1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows by Ai Weiwei an assault on the censors – The Guardian
The best measure of the artist Ai Weiwei was made not by any critic but by an interrogator working for Chinas state security forces. It came 51 days into his imprisonment in 2011 on trumped-up tax evasion charges. The agent understood that I wasnt an evil person, Ai relates in his autobiography, just a troublemaker. Everything I did was basically a form of dadaism, the agent told him. Cultural subversion was my speciality.
Sign up to our Inside Saturday newsletter for an exclusive behind the scenes look at the making of the magazines biggest features, as well as a curated list of our weekly highlights.
The artist first became a nail in the eye, a spike in the flesh, gravel in the shoe of the Chinese Communist party when he orchestrated the gathering and publication of the names of 4,851 children who died in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. Their deaths, Ai writes, were a direct consequence of corruption and the unsafe construction of school buildings.
Were Ai to have kept this politicking confined to the gallery, the state security services might not have been so determined in their persecution of him. Indeed, we hear little about the conceptual work that initially made his name: the 1,001 Chinese nationals, from all walks of life, who became a living artwork at the Documenta exhibition in Kassel in 2007 are afforded just a few paragraphs; his later installation of 100m ceramic sunflower seeds in the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern in 2010 even less. Art Ai regards as a safe haven, a language that was less confrontational. Instead, the artist has increasingly turned to documentary-making to highlight the governments corruption and censorship, as well as embracing blogging and social media with bravado. Politics, he says, is a kind of readymade artwork.
The earthquake is not the only cause Ai has taken up. He has highlighted labour abuses in the construction of the 2008 Beijing Olympics stadium he helped design; sold a pack of baby formula at auction to call attention to its high levels of toxic melamine; and campaigned against the cat-meat trade. In 2009 the artist was beaten and his team locked in their hotel rooms after they travelled to Chengdu in Chinas southwest to support a fellow activist on trial.
Ai clearly relishes the publicity these confrontations afford him and he makes no huge effort to ingratiate himself with the reader. In 1994 he produced The Black Cover Book, a compendium of artworks and texts distributed under the radar of the censors. Though it did catch the attention of the police, spooking his collaborators, Ai sounds disappointed when he reveals they did not directly interfere. After Chengdu he says he was determined to see how far I could go. His arrest followed shortly after, sparking international condemnation (in 2015, when the UK issued only a limited visa to allow him to visit his show at the Royal Academy in London due to his criminal record, home secretary Theresa May intervened to extend it).
Given that AI is not shy of controversy, there are some strange omissions. He does not address the criticism levelled at him after he recreated the photograph of Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian refugee pictured dead on a beach, with himself in the position of the drowned boy. Nor does he mention his support for Julian Assange. Early in the book, in a paragraph concerning self-criticism sessions in 1940s China, he writes how ideological cleansing continues in the modern west under the influence of politically correct extremism but leaves the point hanging.
Ais rebellion has its roots in his fathers turbulent life. He writes that he was never emotionally close to Ai Qing, who was a famous poet. Yet it is evident that his fathers persecution, first under the Nationalists in the 30s and then as a rightist during the Cultural Revolution, had a profound effect on Ais character.
Ai Qing joined the Communist party in 1941 and was intimate with its leading lights, including Mao Zedong, whom he found thoughtful and composed, and widely read cracking the occasional joke. Yet he soon fell foul of the leaders purges. It is in the recollections of Weiweis teenage years in a region nicknamed Little Siberia that the autobiography is at its most vivid and revealing. Living in a dug-out pit, the boy foraged for firewood to keep warm, his father forced to clean latrines in which faeces would freeze into icy pillars.
Father would always light a cigarette and size up the work as though admiring a Rodin sculpture. The nicotine rush would bolster his courage in addressing the task ahead, he writes. Ai Qing suffered this persecution stoically, he notes: I have to admit I lack that level of forbearance. When Ai Qing was eventually politically rehabilitated, he professed himself at peace, but for his son those humiliations have cast a long shadow. He expresses an impatience with the timidity of my fathers generation.
