| What is Pottery?
The production of pottery is one of the truly ancient arts known to
man. Ceramics in general is the art of heating common clay. In the
earliest days of Chinese pottery (approximately 8000 years ago), the
clay was used to create either utilitarian or ornamental objects.
Ceramics are usually thought of as all pottery and porcelain wares.
It is porous clay that has been baked or fired in a kiln generally
at a temperature of 1000 Centigrade.
Pottery
generally consists of three genuine types of wares. The first type,
which is earthenware, has been made pretty much the same way since
ancient times. Basically made of clay (oftentimes blends of
different types of clays) and then baked. The hardness of the
pottery depends on the heat of the firing. As the invention of
glazing came into being we see the application of glazes
ornamentally and pieces were glazed to insure their being
waterproof. If fired at great heat, the pieces would become
nonporous.
These nonporous pieces, called stoneware, are the second type of
ware. The third type of pottery is another Chinese invention. What
is known in the West as "China", makes up the third category of
pottery.
Porcelain was made from a mixture of special clays, often Kaolin and
Feldspar.
Chinese potters looked at glazing techniques as having prime
importance in their craft. In the early days of Chinese pottery
there were thousands of kilns throughout the countryside, each
government owned. As far back as the earliest potters, artists began
using various techniques of decorating. Some of the earliest styles
involved impressing and incising.
As the history of pottery progressed, and as the government gave up
control in the later Ching Dynasty of the kilns, we see the local
craftsman themselves taking control of the kilns they had worked in
for so many years. This is when the uniqueness of craft truly
flourished most.
The independent artist themselves now had the opportunity to do as
they wanted. Self expression and style really progressed most during
the Ming and Ching Dynasties because of their greater freedoms and
autonomy. As the Dynasties developed and people began to prosper, so
did the development of the arts.
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