1000 years of joys and sorrows A memoir

Weiwei Ai

Book - 2021

"In his widely anticipated memoir, Ai Weiwei-one of the world's most famous artists and activists-tells a century-long epic tale of China through the story of his own extraordinary life and the legacy of his father, Ai Qing, the nation's most celebrated poet. Hailed as "the most important artist working today" by the Financial Times and as "an eloquent and unsilenceable voice of freedom" by The New York Times, Ai Weiwei has written a sweeping memoir that presents a remarkable history of China over the last 100 years while illuminating his artistic process. Once an intimate of Mao Zedong, Ai Weiwei's father was branded a rightist during the Cultural Revolution, and he and his family were banished to a ...desolate place known as "Little Siberia," where Ai Qing was sentenced to hard labor cleaning public toilets. Ai Weiwei recounts his childhood in exile, and his difficult decision to leave his family to study art in America, where he befriended Allen Ginsberg and was inspired by Andy Warhol. With candor and wit, he details his return to China and his rise from artistic unknown to art world superstar and international human rights activist-and how his work has been shaped by living under a totalitarian regime. Ai Weiwei's sculptures and installations have been viewed by millions around the globe, and his architectural achievements include helping to design the iconic Bird's Nest Olympic Stadium in Beijing. His political activism has long made him a target of the Chinese authorities, which culminated in months of secret detention without charge in 2011. Here, for the first time, Ai Weiwei explores the origins of his exceptional creativity and passionate political beliefs through his own life story and that of his father, whose own creativity was stifled. At once ambitious and intimate, 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows offers a deep understanding of the myriad forces that have shaped modern China, and serves as a timely reminder of the urgent need to protect freedom of expression"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/Ai, Weiwei
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Ai, Weiwei Checked In
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Ai, Weiwei Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
New York : Crown [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Weiwei Ai (author)
Other Authors
Allan Hepburn Barr (translator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 380 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color); 25 cm
ISBN
9780553419467
9780593240694
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

World-acclaimed artist of conscience Ai Weiwei's exceptional facility with language is as essential to his profoundly imagined, audaciously produced, and deeply humanitarian creations as his courageous opposition to Chinese authoritarianism. His eloquence and commitment to freedom of expression mirrors that of his father, the revered poet Ai Qing, who was labeled a traitor, harshly abused, and exiled during Mao's reign of terror. As a boy, Ai Weiwei lived with his father in a totalitarian hell in China's "Little Siberia." Ai Weiwei felt impelled to tell his father's story and share his own harrowing experiences after he was cruelly detained, and tortuously separated from his son, in 2011, the culmination of relentless government surveillance and harassment. Ai Weiwei's bone-deep empathy and utter devotion to the fight for truth and justice shape every page in this galvanizing record of his and his father's ordeals which embody a century of valorous artistic exploration in spite of diabolical tyranny. Excerpts from Ai Qing's poems are matched with unprecedented accounts of Ai Weiwei's acceptance that, for him, "inspiration comes from resistance" and the resulting evolution of his boldly innovative, endangering, yet empowering collaborative projects, from documentaries to architecture, mind-whirling and profoundly affecting installations, and gutsy digital dissent. Ai Weiwei's historically precise, generously candid, and deeply delving chronicle is clarion testimony to how intrinsic art is to human nature and to defining and protecting human rights. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Revered artist and activist Ai Weiwei has a ready audience for this revelatory and moving family history and memoir.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this impassioned and elegant work, acclaimed Chinese artist and activist Weiwei (Humanity) tells his story alongside his father's--renowned poet Ai Qing--to describe the personal cost of resistance. In 1957, the year Weiwei was born, Qing was exiled during China's purge of "rightist" intellectuals, first to the far northeast and later to the base of Xinjiang's Tian Shan mountain range. "The whirlpool that swallowed up my father... a mark on me that I carry to this day," Weiwei writes. Though Qing's reputation was later restored, Weiwei, at 19, felt alienated by "the new post-Mao order." Novelistic in its scope and detail, his story follows his search for freedom across decades and borders, from New York City--where he moved in 1981 and found minor success as an artist--back to Beijing in 1993, where he continued his subversive art, "damaging the past and reconstructing it." Despite being commissioned to design Beijing's Bird's Nest stadium for the 2008 Olympics ("I was as much of an attraction to as the Great Wall"), Weiwei continued to rail against the country's oppressive systems with his art and writing, continuing to do so even after his imprisonment in 2011. Astounding and provocative, this easily sits in the top tier of dissident writing. Agent: Peter W. Bernstein, Bernstein Literary. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Artist Ai Weiwei has penned an engrossing memoir that takes readers back and forth through time as he examines the life and legacy of his father, the renowned poet Ai Qing, as well as the evolution of his own political and artistic sensibilities, all in the shadow of the tremendous upheaval in China over the past century. The first half of the book is an accounting of the experiences of Ai Qing during Mao's rise and fall in China; the poet was alternately celebrated and denounced, working with the Chinese Communist Party at one point, and being exiled to a remote re-education camp at another. Ai Weiwei then turns his lens on his own young adulthood and his development as an artist. He draws contrasts between his own and his father's experiences of the Chinese State, travel, incarceration, immigration, and repatriation. The memoir is illustrated with black-and-white reproductions of Ai's artworks that reflect on people and place and evoke raw emotion. VERDICT Ai creates a vivid portrait of two generations grappling with their place in the Chinese cultural and political landscape, and gives readers a glimpse of his approach to art and the creative process. Highly recommended for those interested in art, memoir, politics, and history.--Rebecca Brody, Westfield State Univ., MA