Despite these mixed feelings, 1000 Years of Joy and Sorrow is ultimately an elegiac tribute to his fathers professional and personal legacy. He quotes from Ai Qings poems, reproducing several of them in full. One of his fathers earliest works, written in Paris, describes his fellow exiles loving freedom, hating war / In a fury over these things / In anguish over them / Working up a sweat / Tears in their eyes. Ai now lives in Portugal, and, for all his pragmatic understanding of arts limits in the face of totalitarianism, rejecting his fathers belief that poetry was inseparable from the future of democratic politics, art nonetheless remains for him a signifier of social health. Censorship, Ai writes, is the cruellest form of violence.
1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows by Ai Weiwei, translated by Allan H Barr, is published by Bodley Head (25). To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
View original post here:
1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows by Ai Weiwei an assault on the censors - The Guardian
- Faith for Libraries Campaign Will Combat Book Censorship and Defend Religious Freedom - American Library Association - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Why Jim Gaffigan Calls This the Best Time That Standup Comedy Has Ever Had Despite Censorship and Cancellation - Variety - November 10th, 2025 [November 10th, 2025]
- Britain calls it safety. It is censorship - Al Jazeera - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Author Visit Canceled at Last Minute; Maryland Returns Flamer to Shelves | Censorship News - School Library Journal - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Breaking norms to survive in war-torn Yemen - Index on Censorship - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- The GENIUS Acts $250M battle begins now: Bitcoin stands as the last bastion against censorship - CryptoSlate - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Fix Indiana Universitys Free Speech Crisis - FIRE | Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- YouTube Quietly Erased More Than 700 Videos Documenting Israeli Human Rights Violations - The Intercept - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- How artist Sais exhibition in Thailand was censored after Chinese protests - Index on Censorship - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- A letter to the Home Secretary on transnational repression in the UK - Index on Censorship - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Meet the High Schoolers Who Overturned a State Reading Bowl Book Ban: Book Censorship News, November 7, 2025 - Book Riot - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- This Journalist Asked the Simplest Question about Israel and Got Fired for It. If Zionists Think This Level of Censorship Helps Them They are Dead... - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Revealed: Secret plans to introduce media censorship in Australia - Pearls and Irritations - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Application Gatekeeping: An Ever-Expanding Pathway to Internet Censorship - Electronic Frontier Foundation - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- University Censorship Committee spars over its own legality in first meeting - The Missoulian - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Indiana University facing lawsuit after claims it tried to censor student newspaper - NPR - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Staff Editorial: Censorship Goes Against the Core of Journalism - Pepperdine Graphic - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- When speaking out feels risky: ASU study reveals the hidden dynamics of self-censorship - ASU News - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- We will survive this: Fears about censorship in the entertainment industry grow - depauliaonline.com - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Censorship by Omission: How China Edits Reality Before Its Written - The Sunday Guardian - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Freedom of speech has never been for everyone : Code Switch - NPR - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Arizona university accused of censorship for banning poster - azcentral.com and The Arizona Republic - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Letter: Resist those trying to use censorship - The Globe | Worthington, Minnesota - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- The Bolduc Brief: The Dangers of Censorship - A Critique of the Recent Secretary of Defense Guidance - SOFREP - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- My Hero Academia's Censorship May Ruin the Final Season's Most Shocking Scene - Screen Rant - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Tesla's fourth Robotaxi crash is now official and suspicions grow about censorship of information in reports submitted to NHTSA - Unin Rayo - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- 'Thank God for GB News!' Donald Trump ally accuses BBC Panorama of 'arrogant censorship' in heated tirade - GB News - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Inside the Israeli Media's 'Shocking Self-censorship' of the Horrors of Gaza - Haaretz - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Exclusive | Facebook still censoring The Posts reporting on Black Lives Matter despite pledge to end restrictions - New York Post - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- New Report Shows Right-Wing School Boards Responsible for Book Banning, Censorship and Anti-LGBTQ Policies Across Pennsylvania - Bucks County Beacon - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Indiana University Lifts Ban on Printing News in College Newspaper - The New York Times - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Alfian Saat On Censorship, Courage, And The Power Of Singapore Theatre - a+ Singapore - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- Tech Executives & Others Testify on Internet Censorship - C-SPAN - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Russia's Digital Censorship Intensifies with Selective Internet Blocking in 2025 - - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Rogue Goodreads Librarian Edits Site to Expose 'Censorship in Favor of Trump Fascism - 404 Media - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- CNN Boss