Beverley Lim
2015
School: Canadian International School
Dimension: 150 x 121cm
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Country: Hong Kong
As the second part of my triptych series, this painting focuses on Ai Weiwei in the present. Through my commentary, I critique Ai Weiweis political activism against the Chinese governments political ideology. My body of work continuously explores how the expression of architecture can be translated into different areas, such as ones identity and culture. In this piece, I also try to explore the question: will Ais activism change China? Through my exploration in this series, I aim to answer this question. Before Ai Weiwei established his international reputation, he was a student in the US. In the 9 years Ai Weiwei lived in the East Village, he befriended many counterculture individuals, studied the influences of modernists, and began photographing urban life. Photos of him standing in front of famous architectural landmarks represent how his American education may have influenced his beliefs. Ultimately, his environment ignited his desire to use his canvas as a means of resisting the Chinese governments silencing of dissenting opinion. Alongside Herzog & de Meuron, Ai helped design the Birds Nest stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Ai designed it to symbolise the building of a better future for the Chinese people. However, he was disillusioned to find out that the governments hidden agenda was to spread their patriotic education and to glorify it on a world stage. This is evident in the abstracted depiction of the stadium in the background, and the intensity of the Communist Party red. He has been put under house arrest and revoked of his travel rights, yet he never loses the hope of fighting for freedom of speech and thought in China.