Ai Weiwei / exhibition curators, Tim Marlow, artistic director, Adrian Locke.
Description: 237 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), portraits ; 31 cmISBN: 9781910350164; 1910350168; 9781910350232; 1910350230; 9781910350423; 1910350427Contained works: Tancock, John L. Born radical | Rosbottom, Daniel, 1969- Architecture can also be silent | Ai, Weiwei. Works. SelectionsSubject(s): Ai, Weiwei -- Exhibitions | Ai, Weiwei -- Interviews | Ai, Weiwei | 1900-2099 | Art, Chinese -- 21st century -- Exhibitions | Photography -- China -- Exhibitions | Architecture, Chinese -- 20th century -- Exhibitions | Architecture, Chinese | Art, Chinese | Photography | ChinaGenre/Form: Exhibition catalogs. | Interviews. | Exhibition catalogs.DDC classification: 709.2 LOC classification: N7349.A5 | A4 2015Other classification: 21.62 Online resources: Contributor biographical information | Publisher descriptionItem type | Current library | Class number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations |
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Book-Circulating | Fischer Hall Library Oversize | N7349.A5 A4 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Donated by Prof Giles Waterfield, Fall, 2015 | B013733 |
Published on occasion of the exhibition "Ai Weiwei" held at Royal Academy of Arts, London, September 19-December 13, 2015.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 228-229) and index.
Ai Weiwei in conversation / Tim Marlow -- Born radical / John Tancock -- Architecture can also be silent / Daniel Rosbottom -- Chronology / Adrian Locke -- Catalogue plates / with section introductions by Adrian Locke.
Artist, designer, architect, author, publisher, and curator: Ai Weiwei (b. 1957) is a truly 21st-century creative, influential across a variety of media. During his childhood, criticism of his father's poetry--he was labeled as a dissident--meant that Ai and his family were exiled to a remote region of China for 16 years. Following the death of Chairman Mao, Ai left to train as an artist in Beijing and New York. Ai is today an artist of global stature, and his strong social conscience has galvanized a generation of Chinese artists. With works that touch on topics such as imprisonment, borders, and disaster, Ai has often found himself in conflict with the Chinese authorities. Ai Weiwei is published to coincide with a major exhibition at the Royal Academy in London--the largest showing of Ai's work to date. This volume includes installations and artworks specially created for the exhibition, an interview with Ai by Tim Marlow, and contributions from a team of scholars, analyzing the variety of Ai's output and concerns.