From his studio in Beijing, Ai Weiwei (艾未未), the outspoken Chinese artist and dissident, had a clear view of Rikers Island in New York City. For months Ai, who was detained by Chinese authorities in the spring and released under close surveillance in June, has been limited in his travel and communications with the outside world. But recently he was able to escape, at least digitally, and even to make new work in another country.
In an unusual collaboration with W magazine, Ai created a story line for a series of photos that were shot on location in New York by the photographer Max Vadukul as Ai looked on, art directing via Skype on a laptop computer. The photos will appear in next month’s issue, W’s sixth annual one devoted to art. They depict a woman, dressed in the requisite designer outfit, being captured, handcuffed and hooded on the street by two menacing figures and taken to a grim institution — a disused part of Rikers — where they watch her shower.
The scenes are reminiscent of photos Ai took of the Tompkins Square riots in the 1980s, when he lived in New York. They also unavoidably refer to his own confinement, which China’s government has forbidden him from discussing.
“It’s a very astute way of communicating with the world outside of China,” said Melissa Chiu, director of Asia Society Museum, which organized an exhibition of Ai’s New York-era photos this summer. “I think that what it does is signal that he is prepared to continue his art practice and continue his statements that really can be related to his political activism.”
Ai did not respond to a request to answer questions about the work; since August, when he published an essay critical of social conditions in Beijing in Newsweek, he has been under even greater pressure to avoid interviews. But Diane Solway, the W senior editor who helped oversee the project, explained how it came together. At the suggestion of W’s editor, Stefano Tonchi, the magazine approached Ai to do the cover not long after he was released from detention.
“He really, really liked the idea,” Solway said. “We left it open to him to create an original work and then we didn’t hear from him for a little bit, so we thought it wasn’t happening.”
Out of the blue, Ai emerged, with not only a cover idea but also a detailed schema for five photos, using his Tompkins Square images as a reference for the mood he wanted to create. In late August, when the W editors, Vadukul and Ai discussed the project over Skype, they realized that he could use the same technology to monitor the proceedings.
“Two days later we were at Rikers, shooting,” Solway said.
Vadukul would set up a shot and look to Ai for approval. “We could see him on the screen, scrolling through the images,” Solway said. “What was so interesting was his attention to every detail. There was this big shower in Rikers — we thought it looked very dingy, but he said the grout was way too clean and graphic.”
For Vadukul, a leading photographer for Rolling Stone, the challenge was in translating Ai’s aesthetic for W’s fashion readership. (A nude Kim Kardashian was on the cover of the art issue last year; Brad Pitt’s photos of Angelina Jolie appeared in 2008.) Though Ai specified that he wanted street clothes, in the cover photo, shot in Queens, the model is wearing an outfit by Alexander Wang. Vadukul made some suggestions — like shooting in black and white, which he said Ai agreed with — but he was mindful that he was there to execute another person’s vision.
“This is his story,” Vadukul said. “For me, the excitement has been, firstly, to have the chance to collaborate with an artist of his stature, then to hear him actually give a very strong direction.” He added: “If anybody ever asks me what’s the most incredible thing you’ve ever done in editorial, I will say this assignment.”
As for the effect that the photos will have on Ai’s status in Beijing, Chiu, of Asia Society, noted that “the audience for W magazine is mainly in the West.”
But Sophie Richardson, China director for Human Rights Watch in Washington, cautioned that it was difficult to know how the Chinese government would respond.
“Its conduct is often the very definition of arbitrariness,” she said. (After he was detained, Ai was charged with tax evasion, a rare offense in China.) Ai’s popularity in the West — he maintains an English-language Twitter account — and his currency within the art market may unnerve Chinese authorities.
“This is part of what particularly rankles the government about him, is that not only does he have international standing, he has standing in a community that is not very well known to them,” Richardson said. “It’s hard to know when the hammer will come down.”
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