Ordered Teardown Censorship After V.I.P. West Wing Visit - The Daily Beast - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Everybody Loves Wanda Sykes: The Comedy Legend on Ending The Upshaws, Why Her Character Is Straight and Why She Wont Censor Herself in Trumps America... - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- CNN Boss Ordered Teardown Censorship After V.I.P. West Wing Visit - Yahoo - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Online Regulators Have Launched an Operation to Censor Pessimists. Here's Where It's Happening - People.com - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Freedom in the Arts launches survey into censorship in the arts - Arts Professional - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Gerry Adams: Censorship anniversary is a lesson for today - Irish Echo Newspaper - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Theres only room for one god in China - Index on Censorship - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- The Chainsaw Man Movie is Completely Faithful to the Manga Including the 'Censorship' - Comic Book Resources - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
- Crypto Treasury Stocks Face a Reckoning. Why Boom Could Turn to Bust. - Barron's - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- The Lone House Democrat Who Thinks His Party Has the Shutdown All Wrong - The Wall Street Journal - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Voters are about to speak. What they say might not end the shutdown. - Politico - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- US government shutdown threatens the spending power of Congress - Reuters - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Hungry kids are about to become the new face of the shutdown - MSNBC News - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Dems Can Win a Senate Seat in Texas. Yes, Really - Rolling Stone - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- The shutdowns looming health care cliff - Politico - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- 'A Nice Indian Boy' | Whats in a name? Ask the censor board - The Hindu - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Why Did Indiana University Axe Its Award-Winning Print Newspaper? - The Nation - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- In America, no government has the right to censor - ironmountaindailynews.com - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Buried on the Ballot, Prop 15 Sparks Fears Over Censorship and Trans Youth Care - Dallas Observer - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- U of M sits tight on institutional speech code amid growing concerns of faculty censorship - MinnPost - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Court Awards $885,000 in Attorney Fees After Counseling Censorship Victory - Focus on the Family - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Organizers Cancel a University Conference on Censorship After Being Warned It Could Run Afoul of Utah Law Unless It Was Censored. Yes, You Read that... - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- The Librarians Centers the Educators Fighting Book Bans - The Progressive - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- EDITORIAL: In wake of Indiana University, student press must stand as one against censorship - The Daily Eastern News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- College faculty are under pressure to say and do the right thing the stress also trickles down to students - The Conversation - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Russian censorship body confirms it has partially blocked WhatsApp and Telegram - - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Editorial: The Spectator Condemns the Suppression of Free Speech at IU - seattlespectator.com - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Opinion | My Bosses Were Afraid of Crossing Trump. So, I Quit. - Politico - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Trump Campaigned on Free Speech. That Isn't How He's Governed. - Reason Magazine - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Watertown Group Hosting Presentation on Promoting Inclusion, Resisting Censorship - Watertown News - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- No, There Never Was a Biden Censorship-Industrial Complex - theunpopulist.net - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Indiana University subsidizes IDS, so it has the right to cut print editions | Letters - IndyStar - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- EDITORIAL: Statement in support of the Indiana Daily Student - The Butler Collegian - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Censorship is the Real Danger, Not the Books - Talon Marks - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Censoring the Indiana Daily Student contradicts IU's core principles | Letters - IndyStar - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- The censors have names. Use them. - goSkagit - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- CT ACLU Legal Director: The closest analog to us is the McCarthy era - dailycampus.com - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Contents Truth, trust & tricksters: Free expression in the age of AI - Index on Censorship - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Geopolitics and Corruption - A History of the Objections to NGO Participation in the UN Convention Against Corruption, 2017-2023 - The National Law... - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- Why the Open Technology Fund Is Worth Saving - The Dispatch - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reactions to IU's censorship of the IDS - Indiana Daily Student - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Whats the biggest threat to free speech censorship or contempt? - Deseret News - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Jodi Picoult decries 'devastating' H.S. cancelation of her musical 'Between the Lines' - Asbury Park Press - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Self-censorship and the spiral of silence: Why Americans are less likely to publicly voice their opinions on political issues - Yahoo - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- My first encounter with censorship - Grand Haven Tribune - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]