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Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Chinese, b. 1957

Ai Weiwei was born in northwest China but was sent to a labor camp in Beidahuang, Heilongjiang, when he was only a year old. There he was raised for the early years of his life. His father Aì Qīng’s involvement in the Anti-Rightist Movement led to the family's exile shortly afterward to Shihezi, Xinjiang, where Ai spent the duration of his childhood. Upon Mao Zedong’s death, the family returned to Beijing in 1976.

Following the family’s return home, Ai enrolled in the Beijing Film Academy to study animation in 1978. He was one of the founders of the avant-garde art group the Stars alongside contemporaries Ma Desheng, Wang Keping, Mao Lizi, Huang Rui, Li Shuang, Ah Cheng and Qu Leilei. The Stars disbanded in the 1980s, but Ai participated in regular shows that recalled the ten years that the group had been together, including at the Hanart Gallery in 1989 and the retrospective 2007 exhibition at Beijing's Origin Point.

Ai moved to the USA in 1981, among the earliest of students to study abroad following China’s reform in 1980, which afforded him the opportunity to take the TOEFL in 1981. He lived in Philadelphia and then in San Francisco, studying English at the University of California, Berkeley. Afteward, Ai studied at Parsons School of Design in New York City and attended the Art Students League of New York from 1983 to 1986. He initially made a living by drawing street portraits.

Immersing himself in the Pop art scene, which was rapidly gaining popularity, Ai began creating conceptual art and photography. Ai returned to China after his father became ill in 1993, and while there he helped to establish the experimental art scene called Beijing East Village. In 1999, Ai built a studio house in Beijing — his first architectural project. Ai founded the architecture studio FAKE Design in 2003, and co-curated the art exhibition "Fuck Off" with Feng Boyi in Shanghai.

In 2011, Ai was arrested and jailed. Released after 81 days, the government confiscated his passport. His release was in part due to the uproar of the art world against his charges of tax evasion; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and the International Council of Museums both organized petitions, collecting almost 100,000 signatures calling for his release. When he reclaimed his passport in 2015, Ai moved to Berlin and lived in a studio. It became a base for him to create his international work.

Ai is the artistic director of China Art Archives & Warehouse. The experimental gallery and archive, co-founded by Ai in 1997, concentrates on experimental art from the People’s Republic of China, initiating and facilitating exhibitions both in China and internationally.

Ai's work is in the collections of museums worldwide, including the Tate, London; Arken, London; Brooklyn Museum, New York; and the RA, London. His international architectural collaborations, including the Beijing National Stadium and the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, have consistently been met with critical acclaim.

Find a variety of authentic Ai Weiwei prints, paintings and other art today on 1stDibs.

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Artist: Ai Weiwei
Ai Weiwei, Bomb - Fine Art Inkjet Print, Hand-Signed
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Hamburg, DE
Ai Weiwei (Chinese, b. 1957) Bomb, 2020 Medium: Fine art inkjet print, Hahnemüle German etching 310g paper Dimensions: 95 x 130 cm (37 2/5 x 51 1/5 in) Edition of 100 + 25 AP: Hand-s...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Paper, Inkjet

AI WEIWEI - CEDAR (LARGE) Chinese Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink White
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Madrid, Madrid
Ai Weiwei CEDAR (LARGE) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition: 50 Size: 70.5 x 55.5 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new and nev...
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2010s Conceptual Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

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Ai Weiwei, History of Bombs - Limited Edition Print, Chinese Contemporary Art
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Hamburg, DE
Ai Weiwei (Chinese, b. 1957) History of Bombs, 2020 Medium: Digital print on 170gsm arco paper Dimensions: 19.7 x 27.6 in (50 x 70 cm) Edition of 1000: Printed signature on accompany...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Digital

Ai Weiwei, Cats (Black) - Signed Print, Contemporary Art, Chinese Activist
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Hamburg, DE
Ai Weiwei (Chinese, b. 1957) Cats (Black), 2022 Medium: Screenprint on paper Sheet dimensions: 28 x 32.8 cm Frame dimensions: 36.1 x 41.2 cm Edition of 150: Hand signed, numbered and...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Screen

