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1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows von Ai Weiwei
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1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows (2021. Auflage)

von Ai Weiwei (Autor), Allan H. Barr (Übersetzer)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
2486107,828 (4.02)32
Einer der größten Künstler unserer Zeit erzählt sein Leben vor dem Hintergrund der Geschichte Chinas Ai Weiwei gehört zu den bekanntesten Künstlern unserer Zeit. In "1000 Jahre Freud und Leid" schildert er erstmals seinen außerordentlichen künstlerischen Werdegang vor dem Hintergrund der Geschichte seiner Familie in China. Schon als Junge erlebte er die Verbannung und Demütigung seines Vaters Ai Qing, einst ein Vertrauter Maos und Chinas einflussreichster Dichter, der im Zuge der Kulturrevolution als "Rechtsabweichler" gebrandmarkt wurde. Diese Erfahrungen prägten Ai Weiweis Schaffen und seine politischen Überzeugungen. Er beschreibt die schwierige Entscheidung, seine Familie zu verlassen, um für ein Kunststudium in die USA zu gehen, wo er sich u. a. mit Allen Ginsberg anfreundete und künstlerische Inspiration fand. Offen erzählt er von seinem Aufstieg zu einem Star der internationalen Kunstwelt, der aufgrund seiner Menschenrechtsaktivitäten jedoch immer stärker ins Visier des chinesischen Regimes geriet, das ihn schließlich 2011 mehrere Monate inhaftierte. Die sehr persönlichen und vom Künstler selbst reich illustrierten Erinnerungen geben nicht nur einen fesselnden Einblick in Ai Weiweis Leben und Arbeiten, sie sind zugleich Mahnung, die Meinungsfreiheit immer wieder neu zu verteidigen.… (mehr)
Mitglied:emaestra
Titel:1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows
Autoren:Ai Weiwei (Autor)
Weitere Autoren:Allan H. Barr (Übersetzer)
Info:Crown (2021), 400 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek, Noch zu lesen
Bewertung:
Tags:memoir, China

Werk-Informationen

1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows: A Memoir von Ai Weiwei (Author)

Asia (1)
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Psychological
  BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
Een autobiografie die begint met een biografie van de vader van Ai Weiwei.
Daarmee geeft het boek een goed overzicht van het wel en wee sinds de CCP-dictatuur aan de macht kwam.

Het actievoeren en de conflicten met het autoritair regime van de kunstenaar Ai Weiwei heeft veel gelijkenissen met wat A. Zinovjev meemaakte in de Sovjetunie. Beiden kregen tenslotte asiel in Duitsland. ( )
  Rodemail | Jun 21, 2023 |
gave a deep understanding with forces. ( )
  hibaansari924 | Sep 6, 2022 |
Artist Ai Weiwei writes a dual memoir of his father and himself. His father, Ai Qing, was a well-known poet and friend of Pablo Neruda, but during the Cultural Revolution he was put in a camp and treated poorly because the state deemed his poetry anti-Communist. Ai Weiwei, in parallel, is an outspoken artist who found an internet following on Twitter and constantly challenges the status quo. This, too, got him into trouble with the authoritarian state, and he draws parallels between himself and his father and writes about his commitment to art and free expression.

Towards the end of the memoir, Ai Weiwei explains his reason for writing:

"So the idea came to me that if I was released, to bridge the gap between us, I should write down what I knew of my father and tell my son honestly who I am, what life means to me, why freedom is so precious, and why autocracy fears art. I hoped that my convictions could become something he could see and feel in his heart and mind. That way, if one day Ai Lao [his son] wanted to know more, it would be there–my own story, and his grandfather’s."

He does exactly what he sets out to do. The form of the book is nearly evenly split between his father's story and his. Sometimes the timeline in his father's story was a little hard for me to follow, because Ai Weiwei would move forward and back, mostly telling it in chronological order but then referring to something in the future that I wasn't familiar with before picking up the thread. Throughout both men's stories, he reflects on art - and a lot of his thoughts could apply to Art as a whole, including writing - and its meaning to him. I was unfamiliar with his art prior to picking up the memoir, but I found that half of the book especially interesting. Photographs and sketches accompany the text and provide context for the art exhibitions he describes, and now I want to see if I can find at least one of the documentaries he created. He gives a lot of background to his thought process behind his works, and insists that art is always changing and doesn't mean one thing. A book that would equally interest readers of Chinese history and art history. ( )
  bell7 | Jul 21, 2022 |
This is the memoir of Ai Weiwei, a famous Chinese conceptual artist, architect and activist. Although Ai Weiwei has struggled determinately and consistency against the censorship and other oppressions of the current Communist Chinese regime, and has presented his conceptual art in major exhibitions and museums around the world, this is the rare memoir in which the portrayal of the author's childhood is actually more interesting (or at least that was my reaction) than the portrayal of his or her adulthood. That's because Ai Weiwei's father, Ai Qing, was also famous, a world renowned lyric poet, who was targeted and harshly oppressed by the forces of Mao's Cultural Revolution. In approximately the first half of his memoir, Ai Weiwei relates his time as a child, moving with his father and his half-brother from one remote and desolate punishment outpost to another, with only intermittent contact with his mother. From his father's early comradeship with Mao, through the descriptions of these horrible work settlements and Ai Qing's day to day degrading humiliations as a "Big Rightist" who is made an example of on an hourly basis, Ai Weiwei walks us through the events and repercussions of the Cultural Revolution and describes the profound loss of history and Chinese cultural identity that resulted.

