Dissident artist on trial in China for satirical Mao sculptures, rights group says

This version of Dissident Artist Gao Zhen Trial China Satirical Mao Sculptures Rcna265979 - World News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

Gao Zhen, 69, who was detained in 2024 during a visit from the U.S., faces a maximum three-year prison sentence after a closed-door, one-day trial.
Underground Art in China
Gao Zhen, left, and his brother Gao Qiang with their sculpture “Mao’s Guilt” in Beijing in 2009.Shiho Fukada / Shiho Fukada/The New York Times via Redux

BEIJING — Chinese dissident artist Gao Zhen, famous for making provocative satirical sculptures of former leader Mao Zedong, was tried Monday on accusations of “defaming national heroes and martyrs,” his wife and a rights group said.

Gao, 69, who was detained in 2024 during a visit from the U.S., faces a maximum three-year prison sentence, said his wife, Zhao Yaliang, and Shane Yi, a researcher at the Chinese Human Rights Defenders group which operates outside the country.

The closed-door, one-day trial took place at Sanhe City People’s Court in Hebei province neighboring the capital, Beijing, and ended without a verdict, Zhao and Yi told Reuters, citing information from his lawyers.

Zhao said she was barred from entering the courtroom. Verdicts are often announced months later in such trials.

The Sanhe Public Security Bureau did not immediately respond to a request for comment on his case.

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The New York-based artist, who moved to the U.S. in 2022, was detained in August 2024 on a family visit to China even though he had made multiple trips there without issues, Yi added.

“This really shows the Chinese government’s logic, when they want to target someone, they can use anything in their power to do so,” she said.

“Gao Zhen is an artist. He has a right to artistic freedom, period.”

With his brother Gao Qiang, Gao produced several provocative sculptures of Mao that critiqued the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution, a period of social turmoil and widespread political persecution in China that led to millions of deaths.

Their most famous works include “Miss Mao,” featuring Mao with unsettling features such as Pinocchio noses and breasts, and “Mao’s Guilt,” a bronze statue of the leader kneeling remorsefully.

European Union diplomats tried to attend the trial but were blocked from entering, its China mission said in an official X post.

Gao’s wife said she and their 7-year-old son, an American citizen, are under exit bans and cannot leave China.

“This is a huge blow to me,” Zhao told Reuters. “My son hasn’t seen his father since the year before last, and we have been barred from sending letters to him since last May. It’s had a significant impact on my son’s emotions and health.”

Gao is suffering from malnutrition and has lumbar spine disease, as well as chronic knee and eye conditions that need treatment, Yi said.

Gao was charged for works between 2005 and 2009, Yi said, even though China’s “Law on the Protection of Heroes and Martyrs” was only established in 2018 and strengthened in 2021.

The law has previously been used to prosecute individuals accused of insulting servicemen and military members who died in the line of duty, as well as historical figures.

A stand-up comedian was censored and his comedy firm fined $2 million in 2021 after he made a joke that referenced a People’s Liberation Army slogan.

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