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Author Gillette, Maris Boyd

Title China's Porcelain Capital : the Rise, Fall and Reinvention of Ceramics in Jingdezhen
Published London : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2016

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Description 1 online resource (217 pages)
Contents Cover page; Halftitle page; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; Tables and Illustrations; Acknowledgements; Notes on Names and Transliterations; 1 The World's Most Famous Ceramics and the People Who Made Them; The basics: Clay, fuel, and transportation; Research materials, methods, and scope; Jingdezhen's longue durée; 2 Creating a Porcelain Capital, Prehistory to 1785; Early Jingdezhen; The imperial manufactory and rise of the porcelain capital; 3 Decline and Disarray, 1780-1948; Government disinvestment in Jingdezhen (1786-1948); Foreign porcelain (1850-1945)
Ceramists respond (1800-1948)4 Production and Politics, 1949-1972; Economic recovery, 1949-1952; From capitalism to socialism; The Great Leap Forward; Economics or politics?; The porcelain capital's Cultural Revolution; 5 Dual-Track Porcelain, 1973-1993; Reviving the porcelain industry; Deng Xiaoping's 'Reform and Opening'; Plan and market together: The early years; Policy changes and competitor industries, 1984-1993; Private porcelain manufacturing expands; 6 Porcelain Capital No More, 1994-2010; Decollectivization; Porcelain workers during deindustrialization
Repurposing former SOEs and collectivesPrivate enterprise: Historic replicas; Porcelain fakes on the art market; New-style artist entrepreneurs; Investing in Jingdezhen; 7 From Porcelain Capital to Heritage Site; Officials redevelop the porcelain capital; Public opinion about Jingdezhen's redevelopment; Private entrepreneurs and artistic residencies; Local perspectives on visiting artists; The porcelain tourism capital; Glossary; Notes; Bibliography; Index
Summary Maris Boyd Gillette's groundbreaking study tells the story of Jingdezhen, China's porcelain capital, from its origins in 1004 in Song dynasty China to the present day. Gillette explores how Jingdezhen has been affected by state involvement in porcelain production, particularly during the long 20th century. She considers how the Chinese government has consumed, invested in, taxed and managed the local ceramics industry, and the effects of this state intervention on ceramists' lives, their local environment and the nature of the goods they produce. Gillette traces how Jingdezhen experienced the transition from imperial rule to state ownership under communism, the changing fortunes of the ceramics industry in the early 21st century, the decay and decline that accompanied privatisation, and a revival brought about by an entrepreneurial culture focusing on the manufacture of highly-prized 'art porcelain'
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Porcelain, Chinese.
Porcelain -- China
Ceramic arts, pottery, glass.
Asian history.
History of art -- art & design styles.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Industries -- General.
Antiquities
Porcelain
Porcelain, Chinese
SUBJECT China -- Antiquities. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85023988
Subject China
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781474259422
1474259421
9781474259439
147425943X
1474259448
9781474259446