Oddly, though, once Ai Weiwei grows to adulthood and, especially, once he becomes a noted artist and activist, the narrative flattened out for me. Perhaps some of this has to do with the translation from Chinese to English. Ai Weiwei certainly has led a fascinating and, it seems, a quite admirable life. His conceptual art installations have been aimed at promoting ideas of freedom and individuality, of protesting against the harshness and absurdity of the repression of the Communist regime, and of pointing out the regime's corruption and ineptitude as they steer the country toward capitalism under the guise of communism. One of the issues for me, as I think back on the reading experience, is that Ai Weiwei often presents his own activities in isolation, as if he were the only activist in China. Occasionally other names are mentioned, but I found it off-putting that so much of Ai Weiwei's narrative consisted of statements along the lines of "I created this work in order to say that." Well, it's a memoir, so of course he'd be talking about his own accomplishments, but he seemed to me to be entirely self-focused. With a few exceptions, the entirely of Chinese history during the time under discussion seemed to me to be focused through the lens of his own perspective.

An example of this is Ai Weiwei's description of his discovery of the Internet, and of the beginnings of his life as a blogger with many thousands of followers. There are overstatements like "Every character that I tapped on my keyboard was emblematic of a new kind of freedom." (Again, maybe this is a translation issue.) The next sentence, I'm sure, rang true at the time, though seems less assuredly true by this point: "Buy enabling alternative voices, the internet weakened the power of autocracy, dispelling the obstacles it tried to put in the individual's way." That second sentence and another that follows soon after ("On the internet, social coercion is nullified and the individual acquires a kind of weightlessness, no longer subordinate to the power structure.") made me nostalgic for the early days of the online world, when we still thought such things were unmistakably true. And was Ai Weiwei the only activist blogger at this time? I don't know, but from this memoir, you'd think so.

One more example of this sort of thing: In his role as an architect, Ai Weiwei had an active role in the designing of the stadium (referred to by Ai Weiwei as "the Bird's Nest") to be used for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The description of the teamwork and creative process in this work was very interesting. But Ai's final comments on the endeavor had me scratching my head:

"The design of the Bird's Nest aimed to convey the message that freedom was possible: the integration of its external appearance whites exposed structure encapsulated something essential about democracy transparency, and equity. In defense of those principles, I now resolved to put a distance between myself and the Olympics, which were simply serving as nationalistic, self-congratulatory propaganda. Freedom is the precondition for fairness, and without freedom, competition is a sham."

I found Ai Weiwei's assumption that any more than a slight handful of observers would notice a message of freedom in the design of a stadium to be unfortunately self-absorbed, and his shock that the Chinese government was using the Olympics as a propaganda tool, despite the artistic splendor of the stadium design, to be more than a little disengenuous.

Ai Weiwei's personal relationships get more or less short shrift. I understand that his focus here was on his artistic and political accomplishments and on exposing conditions in China, but no matter how reasonable the intent, the result for me was a memoir somewhat drained of dimension and empathy.

I have waited much too long to say that Ai Weiwei is clearly a man of courage who has inspired a great many of his internet followers, and admirers of his art, to maintain a resistant attitude toward the oppression of the Chinese regime. He has done so despite the constant threat to his own freedom, even to his life. In this, we has clearly been inspired by his father's example. Also, I have a lot of respect for conceptual artists, those who attempt to challenge our preconceived notions of reality, life and politics through their work. Ai Weiwei's output, and the degree to which he is clearly admired and respected by other artists and curators, speaks volumes about the value of his accomplishments. Many of the installations and exhibits Ai Weiwei describes sound like works I would love to see and experience, and there's quite a lot of interest in the memoir about the creative process in general. And as a tour through Chinese history from the end of World War 2 through the present day, and as a close-in look at the threats, oppressions and dangers experienced by artists fighting to stay relevant within oppressive regimes, 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows is a valuable narrative and testimony. ( )
2 abstimmen rocketjk | Jun 22, 2022 |
1,000 Years of Joys and Sorrows touches on the inevitable contradictions of being an activist and an art superstar, but it is above all a story of inherited resilience, strength of character and self-determination.
hinzugefügt von shervinafshar | bearbeitenThe Guardian, Sean O’Hagan (Oct 24, 2021)
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (3 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Weiwei, AiAutorHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Barr, Allan H.ÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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Einer der größten Künstler unserer Zeit erzählt sein Leben vor dem Hintergrund der Geschichte Chinas Ai Weiwei gehört zu den bekanntesten Künstlern unserer Zeit. In "1000 Jahre Freud und Leid" schildert er erstmals seinen außerordentlichen künstlerischen Werdegang vor dem Hintergrund der Geschichte seiner Familie in China. Schon als Junge erlebte er die Verbannung und Demütigung seines Vaters Ai Qing, einst ein Vertrauter Maos und Chinas einflussreichster Dichter, der im Zuge der Kulturrevolution als "Rechtsabweichler" gebrandmarkt wurde. Diese Erfahrungen prägten Ai Weiweis Schaffen und seine politischen Überzeugungen. Er beschreibt die schwierige Entscheidung, seine Familie zu verlassen, um für ein Kunststudium in die USA zu gehen, wo er sich u. a. mit Allen Ginsberg anfreundete und künstlerische Inspiration fand. Offen erzählt er von seinem Aufstieg zu einem Star der internationalen Kunstwelt, der aufgrund seiner Menschenrechtsaktivitäten jedoch immer stärker ins Visier des chinesischen Regimes geriet, das ihn schließlich 2011 mehrere Monate inhaftierte. Die sehr persönlichen und vom Künstler selbst reich illustrierten Erinnerungen geben nicht nur einen fesselnden Einblick in Ai Weiweis Leben und Arbeiten, sie sind zugleich Mahnung, die Meinungsfreiheit immer wieder neu zu verteidigen.

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