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Past Exhibitions


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Ai Weiwei: Colored Vases

Apr 5 2014 – Feb 26 2017

Seattle Asian Art Museum

Foster Galleries

Ai Weiwei is one of China’s most acclaimed contemporary artists and outspoken dissidents. Working in various mediums, from installations and photography to interactive internet programs, Ai uses his work to call attention to critical social issues.

Colored Vases, Ai’s first work acquired by the Seattle Art Museum, is a pivotal piece in his iconoclastic oeuvre. Ai dipped earthenware vases into buckets of industrial paint and then let them drip dry. By covering the surfaces with new paint, what is underneath—like history itself—is “no longer visible, but is still there.” When asked if the vases were truly ancient, Ai seemed surprised that anyone would think otherwise.

Widely traded for centuries, Chinese ceramics and silk “left the outside world incapable of resistance,” according to Ai. The fundamental irony—always a subtext of Ai’s ceramic works—is that they slyly play on the question of authenticity, an aspect which features prominently in today’s market for Chinese art.

–Xiaojin Wu, Associate Curator for Japanese and Korean Art

Colored Vases, 2010, Ai Weiwei, Chinese, b. 1957, ceramic with industrial paint, dimensions variable; (approx. 17 x 22 in. each), Seattle Art Museum, Purchased with funds from the Estate of Robert M. Shields, 2013.33. © Ai Weiwei, Photo by Nathaniel Willson.

Seattle Art Museum respectfully acknowledges that we are on Indigenous land, the traditional territories of the Coast Salish people. We honor our ongoing connection to these communities past, present, and future.

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