Olympic artist attacks China's pomp and propaganda
Ngọc Lý 22.08.2007 12:44:20 (permalink)
Olympic artist attacks China's pomp and propaganda


· Man behind bird's nest stadium to boycott games
· Row with Spielberg over role of film directors

Jonathan Watts, East Asia correspondent
Thursday August 9, 2007
The Guardian



The Chinese National Olympic Stadium, also known as the 'bird's nest',
designed by Ai Weiwei. Photograph: AP
 



The Chinese artist behind Beijing's spectacular new Olympic stadium has said he wants nothing to do with the propaganda for which it will be used during next year's games.
In an attack on the "disgusting" political conditions in the one-party state, Ai Weiwei told the Guardian he would not attend the opening ceremony a year from now, or allow himself to be associated with either the government or the games.
"I would rather be disconnected or forgotten," said Ai, one of China's most prominent figures in the arts. He conceived the stadium's steel-lattice design - nicknamed the bird's nest - with Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.
"I hate the kind of feeling stirred up by promotion or propaganda ... It's the kind of sentiment when you don't stick to the facts, but try to make up something, to mislead people away from a true discussion. It is not good for anyone."
He accused those choreographing the opening ceremony on August 8 next year - including film-makers Steven Spielberg and Zhang Yimou - of failing to live up to their responsibility as artists.
"All the shitty directors in the world are involved. It's disgusting," said Ai. "I don't like anyone who shamelessly abuses their profession, who makes no moral judgment. It is mindless."
Recently, a Spielberg spokesman hinted the director might relinquish his Olympic role unless China dropped its opposition at the UN to an increased peacekeeping force for Darfur; four days later, a deal on the force was announced in New York.
Although Ai's work, too, will be used as the stage for the Olympics' opening ceremony, he has no regrets. "The joy of design is already there. The rest is rubbish," he said. "I was not hired by the state but by a design team in Switzerland. No one in the state here would ever hire me for a project like this."
With a family history of persecution by the communist government, Ai's involvement with the Olympic project raised eyebrows from the start. The artist spent much of his childhood in remote Xinjiang after his father, Ai Qin, one of China's greatest modern poets, was exiled.
Such persecution, along with political murders, corruption and rampant land theft, remain taboo subjects in China. Ai is one of only a few prominent people living in Beijing to speak out. "I very openly criticise the tendency to use culture for the purpose of propaganda, to dismiss the true function of art and the intellect."
Ai's contemporary, Zhang Yimou - whose family also had troubled times under the communists - has been criticised at various points in his career by both the authorities and their opponents.
As for Spielberg, when he announced in April last year that he had been hired as a consultant on the opening and closing ceremonies for the Olympics, he said his overriding goal was "to give the world a taste of peace, friendship and understanding". In recent months he has elaborated on his motives, after being criticised in the US for his involvement with Beijing when the government there stands accused of aiding Sudan's regime, despite the latter's promoting a genocide in Darfur.
In May, Spielberg set out his moral position on that issue when he published the text of a private letter he had sent to China's president, Hu Jintao. The director spoke of his pride in the work of the Shoah Foundation Institute which he founded to record the testimonies of survivors of the Holocaust, and the value he saw in the Beijing Olympics as an event promoting "respect for universal moral principles".
"I believe there is no greater crime against humanity than genocide. I feel strongly that every member of the world community has a moral and ethical responsibility to act to prevent such crimes," he said. His hope for all sovereign nations, he added, "is that they will work creatively to coexist with great peace and lasting prosperity and that they will treat their citizens with dignity and respect".
Ai dismissed concerns about repercussions from expressing his views, adding: "It is not opposition to the state, but rather in fighting for individualism and freedom of expression, freedom of human rights and justice ... If you read newspapers today you see the problems created by this structure and by the effort to maintain power. It is against everything that human society should be fighting for."


Special reports
China

Archived articles
More on China

World news guide
China

Useful links
Chinese government gateway site
Human rights in China
China Daily
South China Morning Post
China Times

http://www.guardian.co.uk/china/story/0,,2144691,00.html
#1
    Chuyển nhanh đến:

    Thống kê hiện tại

    Hiện đang có 0 thành viên và 1 bạn đọc.
    Kiểu:
    2000-2024 ASPPlayground.NET Forum Version 3.9