BEIJING (Reuters) - An enraged Chinese sculptor is suing an art
professor for violation of copyright by recreating his sculpture of
a sleeping Mao Zedong in another work called "Nightmare", a state
newspaper said on Wednesday.
Wang Wenhai worked for the Revolutionary Museum in Yan'an, in the
central province of Shaanxi, the heart of the Chinese Communist
revolution, where he devoted himself to creating thousands of
sculptures of the late Chairman Mao, his hero.
"Sleeping Chairman Mao", completed in 2002, has the Great
Helmsman wrapped in a thick cotton quilt sleeping on a brick
bed.
"Chairman Mao sleeps there like a big mountain, that is my
intention," Wang told the Beijing Times.
Sui Jianguo, professor at the China Central Academy of Fine Arts
in Beijing, had invited Wang to create the sculpture and even helped
paint it.
And then, two years later, Sui's own sculpture, "Nightmare",
featuring a bizarre dream scene with a sleeping Mao in the middle,
turned up at an exhibit in San Francisco, the newspaper said.
Wang is claiming copyright infringement while Sui's lawyer told
the Beijing court the work is an entirely different concept and
therefore cannot be an infringement.
Wang is also upset at Mao being humiliated.
"I was so angry I fainted," the Beijing Times quoted him as
saying when he heard of "Nightmare" being exhibited in the
States.
"I said at the time, 'ah, Professor Sui, why did you not tell me?
You are committing a sin. How can you equate Chairman Mao with the
devil?'"
The full name of the sculpture in Chinese means literally
"Nightmare, a devil in your dreams".
Art involving Mao and the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution has found a
large audience in the West. Andy Warhol's 1972 iconic "Mao" portrait
sold for $17,376,000 in New York last week.
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