arts and design

Ai Weiwei creates 10,000 masks in aid of coronavirus charities

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Art has come together with activism in the shape of face masks created by Ai Weiwei which show images of sunflower seeds, mythical beasts and perhaps most appropriately of all, a defiant middle finger.

The Chinese artist and activist has printed an initial batch of 10,000 face masks to be sold for charity through eBay. All the takings will go to coronavirus humanitarian efforts led by Human Rights Watch, Refugees International and Médecins Sans Frontières.

Ai was at home in Cambridge when he began getting angry about face mask news stories including the US being accused of “modern piracy”, accused of taking masks meant for Germany.

It was almost laughable, he said. “It is such a waste. There is so much argument around the mask. A face mask weighs only three grams but it carries so much state argument about global safety and who has it and who doesn’t have it.”

He printed a wood carving on to a mask and put it on Instagram. People loved it and asked how they could get hold of one. From that came his new art project.

The art works will be sold singly for $50 (£40), $300 for a series of four, and $1,500 for a collection of 20. They will have images familiar to fans of the artist’s work, including sunflower seeds based on his Tate Modern installation in which he filled the gallery’s Turbine Hall with 100m individually crafted sunflower seeds. Some of the images will include his middle finger gesture of defiance.

Ai Weiwei pictured in London, 2015, with his creation named Tree



Ai Weiwei pictured in London in 2015 with his creation named Tree. Photograph: Leon Neal/AFP/Getty

Ai said the pandemic was a humanitarian crisis. “It challenges our understanding of the 21st century and warns of dangers ahead. It requires each individual to act, both alone and collectively.” He likened each purchase to an act of hope and social awareness.

The images have been silk-screened by hand in Berlin on to non-surgical cloth face masks. Ai predicts people will buy them to collect rather than wear.

Ai spent 81 days in a Chinese jail and four years under house arrest before getting his passport back and fleeing to Germany in 2015. He moved to the UK last year.

He said people were right to feel anger towards China over the pandemic. “When we talk about humanity the most important thing is trust, between people and between nations. Without transparency and trust you cannot play the game. China has been for a long time not trustable. We have all accepted that.”

China had intentionally covered up information about the outbreak, even destroying medical evidence, he said. “China has been acting in the old military way: everyone who questions them can be a potential enemy.”

The project is curated by Alexandra Munroe, who said the masks were artworks which symbolised life in the time of coronavirus. “To have one is an ethical and creative act to overcome our tired isolation and participate in a collective enterprise of real compassion.”

Ai was preparing direction of an opera, Puccini’s Turandot, when the lockdown came during rehearsals.

At home in Cambridge, where he lives with his partner and child, it was wonderful, he said. “I have never had such a peaceful and enjoyable time in my life. I’m spending so much time with my loved ones and this spring in Cambridge will be memorable for the rest of my life because I’ve never seen so many wildflowers. Daily I walk out in the fields and take photographs and see what their Latin and Chinese name is. It is so much fun.”

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