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Fans Flood Artist Ai Weiwei With Offers Of Legos

Visitors look at Ai Weiwei's "Trace" installation — part of the @Large: Ai Weiwei on Alcatraz series — last year on Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Bay.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images
Visitors look at Ai Weiwei's "Trace" installation — part of the @Large: Ai Weiwei on Alcatraz series — last year on Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Bay.

The company that makes Legos has landed at the center of a social-media firestorm after Chinese artist Ai Weiwei complained that it refused to supply a bulk order of the toy bricks for his art.

Ai said he wanted to use the bricks for an exhibition on free speech at Australia's National Gallery of Victoria. The museum attempted to place an order but was told by the company that it "cannot approve the use of Legos for political works." A post on Ai's Instagram account said:

"As a powerful corporation, Lego is an influential cultural and political actor in the globalized economy with questionable values. Lego's refusal to sell its product to the artist is an act of censorship and discrimination."

A free-speech advocate who was imprisoned by the Chinese government, Ai suggested that Lego was acting under pressure from authorities. The privately held Danish company recently announced that a Legoland theme park will open in Shanghai.

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In response, fans of the artist flooded Twitter and Instagram with offers of Legos, and Ai said he was setting up drop-off points for donations. He also posted a picture of Legos that had been left inside a car on a street in Berlin, where he is serving as a visiting professor at the University of the Arts.

In a statement posted on a number of news sites, Lego said:

"We acknowledge, that Lego bricks today are used globally by millions of fans, adults, children and artists as a creative medium to express their imagination and creativity in many different ways. Projects that are not endorsed or supported by the Lego group."However, as a company dedicated to delivering great creative play experiences to children, we refrain — on a global level — from actively engaging in or endorsing the use of Lego bricks in projects or contexts of a political agenda. This principle is not new."

The New York Times reports that:

"The company's rejection of Mr. Ai's most recent order was praised by the state-run Chinese newspaper Global Times, which referred to it as an 'appropriate decision.' " 'As China becomes more powerful, commercial organizations and national governments will become more well behaved and more scared to apply a double standard to China,' the commentary by Shan Renping read."

This isn't the first time Ai has used Legos to make a political statement. Last year, he created mosaic portraits of people he called prisoners of conscience, including Edward Snowden and Nelson Mandela, on the floor of Alcatraz, the former prison in San Francisco Bay.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.