From:
In Memoriam: Liu Xiaobo
Chinese poet, dissident, and 2010 Nobel Peace
Prize recipient Liu Xiaobo died of acute liver cancer on Thursday, July 13,
2017 while in police custody. At the time of his death he had been released
from prison, where he had served almost nine years of an 11-year sentence, and
transferred to the First Hospital of China Medical University in Shenyang.
There the Chinese authorities kept him under guard until his passing,
preventing him from making any final public statement.
Untitled photograph (Liu Xiaobo with doll), ca. 1999, © copyright by Liu Xia, from the “Ugly Babies” series |
In 2009 a Chinese court convicted Liu of subversion for his role in
co-authoring and disseminating “Charter 08,” which called for the recognition
and practice of the democratic freedoms proclaimed in the constitution of the
People’s Republic of China. His opposition to the Chinese Communist Party goes
back to his leadership role in the events leading up to the Tienanmen Square
Massacre of June 4, 1989.
Liu Xia installation with the “Empty Chair,” Hong Kong, June 9, 2012. Photo © 2012 by A. D. Coleman. |
Predictably, just hours after
Liu’s death Donald
Trump praised China’s president, Xi Jinping. Trump has yet to
acknowledge Liu’s death.
Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia in an undated photo released by his family. |
Liu’s body was cremated and
his ashes buried at sea, so that no gravesite exists that could serve as a
place of pilgrimage by his supporters.
Liu Xia’s whereabouts are
currently unknown. Those close to her fear for her mental and physical health,
and her safety. With her husband now dead, she has become de facto the most
internationally recognized symbol of opposition to the oligarchy that rules
mainland China as a military dictatorship.
(Full disclosure: In 2012-13
I assisted with the international tour of the photography exhibition “The
Silent Strength of Liu Xia,” organizing showings in Hong Kong, Taipei, Berlin,
Madrid, and Richmond, VA. Toward that end I developed and published the only
English-language website devoted to her work, “Liu
Xia: Silent Strength.” There you’ll
find information about her life and work, including a number of essays about
her — one of them by me, “Freedom
Reflex: The Photographs of Liu Xia.” The site also
includes downloadable pdf files of two catalogs of her work.
With the ascension to power
in the PRC of Xi Jinping, my contacts in the circles around Liu Xiaobo and Liu
Xia asked me to suspend my efforts to circulate the exhibition, and the
development of the website, in hopes that the new regime in China would show
leniency toward these dissidents. Clearly that has not proved to be the case.
Untitled photograph by Liu Xia from the “Ugly Babies” series, © copyright 1996. |
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