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In China the potter's workmanship was
lifted above the utilitarian level and became a fine art. The great
work of the imperial potters at the peak of their excellence has never
been equaled in modern times.
Pottery was made in China long before
history was set down in writing. A coarse gray earthenware was made
before the Shang Dynasty (1766-1122 BC), and a finer white pottery was
made during this era. These vessels resemble in size and shape the
Chinese bronze vessels of the same period, and it is likely that the
bronzes were first copied from pottery.
It is from the Han Dynasty (202 BC-AD
220) that the history of pottery making in China is ordinarily traced.
The ancient Chinese had a custom of burying the dead with pottery
images of people, animals, and possessions dear to them during life.
These images have given modern students a clear insight into the life
and customs of these people.
The period of disunity (220-581) is
noted for vigorous modeling of figures, particularly of animals. The
pottery horses of the T'ang Dynasty (618-907) are among the most
celebrated examples of ancient Chinese art. Glaze was probably first
used on the earthenware body in the Han Dynasty. By the time of the
Sung Dynasty (960-1279), pottery of simple design was decorated with
monochrome glazes. Celadon, or sea green, is probably the best known of
these glazes.
Although crazed, or crackled, glazes
appear to have been used before the Sung Dynasty, they are commonly
associated with this period. This shrinking and cracking of the glaze,
due to too rapid cooling, was probably first an accident of firing. The
resulting effects were so attractive that crackled glazes became a
studied effect in finer wares.
Porcelain gradually evolved in China,
probably during the T'ang Dynasty. It grew out of earthenware by a
process of refining materials and manufacturing techniques. This true
porcelain, sometimes called hard-paste porcelain, was a combination of
kaolin, or China clay, and petuntse, also known as feldspar or China
stone. These ingredients were called by the Chinese the body and the
bone of the porcelain.
The principal porcelain factory in
China was the imperial plant at Jingdezhen in Jiangxi Province. Pottery
and porcelain probably were made there long before Jingdezhen became
the seat of the imperial potteries under Emperor Chen Tsung about AD
1004. The Jesuit missionary Pere d'Entrecolles later described the city
and the art of porcelain making in two letters written in China in 1712
and 1722. These brought to Europe for the first time a detailed account
of Chinese porcelain manufacture. He described the great
porcelain-making center of Jingdezhen as holding approximately a
million people and some 3,000 kilns for ceramics.
The glazes and decorations made at the
imperial factory were intended to reproduce natural colors. Some of the
best-known glazes are celadon; peach bloom, like the skin of a ripening
peach; apple green; sang de boeuf, or oxblood; and clair de lune, a
pale gray blue resembling soft moonlight. The decoration called cracked
ice is said to have been inspired by the reflection of sunny blue sky
in the ice of a stream cracking with the first spring thaw.
The rice-grain decoration was achieved
by cutting out the decoration from the porcelain body before glazing.
The glaze then filled the cutout portions, which remained transparent
after firing. Famille rose (rose or soft pink), famille verte (green),
and famille noir (black) are decorations in which these colors are
dominant.
The porcelains of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644) were noted for boldness in form and decoration, with great
variations in design. They include the blue and white wares, huge and
heavy vessels for the imperial temples, and thin and delicate white
eggshell porcelain. Great beauty in polychrome decoration was attained
in the later Ch'ing, or Manchu, Dynasty (1644-1911), particularly in
the reign of Emperor K'ang-hsi (1661-1722).
Some fine white porcelain was made at
Dehua in the province of Fujian in South China from the 1400s to the
1700s. Some of this ware was brought to Europe by early traders, where
it was known as blanc de chine. It provided many models for the early
European porcelain makers.
During a rebellion in 1853 the
imperial factory was burned. The rebels sacked the town, killing some
potters and scattering others. The factory was rebuilt in 1864 but
never regained its former excellence. With the end of the Manchu
Dynasty in 1911, the long history of Chinese porcelain making drew to a
close.
Source: Chinese
Cultural Studies: Chinese Arts: Brief Guide
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