Chinese blogger Hairong Tiantian (海容天天) is at it again. In her latest installation art performance at Beijing's 798 art district (otherwise known as Dashanzi), she shed her clothes and holed herself up in a metal cage for ten days. During part of the performance, she would be pushed around in the cage by a male assistant. Hairong Tiantian says this was a show on women's rights and an expression for women to walk free from their dependence on men. Describing the performance as the most successful she's ever done, she shrugs off all the criticism by netizens, saying she is not out to do this for fame.
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Hairong Tiantian (海容天天) is at it again (and again, and again, and again), inspiring China on to philosophical nirvana with her highly profound works of performance art. This time, her message is about how clothes maketh the (wo)man, and how people position you in their minds based on what you wear (or don't wear). Quote of the Day: "我个人是不穿衣主义" (which can be loosely translated as "I don't believe in wearing clothes"). Enough said. Watch the video for yourself and make your own conclusions.
Remember Hairong Tiantian (海容天天), the Chinese blogger, who shot to fame last year by soliciting pictures of limp dicks? She started dabbling with a bit of performance art earlier this year when she joined artist Ye Fu living in adjacent tiny glass rooms, sealed off from one another and the rest of the world, in Beijing's eastern Jiuxianqiao industrial area. Well this time, she has shed her clothes again all in the name of art, in a performance item called 'Lotus' under an exhibition called 99 Tents, 99 Dreams (“99个帐篷,99个梦想”) at the 'Left and Right Art Zone' (左右艺术区) in Beijing.
Shanghaiist was surprised today to see well over 7,000 visitors coming in via this post today, and we were curious to know why so many people were Googling Hairong Tiantian, who caused a storm last year by not only posting saucy images of herself on her blog but also soliciting photos of limp penises.
Since we broke the stories of Shandong Erge and Yaofei Niangniang in the English-language blogosphere, their tales have gone round and round and round the world. Thanks to our stories, Shandong Erge has been named China's answer to Aleksey Vayner, and has also entered into the Douchebag Hall of Fame.
