Current location:world >>
Ai Weiwei mourns Hong Kong freedoms but is 'proud' of Tiananmen middle
world54242People have gathered around
Introductionby Jerome TaylorWhen dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei secretly snapped a picture of himself showin ...
by Jerome Taylor
When dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei secretly snapped a picture of himself showing a middle finger in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, he knew it was provocative.
But he never thought that picture would be at the heart of rising censorship fears in Hong Kong 26 years later.
“Any sign of freedom of speech, any sign of free expression can be… declared unlawful or subversive to state power,” Ai told AFP by phone.
“That law was applied in mainland China but it is also being applied in Hong Kong, there’s no question,” the 63-year-old added.
‘Fast changing world’
For Hong Kong’s art community, all eyes are currently focused on the M+ Museum.
Subscribe to HKFP's twice-weekly newsletter for a concise round-up of local news and our best coverage. Unsubscribe at any time - we will not pass on your data to third parties.
Processing… Success! You're on the list. Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.A 60,000 square-metre venue set to open later this year, it boasts perhaps the finest collection of contemporary Chinese art in the world thanks in part to a massive donation by Swiss collector Uli Sigg.
The museum’s online catalogue lists 249 works by Ai Weiwei alone. It also has photographs by Liu Heung-shing of Beijing’s deadly 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen, an event scrubbed by censors on the mainland.
But there are question marks over whether it can display its more provocative pieces given the precarious new legal and political atmosphere in Hong Kong.
Pro-Beijing politicians there have already accused the museum of breaking the new security law and “spreading hatred against the country” with their collection, singling out Ai’s Tiananmen picture.
On Monday, a government official confirmed Ai’s photo would not be displayed when the museum opens and he said he would welcome national security police to vet its collection for any possible breaches.
Ai described the curators behind M+ as “very professional” people with “creative integrity” who are dealing with “an extremely fast-changing world”.
But he said he now wonders whether any of his work will be displayed, including two large installations that are meant to be included in the opening.
“Hong Kong’s more liberal, more democratic society, is disappearing,” he lamented.
‘Proud’
Ai was once feted by Chinese authorities and helped design Beijing’s Bird’s Nest Olympic stadium.
But he found himself on the receiving end of the state’s wrath, especially when he criticised authorities over their handling of 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in which more than 87,000 people died.
He was detained for 81 days in 2011 and eventually left for Germany four years later.
The fact that his photo in Tiananmen Square is triggering Chinese authorities once more is something he welcomes.
“I cannot refuse that feeling of being proud,” he mused.
Ai took the picture back in 1995 and it kicked off a series now known as “Studies in Perspective”.
Wherever Ai went in the world he would take a similar photograph with a middle finger extended, usually towards something politically powerful or culturally important.
He has done it in more than 100 locations, including outside the White House, Germany’s Reichstag and Russia’s Kremlin.
The fact that Chinese authorities remain so outraged by his Tiananmen gesture is, he says, exactly the point.
“An individual’s little gesture can become a state matter and can really shake the foundations of authoritarianism,” he said.
Ai was critical of western museums doing deals on the mainland.
He singled out recent collaborations by France’s Centre Pompidou and Britain’s Tate Modern.
“So many cultural institutions rush to China but do they care about the most important meaning in art which is freedom of expression?” he said.
“Are they going to stay silent seeing professional museums like M+ under unthinkable pressure from the same government they are trying to please,” he added.
“Can they show their middle finger?”
Tags:
Reprint:Friends are welcome to share on the Internet, but please indicate the source of the article when reprinting it.“Stellar Stories news portal”。http://mauritania.downmusic.org/news-21b599924.html
Related articles
Brazil replaces injured goalkeeper Ederson in Copa America squad
worldRIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazil coach Dorival Júnior has replaced injured goalkeeper Ederson with Sao P ...
【world】
Read moreChina and Russia hold first joint navy patrol in Pacific
worldYour web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here ...
【world】
Read moreForget what you saw in Sex and the City! Most singletons are actually introverts, study finds
worldIt's often regarded as the ultimate depiction of single life.But a new study suggests that Sex and t ...
【world】
Read more
Popular articles
- Election 2024: Biden and Trump bypassed the Commission on Presidential Debates
- Britain's 'drone superhighway' will be completed this SUMMER: 165
- I lifted 200kg weights two days before giving birth
- Giant screen falls on stage during concert by Hong Kong boy band Mirror, two performers injured
- Jessica Biel CHOPS her long locks into a bob after book signing in Studio City
- Lazy or genius? It's the gadget that's becoming a must
Latest articles
Pope trip to Luxembourg, Belgium confirmed for September, 2 weeks after challenging Asia visit
How I kept my Easter under £10 by buying no eggs and using year
My friend turned up to my wedding as a surprise, took four pizzas and had sex with my sister
Love Island's Amy Hart reveals cruel trolls target her and one
Celebrity birthdays for the week of May 26
Revealed: The countries with the highest levels of cybercrime in the world
LINKS
- Vegas use of injured reserve prompts questions about salary cap. Other NHL teams do same thing
- Cheers and flames as Orthodox worshipers greet the ancient ceremony of the 'Holy Fire'
- Real Madrid wins the Spanish league after Barcelona loses at Girona
- Gas and propane stoves linked to 50,000 cases of childhood asthma, study finds
- Afghanistan's only female diplomat resigns in India after gold smuggling allegations
- Drew Barrymore unveils new fashion collaboration with Justin Bieber's Drew House brand
- Teyana Taylor looks fierce in towering platform boots while carrying a jeweled camera
- Why Pret's £4.50 cheddar baguette made me swear never to buy anything from the chain again
- A Chinese driver is praised for helping reduce casualties in a highway collapse that killed 48
- Swiss company to build $184 million metal casting facility in Georgia, hiring 350