Dissident Chinese artist Gao Zhen has been detained on suspicion of “insulting revolutionary heroes and martyrs,” his brother and artistic partner Gao Qiang has said.

The Gao Brothers are known for their provocative sculptures, which critique the founder of the People’s Republic of China, Mao Zedong, and his regime.

Gao Zhen left China two years ago to live permanently in the United States, but had been visiting family when he was taken by authorities in Hebei province, his brother said in a post on Facebook.

Chinese authorities have not responded to the allegations by Gao Qiang, who said about 30 police officers stormed the brothers’ art studio in Sanhe City on 26 August.

[…]

Since the 1980s, the brothers have been drawing international acclaim for works such as Mao’s Guilt, a bronze statue of the former Communist dictator kneeling remorsefully.

[…]

Mao Zedong, often called Chairman Mao, helped found Communist China in 1949 and led it through a tumultuous period in the 1960s and 1970s known as the Cultural Revolution, in which more than a million people are believed to have died.

During this period, the Gao Brothers’ father was labelled a class enemy and dragged off to a place that was “not a prison, not a police station, but something else”, where he died, Gao Zhen told The New York Times in 2009.

[…]

Spoofing or insulting China’s revolutionary “heroes and martyrs” was made a crime in 2021, as part of a newly amended criminal code, under a campaign by China’s leader, Xi Jinping. It carries a penalty of up to three years’ imprisonment.

    • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      With the censorship on Chinese internet and even of their own foreign ministry archives they don’t deal with the streisand effect nearly as much.

  • WraithGear@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Like, wait. Why did he think this wasn’t going to happen when he went to China to visit family?

      • WraithGear@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        You are suggesting that this is another form of art to show how bad China has gotten? I don’t know… he’s throwing his life away to preach to the choir, and Chinese citizens are not going to be motivated by his sacrifice. Or are you suggesting that he got batman’d into China jurisdiction and this was the reason given to cover the fact he was extrajudicially kidnapped to silence him and prevent nations from implementing sanctions?

        • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          Your comment was shorter in the first couple of hours. Why didn’t you add new parts as another paragraph?

          I don’t suggest anything or suspect\judge his motives. I’ve told you what I’ve seen: from the outsider’s perspective it can be seen as a performance, or a tale, without touching his unintentions at all.

          Him coming home to China (both China as his family and China as the CCP) is a powerful and a very simplistic plot point. The hero is conflicted between the fact it’s dangerous to go back and his own need to reconnect with his kin whatever it takes. I feel like a lot of people sharing his faith of an immigrant can relate to it.

  • 100@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    ah yes great leap forward and cultural revolution, actions worthy of much praise for the heroes behind them