Best Attractions and Places to See in Jingdezhen, China
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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
Tourists flock to Jingdezhen, China's porcelain capital
Known as the porcelain capital of China, the city of Jingdezhen in East China's Jiangxi Province has long been a hot tourist spot.Tourists from all over the country flock to China's porcelain capital! Here at the exhibition centre, visitors can not only see fine works of porcelain and pottery, but also see how it's done. Master artisans are on site to demonstrate the artistry, which is among China's intangible cultural heritages.
Jingdezhen, the Porcelain Capital.
Jingdezhen is the mother of porcelain. The city has recently renovated an old ceramic factory and created a modern commercial ceramic campus, Taoxichuan. The campus hosts many international flavored restaurants, shops, galleries, museums, studios, nightclubs, and a 4 star hotel. Jingdezhen is now ready to host the rest of the world as a top tourist destination. See it for yourself.
Chine #1 - La poterie chinoise à Jingdezhen / Capitale mondiale de la porcelaine
Pas mieux comme ville pour apprendre l'art de la porcelaine : tournage, modelage, moulage, décor, cuisson ..
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SURCHARGE
Film de Marc DUQUESNOY, 2009
Musiques et prises de sons réalisées sur place.
Ce reportage a été réalisé en 2009 alors que je réalisais une résidence en Chine, au JCI (Jingdezhen Ceramic Institut).
La durée de mon séjour a été de 4 mois.
Les pièces que j'avais réalisé sur place sont montrées de temps à autre lors d'expositions, ventes aux enchères ... en France et à l' étranger.
Jingdezhen est une ville consacrée à la porcelaine. Partout où l'on jette un oeil, il y a un rapport avec la céramique et la porcelaine. Que ce soit du lampadaire qui éclaire la rue, de la boutique du coin, des étrangers que l'on rencontre, ou du restaurant dans lequel on mange, la porcelaine est toujours omniprésente.
Les techniques de tournage, de modelage, de coulage & de moulage ont été poussées à leur paroxysme par les artisans. Il est tout aussi étonnant de voir comment sont réalisées les plus petites tasses que les vases gigantesques ...
Exotisme et dépaysement assuré !
Jingdezhen est aussi la ville où l'artiste chinois Ai Wei Wei a fait réaliser ses millions de graines de tournesol pour son installation Sunflower Seeds.
2014 Jingdezhen International Ceramic Fair
ceramic,wanglong
Jingdezhen - capitale mondiale de la porcelaine ( 1/2 )
Carnet de route 07/13/2017 Jingdezhen,capitale mondiale de la porcelaine 1
Les longs voyages commencent toujours par un pas, alors partez avec Carnet de Route à la découverte des plus beaux paysages de Chine et du monde. Ses habitants vous ouvriront les portes d’un nouvel univers de couleurs et de saveurs.
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Chinese Socialism: A Streaming Talk With Ian Goodrum (Guest talk)
Video recording of an event held in Athens, Georgia on February 16 titled Chinese Socialism: Defeding the Revolution Past, Present and Future. The event features Ian Goodrum Digital Editor at the China Daily. It was sponsored by the Socialist Coalition of North Georgia and endorsed by the Party for Socialism and Liberation.
Early Chinese Pottery
Features more than 100 pieces of Chinese ceramics dated from 4th and 5th millennia B.C. up to the end of the Han Dynasty, (220 B.C. -- 220 A.D.), presented on exhibit at the QCC Art Gallery from October 7, 2010 through November 27, 2010.
Zhangzhou Ware Found in the Philippines on The Good Life with Cory Quirino
A December 30, 2007 feature on the Chinese ceramics exhibit Zhangzhou Ware Found in the Philippines: 'Swatow' Export Ceramics from Fujian 16th - 17th century on The Good Life with Cory Quirino (ANC). The exhibit was on view at the Yuchengco Museum from October 11, 2007 to April 5, 2008.
Cuban archaeologist's passion about Chinese porcelain
Cuban archaeologist Yosvanis Fornaris knows his porcelain--in fact, he is his country's foremost expert in the delicate subject. And at the National Museum of Decorative Arts in Havana, Fornaris is in his element in an exhibit that contains 1200 Chinese porcelain objects.
Fornaris returned from China about a month ago after studying a master's degree at the Jingdezhen Ceramic University in Jiangxi. He was the university's first foreign graduate from the archaeology program. His extensive studies taught him the proper way to review and catalogue each intricate piece of porcelain in the museum's collection.
Fornaris may be considered by many to be an expert in the area of Chinese porcelain, but he still wants to learn more. Currently, he is writing about his experiences in cataloguing the exhibition and is hoping to turn it into a doctoral thesis that he will complete in China.
