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Post by sleepboy on Oct 29, 2011 8:39:03 GMT -8
Also a book of his photography released. More info here.
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Post by saL on Nov 7, 2011 14:45:18 GMT -8
Chinese tax authorities send outspoken artist Ai Weiwei new bill for $2.4 millionThe new notice gave him around 10 days to make the payment, without saying what might happen if he failed, he said.
Ai said he would not pay until police returned account books confiscated from his Beijing Fake Cultural Development Ltd. design company and allowed him to meet with his former office manager and accountant.
“We can pay this money, but we need to know why we have to,” he said. “We cannot just unwittingly hand over a sum of money. This would be irresponsible toward the country.”
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Post by lowpro on Nov 7, 2011 19:12:58 GMT -8
^^^ There is a beautiful yin to every ugly yang...er something poetic like that. The generosity of people sometimes, while rare, does astound. Online and by Paper Airplane, Contributions Pour In to Chinese DissidentBEIJING — In the days since the Chinese government delivered a punitive $2.4 million tax bill to the artist Ai Weiwei, thousands of people have responded by contributing money in a gesture that is at once benevolent and subversive. Ai Weiwei on Tuesday. He has received more than $550,000 to pay a $2.4 million tax bill. Related More than 20,000 people have together contributed at least $840,000 since Tuesday, when tax officials gave Mr. Ai 15 days to come up with an amount that was more than three times the sum he was accused of evading in taxes. “It’s surprising; it has really changed my perspective on people,” he said in a telephone interview on Sunday, describing how scores of supporters, some of whom traveled from distant cities, have been delivering cash to his home. One of China’s best known artists and a voluble government critic, Mr. Ai was detained in April and held for 81 days at an undisclosed location, ostensibly on tax evasion charges, according to the state-run news media. Mr. Ai insists his prosecution is politically motivated. During his confinement, he said his questioners were only interested in discussing his activism, particularly his role in the so-called Jasmine Revolution, the call for pro-democracy protests inspired by events in the Arab world. Mr. Ai said he was not involved in organizing the protests, which were effectively stymied by the Chinese authorities. Since his release in June, Mr. Ai, 54, has kept a low profile, one of the conditions of his bail. But the imposed silence ill-suited the artist, who has increasingly bridled against the restrictions, among them a prohibition against talking to the news media or communicating publicly through Weibo, China’s Twitter-like microblogging service. Since the amount of his fine became public on Tuesday, Mr. Ai appears to have shed any reluctance to speak out and has criticized the tax penalty as an act of naked retribution for his critiques against the governing Communist Party. The donations began pouring in on Thursday, many of them delivered electronically and accompanied by politically tinged comments. “You helped them to design the Bird’s Nest, but they sent you into a bird cage,” said one donor, referring to Mr. Ai’s role in designing the Olympic stadium in Beijing. “You charged them fees, but now they fine you more than hundreds of times that in blood and sweat.” Some contributions have been small — symbolic, fractional sums of the total — while others have totaled thousands of dollars. Mr. Ai said one businessman offered him 1 million renminbi, about $157,000, but he turned it down, saying he preferred to receive smaller sums. Mr. Ai has insisted on describing the money as loans that he will repay. On Monday, one of China’s more stridently nationalistic state-owned newspapers, Global Times, published an editorial in its English-language edition that criticized the campaign, warning that it might constitute “illegal fundraising” and insisting that the expressions of public support should not be construed as absolution for his crimes. “These people are an extremely small number when compared with China’s total population,” the editorial said of the donors. “Ai’s political preference along with his supporters’ cannot stand for the mainstream public, which is opposed to radical and confrontational political stances.” On Sunday, after his Weibo account was disabled, dozens of people began arriving at the gate of Mr. Ai’s studio on the outskirts of the capital. He said a number of people had folded 100-renminbi notes into airplanes and tossed them over the walls of his compound. “Over the past three years, during all the efforts I’ve made, sometimes I felt like I was crying alone in a dark tunnel,” he said. “But now people have a way to express their true feelings. This is a really, really beautiful event.”
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Post by sleepboy on Nov 13, 2011 16:20:38 GMT -8
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Post by saL on Nov 17, 2011 3:30:31 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Nov 20, 2011 7:05:38 GMT -8
Ai Weiwei sings Caonima at his fans’ request. The iPad video has lyrics that may be interpreted as “f- your mother” in certain tones and contains slang for “f- your mother’s vagina.” It is probably directed at the Chinese government.
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Post by funkymonkey on Nov 20, 2011 10:27:25 GMT -8
Ai Weiwei sings Caonima at his fans’ request. The iPad video has lyrics that may be interpreted as “f- your mother” in certain tones and contains slang for “f- your mother’s vagina.” It is probably directed at the Chinese government. effing hilarious and gutsy... I just love this guy. apparently chinese government is now accusing Ai and his assistants for "manufacturing pornography"
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Post by sleepboy on Nov 21, 2011 10:27:15 GMT -8
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Post by saL on Nov 22, 2011 6:56:24 GMT -8
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Post by saL on Nov 22, 2011 7:24:33 GMT -8
here is the entire chat for everyone that missed it:
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Post by sleepboy on Dec 1, 2011 5:40:11 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Dec 14, 2011 11:34:15 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Jan 5, 2012 8:51:04 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Jan 16, 2012 18:08:12 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Apr 12, 2012 20:40:03 GMT -8
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cra66
Junior Member
Posts: 86
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Post by cra66 on Apr 21, 2012 16:46:07 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on May 24, 2012 19:34:20 GMT -8
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Post by saL on Jun 1, 2012 5:29:49 GMT -8
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 Designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei 1 June - 14 October 2012 more info >
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Post by sleepboy on Jun 4, 2012 21:33:40 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Jun 13, 2012 19:30:44 GMT -8
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Post by sleepboy on Jun 21, 2012 7:10:21 GMT -8
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Post by saL on Jul 4, 2012 14:46:35 GMT -8
new limited edition by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei just released through Serpentine Gallery: Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 Silkscreen print on Somerset 410gsm paper 84.1 x 84.1 cm Edition of 200, each signed and numbered £300 (excl. VAT) order here >
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Post by saL on Jul 5, 2012 8:11:03 GMT -8
boardie from UAA forum shared this image of the framed print @ Serpentine gallery:
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Post by misterwhisper on Aug 10, 2012 1:20:24 GMT -8
new limited edition by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei just released through Serpentine Gallery: Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 Silkscreen print on Somerset 410gsm paper 84.1 x 84.1 cm Edition of 200, each signed and numbered £300 (excl. VAT) Has anyone else ordered this? If so, have you heard back from the gallery yet? I placed an order a few weeks ago for delivery, and got my paypal receipt, but haven't heard a peep from the gallery -- no invoice, no reciept, not even an order confirmation. Has anyone else heard from them?
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80
Junior Member
Posts: 54
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Post by 80 on Aug 10, 2012 3:41:05 GMT -8
new limited edition by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei just released through Serpentine Gallery: Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 Silkscreen print on Somerset 410gsm paper 84.1 x 84.1 cm Edition of 200, each signed and numbered £300 (excl. VAT) Has anyone else ordered this? If so, have you heard back from the gallery yet? I placed an order a few weeks ago for delivery, and got my paypal receipt, but haven't heard a peep from the gallery -- no invoice, no reciept, not even an order confirmation. Has anyone else heard from them? I got an email from the gallery a day after ordering saying that they'll be ready to collect/deliver by the end of August at the latest. Just a paypal receipt apart from that.
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