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LOT 173

Ai Weiwei, Chinese b.1957- Fairytale 1001 Chairs (Nr. L/R - 067, Nr. L/R - 068), 2007; two wooden chairs, Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), bear Chinese calligraphy on the bottom, one chair 98x58x43.5cm, one chair 95x42x36.5cm(2) Provenance: Einfache...

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Ai Weiwei, Chinese b.1957- Fairytale 1001 Chairs (Nr. L/R - 067, Nr. L/R - 068), 2007; two wooden chairs, Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), bear Chinese calligraphy on the bottom, one chair 98x58x43.5cm, one chair 95x42x36.5cm(2) Provenance: Einfache Gesellschaft Fairytale, Switzerland, where purchased from the present owner. Exhibited: 'Fairytale Chairs Yorkshire Sculpture Park, 2014 Note: This lot is accompanied with a certification of authenticity. Ai Weiwei is undeniably one of the most important and best-known artists of the modern day. Ai’s role as an activist is inseparable from his artworks, which are heavily loaded with the artist’s well-documented criticism of China’s political regime. Ai regularly produces artwork in a variety of media, often creating large-scale installations, of which the present piece is a part. These chairs are from an exhibition held at Yorkshire Sculpture Park in 2007, which consisted of 1,001 chairs in total, as an extension of Ai’s project for Documenta 12, Kassel, in the same year, where he brought 1,001 Chinese citizens to Kassel for 20 days. The chairs therefore represent each of these individuals, and highlighting the difficulties with international travel which many ordinary Chinese citizens can face. This piece also raises concepts of the role of the individual within the collective, as suggested by Ai’s use of 1,001 different antique chairs, each with a distinct history and appearance. This work expresses both the challenge to existing political authority and the highly conceptual approach which defines Ai’s work. Works by Ai are in a number of prominent collections throughout the world, such as the Guggenheim and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, whilst he is perhaps best known in the UK for his high-profile installation of sunflower seeds at the Tate Modern in 2010.
Please refer to department for condition report

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Ai Weiwei, Chinese b.1957- Fairytale 1001 Chairs (Nr. L/R - 067, Nr. L/R - 068), 2007; two wooden chairs, Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), bear Chinese calligraphy on the bottom, one chair 98x58x43.5cm, one chair 95x42x36.5cm(2) Provenance: Einfache Gesellschaft Fairytale, Switzerland, where purchased from the present owner. Exhibited: 'Fairytale Chairs Yorkshire Sculpture Park, 2014 Note: This lot is accompanied with a certification of authenticity. Ai Weiwei is undeniably one of the most important and best-known artists of the modern day. Ai’s role as an activist is inseparable from his artworks, which are heavily loaded with the artist’s well-documented criticism of China’s political regime. Ai regularly produces artwork in a variety of media, often creating large-scale installations, of which the present piece is a part. These chairs are from an exhibition held at Yorkshire Sculpture Park in 2007, which consisted of 1,001 chairs in total, as an extension of Ai’s project for Documenta 12, Kassel, in the same year, where he brought 1,001 Chinese citizens to Kassel for 20 days. The chairs therefore represent each of these individuals, and highlighting the difficulties with international travel which many ordinary Chinese citizens can face. This piece also raises concepts of the role of the individual within the collective, as suggested by Ai’s use of 1,001 different antique chairs, each with a distinct history and appearance. This work expresses both the challenge to existing political authority and the highly conceptual approach which defines Ai’s work. Works by Ai are in a number of prominent collections throughout the world, such as the Guggenheim and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, whilst he is perhaps best known in the UK for his high-profile installation of sunflower seeds at the Tate Modern in 2010.
Please refer to department for condition report

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Estimate
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Time, Location
01 Dec 2021
UK, London
Auction House
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