Ai Weiwei
Zodiac Charm ‘Dragon’, 2023
Zodiac Charm hand-cast in 999 pure gold, ⌀ 2 cm; on a red silk string, packaged in a clamshell box with a booklet
Edition of 99
Edition numbered and signed by Ai Weiwei
9783836596114
Copyright The Artist
Photo: TASCHEN
Further images
The tale of the “Great Race” describes how and in what order each of the twelve animals of the Chinese Zodiac came to be included. The idea of an animal...
The tale of the “Great Race” describes how and in what order each of the twelve animals of the Chinese Zodiac came to be included. The idea of an animal zodiac—composed of Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Ram, Monkey, Rooster, Dog, and Pig—grew out of the Twelve Earthly Branches previously used to order time. The twelve animals in turn rule over a lunar year, lending certain traits and attributes of their characters to those born within their time span. They also stand for the twelve double hours of the day, their ranking derived from a mythical race to the Jade Emperor’s birthday, with the rat, who managed to arrive first riding the Ox across a turbulent river, taking the midnight hour.
As part of his constant investigation into Chinese history, beliefs, and crafts, Ai Weiwei notoriously re-interpreted the Zodiac in his 2010 public sculpture Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads, which brought to life his reflections on cultural dialogue, war, authenticity, and national values. Harking back to the history of not only the zodiac signs, but the story behind the forms of the animal heads themselves, he recreated the zodiac figures from a fabled 18th-century fountain in Beijing’s Old Summer palace.
This piece invites wearing the signs of the zodiac as a charm, a custom that goes back almost as far as the concept of the zodiac itself. Fittingly, the reverse of each charm carries the name of the animal sign in Chinese small seal script, an ancient form of calligraphy standardized at the start of the Qin dynasty around 220 BCE. The Zodiac Charm has been sculpted based on its appearance in the Circle of Animals and hand-cast in 999 pure gold.
Limited edition of 99 copies, each signed by Ai Weiwei; Zodiac Charm hand-cast in 999 pure gold on a red silk string.
The artist: born in Beijing in 1957, Ai Weiwei is renowned for making strong aesthetic statements that resonate across today’s geopolitical world. From architecture to sculpture and installations, social media to documentaries, he uses a wide range of media for new ways of artistically examining society and its values. He is the recipient of the 2015 Ambassador of Conscience Award from Amnesty International and the 2012 Václav Havel Prize for Creative Dissent from the Human Rights Foundation. Ai’s first feature-length documentary Human Flow premiered at the 74th Venice Film Festival in competition. He currently lives and works in Cambridge, Berlin, and Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal.
As part of his constant investigation into Chinese history, beliefs, and crafts, Ai Weiwei notoriously re-interpreted the Zodiac in his 2010 public sculpture Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads, which brought to life his reflections on cultural dialogue, war, authenticity, and national values. Harking back to the history of not only the zodiac signs, but the story behind the forms of the animal heads themselves, he recreated the zodiac figures from a fabled 18th-century fountain in Beijing’s Old Summer palace.
This piece invites wearing the signs of the zodiac as a charm, a custom that goes back almost as far as the concept of the zodiac itself. Fittingly, the reverse of each charm carries the name of the animal sign in Chinese small seal script, an ancient form of calligraphy standardized at the start of the Qin dynasty around 220 BCE. The Zodiac Charm has been sculpted based on its appearance in the Circle of Animals and hand-cast in 999 pure gold.
Limited edition of 99 copies, each signed by Ai Weiwei; Zodiac Charm hand-cast in 999 pure gold on a red silk string.
The artist: born in Beijing in 1957, Ai Weiwei is renowned for making strong aesthetic statements that resonate across today’s geopolitical world. From architecture to sculpture and installations, social media to documentaries, he uses a wide range of media for new ways of artistically examining society and its values. He is the recipient of the 2015 Ambassador of Conscience Award from Amnesty International and the 2012 Václav Havel Prize for Creative Dissent from the Human Rights Foundation. Ai’s first feature-length documentary Human Flow premiered at the 74th Venice Film Festival in competition. He currently lives and works in Cambridge, Berlin, and Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal.
