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Ai Weiwei's first feature-length film to focus on refugees

Chinese artist documents humanitarian crisis from Lesbos to Lebanon

Anny Shaw
30 April 2016
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The Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei is making his first feature-length film, a documentary about refugees. Ai first visited the Greek island of Lesbos on Christmas day in 2015 and has since moved his studio there. For the past few months he has been documenting the plight of refugees on the island, photographing and recording videos of people arriving from Turkey by boat or already at the Idomeni refugee camp.

The artist has also hired a professional film crew for the first time and, with their help, plans to gather footage over the course of the next year. The editing of the film is expected to take a further six months.

On his Instagram and Twitter accounts, Ai has documented his trips with his film crew to Lebanon and to the Za’atari camp in Jordan, which is home to thousands of Syrian refugees. The artist and his team appear to be travelling against the flow of people fleeing to Europe from the Middle East and North Africa.

Meanwhile, an exhibition of Ai’s work opens at the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens this month. It will feature 25 works, including a new marble sculpture inspired by the institution’s archaeological collection and works made in response to the refugee crisis.

“[Ai] was so shocked by what he saw on Lesbos, he kept extending his stay. Eventually he moved his studio there,” says Aphrodite Gonou, who advises the Cycladic museum on its contemporary art programme. “He’s up at 5am, spending time with people; he practically lives there. It’s completely changed his life.”

• Ai Weiwei at Cycladic, Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens, 20 May-30 October

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