Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
Feishu Mask Clothing / Accessories Ai Weiwei
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Feishu Mask

Vendor

Ai Weiwei

Regular price
$489.14
Sale price
$489.14
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
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Face mask is sealed in an unopened transparent envelope and enclosed in a larger black envelope which also includes a signed artist’s statement with plated signature.

Dimensions: 6.89 x 3.75 inches / 17.5 x 9.5cm

Medium: Screenprint on cloth face mask

Provenance: Includes a signed artist’s statement with plated signature in addition to the original packaging. Gallery certificate of authenticity.

Edition: Limited Edition (Sold Out))

Year: 2020

Condition: New

 

ABOUT THE ART


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.”

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Dissident artist Ai Weiwei is famous for conceptual artworks that challenge authority and explore the links between the contemporary world and traditional Chinese culture. His photographs, sculptures, films, performances, and installations earned him ire from the Chinese government, which imprisoned him for 81 days in 2011 and razed his studio in 2018. Ai left the country in 2015. His most lauded works include Sunflower Seeds (2010)—for which the artist scattered 100 million porcelain “seeds” (hand-painted by Chinese artisans) across the floor of Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall—and Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (1995), in which he destroyed the eponymous cultural artifact. Urns are frequent motifs throughout Ai’s practice, which often comments on mass consumption, individuality, censorship, and interconnections among contemporary cultures. Ai studied at the Beijing Film Academy before attending Parsons School of Design, and he has exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Paris, Copenhagen, Beijing, London, and other cities. His work belongs in the collections of multiple institutions, including Centre Pompidou, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Tate, among others. Ai served as an artistic consultant for the design of the Bird’s Nest stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. His work has sold for millions of dollars at auction, yet given the diversity of his practice, many of his pieces sell for four or five figures on the secondary market.