Advertisement
Advertisement
Ai Weiwei
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Chinese conceptual artist and political activist Ai Weiwei poses for photographers in front of his new instalation, Law of the Journey, at the National Gallery in Prague. Photo: AFP

Chinese artist Ai Weiwei’s latest work targets ‘shameful’ response to refugee crisis

Ai Weiwei

Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei on Thursday slammed “shameful” politicians who ignore refugees as he launched a giant art installation centred on their fate at the National Gallery in Prague.

Called Law of the Journey, the show features a stylised 70-metre-long inflatable boat carrying 258 oversize refugee figures.

A tribute to the thousands who have drowned crossing the Mediterranean, the piece is Ai’s biggest-ever installation. It will be on display until the end of the year.

“My message is very clear: being a politician or a political group, you cannot be so short-sighted, you cannot have no vision, you cannot sacrifice human dignity and human rights for political gain,” Ai said.

“I think this is very, very shameful behaviour,” he added.

“My message is very clear: being a politician or a political group, you cannot be so short-sighted, you cannot have no vision, you cannot sacrifice human dignity and human rights for political gain,” Ai said.
A detail from Ai Weiwei’s Law of the Journey suggests a child lost overboard from a refugee boat. Photo: AFP
The Czech Republic and the other post-Communist central European members have rejected EU plans to allow Muslim refugees on their territories throughout the migrant crisis.

Immigration from Muslim countries has become a hot political topic in these states, although most refugees have opted for wealthier western countries like Germany or Sweden.

“If we see somebody who has been victimised by war or desperately trying to find a peaceful place, if we don’t accept those people, the real challenge and the real crisis is not of all the people who feel the pain but rather for the people who ignore to recognise it or pretend that it doesn’t exist,” said Ai.

“That is both a tragedy and a crime,” said the 59-year-old painter, sculptor and photographer.

Ai spent the last year visiting such migrant and refugee hotspots as the US-Mexican border badlands to the Turkish-Syrian frontier and crowded holding camps on Greek islands.

An outspoken critic of the Chinese government, Ai was detained in 2011 for 81 days and had his passport confiscated for four years.
A 70-metre-long inflatable installation of a stylised lifeboat by Ai Weiwei at the National Gallery in Prague. Photo: EPA
Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei poses for the media at the National Gallery in Prague. Photo: EPA
He later travelled to Berlin where his wife and son live.

Recently he has staged several high-profile exhibitions inspired by migrants, including decking out the columns of Berlin’s Konzerthaus with 14,000 orange life jackets from Lesbos.

Last month, he said he looked on in dismay at the Trump presidency, the US entry ban on Syrian refugees, the attempt to deny visas to citizens of several mainly Muslim nations, the pledge to build a wall with Mexico and invoke mass deportations.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Ai Weiwei launches gigantic refugee-themed artwork
Post