FISHERMAN’S VILLAGE, QUANZHOU, CHINA – For over two decades, the impossible dream of one man burned brighter than any fleeting spark. What began as a private, aching promise to a grandmother became a breathtaking, monumental artwork that defied physics, funding, and repeated failure. This is the story of celebrated Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang and his legendary firework creation, the “Sky Ladder.”
A Promise to Grandmother
The inception of “Sky Ladder” was not an artistic statement but a profoundly personal act of devotion. Cai conceived the vision as a final tribute to his beloved grandmother, his greatest supporter, who had lived to be 100 years old.
”My grandmother was a very confident, prideful person,” Cai recalled. “I had to build that ladder to the sky, to let her watch.”
The concept: to construct a 1,650-foot (500-meter) ladder of fire, suspended by a giant hot air balloon and lit entirely by pyrotechnics, appearing to connect the Earth to the heavens.
Two Decades of Setbacks, One Moment of Triumph
The road to completion was a 21-year struggle chronicled in the 2016 Netflix documentary, Sky Ladder: The Art of Cai Guo-Qiang. The film details a series of heartbreaking failures: an initial attempt in Bath, England, was grounded by wind in 1994; a second effort in 2001 was abandoned due to tightened airspace security after 9/11; and a third attempt in 2012 was thwarted by bureaucratic red tape.
Cai’s lifelong struggle became his Moby Dick—an impossible, beautiful obsession.
The final, successful attempt in June 2015 was a quiet, private affair in his hometown village of Quanzhou, orchestrated with the help of volunteer local fishermen and residents. The goal was to execute the piece quickly before government authorities could intervene, allowing his frail, centenarian grandmother to watch from her bed via a live video stream.
As the timers hit zero, the sequence began. For just two minutes and twenty seconds, a golden, glowing ribbon of fire ascended into the pre-dawn sky, a flawless execution of a two-decade-old vision. Cai, watching the display with his family, filmed the fleeting masterpiece on his phone, later shouting, “Isn’t your grandson awesome?”
A month later, his grandmother passed away. The final artwork was her last memory of her grandson’s impossible dream come true.
A Legacy Beyond the Fire
Today, “Sky Ladder” is not just a dazzling firework display; it is a globally recognized work of contemporary art, revered for its complexity and emotional depth. Art critics cite it as a perfect example of an artist operating at the intersection of:
- Eastern Philosophy: Drawing upon the Chinese alchemists who first invented gunpowder while searching for an elixir of immortality.
- Personal Devotion: Turning a private, loving tribute into a monumental public spectacle.
- Extreme Perseverance: Sustaining a singular dream through decades of setbacks, demonstrating how long-term dedication can turn an ephemeral medium into a permanent symbol of persistence.
Cai Guo-Qiang, who also served as the Director of Visual Effects for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics, continues to explore the “cosmic cycle” of creation and destruction in his work. He is currently being featured in a number of exhibitions, including a major solo show in London in September 2025.












