China eases up on artist Ai
In June, the activist had his first solo show there in years. Now he regains his passport.
BEIJING — Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei regained his passport Wednesday, more than four years after it was seized by authorities apparently in retaliation for his social and political activism.
Ai posted a selfie to Instagram holding his red People’s Republic of China passport up to the camera.
“This morning I was notified to go to the border control office,” Ai said in an email. “There at the office, I received my passport back and verbal permission to say that my right to travel abroad was restored.
“I was always very positive about my situation,” he said. “I did sense that it would happen one day, but, of course, that day could have been very distant.”
Andreas Johnsen, director of the 2013 documentary “Ai Weiwei: The Fake Case,” said the news was a shock, but a pleasant one. “It’s extremely great, but it’s just sad it took so long,” he said.
Alison Klayman, director of the 2012 documentary “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry,” called the news “bittersweet,” saying it “opens up a lot of hard-to-answer questions: What will happen next? Will he be safe to travel abroad and return freely? Why now and why did it take so long? Why was it taken away in the first place?
“An arbitrary authority can be unsettling that way,” she said.
Ai is best known for his postmodern, larger-thanlife art installations, including works featuring bronze zodiac animal heads, bicycle frames fused together and millions of handcrafted porcelain sunflower seeds spread out on a gallery floor.
He has also established a reputation as a fierce government critic with a significant social media following. He led a campaign to investigate government corruption after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in which shoddily constructed schools collapsed, leading to more than 5,000 student deaths.
In March 2011, authorities detained him for 81 days on suspicion of subverting state power. After his release, police installed security cameras outside his Beijing courtyard home, hit him with a $2.5-million fine for “economic crimes” and confiscated his passport while he fought the case.
Recently, prominent galleries and museums in Germany, Britain and the U.S. have honored his work in one-man shows, but Ai has been unable to leave the country to plan the shows or attend them.
“The authorities always promise me I will get my passport, but there is no clear indication when or at least nothing I can really rely on,” he told The Times in June 2014.
Recently, authorities have shown signs of easing in Ai’s case. He has been able to travel within China, and in June he opened his first solo show in the country in years, at Beijing’s 798 Arts District.
The show is not overtly political; it consists of a 400year-old Ming Dynasty-era ancestral hall that Ai and his assistants disassembled and reconstructed, dividing the wooden structure between two art galleries.
On San Francisco’s Alcatraz Island, Ai’s “@Large” show, which closed in April, attracted more than 896,000 visitors. Ai was unable to travel to California to supervise installation of the show, forcing exhibit organizers to make multiple trips to Beijing to confer with him on the project.
The show dealt with themes of incarceration and freedom.
“As an artist, I live in a society where freedom is incredibly precious. We strive for it daily and put forth a great amount of effort, sometimes sacrificing everything to protect this value, to insist on freedom,” Ai said in materials prepared for the exhibition.
Since his release from detention in 2011, Ai said, he has been held in “what some would call a ‘soft’ detention.”
“The government has never formally charged me, but in China my name has been censored on the Internet, in the media and even in exhibitions featuring my own work. Even after 65 years of rule, the government has never recognized the rights of the people,” he said.
“We cannot vote, and we have no independent judicial system or independent media apart from state control. Freedom, indeed, is a word that carries a great deal of weight for the Chinese people.”
In September, he is to open a show at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. The museum said it would present some of his most important works since 1993 when he returned to China from the United States. It was unclear whether Ai would go to Britain for the show.
Among new works, the museum said, would be pieces created for its galleries and courtyard, including large-scale installations using materials such as marble, steel, tea and glass.