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The artist and social activist explores his father's turbulent relationship with the early Communist regime and his own struggle for creative freedom. Spurred by his imprisonment in 2011 for "economic crimes" against the authoritarian Chinese government, Ai Weiwei (b. 1957) uses his father's heartbreakingly difficult life as a point of departure to tell his own story. Born in 1910, just as the Qing dynasty was collapsing, Ai Qing was part of the new idealistic proletariat, trained as an artist and schooled for a year in Paris before taking his place as part of the increasingly ideological cultural force in the new Communist China. But Mao Zedong unleashed waves of political upheaval, and just when the author was born, Ai Qing was exiled during the so-called Anti-Rightist campaign. Most miserably, during the Cultural Revolution, father and sons were sent to "Little Siberia," on the edge of the Gurbantünggüt Desert, where they lived in "a square hole dug into the ground, with a crude roof formed of tamarisk branches and rice stalks, sealed with several layers of grassy mud." Still, his father's indomitable spirit remained intact, and under Deng Xiaoping's leadership, the family was able to return to Beijing. At this point, the author segues into his own restless seeking. He spent more than a decade in New York City before returning to Beijing to try his hand at curating art shows, designing architecture (he consulted on the "Bird's Nest" stadium for the 2008 Olympics), and engaging in social activism (Black Cover Book). The author eventually ran afoul of the party leadership for his "intolerable insolence," but the tenacity of his father and his artistic vision have always guided him. "In China," he writes, "we were still living in a culturally impoverished era, but art had not abandoned us--its roots were deeply planted in the weathered soil." Throughout, the author maintains a fluid, heartfelt narrative. A beautiful and poignant memoir demonstrating perseverance and the power of art. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Pellucid Night Boisterous laughter erupts along the path A bunch of boozers stumble out of the sleeping village Clatter their way toward the sleeping fields On this night, this pellucid night --Lines from "Pellucid Night," written by my father in a Shanghai prison in 1932 I was born in 1957, eight years after the founding of the "New China." My father was forty-seven. When I was growing up, my father rarely talked about the past, because everything was shrouded in the thick fog of the dominant political narrative, and any inquiry into fact ran the risk of provoking a backlash too awful to contemplate. In satisfying the demands of the new order, the Chinese people suffered a withering of spiritual life and lost the ability to tell things as they had truly occurred. It was half a century before I began to reflect on this. On April 3, 2011, as I was about to fly out of Beijing's Capital Airport, a swarm of plainclothes police descended on me, and for the next eighty-one days I disappeared into a black hole. During my confinement I began to reflect on the past: I thought of my father, in particular, and tried to imagine what life had been like for him behind the bars of a Nationalist prison eighty years earlier. I realized I knew very little about his ordeal, and I had never taken an active interest in his experiences. In the era in which I grew up, ideological indoctrination exposed us to an intense, invasive light that made our memories vanish like shadows. Memories were a burden, and it was best to be done with them; soon people lost not only the will but the power to remember. When yesterday, today, and tomorrow merge into an indistinguishable blur, memory--apart from being potentially dangerous--has very little meaning at all. Many of my earliest memories are fractured. When I was a young boy, the world to me was a split screen. On one side, U.S. imperialists strutted around in tuxedos and top hats, walking sticks in hand, trailed by their running dogs: the British, French, Germans, Italians, and Japanese, along with the Kuomintang reactionaries entrenched on Taiwan. On the other side stood Mao Zedong and the sunflowers flanking him--that's to say: the peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, seeking independence and liberation from colonialism and imperialism; it was we who represented the light and the future. In propaganda pictures, the Vietnamese leader, "Grandpa" Ho Chi Minh, was accompanied by fearless young Vietnamese in bamboo hats, their guns trained on the U.S. warplanes in the sky above. Every day we were treated to heroic stories of their victories over the Yankee bandits. An unbridgeable gulf existed between the two sides. In that information-deprived era, personal choice was like floating duckweed, rootless and insubstantial. Denied the nourishment of individual interests and attachments, memory, wrung out to dry, ruptured and crumbled: "The proletariat has to liberate all of humanity before it can liberate itself," the saying went. After all the convulsions that China had experienced, genuine emotions and personal memory were reduced to tiny scraps and easily replaced by the discourse of struggle and continuous revolution. The good thing is that my father was a writer. In poetry he recorded feelings that had lodged deep in his heart, even if those little streams of honesty and candor had no natural outlet on those many occasions when political floods carried all before them. Today, all I can do is pick up the scattered fragments left after the storm and try