Crabs
By Ai Weiwei
Located in New York, NY
Ai Weiwei Crabs, 2010-11 Limited Edition, hand numbered Silkscreen on 100% Canadian 2-Ply Maplewood Skateboard. Signed on the deck 31 × 1 × 3/10 inches Edition 126/150 Signed on the deck. Hand numbered from the edition of 150 Highly desirable and sought after limited edition; long sold out worldwide. The text reads: "THE WORLD IS NOT CHANGING IF YOU DON'T SHOULDER THE BURDEN OF RESPONSIBILITY." This skateboard was inspired by the artist’s installation ‘He Xie’, a group of 3,200 ceramic crabs installed at Washington D.C.’s Hirshhorn Museum in 2011. "Crabs" refers to a slang word used for internet censorship in China. It plays on the similar sounding between ‘river crab’ and ‘harmonious’. “I think there is a responsibility for any artist to protect freedom of expression.” – Ai Weiwei “Without freedom of speech there is no modern world, just a barbaric one."― Ai Weiwei This photo is part of ‘Study in Perspective’ where Ai Weiwei openly attacks the regime in place by de-sacralizing one of the country’s most iconic and controversial sites: Tiananmen square...
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2010s Contemporary Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

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Furniture, from The Papercut Portfolio
By Ai Weiwei
Located in London, GB
Papercut, 2019, signed by the artist in pencil recto, from the edition of 250 (there were also 24 artist’s proofs), published by Taschen, London, 60 x 60 cm. (23.6 x 23.6 in.) Ai We...
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2010s Contemporary Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

