For many centuries China held the secret to making the world's finest porcelain—white, translucent ceramic ware of such high quality that it produced a musical tone when struck. The envy of ...
These porcelains from the collections of the Freer Gallery are part of a 1,500-year-old tradition of making porcelains in Jingdezhen, China. Porcelain production during the Kangxi period (1662–1722) ...
Two bottles were made from blue and white porcelain with a lotus petal opening ... a city outside Deyang in the Sichuan ...
In Europe, blue-and-white porcelain is practically synonymous with China. And we've always associated it with the Ming Dynasty. But it was the David Vases, now in the British Museum, that made us ...
"China has many exquisite, large blue-and-white porcelain vases, but their application in architectural settings is relatively rare. I hope to integrate ceramics into architecture in a public ...
The 32-year-old artist, who has spent the past three years in Jingdezhen in Jiangxi province, China's "porcelain capital", ...
Modelling their china on the blue and white glazes found in the porcelain of the Ming Dynasty, the Meissen painters created patterns that became known as “onions,” due to their resemblance to the root ...
Pure and Infinite, an exhibition at Hebei Museum, in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, is a collaboration between the National Museum of China and Hebei Museum to pay tribute to the white porcelain ...
This little lopsided blue and white china cup and saucer was one of the ... pieces were very important in the creation of English porcelain. This piece was later bought by Edgar Rees, a Penzance ...
Where To Buy The “Chinese Blue Porcelain” Air Jordan 1 High If you’re impressed by these gorgeous kicks, you can place an order by simply getting in touch with the gifted Trottier ( ...
The 32-year-old artist, who has spent the past three years wandering through Jingdezhen, dubbed China's "porcelain capital", ...
In Europe, blue-and-white porcelain is practically synonymous with China. And we've always associated it with the Ming Dynasty. But it was the David Vases, now in the British Museum, that made us ...