Royal Collection Trust: Restoring Porcelain, Part 4
In part four of this conservation series we look at the final stage of reassembly of this blue and white porcelain vase.
Un vase chinois du 18e siècle vendu aux enchères 16,2 M d'euros
Oublié dans un grenier pendant plusieurs décennies, un vase chinois en porcelaine créé pour l'empereur Qianlong au 18e siècle atteint 16,2 millions d'euros lors d'une vente aux enchères chez Sotheby's à Paris. Un record !
CHINA: BEIJING: 87 PIECES OF CLASSICAL CHINESE PORCELAIN ARE AUCTIONED
Mandarin/Nat
China's late Communist leader Mao Tse-tung was apparently not living quite as humbly as his own egalitarian doctrines dictated.
While his followers were busy destroying any bourgeois influences, Mao aides secretly presented him with the kind of indulgence that was banned for everyone else: exquisite Chinese porcelain, made specifically for him.
Now, 87 pieces of the collection have been auctioned for roughly 1 (m) million U-S dollars.
And in an ironic twist that shows how much times have changed, bidders at Saturday's auction included Chinese, who once would have been punished for owning it.
An unusual element of China's violent Cultural Revolution has gone under the gavel.
Delicate classical Chinese porcelain, made for former Communist ruler Chairman Mao Tse-tung in 1975 when such objects were being destroyed by official order to rid society of old influences, was put up for auction at a Beijing hotel on Saturday.
Virtually the entire collection went to bidder number 806.
Han Zhi Hong had been a Red Guard, one of the radical followers of Mao devoted to destroying such bourgeois items.
Now head of a government futures trading firm, he spent roughly 950-thousand U-S dollars to buy the pieces as an investment for his company.
The only item that eluded his grasp was a soup bowl which went for 50-thousand U-S dollars.
The collection brought in seven times the appraised value.
For the day's dominant buyer, the auction was something of a tribute.
SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin)
I was also a Red Guard, I was put in a brigade, I came from this era of fanaticism. Feelings about Mao Tse-tung's greatness were common.
SUPER CAPTION: Han Zhi Hong, buyer, CEO Jingyi Future Co.
The porcelain was made in 1975, the year before Mao's death, when the cult of his personality was at its height.
As most Chinese toiled in the poverty of the Cultural Revolution, Mao's aides ordered the tea cups, bowls, wine vessels and other pieces of white porcelain painted with pink plum and peach blossoms to gain his favour.
During the decade-long radical movement that ended with the Chairman's demise in 1976, public displays of wealth were punished.
Austere egalitarianism was the order of the day.
Young and zealous followers of Mao, known as the Red Guards, destroyed art works and attacked anyone suspected of being an enemy to the revolution.
At least a million people died and tens of millions were persecuted.
It is this context which brings out the strange irony of the secret porcelain collection.
SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin)
Only emperors had their own royal porcelain made. Of course maybe Mao Tse-tung did not himself order to have this porcelain made -- but it must be true that people wanted to make this set of porcelain for him, and this represents the highest level of porcelain art at that time.
SUPER CAPTION: Mr. Gu, visitor to exhibit
The Ceramics Industry Research Institute in the southern province of Jiangxi produced around one thousand pieces of porcelain in 1975.
From these, two sets of 138 pieces were selected for Mao.
Although the rest was supposed to have been destroyed, many pieces were stored or given to institute staff.
The pieces that were given to Mao were not part of Saturday's sale.
Those goods, like his calligraphy, are likely considered too valuable by the government to be sold.
The auction of the porcelain, and the astronomical price it brought, shows how deep the reverence for the revolutionary leader still runs -- even among a new middle class enriched by capitalist policies Mao would never have allowed.
The organiser of the sale says the interest in the collection is unique.
SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin)
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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
Discovery Rare Historical Artifacts | Mystery of Chinese Porcelain | Documentary English Subtitles
A Pair of ‘Very Special’ Qianlong Vases
Why these rare and extremely important 18th-century vases prompted our specialist to advise their owner to sit down before it was explained what they might be worth.
Read more at
‘It was one of those wonderful eureka moments,’ recounts Rosemary Scott, Chinese ceramics specialist and International Academic Director at Christie’s. ‘My colleague Jeremy Morgan was on a perfectly normal valuation visit when he walked into the drawing room and there, on the mantelpiece, he saw these vases. He couldn’t believe his eyes.’ As soon as he saw them Morgan knew they were something special, and he suggested to the owner of the house that she should sit down before he explained to her how rare and valuable they are.
