Bust of Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo unveiled in Prague to mark 30th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre

Source: South China Morning Post / www.scmp.com / By Agence France Presse /

A Prague art gallery has unveiled a brass bust of the late Chinese dissident and Nobel Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo to mark the 30th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, a spokeswoman said Wednesday.

“It’s his first bust in the world so far,” Hana Janisova, spokeswoman for the Dox Centre for Contemporary Art, told AFP.

Zhou Fengsuo
Zhou Fengsuo, a former Tiananmen student leader in 1989, unveiling the bust of Liu Xiaobo, Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner, at the Dox Centre for Contemporary Art in Prague. Photo: EPA-EFE

A joint project of Amnesty International, Art for Amnesty, Humanitarian China and Dox, the bust by Czech sculptress Marie Seborova was unveiled on Monday as part of an exhibition marking the anniversary.

Liu, a writer and philosopher, veteran of the Tiananmen Square protests and the winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize, died of liver cancer at age 61 in 2017 after serving several prison terms for his activities.

Liu’s widow Liu Xia, a 58-year-old poet, had been expected to take part in the opening ceremony, but she excused herself at the last moment “for serious personal reasons”, Janisova said.

Liu Xia’s photographs are on display in the same room as the bust. Dox has kept them since an exhibition in 2014 which Liu Xia could not attend because she was under house arrest.

She was put under close police watch tantamount to house arrest after Liu won the Nobel Prize, which infuriated Beijing.

Liu Xia was released and allowed to travel to Germany in 2018.

The images date back to 1996 when Liu Xiaobo was at a labour camp and his wife preferred to communicate with him through her photos depicting dolls to puzzle the guards.

She was supposed to see them for the first time now but it won’t happen. But we’ll give them to her as a present,
Janisova said of the enlarged versions of her 1996 photographs.

The bust and pictures will be on display until June 4, the exact anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre in which hundreds of protesters demanding democratic changes lost their lives, Janisova said.

She added the bust would remain at the gallery after the exhibition.

The Vaclav Havel Center