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AI WEIWEI - CEDAR (LARGE) Chinese Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink White
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Ai Weiwei CEDAR (LARGE) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition: 50 Size: 70.5 x 55.5 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new and never framed Screen print on Somerset Velvet Antique 280gsm paper hand signed and numbered by the artist of a limited edition of only 50 copies. Following his series of trees, this screen print is based on the freehand ink sketch of the Cedar sculpture that Ai Weiwei created in 2022 and can currently be seen at the The Heong Gallery in Cambridge, UK. The "Tree" series of Ai Weiwei are all made of branches and trunks all assembled in a form of a new tree. The idea comes from the indigenous Chinese markets in the town of Jingdezhen in the northeastern Jiangxi province, in which vendors sell distinctive tree trunks, branches and curiously shaped roots as objects to be appreciated and displayed in the home, giving all these tree leftovers a new life. ABOUT THE ARTIST Born in Beijing, China in 1957, Ai Weiwei grew up during the Cultural Revolution and lived through the exile of his father, the well-known Chinese modern poet Ai Qing. The family was sent to a labor camp as a result of his father's denunciation during the 1957-59 purge of the Anti-Rightist Movement, and were subsequently exiled to Shihezi, Xinjiang, in China's far west. This event, although early in his life, would shape him into the activist he is today. The family did not return to Beijing until 1976, after the end of the Cultural Revolution, after which Ai studied animation at the Beijing Film Academy. At this time he founded the avant-garde art group Stars together with fellow artists Ma Desheng, Wang Keping, Huang Rui, Li Shuang, Zhong Acheng and Qui Leilei. He then spent just over a decade in New York, where he briefly attended Parsons School of Design and the Art Students League. In the 1980s, he found his calling in New York's East Village, where he delved into photography while participating in all the protest movements going on around him. During his stay in the Big Apple, he was inspired by the French artist Marcel Duchamp and the German sculptor Joseph Beuys. Under these influences flourished some of his early sculptures, which would later be recognized as one of his first creative phases. This was a time when Ai Weiwei gave free rein to his freedom of expression, the more anti-authoritarian and oppositional the statement, the better. When his father became ill in the early 1990s, Ae returned to China, an environment far less open to such views. In Ai's words, "China and the United States are two societies with very different attitudes toward opinion and criticism." He saw the difference and refused to conform. Since then, Ai Weiwei has risked much to defend freedom of expression, for example, by responding strongly to the devastating aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre through his work. Thus he invented his trademark, the middle finger extended in front of famous places or institutions of power. By carefully selecting the setting for his photographs, Ai Weiwei used these opportunities to illustrate his disdain for the mechanisms of power and to raise awareness of the unfair treatment of citizens. His mission would be to represent the power of the people and denounce the injustices of the world. In 2008, Ai was commissioned to collaborate with the Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron on the "Bird's Nest" stadium for the Beijing Olympics; he later referred to the project as a "tasteless fake smile." In May of the following year, Ai's influential and widely read blog, where he posted scathing criticisms of Chinese government policies, was shut down. The following August, the artist was beaten by Chinese police for attempting to testify on behalf of Tan Zuoren, with whom he had investigated the aftermath of the devastating 8.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Sichuan province in May 2008. Also as a result of his activist work, in 2011, Ai Weiwei was arrested and held for 81 days without being charged with any crime. His "SACRED" series, premiered in Venice during the 2013 Biennale, was based directly on his detention experience (governments, artists and individuals around the world protested strongly against his arrest and subsidized his bail). Ai Weiwei is the most famous Chinese artist today. As an activist, he draws attention to human rights violations on an epic scale; as an artist, he expands the definition of art to include new forms of social engagement. In a country where freedom of expression is not recognized as a right, he has been beaten by police, kept under house arrest, had his newly built studio demolished and placed under surveillance. He is considered a threat to "harmonious society". From breaking an antique vase to reciting the names of children killed by government neglect, Ai's dramatic actions highlight the growing gap between the ideal and the real in Chinese society. He is also one of the first conceptual artists to use social media-Instagram and Twitter, in particular-as one of his primary mediums. Trained in the West, Ai is intimately familiar with tradition, conceptual and minimalist art, and knows how to combine all of these concepts. In his refusal to please the eye, he is the opposite of Jeff Koons, his equally famous contemporary. In their visual austerity, Ai's pieces coincide with the work of other global activists, such as David Hammons, Robert Gober and Doris Salcedo...
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AI WEIWEI CEDAR (SMALL) Chinese Contemporary Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Madrid, Madrid
Ai Weiwei CEDAR (SMALL) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition number: 9/150 Size: 47.5 x 38 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new and never framed Screen print on Somerset Velvet Antique 280gsm paper hand signed and numbered by the artist of a limited edition of 150 copies. When Ai Weiwei creates these trees, the artist emphasizes his interest in the physical and aesthetic qualities of material and its transformative nature. The way things can have another meaning or use, the transformation that leads to a rebirth of the object is a theme that recalls the taoism fundamentals. In this case, the trunks and branches create a new tree that is not intended to look like a natural grown tree. "My work is always ready made. It could be cultural, political, or social, and also it could be art – to make people re-look at what we have done, its original position, to create new possibilities. I always want people to be confused, to be shocked or realize something later." - Ai Weiwei ABOUT THE ARTIST Born in Beijing, China in 1957, Ai Weiwei grew up during the Cultural Revolution and lived through the exile of his father, the well-known Chinese modern poet Ai Qing. The family was sent to a labor camp as a result of his father's denunciation during the 1957-59 purge of the Anti-Rightist Movement, and were subsequently exiled to Shihezi, Xinjiang, in China's far west. This event, although early in his life, would shape him into the activist he is today. The family did not return to Beijing until 1976, after the end of the Cultural Revolution, after which Ai studied animation at the Beijing Film Academy. At this time he founded the avant-garde art group Stars together with fellow artists Ma Desheng, Wang Keping, Huang Rui, Li Shuang, Zhong Acheng and Qui Leilei. He then spent just over a decade in New York, where he briefly attended Parsons School of Design and the Art Students League. In the 1980s, he found his calling in New York's East Village, where he delved into photography while participating in all the protest movements going on around him. During his stay in the Big Apple, he was inspired by the French artist Marcel Duchamp and the German sculptor Joseph Beuys. Under these influences flourished some of his early sculptures, which would later be recognized as one of his first creative phases. This was a time when Ai Weiwei gave free rein to his freedom of expression, the more anti-authoritarian and oppositional the statement, the better. When his father became ill in the early 1990s, Ae returned to China, an environment far less open to such views. In Ai's words, "China and the United States are two societies with very different attitudes toward opinion and criticism." He saw the difference and refused to conform. Since then, Ai Weiwei has risked much to defend freedom of expression, for example, by responding strongly to the devastating aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre through his work. Thus he invented his trademark, the middle finger extended in front of famous places or institutions of power. By carefully selecting the setting for his photographs, Ai Weiwei used these opportunities to illustrate his disdain for the mechanisms of power and to raise awareness of the unfair treatment of citizens. His mission would be to represent the power of the people and denounce the injustices of the world. In 2008, Ai was commissioned to collaborate with the Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron on the "Bird's Nest" stadium for the Beijing Olympics; he later referred to the project as a "tasteless fake smile." In May of the following year, Ai's influential and widely read blog, where he posted scathing criticisms of Chinese government policies, was shut down. The following August, the artist was beaten by Chinese police for attempting to testify on behalf of Tan Zuoren, with whom he had investigated the aftermath of the devastating 8.