See the world's finest porcelain in China's ceramics capital
An international ceramic fair opened Friday in the city of Jingdezhen, a world-famous ceramics capital, in east China's Jiangxi Province. It has attracted nearly 1,000 firms and over 3,500 exhibitors from various countries and regions, including Italy, and the Netherlands. With a 1,700-year-old ceramic-making history, Jingdezhen is home to more than 30,000 people working in the ceramics industry. Porcelain is widely known for being white as jade, thin as paper, with the sound of a bell and bright as a mirror.
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Overseas potters pursue china dream in Porcelain Capital
Modern ceramics made by British and Taiwanese potters in Jingdezhen, China's Porcelain Capital, have gone on sale in Thomas Goode's store in Mayfair, London.
Best Attractions and Places to See in Jingdezhen, China
Jingdezhen Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Jingdezhen. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Jingdezhenfor You. Discover Jingdezhenas per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Jingdezhen.
This Video has covered Best Attractions and Things to do in Jingdezhen.
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List of Best Things to do in Jingdezhen, China
Jingdezhen Ceramic Exposition
Museum of Porcelain
Jingdezhen Official Kiln Museum
Ancient Kiln Folk Customs Museum - Gu Yao
Jingdezhen International Studio
Ceramic Historical Exhibition Area
Old Street
Ceramics Museum Jingdezhen, China 景德镇陶瓷博物馆 - 中国
A glimpse at some the treasures housed within the new Jingdezhen Ceramics Museum in China. The museum houses an astounding collection of over 50,000 pottery and porcelain masterpieces and artifacts dating from the Han, Tang and Ming dynasties.
The Jingdezhen China Ceramics Museum opened on October18th, 2015. The address is NO.1 Zijing Rd, Jingdezhen, Jiangxi Province, China.
在中国的一个新的景德镇陶瓷博物馆里,一些珍贵的宝藏,一瞥。 这个新博物馆藏有五千余种从汉唐唐代起的瓷器和瓷器。
景德镇中国陶瓷博物馆于2015年10月18日开业。地址是中国江西省景德镇紫京路1号。
video: Stephen Smith
Reporter: Ilona Kauremszky
Kevin MacLeod:
mycompasstv ~ travel + arts + lifestyle
Jingdezhen Porcelain Capital
China is well known in the world for its porcelain, and Jingdezhen is the most well-known centre, with the highest quality porcelain in China.And Jingdezhen is not only famous of its porcelains,but is also attractive by its beautiful scenery.
Picasso ceramics part of new exhibition at Yingge Ceramics Museum
Yingge Ceramics Museum will display 33 ceramic pieces by Pablo Picasso. Today these works from the late Spanish master were unpackaged. This wooden crate is moved cautiously and upon opening there is another paper carton. Inside is very fragile ceramic artwork wrapped in yet another layer of protective foam. At long last, museum staff wearing gloves display Picasso''s ceramic works.Many people are familiar with Picasso''s paintings, such as Les Demoiselles d''Avignon. Fewer know that Picasso created more than 3,000 ceramic works, 33 of which will be displayed at the Yingge Ceramics Museum.Chen Chun-lanDirector, Yingge Ceramics MuseumThe works were specially shipped over from an art center in Monte Carlo, Monaco. Because they are ceramics they are quite fragile, so the packaging was done
chinese ceramics Art history presentation NUS museum
Live: Embrace ceramic beauty in China's porcelain capital 来景德镇看世界各地陶瓷艺术品
Hundreds of artists from 25 countries across five continents gather at the China Jingdezhen International Ceramic Fair to show their porcelain masterpieces, presenting exquisite artworks made in America, Australia, France and other places. CGTN brings you a feast of culture in Jingdezhen, heart and soul of China's ceramics.
Jingdezhen, The Porcelain Capital
Jingdezhen (or the Town of Jingde) is a prefecture-level city, previously a town, in northeastern Jiangxi province, China, with a total population of 1,554,000 (2007), bordering Anhui to the north. It is known as the Porcelain Capital because it has been producing quality pottery for 1700 years.
Jingdezhen was named one of top 24 national historical and cultural cities of the People's Republic of China on February 28, 1982.[5]
In 2004, Jingdezhen celebrated the millennium of its becoming the porcelain capital and its assuming its present name.
Chinese Porcelain Museum Tour
Longquan is a historic and cultural city in Zhejiang province, well-known for its celadon industry. There were five famous kilns in the Chinese history, namely Guan, Ge, Ru, Ding and Jun, among which Ge referred to the celadon kiln in Longquan.
