Ai Weiwei on His Favorite Artists, Living in New York and Why the Government is Afraid of Him
The Chinese government has long tried to contain the artist and activist but his ideas have spread overseas and he's got plenty more to say
- By Christina Larson
- Smithsonian.com, August 22, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
I remember my first glimpse of New York, when my plane came down. It was early in the evening—it looked like a bowl of diamonds. When I grew up, [there was] no electricity when the sun went down—the whole earth would go dark.
Before I came to New York, I only knew this is the heart of capitalism, the most sinful city. Of course, I am crazy [excited] to go since I hate Communists. I thought, that’s a place I would love to go. But I knew nothing about New York—all of my impressions came from Mark Twain and Walt Whitman.
And when you came back to Beijing in the 1990s, how was it different?
I could see some material changes, but I was very disappointed to see so little political change. I could see so many luxury cars. There is no justice or fairness in this society—so far from it—and the gap is getting deeper and wider.
Education is totally ruined—they [the government] never know how education should teach you to think; they just want to control everyone’s mind. They sacrifice everything just for stability, and [now are] trying to block information from the young generation. This produces a generation of young people who cannot meet the challenges, who are lacking in imagination, passion and courage. It is not a good picture for the future of this nation.
Why, exactly, is the government afraid of you?
My resistance is a symbolic gesture; it’s not just a struggle for myself, but to present certain common values. The secret police told me, everybody can see it but you, you’re so influential. But I think [their behavior] makes me more influential. They create me, rather than solve the problem.
When they demolished my studio outside Shanghai was demolished about a year ago , it made every young person —whether or not they liked me before—think I must be some kind of hero. Just in trying to maintain my own identity, it becomes more dramatic.
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Comments (1)
i would have loved to read this whole article but the fact that it was split into five pages for no apparent reason was so irksome that i couldn't bring myself to finish it. this website is great but unnecessary pagination is a terribly odious practice.
Posted by Jeffery A Davis on October 2,2012 | 12:38 AM