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Sichuan province in May 2008. Also as a result of his activist work, in 2011, Ai Weiwei was arrested and held for 81 days without being charged with any crime. His "SACRED" series, premiered in Venice during the 2013 Biennale, was based directly on his detention experience (governments, artists and individuals around the world protested strongly against his arrest and subsidized his bail). Ai Weiwei is the most famous Chinese artist today. As an activist, he draws attention to human rights violations on an epic scale; as an artist, he expands the definition of art to include new forms of social engagement. In a country where freedom of expression is not recognized as a right, he has been beaten by police, kept under house arrest, had his newly built studio demolished and placed under surveillance. He is considered a threat to "harmonious society". From breaking an antique vase to reciting the names of children killed by government neglect, Ai's dramatic actions highlight the growing gap between the ideal and the real in Chinese society. He is also one of the first conceptual artists to use social media-Instagram and Twitter, in particular-as one of his primary mediums. Trained in the West, Ai is intimately familiar with tradition, conceptual and minimalist art, and knows how to combine all of these concepts. In his refusal to please the eye, he is the opposite of Jeff Koons, his equally famous contemporary. In their visual austerity, Ai's pieces coincide with the work of other global activists, such as David Hammons, Robert Gober and Doris Salcedo...
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AI WEIWEI - CEDAR (LARGE) Chinese Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink White
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Madrid, Madrid
Ai Weiwei CEDAR (LARGE) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition: 50 Size: 70.5 x 55.5 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new and never framed Screen print on Somerset Velvet Antique 280gsm paper hand signed and numbered by the artist of a limited edition of only 50 copies. Following his series of trees, this screen print is based on the freehand ink sketch of the Cedar sculpture that Ai Weiwei created in 2022 and can currently be seen at the The Heong Gallery in Cambridge, UK. The "Tree" series of Ai Weiwei are all made of branches and trunks all assembled in a form of a new tree. The idea comes from the indigenous Chinese markets in the town of Jingdezhen in the northeastern Jiangxi province, in which vendors sell distinctive tree trunks, branches and curiously shaped roots as objects to be appreciated and displayed in the home, giving all these tree leftovers a new life. ABOUT THE ARTIST Born in Beijing, China in 1957, Ai Weiwei grew up during the Cultural Revolution and lived through the exile of his father, the well-known Chinese modern poet Ai Qing. The family was sent to a labor camp as a result of his father's denunciation during the 1957-59 purge of the Anti-Rightist Movement, and were subsequently exiled to Shihezi, Xinjiang, in China's far west. This event, although early in his life, would shape him into the activist he is today. The family did not return to Beijing until 1976, after the end of the Cultural Revolution, after which Ai studied animation at the Beijing Film Academy. At this time he founded the avant-garde art group Stars together with fellow artists Ma Desheng, Wang Keping, Huang Rui, Li Shuang, Zhong Acheng and Qui Leilei. He then spent just over a decade in New York, where he briefly attended Parsons School of Design and the Art Students League. In the 1980s, he found his calling in New York's East Village, where he delved into photography while participating in all the protest movements going on around him. During his stay in the Big Apple, he was inspired by the French artist Marcel Duchamp and the German sculptor Joseph Beuys. Under these influences flourished some of his early sculptures, which would later be recognized as one of his first creative phases. This was a time when Ai Weiwei gave free rein to his freedom of expression, the more anti-authoritarian and oppositional the statement, the better. When his father became ill in the early 1990s, Ae returned to China, an environment far less open to such views. In Ai's words, "China and the United States are two societies with very different attitudes toward opinion and criticism." He saw the difference and refused to conform. Since then, Ai Weiwei has risked much to defend freedom of expression, for example, by responding strongly to the devastating aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre through his work. Thus he invented his trademark, the middle finger extended in front of famous places or institutions of power. By carefully selecting the setting for his photographs, Ai Weiwei used these opportunities to illustrate his disdain for the mechanisms of power and to raise awareness of the unfair treatment of citizens. His mission would be to represent the power of the people and denounce the injustices of the world. In 2008, Ai was commissioned to collaborate with the Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron on the "Bird's Nest" stadium for the Beijing Olympics; he later referred to the project as a "tasteless fake smile." In May of the following year, Ai's influential and widely read blog, where he posted scathing criticisms of Chinese government policies, was shut down. The following August, the artist was beaten by Chinese police for attempting to testify on behalf of Tan Zuoren, with whom he had investigated the aftermath of the devastating 8.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Sichuan province in May 2008. Also as a result of his activist work, in 2011, Ai Weiwei was arrested and held for 81 days without being charged with any crime. His "SACRED" series, premiered in Venice during the 2013 Biennale, was based directly on his detention experience (governments, artists and individuals around the world protested strongly against his arrest and subsidized his bail). Ai Weiwei is the most famous Chinese artist today. As an activist, he draws attention to human rights violations on an epic scale; as an artist, he expands the definition of art to include new forms of social engagement. In a country where freedom of expression is not recognized as a right, he has been beaten by police, kept under house arrest, had his newly built studio demolished and placed under surveillance. He is considered a threat to "harmonious society". From breaking an antique vase to reciting the names of children killed by government neglect, Ai's dramatic actions highlight the growing gap between the ideal and the real in Chinese society. He is also one of the first conceptual artists to use social media-Instagram and Twitter, in particular-as one of his primary mediums. Trained in the West, Ai is intimately familiar with tradition, conceptual and minimalist art, and knows how to combine all of these concepts. In his refusal to please the eye, he is the opposite of Jeff Koons, his equally famous contemporary. In their visual austerity, Ai's pieces coincide with the work of other global activists, such as David Hammons, Robert Gober and Doris Salcedo...
Category

