of Weiweiโs life as a political prisoner. The artist has stated that his experience still gives him nightmares. The works were made over a year and a half as a way of overcoming the trauma of incarceration. Including doll-like sculptures of the artist himself and the green uniformed prison guards who watched over him, they are exquisitely rendered yet not life-like enough to appear real. Weiwei is pointedly reminding the viewer that what he or she is seeing is a fake. This too is a political statement โ Weiwei is in the business of busting illusions and exploding myths. Each diorama is housed in a large two and half ton iron box. The viewer must step on a block and peer inside in order to look at the scenes. This creates a sense of voyeurism โ the viewer is made complicit in the guardsโ surveillance of Weiwei. To look at these works is to become a peeping tom, a pseudo-spy in the service of โ what? It is the contrast between the physical vulnerability of Weiwei and the sterility of his surroundings that makes these works so powerful. In Cleansing (2011-2013), a figure of the artist can be seen showering while two guards look on. They are fully clothed while he is naked, which dramatizes the power imbalance. The water that runs out of the tap is a thick, yellow, and mucus-like โ even the act of washing is contaminated. These are scenes of abjection, but they are executed with a sublime craftsmanship." www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/reviews/venice-biennale-review-ai-weiweis--sacred-are-scenes-of-abjection-showing-sublime-craftmanship-8634800.htmlTruely incredible art.
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Coach on Aug 17, 2013 19:27:46 GMT 1, would love to view this in person.
Yes, I thought that too my friend. I imagine that would make it even more moving.
would love to view this in person. Yes, I thought that too my friend. I imagine that would make it even more moving.
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Deleted on Aug 17, 2013 19:53:58 GMT 1, Thanks for posting this coach. One of the best works i have seen all year. Love this to come to london
Thanks for posting this coach. One of the best works i have seen all year. Love this to come to london
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Coach on Aug 17, 2013 19:54:03 GMT 1, Hopefully it makes its way to NYC...any idea how large the boxes are?
I don't know the exact sizes, but big enough for viewers to have to stand on a step to look in. If you google the title of this thread, and go to images, there are loads more pics, including pics of people looking into the boxes. That will give you a good idea of the scale.
Hopefully it makes its way to NYC...any idea how large the boxes are? I don't know the exact sizes, but big enough for viewers to have to stand on a step to look in. If you google the title of this thread, and go to images, there are loads more pics, including pics of people looking into the boxes. That will give you a good idea of the scale.
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Coach on Aug 17, 2013 19:54:39 GMT 1, Thanks for posting this coach. One of the best works i have seen all year. Love this to come to london
You are more than welcome.
Thanks for posting this coach. One of the best works i have seen all year. Love this to come to london You are more than welcome.
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Deleted on Aug 17, 2013 21:01:39 GMT 1, Both powerful and poignant, very moving.
Both powerful and poignant, very moving.
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by highly framable on Aug 18, 2013 3:19:20 GMT 1, from zhao, "the question it raises: "what is sacred?" "nothing is. to these fuckers. withnessing the demonlishing of freedom makes the idea of freedom precious, profound and, well, sacred."
from zhao, "the question it raises: "what is sacred?" "nothing is. to these fuckers. withnessing the demonlishing of freedom makes the idea of freedom precious, profound and, well, sacred."
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Ai Weiwei S.A.C.R.E.D., by Jeezuz Jones Snr on Aug 18, 2013 3:28:38 GMT 1, Did he end up paying his tax bill?
Did he end up paying his tax bill?
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