In 2009, the traditional firing technology of Longquan celadon was inscribed on the representative list of the intangible cultural heritage of humanity by UNESCO.
The History of Chinese Porcelain
Learn more:
Join Karine as she learns about the history of Chinese porcelain, an art form created during the Han Dynasty and shaped by artisans from the Song, Ming and other dynasties.
An Introduction to Song Ceramics | Christie's
Robert D. Mowry, Senior Consultant at Christie’s in New York, explains why these four Song dynasty Chinese vessels from the Linyushanren Collection are ‘the ultimate achievement in their techniques’.
Ceramics are among the most complicated, most involved works of art,’ says Robert D. Mowry, Senior Alan J. Dworsky Curator of Chinese Art Emeritus, Harvard Art Museums, and Senior Consultant at Christie’s in New York. ‘There are the clays, the glazes, the different decorative types; then there are the kilns and the firing temperatures. So many things have to be exactly right to achieve perfection.’
Song dynasty (960-1279) ceramics have straightforward shapes and, says Mowry, are mostly ‘characterised by light-coloured, subtly-hued glazes’. Though kilns often produced various types of wares, in general each was known for producing a specific type of ware. The Ding kilns, which are best known for their creamy white porcelains, also produced the short, conical Ding ware bowl (shown below), which with its black glaze over a white porcelain body, is ‘the rarest of the rare’. It features particularly fine partridge feather mottles — brown flecks which are splashed on to the surface of the glaze. Gaps in the glaze on the bowl’s foot-ring indicate where the potter gripped it with his fingers.
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China: The Dragon's Ascent: Pottery - short clip
A short clip from CHINA: THE DRAGONS ASCENT an 8-hour television documentary series with accompanying book and CD-ROM, the Dragons Ascent is about the links between the China of today and Chinese history and civilisation. Francis Gerard devised the project, negotiated its making with the Chinese leadership, co-raised the US$7 million budget from donors worldwide to a charitable trust he set up for the purpose. Visit totem-media.net
Jingdezhen Porcelain Capital of China Oct 2012 by Paul Dominic Lopez
British Museum exhibits contemporary Chinese porcelain
Porcelain art is an essential part of Chinese culture and it’s experiencing a revival. A new generation of Chinese ceramists has emerged on the art scene, taking their works to London for a special exhibition at the Clore Education Centre of the British Museum.
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Porcelain for Emperors
Porcelain for Emperors
1993
12 minutes
Made for the exhibition Joined Colors: Decoration and Meaning in Chinese Porcelain at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery.
Sada Planning, Inc.; School of Cinema-Television and Center for Visual Anthropology, University of Southern California; Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. Editorial support from EditDroid Syetem/LucasArt Entertainment Company. Additional funding from the Tianminlou Foundation.
Porcelain for Emperors introduces traditional porcelain production in the city of Jingdezhen, China, where ceramic vessels were made to imperial order for more than 500 years. Viewers can see Jingdezhen specialists preparing the clay body, transforming it into vessel shapes, glazing and decorating, and firing the last wood-burning kiln still operating in Jingdezhen.
The making process of China’s Longquan celadon
Longquan, a city in the province, is known for its celadon producing. Longquan Celadon, with 1600 years history, is the longest and largest kiln family in the Chinese kiln history, which is worth researching and Inheriting.
Ming: 50 years that changed China 大英博物馆 明 - 盛世皇朝50年
Curator Jessica Harrison-Hall introduces the British Museum’s collection which tells the history of the world for the world, with
particular focus on ceramic works and the current BP exhibition Ming: 50 years that changed China at the British Museum 18 September 2014 – 5 January 2015
Xi'an Art Ceramics and Laquer Factory - Travel to China part 19 - Travel video HD
For visitors to Xi'an, one of the most intereting shopping and hand-on activity is to DIY their own models of Terracotta Warriors at Xi'an Art Ceramics & Lacquer Factory, usually right following the trip of the real Terracotta Warriors. Besides taking delight in the hand-making work, you can also have a tour around the factory and see how terracotta models are made.
Video by costiflorea
costiflorea1@yahoo.com
Porcelain treasure exhibition opens in Shanghai
An exhibition featuring hundreds of Chinese and western porcelains opened at the Shanghai History Museum on Thursday, giving visitors an insight into the historical cultural exchanges between the East and West.
Some of the porcelains being displayed at The White Gold - East and West Porcelain Capital Jingdezhen-Meissen Porcelain Exhibition are Kraak porcelains made in Jingdezhen, China's Porcelain Capital, during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Meissen porcelain, the first European hard-paste porcelain, starting from the early 18th century, also dazzled visitors at the exhibition.
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