2010s Conceptual Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Paper, Screen

The Odyssey
By Ai Weiwei
Located in New York, NY
Ai Weiwei The Odyssey, 2017 Limited Edition inkjet print Frame Included In 2017, the world famous Chinese artist Ai Weiwei collaborated with New York's Public Art Fund to put on a mo...
Category

2010s Pop Art Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Inkjet

The Odyssey
The Odyssey
H 37.5 in W 25.5 in D 0.5 in
AI WEIWEI - CEDAR (LARGE) Chinese Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink White
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Madrid, Madrid
Ai Weiwei CEDAR (LARGE) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition: 50 Size: 70.5 x 55.5 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new and nev...
Category

2010s Conceptual Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Paper, Screen

AI WEIWEI CEDAR (SMALL) Chinese Contemporary Modern Activism Tree Tradition Ink
By Ai Weiwei
Located in Madrid, Madrid
Ai Weiwei CEDAR (SMALL) Date of creation: 2022 Medium: Screenprint on Somerset Velvet Antique paper Edition number: 9/150 Size: 47.5 x 38 cm Condition: In mint conditions, brand new...
Category

2010s Conceptual Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Paper, Screen

F?!k (There are No Outdoor Sports as Graceful as Throwing Stones at a Dictators)
By Ai Weiwei
Located in New York, NY
Ai Weiwei F*?!k (There are No Outdoor Sports as Graceful as Throwing Stones at a Dictatorship in the World), 2010 Limited Edition Silkscreen on 7 Ply Grade A Canadian Maplewood 31 × ...
Category

2010s Conceptual Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints

Materials

Wood, Screen

Ai Weiwei figurative prints for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Ai Weiwei figurative prints available for sale on 1stDibs. If you’re browsing the collection of figurative prints to introduce a pop of color in a neutral corner of your living room or bedroom, you can find work that includes elements of red and other colors. You can also browse by medium to find art by Ai Weiwei in paper, screen print, archival paper and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 21st century and contemporary and is mostly associated with the contemporary style. Not every interior allows for large Ai Weiwei figurative prints, so small editions measuring 8 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Stik, Georg Baselitz, and Jonas Wood. Ai Weiwei figurative prints prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $477 and tops out at $8,320, while the average work can sell for $5,760.
Questions About Ai Weiwei Figurative Prints
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    Yes, Ai Weiwei does paint. While Ai Weiwei is known more for his poetry, sculpture and photography, he did occasionally paint and use paint in his sculptural work. Ai Weiwei is known for his activism and his artwork often encapsulated his political leanings. Shop a selection Ai Weiwei works on 1stDibs.
  • 1stDibs ExpertApril 5, 2022
    What Ai Weiwei's art represents depends on the piece. Some of the Chinese artist's works seem to symbolize how the Chinese Community party stripped away individuality and demanded conformity. Many of his pieces communicate messages about various human rights violations. Shop a range of Ai Weiwei art on 1stDibs.
  • 1stDibs ExpertFebruary 13, 2024
    Ai Weiwei made Sunflower Seeds to provide a political critique. During his childhood, the Chinese artist frequently saw propaganda posters depicting Mao Zedong, founder of the Chinese Communist Party, as the sun and the citizens of China as sunflowers thriving beneath his rays. His installation featuring 100 million individually handmade sunflower seeds symbolized the poverty that the artist experienced while growing up in Communist China and the reduction of people as individuals / the grouping of individual human beings into a mass that occurred under Communist rule. Shop a collection of Ai Weiwei art on 1stDibs.

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