{"id":335,"date":"2011-02-23T10:45:45","date_gmt":"2011-02-23T14:45:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.orientalfurniture.com\/blog\/?p=335"},"modified":"2011-02-23T10:45:45","modified_gmt":"2011-02-23T14:45:45","slug":"porcelain-china-the-pinnacle-of-ceramic-pottery","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.orientalfurniture.com\/blog\/product-spotlight\/porcelain-china-the-pinnacle-of-ceramic-pottery","title":{"rendered":"Porcelain China: The Pinnacle of Ceramic Pottery"},"content":{"rendered":"
Pottery is almost as old as mankind. Shards of ancient pottery as old as 4000 B.C.E. have been found on archeological digs on 5 continents. For archeologists, the quality of the pottery an ancient culture produced is a significant sign of the culture’s level of social development.<\/p>\n
The most important qualitative breakthrough in ceramics and pottery from a technology standpoint was the invention of porcelain<\/a>. The oldest pieces of what can be described as “proto-porcelain” have been found in Shang dynasty era China, roughly 1600 B.C. E. Actual porcelain was in use widely in Han dynasty China by 200 B.C.E.<\/p>\n The classic porcelain most of us associate with the word is the thin, extra hard and translucent white ceramic pottery. This was first achieved by master Chinese potters in the eighth century, and perfected over the Tang, Song & Yuan dynasties.<\/p>\n The breakthrough came when potters took pottery thrown from specially formulated clay, and fired them in kilns built to generate ultra-high temperatures of between 1200 & 1400 degrees C. (2100 to 2500 degrees F).<\/p>\n The correct combination of clay, silica, and minerals, and the extraordinary heat, produced a quality of fine ceramic pottery previously unseen. Though whispered about for centuries.<\/p>\n Earthenware, stoneware, terra cotta, ceramics of all kinds, were forever relegated to a quaint, very easily broken past. Hard, beautiful, lightweight, fine porcelain was the future of pottery. And it began, and, for the most part, remains, in mainland China. That’s why sometimes, it’s call “Fine China”.<\/p>\n Red is the luckiest color in the ancient Chinese color palette, and producing a red glaze was inevitable in Chinese decorative design.<\/p>\n During the Song dynasty, beautiful Longquan Celadon porcelain was first produced with a small amount of iron oxide, creating a fine pale green jade color glaze. Sometimes the celadon was “crazed”, creating a uniquely beautiful “ice crackle” effect in the clear over-glaze.<\/p>\n Ancient Korea also found celadon an elegant glaze and developed a distinctive Korean celadon industry.<\/p>\n With a small amount of cobalt added to the glaze, the high temperature kilns produced a deep, rich royal blue glaze. The dark sapphire blue appeals the eye, and accentuates the hard, clear, otherworldliness that porcelain has intrinsically.<\/p>\n Porcelain accessories large and small are still produced with in all three of these classic glazes.<\/p>\n Thailand, Korea and China export a lovely selection of decorative celadon porcelain; vases<\/a>, plates, spice jars<\/a>, and fruit bowls as well as planter pots, fishbowls<\/a>, garden stools<\/a>, and umbrella stands<\/a>.<\/p>\n China, Hong Kong and Taiwan continue to produce fine quality Oxblood glazed decorative porcelains. An exceptionally beautiful style, with artifacts in the glaze around the lip of vases and pots, are popular in contemporary high end East Asian d\u00e9cor.<\/p>\n The deep cobalt blue is reproduced mainly for fishbowls and large planters, as well as umbrella stands and garden stools, both for porcelain as well as stoneware pottery in Malaysia, Vietnam, and mainland China.<\/p>\nHigh Temperature Kilns in 8th Century China<\/h3>\n
Review of Fine Porcelain Glazes & Designs<\/h2>\n
Small amounts of metal oxides mixed into the glaze and fired at ultra-high temperatures, produced a selection of simple yet beautiful monochrome glazed porcelain.<\/span><\/h3>\n
Rich Red Oxblood Porcelain<\/h3>\n
<\/a>Oxblood, a deep red glaze more blue-red than orange-red, was achieved with a small amount of iron oxide in the glaze.<\/p>\n
Celadon Porcelain Glaze<\/h3>\n
Cobalt Blue Porcelain Glaze<\/h3>\n
Modern Reproduction Celadon, Oxblood, & Cobalt Blue<\/h2>\n
Ming & Qing Blue & White Export Porcelain<\/h2>\n