Over centuries, artisans across the country refined porcelain-making to remarkable levels of precision. Kilns in different regions developed distinctive approaches, yet all pursued harmony between material, fire and form.
Zhang Mi, the exhibition's curator at the National Museum of China, notes that porcelain evolved through dialogue with other crafts, borrowing shapes and decorative elements from bronze, jade and lacquer. Poetry, prose, calligraphy and painting informed both surface design and conceptual depth, elevating porcelain beyond functional ware.
The masterful, creative application of diverse colors is often why people fall for Chinese porcelain at first glance. The exhibition illuminates the timeless beauty of monochromatic wares.