As the rain poured down on Idomeni camp, where some 12,000 people are stranded in miserable conditions, a surreal scene played out with Syrian refugee Nour Alkhzam sitting at the piano and playing for 20 minutes under cover of plastic sheeting held up by Ai and a handful of others.
The stunt was the latest in a series of projects by the dissident artist to shine a spotlight on the people caught up in Europe's worst migrant crisis since World War II.
By the end of next week, there would be "50,000 spots" available across the country, he said.
"I hope the situation at Idomeni is resolved within a week without recourse to force," he told Mega TV, saying some 400 people had already moved to other centres in northern Greece on Friday.
Earlier in the day, around 200 people demonstrated in Idomeni over conditions at the camp where they have been waiting in vain for the Macedonian border to open so they can continue their journey to central and northern Europe.
The border closures have left thousands, many of them children, forced to camp out in increasingly squalid conditions in the area around the Idomeni crossing.
As Europe's diplomats rushed to try and find answers to the crisis, a 44-year-old Syrian refugee began a hunger strike to highlight the ongoing suffering at the frontier. Nazim Serhan, who travelled to Europe with his three children, is hoping to join his wife in Germany where she is battling cancer.
"I want to see her, just for one day," he told journalists.
"She has been victimised by these wars. She has not had the chance to touch a piano in three years," Ai said, explaining the piano as an "attempt to create an opportunity" for her.
There are more than 42,000 migrants and refugees currently in Greece, of which around 7,700 are on islands in the Aegean Sea. Many more, most fleeing the Syrian conflict, are still trying to reach the Greek islands by taking dangerous boat trips from Turkey.
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