Reuters
| May 13, 2013
Add videographer to the list of roles dissident Chinese artist Ai WeiWei is mastering. The artist who often annoys Chinese officials picked up a camera to film a bloody street brawl in Beijing involving a clash between ethnic Tibetan street v...
Euronews
| Oct 26, 2012
Even though tens of thousands of delighted Chinese fans watched Ai WeiWei in his own video version of "Gangnam Style," Chinese officials quickly yanked his performance off the Internet — and the dissident artist is steamed. A repressive gove...
YouTube
| Oct 24, 2012
The mega-popular "Gangnam Style" by South Korean rapper Psy is such a global hit that it's even sweeping Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei off his feet. He just posted his own cover version of the rap vid on YouTube. In a nod to his difficulty wi...
Euronews
| Sep 27, 2012
A court in China has rejected an appeal by the country's most famous dissident artist Ai Weiwei against a $2.5m fine for tax evasion. If he does not pay the outstanding balance on the fine -- around half the original amount -- he risks going to ja...
Associated Press
| Jul 20, 2012
A Beijing court has rejected dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei's lawsuit against the tax bureau that imposed a massive fine against his company. Ai's lawyer said he'll file an appeal.
LinkAsia
| Mar 16, 2012
While the Chinese government portrays the new criminal procedures law as a step forward for human rights, social media users have reacted quite differently. Dissident artist Ai Weiwei and others spoke out against it and against secret detention.
LinkAsia
| Nov 18, 2011
Dissident artist Ai Weiwei bursts into song to thank his supporters. Did he just say "grass mud horse", or was that "screw the government"? Did he say "river crab" or "censorship"?
LinkAsia
| Nov 18, 2011
Ai Weiwei has forked out $1.3 million to fight tax evasion charges levied by the Chinese government, but debate about the rights and wrongs of the case has continued online. Some call the government a bunch of hooligans, while others say Ai is a r...
NTDTV
| Nov 8, 2011
Financial support is continuing to come in for dissident artist Ai Weiwei, after Chinese authorities ordered him to pay $2.4 million for alleged tax evasion. On Friday, a handful of Ai's supporters started sending him "loans" over an online paymen...
LinkAsia
| Sep 2, 2011
Chinese microblogging website Sina Weibo shuts down the accounts of users accused of spreading rumors, while Chinese artist Ai Weiwei uses Twitter to speak up for other activists. LinkAsia contributor Charlie Custer reports.
— May 9 at 09:08 pm
...their efforts, Weiwei still spoke openly to reporters, and maintained a blog while on house arrest following an 81 day stint in prison on charge...
— last Thursday at 07:44 pm