澳门六合彩开奖接口

Image of Image of a 14th Century underglaze blue dish with an inscribed panel in the cavetto

A turning point? Branding Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain in the fourteenth century

The second of the Easter term 2019 China Centre 'China in the World' seminars was held on Monday, 3 June 2019 in the Bawden Room. 鈥檚 lecture located the porcelain industry of Jingdezhen within the wider context of the evolution of the Chinese porcelain industry.

China was the first part of the world to develop the techniques to produce porcelain. Europe was unable to produce porcelain until the eighteenth century. For around 1000 years China was the world鈥檚 most advanced region in terms of ceramic technologies.

Shih Ching-fei鈥檚 lecture explored the way in which the city of developed the capability to produce 鈥榖lue and white porcelain鈥 in the fourteenth century. 鈥楤lue and white porcelain鈥 was a revolutionary new product in the porcelain industry. It involved the use of , initially imported from Persia, latterly replaced with domestically produced cobalt from Yunnan.

Jingdezhen鈥檚 blue and white porcelain out-competed the dominant 鈥榞reenware鈥 celadon porcelain, for which Longquan was the main production centre. Jingdezhen鈥檚 blue and white porcelain became the world鈥檚 first 鈥榞lobal brand鈥 through its exports to the Muslim world and to Europe. The Arabic inscription (鈥渏in di jin鈥) on Jingdezhen exports became the world鈥檚 first international trademark.

Professor Shih鈥檚 lecture presented new archaeological evidence to examine the way in which the porcelain producers in Jingdezhen linked their products to the needs of different markets, with brokers and merchants forming the channel for communicating customers鈥 wishes and supplying capital for the porcelain trade. She analysed the way in which the division of labour developed in Jingdezhen, including the attraction of skilled designers from other parts of China.

Professor Shih Ching-fei鈥檚 lecture attracted a wide array of scholars from a variety of disciplines. It stimulated lively debate including extensive discussion within the Q&A of the nature and determinants of innovation in the Jingdezhen porcelain industry.

Shih Ching-fei is Professor at the Graduate Institute of Art History,. She is currently a Jing Brand Fellow at the  and a visiting Fellow at . She is a specialist in East Asian ceramic history of the tenth to twentieth centuries AD and the artistic exchanges between East Asia and Europe during the Early Modern era (seventeenth to nineteenth centuries AD), with a particular focus on the ways in which craft technology and related knowledge were transmitted between cultures. Prior to joining NTU in 2009, Professor Shih worked as assistant curator at the  (2003-2009) and taught at  (2000-2002).