Made in the 18th century for the court of the Qianlong Emperor, probably the greatest of all the Chinese art collectors, the vases feature his reign mark on the bottom. They had been bought in the early 1930s and inherited by the current owner, who, Scott explains, ‘had no idea that she had such amazingly important pieces in her collection.’
The senior specialists at Christie’s were so excited by the find that they all got together to look at the vases when they arrived in the building. Each vase, they discovered, is elaborately decorated to the bulbous lower section with butterflies of various sizes and colours flying amid leafy floral sprays, including peony, chrysanthemum, morning glory, rose and aster, above a band of pink lotus petals. The shoulder is encircled by a ruyi border and bands of floral sprays, below the upper section, which is enamelled with further butterflies and flower heads. The mouth rim is decorated with an iron-red key-fret border, and the pair of handles are adorned with stylised foliate designs.
‘There are lots of different clues you have to look for to ensure that the piece is genuine,’ explains Scott. These include the clay it is made from, the glaze, the enamels, how it is painted and in what colours, because certain colours only appear at certain times. ‘You also look at the shape,’ continues the specialist, ‘and in this case it is an auspicious shape, being associated with fertility and the new year.’
The auspicious meaning attached to most of the flowers seen in the Chinese decorative arts is due to the fact they will form a rebus, either alone suggesting a particular wish, or in combination with another flower, or something else — such as a butterfly. The meanings of the various flowers on these jars are explained more fully in a separate feature by Rosemary Scott on Christies.com.
‘To appreciate the quality of the painting we should look not only at the flowers, but especially at the butterflies,’ Scott continues. ‘You get the impression of transparency in the wings, which flutter and catch the sunlight.’
One of the exciting things about having a pair of vases such as this is that they can be looked at together. ‘We see something that we know about Chinese pairs, namely that they’re never identical,’ says the specialist. ‘They are complementary. They will have the same flowers, but those flowers will be painted slightly differently, as will the butterflies.’
This magnificent pair of famille rose ‘butterfly’ double-gourd vases is offered in the Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art auction on 9 May at Christie’s London, and will be on view at our King Street galleries from Friday 5 May.
China Project
Li Chao exhibit at HACC's Rose Lehrman Art Gallery
吳安然(Wu An-Ran)@China
吳安然(Wu An-Ran)|清華大學美術學院陶瓷設計系(Tsinghua University, Academy of Art & Design, Department of Porcelain Design)
[工作經歷]
2010/4|清華大學美術學院與英國皇家藝術學院合作之Go Global項目
2009/3 - 2009/7|北京經貿職業技術學院珠寶設計專業珠寶手繪課兼職老師
2008/5 - 2008/7|景德鎮「樂天陶社」
2006/12 - 2007/5|景德鎮環球陶瓷有限公司設計部
2006/11 - 2006/12|「景德鎮在線」網站陶瓷頻道記者
2006/10 - 2006/11|挪威卑爾根國家藝術學院之Global Table項目
2006/2 - 2006/11|國家日用及建築陶瓷工程中心設計部
[展覽與獲奬經歷]
2007/4|Global Table項目之作品於挪威卑爾根國家博物館展
2009/5|北京寶潔研發中心中庭裝置藝術設計入圍奬
2010/11|杭州中國當代陶藝展銅奬
[Experience]
Apirl 12, 2010 - Apirl 30, 2010: Go Global Workshop, Royal college of Art & Tsinghua University
March 2009 - July 2009: Beijing Economic & Trade Vocational College Jewelry Design Department, Teacher
May 2008 - July 2008: Jingdezhen Pottery Workshop, Artist
Dec 2006 - May 2007: Jingdezhen Global Ceramics Co., LTD, Designer
Nov 2006 - Dec 2006: The Ceramic Channel of JDZOL.COM, Journalist
Oct 2006 - Nov 2006: Global Table Program Norway Bergen National Academic of Arts
Feb 2006 - Nov 2006: National Daily and Construction Ceramic Engineering Center, Designer
[Awards and Exhibitions]
Nov 2009: The contemporary Ceramic Art Exhibition of China
May 2008: Art Installation Design within the public space of the Central hall of Beijing P&G Research and department Center
April 2007: Global Table Exhibition in Norway Bergen National Museum
Ceramic works had been collected by Kunsthøgskolen i Bergen
chinese ceramics Art history presentation NUS museum
Made in China HUGO KAAGMAN
Fashion presentation in the Delft booth at the China Jingdezhen International Ceramic Art Fair, Hugo Kaagman ceramic work and fashion, made in China, October 2012