Li Ximei, an inheritor of traditional firing techniques of "Jian Zhan", a kind of black glaze bowl, puts glaze on the body of semifinished "Jian Zhan" bowls at a workshop in Jianyang, southeast China's Fujiang Province, Oct. 29, 2018. "Jian Zhan", a kind of temmoku glaze or black glaze porcelain, was then used only by emperors of ancient China's Song Dynasty (960-1279). Famous for its nobility and gorgeousness, "Jian Zhan" was numerously exported overseas through the Silk Road on the sea. However, after Song Dynasty, those traditional firing techniques to make "Jian Zhan" failed to be handed down to future generations. In recent years, those ancient techniques were regained through untiring efforts made by local authorities and porcelain artists, and have been listed as one of the national intangible cultural heritages. "Jian Zhan" products are now exported to many countries and regions like Japan and the UK with annual output valu e hitting 1.65 billion yuan (237 million U.S. dollars). (Xinhua/Lin Shanchuan)
Traditional firing techniques to make black glaze porcelain regain
Source: Xinhua| 2018-11-01 07:29:48|Editor: Yang Yi
Video PlayerClose
KEY WORDS: porcelain
YOU MAY LIKE
-
Major production base of porcelain products in China's Fujian
-
In pics: eggshell porcelain in "China's porcelain capital" Jingdezhen
-
Porcelain restorers repair broken ancient porcelains in Jingdezhen, China's "porcelain capital"
-
Pic story: guangcai porcelain artist opens studio for craftsmanship heritance
-
Feature: Chinese porcelain art gains popularity in Tunisia
MORE PHOTOS