Yours Truly (2019 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yours Truly
Ai weiwei yours truly.jpg
Film poster
Directed by
  • Cheryl Haines
  • Gina Leibrecht
Produced byJohn Caulkins et al.
Starring
Cinematography
  • Dana Smillie
  • Jan Stürmann
Edited byGina Leibrecht
Music byWendy Blackstone
Release date
Running time
76 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesEnglish, Mandarin, Arabic
Budget$550,000 (estimated)

Yours Truly is a 2019 American documentary film about the Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei, especially concerning an exhibition at Alcatraz, a former prison on an island near San Francisco, California, USA.

The documentary covers the creation of the exhibition @Large, a 2014 project that was shown at Alcatraz, covering political prisoners around the world.[1] At this time, Ai Weiwei still had his passport withheld by the Chinese government, so foreign travel was not possible for him and he had to create the exhibition remotely. The exhibition came about through contact with the San Francisco curator and gallerist Cheryl Haines.[2]

The film considers human rights.[3] Interviews with Ai Weiwei and his mother demonstrate the psychological effect of the family's exile in the 1950s to a labor camp in northeast China. The exhibition had two main parts. "Trace" was a room with portraits on the floor of 176 people that had imprisoned for their beliefs, created in bright colors using Lego bricks. The second room, "Yours Truly", enabled visitors to write postcards to some of the imprisoned people, which were later sent by mail to the prisoners where this was possible. The film includes interviews with Chelsea Manning, a former United States Army intelligence analyst who leaked military and diplomatic documents in 2010, originally sentenced to 35 years imprisonment by the US government, and John Kiriakou, a former US CIA agent who revealed the CIA's use of torture, especially waterboarding, and imprisoned by the US government during 2013–15 at the time of the exhibition.

The film has been shown on the Sky Arts television channel.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Bradshaw, Peter (27 September 2019). "Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly review – Alcatraz artwork mixes the political and personal". The Guardian.
  2. ^ Journeyman Pictures (15 October 2020). "Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly Preview Series – Art at Alcatraz". YouTube.
  3. ^ Gyarkye, Lovia (8 July 2020). "'Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly' Review: On the Irony of Personal Freedom". The New York Times.
  4. ^ "Ai Weiwei: Yours Truly". Sky Arts. Sky. Retrieved 11 February 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""