Treasures of Chinese Porcelain
Lars Tharp visits China to explore why Chinese vases are so famous and expensive, visiting the mountain where porcelain was first created and Jingdezhen, the porcelain capital.
In November 2010, a Chinese vase unearthed in a suburban semi in Pinner sold at auction for 拢43 million - a new record for a Chinese work of art. Why are Chinese vases so famous and so expensive? The answer lies in the European obsession with Chinese porcelain that began in the 16th century.
Lars Tharp, the Antiques Roadshow expert and Chinese ceramics specialist, sets out to explore why Chinese porcelain was so valuable then - and still is now. He goes on a journey to parts of China closed to western eyes until relatively recently. Lars travels to the mountainside from which virtually every single Chinese export vase, plate and cup began life in the 18th century - a mountain known as Mount Gaolin, from whose name we get the word kaolin, or china clay. He sees how the china clay was fused with another substance, mica, that would turn it into porcelain.
Carrying his own newly acquired vase, Lars uncovers the secrets of China's porcelain capital, Jingdezhen. He sees how the trade between China and Europe not only changed our idea of what was beautiful - by introducing us to the idea of works of art we could eat off - but also began to affect the whole tradition of Chinese aesthetics too, as the ceramicists of Jingdezhen sought to meet the European demand for porcelain decorated with family coats of arms, battle scenes or even erotica.
The porcelain fever that gripped Britain drove conspicuous consumption and fuelled the Georgian craze for tea parties. Today the new emperors - China's rising millionaire class - are buying back the export wares once shipped to Europe. The vase sold in Pinner shows that the lure of Chinese porcelain is as compelling as ever.
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Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Lars Tharp |
Executive Producer | Alistair Pegg |
Producer | Ian Denyer |
Director | Ian Denyer |
Broadcasts
- Tue 11 Oct 2011 21:00大象传媒 Four & 大象传媒 HD
- Wed 12 Oct 2011 01:00
- Sun 16 Oct 2011 20:00
- Mon 17 Oct 2011 01:50
- Sun 11 Dec 2011 23:00
- Sun 29 Jan 2012 20:00
- Mon 16 Apr 2012 22:00
- Fri 20 Apr 2012 00:50
- Wed 10 Oct 2012 21:00
- Thu 11 Oct 2012 02:00
- Sun 3 Nov 2013 22:45
- Wed 5 Aug 2015 23:00
- Thu 14 Apr 2016 23:00
- Tue 18 Jul 2017 01:00
- Wed 18 Oct 2017 20:00
- Thu 19 Oct 2017 01:30