Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Vietnamese pottery and ceramics has a long history spanning back to thousands of years ago, including long before Chinese domination, as archeological evidence supports. Much of Vietnamese pottery and ceramics after the Chinese-domination era was largely influenced by Chinese ceramics , but has developed over time to be distinctly Vietnamese. [ 1 ]
The village is located in an area rich in clay suitable for making ceramic. Bát Tràng ceramics are considered some of the best known porcelain products in Vietnam besides those of Chu Đậu, Biên Hòa, Phù Lãng, Hương Canh, Lái Thiêu and Bầu Trúc. The history of ceramic making in this village can be traced back as far as the 14th ...
Vietnamese blockwood prints; History of Vietnam including Dong Son civilization; Brief history of Vietnamese ceramics and pottery; Brief with links on Vietnamese Art History; RMIT University Vietnam Contemporary Vietnamese Art. This site has digital images that you can zoom into of all the art in the collection. Vietnam Fine Arts Museum
Bát Tràng (literally: bát is bowl and tràng is workshop) is an old, well established village in the Gia Lâm district of Hanoi, the capital city of Vietnam. It is about 13 km from central Hanoi. Bát Tràng is known throughout Vietnam for producing a unique style of ceramics called Bát Tràng Porcelain.
Chu Đậu village in Hải Dương province was the major ceramic manufacturer [26] From 1436 to 1465, China’s Ming dynasty abruptly ceased trade with the outside world, creating a commercial vacuum that allowed Vietnamese blue-and-white ceramics to monopolize the markets for sometimes, especially in Maritime Southeast Asia.
Cochin ware decoration of the Longyin Temple in Chiayi Kōchi style incense box, dragons design, green glaze. By Rikei, Toyoraku ware. Edo period, 18th century. Cochin ware or Kochi ware or Jiaozhi ware (Chinese: 交趾陶; pinyin: Jiāozhǐ táo) is a type of Vietnamese pottery from Northern Province, Vietnam.
Vietnamese ceramics from Bát Tràng villages produced famous high-quality pottery and dishes. With Tomé Pires noting in 1515 "They [The Vietnamese] have porcelain and pottery-some of them great value-and these go from there to China to be sold.Chinese and Japanese traders came to Đông Kinh to buy both high quality silk and raw silk.
Vietnamese Ceramics from the Hoi An Excavation: The Cu Lao Cham Ship Cargo. John Guy, Orientations, sept. 2000; The Maritime Archaeology of Shipwrecks and Ceramics in Southeast Asia. J Green and R Harper; Pope, Frank (2007). Dragon Sea: A True Tale of Treasure, Archeology, and Greed off the Coast of Vietnam. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.