Review of On the Tip of a Wave: How Ai Weiwei’s Art Is Changing the Tide

On the Tip of a Wave: How Ai Weiwei’s Art Is Changing the Tide On the Tip of a Wave: How Ai Weiwei’s Art Is Changing the Tide
by Joanna Ho; illus. by Cátia Chien
Primary, Intermediate    Orchard/Scholastic    48 pp.
10/23    9781338715941    $18.99

In this powerful picture book, readers learn about artist/activist/filmmaker Ai Weiwei, the worldwide refugee crisis, and the effects art can have in shining a light on humanitarian issues. Readers meet Ai Weiwei in contemporary times as he helps a large group of newly arrived refugees in boats landing on a Greek beach. Flashing back, the text relates that his own tumultuous childhood in a 1960s Chinese labor camp was when he started making art using ordinary objects. The book’s main focus is on his notable protest artwork, visually referenced on the pages; the story concludes by returning to the plight of current-day “wave riders.” Ho’s vivid, expressive prose and Chien’s bright orange and blue impressionistic pencil and pastel drawings—incorporating waves, life jackets, and documentary photographs—inspire empathy for the refugees, many of whom are young children or families. More straightforward biographical details appear in the back matter; and Ho writes that Ai Weiwei’s “art and activism call on us, the citizens of the world, to lift each other up.” This book is a good companion read for Ho’s Playing at the Border (rev. 9/21) and Gravel’s What Is a Refugee?

From the November/December 2023 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Michelle Lee

Michelle Lee is a young adult librarian for the New York Public Library.

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