The Art of Dissent — The Citizenfour filmmaker collaborates with dissident artists Ai Weiwei and Jason Appelbaum on an art-project in Beijing.

Jason Appelbaum and Ai Weiwei are products of the surveillance era. Both have spoken out against the way their respective countries’ governments monitor citizens. Both have been politically persecuted as a consequence.

Ai Weiwei has been detained, questioned, and beaten by the police for his outspoken views. He can no longer leave China because they have taken away his passport. Jason Appelbaum has been advised not to return to the United States following several detentions at the airport for his involvement with WikiLeaks. But they refuse to be silenced.

Both familiar with being under constant surveillance, the two artists collaborated on an art project, “Panda to Panda,” where they stuffed toy pandas with shredded NSA documents and an SD card containing a backup of those documents.

The project explores what it means to be watched, and how watching the watcher engenders a shift in the power play of the situation; a zone of counter-surveillance. Appelbaum and Weiwei constantly filmed and photographed each other during the project in Weiwei’s studio in Beijing.

Laura Poitras, perhaps now best known for her Oscar-winning documentary Citizenfour on Edward Snowden, documented the encounter — adding her own layer to the hyper surveillance — in an op-doc (opinion documentary) for the New York Times.

The art project was commissioned by Rhizome and the New Museum in New York. Jason Appelbaum explains the story behind the project in the video below.

Latest on Huck

Russian hacktivists are using CCTV networks to protest Putin
Activism

Russian hacktivists are using CCTV networks to protest Putin

Putin’s Jail — In Kurt Caviezel’s project using publicly accessible surveillance networks from around the world, he spotlights messages of resistance spread among the cameras of its biggest country.

Written by: Laura Witucka

Inside the world’s only inhabited art gallery
Art

Inside the world’s only inhabited art gallery

The MAAM Metropoliz — Since gaining official acceptance, a former salami factory turned art squat has become a fully-fledged museum. Its existence has provided secure housing to a community who would have struggled to find it otherwise.

Written by: Gaia Neiman

Ideas were everything to David Lynch
Film

Ideas were everything to David Lynch

Dreamweaver — On Thursday, January 16, one of the world’s greatest filmmakers passed away at the age of 78. To commemorate his legacy, we are publishing a feature exploring his singular creative vision and collaborative style online for the first time.

Written by: Daniel Dylan Wray

“The world always shuns”: Moonchild Sanelly on her new album, underground scenes and abortion rights
Music

“The world always shuns”: Moonchild Sanelly on her new album, underground scenes and abortion rights

Huck’s January interview — Ahead of ‘Full Moon’, her most vulnerable project yet, we caught up with the South African pop star to hear about opening up in her music, confronting her past and her fears for women’s rights in 2025.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Krept & Konan are opening an “inclusive” supermarket
News

Krept & Konan are opening an “inclusive” supermarket

Saveways — With 15,000 sq. ft of space and produce from across the world, the store will cater to Black, Asian and ethnic communities in Croydon.

Written by: Isaac Muk

This erotic zine dismantles LGBTQ+ respectability politics
Culture

This erotic zine dismantles LGBTQ+ respectability politics

Zine Scene — Created by Megan Wallace and Jack Rowe, PULP is a new print publication that embraces the diverse and messy, yet pleasurable multitudes that sex and desire can take.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now