Wu Yao-cheng (吳要城), 84, holds up a white porcelain bowl to the window in his studio home in Yingge District (鶯歌), New Taipei City. It is painted inside with auspicious symbols and outside in a scene of monkeys. Wu didn’t paint it: his specialty is making these eggshell porcelain (薄胎瓷) bodies. Held to the light, you can clearly see the symbols through the thin porcelain, superimposed upon the monkey scene.
We are at Wu’s home with ceramic artist Wang Shu-ling (王淑玲). Wang, who has been working with ceramics for 20 years, is currently focusing on ink brush painting on pure white porcelain, and regularly commissions him to make the thin hand-thrown porcelains she needs for her work. When he retires, she will have to move in a new direction: she knows of no-one else in Taiwan with Wu’s skill set.
Porcelain clay is fiendishly difficult to work with, says Wang, and nowadays porcelain bodies are produced using molds. She says it is impossible to master throwing porcelain — and in particular, achieving eggshell porcelain — in a short time.
“It’s like mastering the violin or the cello. It’s something that you have to work at for eight hours every day for 10 years,” Wang says.
Wu has been doing it for 70 years.
He mastered the skill as a small child in China, and has worked in Yingge since he left the army in 1973. According to Cheng Wen-hung (程文宏), head of the Educational Promotion Department of the New Taipei City Yingge Ceramics Museum, he was a pioneer of these techniques when he first arrived in Yingge, and is still one of very few, maybe the only one, still capable of producing eggshell porcelains with traditional techniques in Taiwan. When he dies, the tradition will probably die with him.
Wu was born in 1932 to a family of potters going back at least three generations, in Chaozhou (潮州), Guangdong, a city with a tradition of porcelain production dating back to the Song dynasty. He was a boy of 11 when the Japanese invaded his town, Fengxi (楓溪鎮), during the Second Sino-Japanese War.
His family fled to Dapu (大埔), another town in the same province, where his father got work and accommodation in a local ceramics factory.
Wu started helping producing ceramics at the age of 12. The factory produced functional wares, but some of the more highly skilled workers there were also making imitations of sought-after Song, Ming and Qing dynasty ceramics, including eggshell porcelains, on commission. He would observe them during the day and practice on his own after work. In two years he had mastered the fundamentals of the technique.
“Two years,” says Wang. “Only two years. You can’t do this unless you are gifted.”
Porcelain is prized for its translucent, sonorous quality, and the pure white that cannot be achieved with the lower-fired earthenware or stoneware clays. But every step of the process demands excellent technique.
The difficulties of working with porcelain, and the convenience of the mold press and slip-casting techniques — where results are easily replicable and with a much higher success rate — has meant that few people throw porcelain in Taiwan any more.
Unlike other clays, porcelain clay has no “bone,” or structure, according to Wang, making it very difficult to throw.
But achieving the extreme thinness for eggshell pieces also requires manually trimming the unfired porcelain pieces with steel trimming blades, on a rapidly rotating potter’s wheel. This means the artisan has to be totally familiar with the exact cross-section, throughout the entire piece. Otherwise, he will trim it down to nothing.
“He has to know every form intimately. There is absolutely no room for error,” says Wang.
The unfired, trimmed body is extremely fragile, and must be fired with the correct technique, too.
“Generally speaking, you have to fire things yourself. If you get other people to fire them for you, they may well break,” says Wu.
Wu came to Taiwan at the end of World War II with the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) army. He left the army in 1973 and found work with Tsai Hsiao-fang (蔡曉芳), now based in Beitou (北投), who has made a name for himself producing high-fired imitations of ancient Chinese ceramics.
Tsai took him to the National Palace Museum to look at the ancient ceramics from the Song, Ming and Qing dynasties, and asked him if he could make them.
“I specialized in throwing, working there from 1974 to 1980. I made a lot of porcelain bodies for [Tsai],” says Wu. In 1980, he felt it was time to strike out on his own.
He made a success of producing his own wares in a factory, but when it was sold after two years he moved operations into his house — which of course wasn’t set up to fire a kiln to 1,300 degrees. He has focused on making eggshell porcelain bodies on commission since 1983, and now lets other people worry about the success or failure of the other steps of the process.
“If they fire it well, then they get the money, and if they don’t, then it’s a problem with their technique,” he shrugs, before offering, “although I will give them advice on how to do it.”
Wu is still going strong, and says he has no plans to retire. But he cannot go on forever, and when he stops, there is no one to replace him. Will the loss of this skill have a huge impact on ceramic art in Yingge? Probably not. But for some, Wang included, it will be a huge loss.
Adele Stefanelli says
Is Wu Yao-cheng still alive? Would it be possible to get in touch with him?
I am working on porcelain and eggshell porcelain. I would just love to visit him.
Thank you