The artist met his wife at an unknown location on Sunday and told her he is well, his sister told the BBC.
Mr Ai is said to be under investigation for suspected "economic crimes".
The artist is a vocal critic of the government, complaining about a lack of basic freedoms and often incorporating these political themes into his work.
Ai Weiwei's wife Lu Qing was taken by Chinese police to meet her husband on Sunday afternoon.
The artist's sister told the BBC Lu Qing was summoned to a police station and taken to another location where she was allowed a brief meeting with her husband.
Continue reading the main story Supported online campaign to compile names of children who died in 2008 Sichuan earthquake - many in schools whose construction was allegedly compromised due to corruptionIn August 2009, beaten up by police in Sichuan while trying to testify for dissident Tan ZuorenAlthough a co-designer of Beijing's Bird's Nest Olympics stadium, he later disavowed the project, condemning China's hosting of the Games as "fake and hypocritical" His frequently censored blog was read by 10,000 people a day until shut down by authorities in May 2009Ai Weiwei is a "maverick" who "chooses to have a different attitude from ordinary people toward law", the Global Times said on WednesdayMrs Lu does not know where that location was, but thinks it was only used for the meeting - she said she did not believe her husband was being held there.She reported that Mr Ai told her those holding him were taking good care of him, he was healthy and she should not worry.
However the meeting was very brief, she said, and there were many other people present, some of them taking notes, so she was afraid to talk much more with her husband.
The family were then warned by police not to discuss the visit with the media as they were told it could "be bad for Mr Ai's case".
His family had been demanding to know if he was safe and well as more than 43 days have passed since Mr Ai was detained by police at Beijing's airport, says the BBC's Damian Grammaticas in Beijing.
He had not been allowed any contact with his lawyers or his family.
Calls by artists and governments worldwide for information had not produced any response from China's authorities.
China's foreign ministry has insisted that Mr Ai's case has "nothing to do with human rights or freedom of expression".
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