RareCoinSell.com
| Bookmark | View Cart | About Us | Dispute | Rare Coin Home | Rare Coin Signup | News | Articles | RSS |New |Links |Forum |Chat |Fun |Sitemap | 
  Product Search

  Article Search

 Shop by Category
Other

 Shop by Company
Rare Coin Sell

 Shop by Keyword
China
Byzantine
Celtic
Greek
India
Islamic
Medieval
Roman
Spanish
American eagle
silver dollar
quarter eagle
Stella
half eagle
$10 eagle
double eagle
commemorative
Mexican
U.S. gold
world gold
Australian gold
UK gold
Canadian gold
gold bullion
silver bullion
platinum bullion
dollar
half dollar
quarter
dime
nickel
cent
mint
elongated
encased
geocoin
medal
token
The History Of Oriental Pottery Making In China

 Shop by Price Range
$0 to $9.99

  Resources
Rare Coin Home
Rare Coin Signup
New Items
Reciprocal Links
Forum
Chat
Fun
Rare Collectibles
Postcards, Invitations


Home > The History Of Oriental Pottery Making In China
We Have Found 1 Products for your search of The History Of Oriental Pottery Making In China.
Displaying Items 1 - 1:

 Category  
Company  
   Price Range  
Sort by  
Keyword  

  The History Of Oriental Pottery Making In China  

The History of Oriental Pottery-Making in China by Mitch Johnson

Almost every nation has different beginning of ceramic as per their culture and tradition. It has been given a new shapes and design base on their customs and culture. The following article will make you know how ceramic got its new shape in the hand of Chinese.

The history of Oriental pottery-making, for the most part, is much like that of the rest of the world. Improvements were made gradually over thousands of years, although the Japanese and Chinese apparently got a head-start in the field.

As early as 3000 B.C., Chinese ceramists were shaping some of the most artistic pottery in the annals of man, Europe at this date was still the home of roving bands of barbarians, who knew little more about making pottery than their earliest forebears.

Probably the most august age of Chinese ceramics was during the Sung Dynasty, which lasted from 960-1279 A.D. It was in this period that porcelain was first developed. The earliest known examples of porcelain are of the ying Ch'ing type a soft-looking, bubbly glaze, white in color but with a faint tinge of iridescent green or blue.

Chinese artisans jealously guarded their individual techniques for producing porcelain. The clay had to be properly aged, in many cases for centuries. Succeeding generations of potters inherited the family's supply of clay, which was buried in the ground to be dug up more than 100 years later by a potter's son or grandson. When Oriental porcelain was introduced into Europe in the 15th century, it made even the most beautiful of western pottery look shabby by comparison. European ceramists regarded the Chinese and later, Japanese wares with awe and envy. Ambitious efforts were made to imitate the imported porcelain, which was in heavy demand among wealthy collectors. When Italian potters took to coating their earthenware with white enamel, which gave a superficial porcelain look, it was only the first of a long list of dismal failures.

The problem soon attracted the attention of Italian majolists and alchemists. The first reasonable imitation of porcelain was made at Florence in 1585 by a team of alchemists and potters working under the patronage of Francesco de Medici.

This Florentine "porcelain" was the forerunner of many European wares made in avowed imitation of true Oriental porcelain. They form a link between pottery and glass, for they may be considered either as pottery rendered translucent or as glass rendered opaque by shaping and firing a mixture containing a large percentage of glass with small amounts of clay.

But the search for the secret of true porcelain manufacture was excitedly continued by European ceramists for generations. The imitations ran the gamut of invention and ingenuity. By the mid-17th century, the research was considered so important that the experimenters, backed by such patrons as the Elector of Saxony and Madame de Pompadour, were more interested in solving the riddle of porcelain than they were in the transmutation of base metals into gold.

About the Author
Mitch Johnson is a regular writer for http://www.curtains-n-drapes.com/ , http://www.hubforceramics.info/ , http://www.goodbudgetholiday.info/





Back to Top
This Site Uses PayPal Shopping Cart
Copyright © 2008-2008 RareCoinSell.com. All Rights Reserved.
Google, Yahoo!, Live, dmoz  
Links to Site