A pattern of dedication
Cai Wenjuan at an exhibition featuring blue-and-white porcelain ware at the Jingdezhen Imperial Kiln Institute in Jiangxi province.[Photo provided by Zhou Mi/Xinhua]
Decorated with cobalt blue pigment on a white ceramic body, qinghuaci ware is one of the most well-known cultural products in China, with items made in Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province, considered the best in quality.
With a tradition of making ceramics dating back more than 2,000 years, Jingdezhen is known as the country's "porcelain capital", attracting artists from home and abroad to revive and reinterpret the traditional craft with a contemporary twist.
Cai works on a porcelain vase.[Photo provided by Zhou Mi/Xinhua]
"Ceramics embrace change. I'm here to inherit the tradition in an innovative way and create my own works," Cai Wenjuan, a 36-year-old craftswoman, says. According to experts, there are "72 processes" in traditional porcelain-making and only a master can handle the intricate work. For example, it usually takes a week to engrave a vase.
Her parents and grandparents made qinghuaci, or blue-and-white porcelain ware, in Jingdezhen. Cai's childhood memories are connected to ceramics, which led her to find her passion in painting as a girl.
The craftswoman (right) teaches blue-and-white porcelain-painting techniques to designers in the studio.[Photo provided by Zhou Mi/Xinhua]
Even after graduating from Jingdezhen Ceramic University in 2006, she didn't think about inheriting the family craft and became a saleswoman at a ceramic studio in Beijing back then.
After two years of selling ceramics, Cai was fascinated by the blue-and-white ware. She quit her job and returned to her hometown in late 2008, starting a two-year learning experience of painting blue-and-white porcelain items. In 2012, Cai established her own ceramics-making company and two years later, she built the ceramics-themed brand China Story.
Under Cai's guidance, an apprentice carefully paints a pattern in the studio.[Photo provided by Zhou Mi/Xinhua]
Pushing the boundaries of the age-old practice, Cai puts blue-and-white patterns, inspired by Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) porcelain, on daily objects such as phone cases, umbrellas, curtains, pillows and accessories.
So far, more than 1,000 kinds of cultural products have been sold by her company. "The charm and story behind the blue-and-white porcelain can be told through the way the young generation feels connected," Cai says, adding that porcelain can be stylish. As a provincial-level inheritor of the blue-and-white porcelain-painting, she endeavors to pass on the craft by integrating the ancient charm of the wares with modern aesthetics. On video-sharing platform Douyin, Cai has posted more than 60 clips to popularize the craft and the culture behind it.