to piece together a picture, however incomplete it may be. The year I was born, Mao Zedong unleashed a political storm--the Anti-Rightist Campaign, designed to purge "rightist" intellectuals who had criticized the government. The whirlpool that swallowed up my father upended my life too, leaving a mark on me that I carry to this day. As a leading "rightist" among Chinese writers, my father was exiled and forced to undergo "reform through labor," bringing to an abrupt end the relatively comfortable life that he had enjoyed after the establishment of the new regime in 1949. Expelled at first to the icy wilderness of the far northeast, we were later transferred to the town of Shihezi, at the foot of Xinjiang's Tian Shan mountain range. Like a little boat finding refuge in a typhoon, we sheltered there until the political winds shifted direction again. Then, in 1967, Mao's "Cultural Revolution" entered a new stage, and my father, now seen as a purveyor of bourgeois literature and art, was once again placed on the blacklist of ideological targets, along with other Trotskyists, apostates, and anti-party elements. I was about to turn ten, and the events that followed have stayed with me always. In May of that year, one of the leading revolutionary radicals in Shihezi visited us in our home. My father had been living too cushy a life, he said, and now they were going to send him to a remote paramilitary production unit for "remolding." Father offered no response. "Are you looking to us to give you a farewell party?" the man sneered. Not long after that, a "Liberation" truck pulled up outside the front door of our house. We loaded it with a few simple items of furniture and a pile of coal, and tossed our bedrolls on top--we didn't have much else to take. It began to drizzle as Father took a seat in the front cabin; my stepbrother, Gao Jian, and I clambered onto the back of the truck and squatted under the canvas. The place we were going was on the edge of the Gurbantünggüt Desert; it was known locally as "Little Siberia." Rather than go with us, my mother decided to take my little brother, Ai Dan, back to Beijing. After ten years in exile, she was no longer young, and she couldn't stomach the prospect of living in even more primitive conditions. Shihezi was the farthest she was willing to go. There was no way to keep the family together. I did not beg Mother to go with us, nor did I plead with her to leave my little brother behind. I held my tongue, neither saying goodbye nor asking if she was coming back. I don't remember how long it took for them to disappear from view as we drove off. As far as I was concerned, staying was no different from leaving: either way, it was not our decision to make. The truck shook violently as it lurched along a seemingly endless dirt road riven with potholes and gullies, and I had to hold tight to the frame to avoid being tossed in the air. A mat beside us was picked up by a gust of wind and within seconds it swirled away, disappearing into the cloud of dust thrown up in our wake. After several bone-shaking hours, the truck finally ground to a halt at the edge of the desert. We had arrived at our destination: Xinjiang Military District Production and Construction Corps, Agricultural Division 8, Regiment 23, Branch 3, Company 2. It was one of many such units established in China's border regions in the 1950s, with two goals in mind. In times of peace, Production and Construction Corps workers would develop land for cultivation and engage in agricultural production, boosting the nation's economy. If war broke out with one of China's neighbors, or if there was unrest among the ethnic minority population, the workers would take up their military role and assist in national defense efforts. As we were to learn firsthand, such units sometimes had an additional function--the housing of offenders banished from their native homes elsewhere in China. It was dusk, and the sound of a flute came wafting over from a row of low-standing cottages; several young workers were standing outside, watching us curiously. We were assigned a room that had a double bed but nothing else. My father and I moved in the small table and four stools that we had brought from Shihezi. The floor was tamped earth and the walls were mud brick with wheat stalks sticking out. I made a simple oil lamp by pouring kerosene into an empty medicine bottle, poking a hole in the bottle cap, and threading a scrap of shoelace through it. My father required little in life apart from time to read and write. And he had few responsibilities. It was my mother who had always handled the housework, and she had never expected us to lend a hand. But now it was just my father, Gao Jian, and me, and our living arrangements aroused the curiosity of the other workers, rough-and-ready "military farm warriors" who were blunt in their inquiries. "Is that your grandpa?" they would ask me, or "Do you miss your mom?" In time I learned how to look after things myself. I tried to build us a stove, so that we could get heat and boil water. But the stove leaked smoke from everywhere except the chimney, and tending it made my eyes smart and left me choking, until I realized that air had to flow freely into the chamber. Then there were the other daily chores, like fetching water from the well, picking up meals from the canteen, feeding the stove with firewood, and shoveling away the cinders. Someone had to do these things, and more often than not that someone was me. Excerpted from 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows: A Memoir by Ai Ai Weiwei All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.