![]() ![]() One installation is a collection of porcelain cannonballs dating from the Song dynasty, a period part of China’s “Golden Age” (pictured below). ![]() ![]() (Mr Ai stores his materials between his vast studios and warehouses.) The artist persuaded the museum to strip out the internal walls from its ground-floor gallery space so he could lay out five “fields” of collected artefacts, among them Neolithic tools and the spouts of broken teapots. ![]() Mr Ai arranged 90 tonnes of steel reinforcing bars in one gallery: they had been retrieved from schools destroyed in the Sichuan earthquake of 2008, which had killed more than 5,000 children.Ī new show, “Making Sense”, which recently opened at the Design Museum in London, includes several large-scale works. A huge sculpture at the Royal Academy in 2015 was designed to evoke horror as well as awe. In 2010 he covered the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern with 100m handmade porcelain sunflower seeds-a reference both to Chinese Communist Party imagery, wherein Mao Zedong represented the sun, and a symbol of brighter times to come. In 1995 he produced three black-and-white photographs in which he smashed what looked like a 2,000-year-old urn it was not clear whether the ceramic was real or a fake. ![]()
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