Ai Weiwei · Artist Case Study
This case study takes Fairytale (Documenta 12, 2007) as a seal-level judgment object. Rather than repeating familiar narratives of participation or humanitarian encounter, it examines the project as an operational model: how institutions translate difference into a standardized, legible form that can be staged, circulated, and absorbed.
Statement · Entering Fairytale through Assimilation Logic
Fairytale is often described through the language of social sculpture, relational aesthetics, or participatory art. While not incorrect, these framings tend to bypass a structural question: within the project’s actual operating system, are people positioned as agents, or are they treated as material.
This case study starts from institutional conditions rather than moral intention. The project becomes possible through a precise alignment of administrative gaps, logistical arrangements, and legitimizing infrastructures. It reveals these conditions even as it depends on them.
Assimilation names the mechanism by which difference becomes readable as art. As it enters the exhibition system, difference is processed—numbered, formatted, and made countable. “1001” functions less as a metaphor than as a translation device.
Core Research Text
Archive reference: Tan 13 · Jar AWW001
Fairytale: The Logic of Assimilation examines the tension between critique and incorporation, asking how institutions absorb critical gestures and convert them into stable exhibition content.
Revisit Node
This case is currently sealed. Future changes in exhibition context or institutional conditions may reopen this judgment for comparative analysis.