Ai Weiwei says he wants to bring ‘monumental’ work to Manchester

Getty Images Ai Weiwei, who is wearing a black shirt and a navy overshirt, stands in front of a hedge with his arms crossed. He has a grey beard. Getty Images

Ai Weiwei will take over Aviva Studios in Manchester later this year

Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei said he was planning a “monumental” work in Manchester for his first major show in the north of England.

The 68-year-old, best known for working on the design of Beijing’s Olympic stadium and filling the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall in London with hand-crafted porcelain sunflower seeds in 2010, will lead Aviva Studios’ spring/summer exhibitions.

Factory International said the world-renowned artist’s exhibition would focus on British imperialism, Chinese-British relations and the rise of globalisation.

“I’m not interested in making very big things just for the sake of it,” said Ai. “But in Manchester, that wonderful Warehouse space calls for monumental work.”

Aviva Studios, a grey building made of triangular panels. A bridge runs over a canal towards the site while people can be seen milling around a forecourt.

Ai Weiwei will be at the centre of Factory International’s spring/summer season in Manchester

Organisers said Ai’s large-scale show would take over Aviva Studios’ Warehouse space as he explores 200 years of world history.

The exhibition will incorporate materials such as antique timber, porcelain, cotton, glass and bronze, and will bring new and existing large-scale work together, on display in the UK for the first time.

Ai, who was born in 1957 in Beijing, is the first artist living and working in the Asia-Pacific region to be commissioned for the series.

He has played a key role in contemporary Chinese art over the last two decades, and has been highly vocal about human rights issues.

The 2010-11 installation Sunflower Seeds, by Ai Weiwei, part of the Unilever Series of installations in the Turbine Hall at the Tate Modern art gallery in London

Ai Weiwei once filled the Tate with millions of porcelain sunflower seeds

He said: “Visiting the city for this exhibition – the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution – and reflecting on Britain’s global territorial expansion made me realise I had to explore that history and understand how it connects to the forces driving today’s wars and global crises.

“The world today is deeply divided, with tragedy all around. Understanding history goes hand in hand with standing up for truth and justice.”

Ai Weiwei: Button Up! will run from 2 July to 6 September at Aviva Studios in Manchester

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