Ai Weiwei – Fairytale: A Reader

Editor(s): Lionel Bovier, Salome Schnetz.
Author(s): Catherine Wood, Christian Höller, Daniel Birnbaum, Fu Xiao-Dong, Raphael Gygax, Roger M. Buergel.
Cover type: Softcover.
Dimensions: 160 x 230 mm.
Pages: 232.
Pictures: 104 b/w.


In 2007, Ai Weiwei, the well-known Chinese artist, architect, curator, and filmmaker, presented Fairytale at documenta 12 in Kassel: he invited 1,001 Chinese citizens of different ages and from various backgrounds to Germany to experience Europe’s most innovative five-yearly art event and live their own fairytale for 28 days … Although widely discussed in the press, the project hardly fond commentaries worthy of it in terms of scope and interest. Thus, the publication intends to bring forth and reflect upon it by publishing an extensive documentation, which, in this particular case, is an integral part of the project, as well as by soliciting critical commentaries a posteriori, and from a diverse range of viewpoints.

The book includes texts commissioned from several authors—Daniel Birnbaum, Director of Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Roger M. Buergel, Artistic Director of documenta 12; Raphael Gygax, Curator at the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich; Christian Höller, Editor of Spingerin magazine, Vienna; and Catherine Wood, Curator of Contemporary Art/ Performance at Tate Modern, London—an interview realized at the opening of documenta by Fu Xiao-Dong, as well as documents, photographs, and questionnaires produced over the course of the project.

In the end this book highlights the conditions of production of a work which notably called into question the foundations of participation in documenta as a “global” manifestation of contemporary art, and of which the ideological, curatorial, and artistic parameters become more and more problematic with each new edition.

Published with Galerie Urs Meile, Beijing/Lucerne.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar works

Museum of the Future: Now What?

collection agnès b.

Socialist Architecture: The Vanishing Act