Wu Cheng-hung (吳正宏), 77, is the 23rd generation of a line of potters that started in Cizao town (磁灶鎮) in 5th century China. His grandfather, Wu Ji (吳及, 1878 to 1949), left Cizao at the end of the Qing dynasty to make a living in Taiwan, bringing the coiling technique and kick wheel technology practiced in Cizao with him. When Wu visited his ancestral town in 1999, he discovered that traditional pottery industry there had all but disappeared.
Wu’s daughter-in-law Lai Hsiu-tao (賴秀桃) — a potter in her own right — says that in the past, almost every household in Cizao was involved in producing pottery.
“When [Wu] returned, nobody was making pottery there” Lai says. “Times change,” she adds.
Wu has lived in Yingge (鶯歌), a pottery producing area in New Taipei City, since he was three. He continues to use the Cizao practices. Even after the invention of the electric potter’s wheel obsoleted the kick wheel, Wu still finds value in passing on the method to later generations.
Lai explains that Wu is unusual in that he is skilled in both coiling and the kick wheel. She emphasizes what she sees as the importance of maintaining the old ways, and not diluting them with more modern innovations.
“Factories have simplified the process. He hasn’t, and that is very rare,” she says.
Wu’s ancestors started making pottery in the late Sung in Cizao, a town full of small family-owned kilns making functional wares. The town was located at the southern end of the maritime silk road, and wares from there were exported via the port of nearby Quanzhou (泉州) to Japan, Korea, Penghu, the Philippines, Burma, Thailand, India and Indonesia.
When Wu’s grandfather emigrated to Taiwan, he introduced the kick wheel to Shalu (沙鹿), Taichung, and soon it had been adopted throughout the island. He was originally reluctant to teach the technique to his son, Wu Wen-sheng (吳文生), but he eventually conceded, and Wen-sheng later passed them on to Wu Cheng-hung who, in turn, has passed them on to his own son, Wu Ming-yi (吳明儀).
Before the invention of the electric potter’s wheel, potters employed other ways to keep the wheel spinning fast enough, consistently and for long enough, to throw pots. This was done either by “kicking” it or operating a lever.
In Korea, where they made large urns, they would dig a hole and set a wheel into the ground. The Japanese, who made small tea bowls, elevated the wheel to the height of the seated potter.
The kick-wheel method used in south China in places such as Cizao employed a heavy wheel, roughly a meter in diameter, formed of fired clay held together with matted plant material, set on an axis on the floor.
Wu places the clay in the center of the wheel. Then, supported on one leg, he sets his free foot on the outer rim and starts to turn the wheel, building a momentum that is maintained by the wheel’s sheer weight. He then sits down and starts throwing the pot. When the momentum fades and the wheel slows down, he stands again and repeats the “kicking” process.
He completes a medium-sized pot in two minutes. He hasn’t broken a sweat.
That’s not to say the technique isn’t hard work.
“In the past, potters would be using the kick wheel like that, all day, every day. It was very laborious, exhausting work,” Lai says.
Technological advances drive progress. All innovations are eventually superseded. The energy-intensive nature of the work aside, there are many other reasons to doubt the need to pass on these old methods.
Even Wu himself admits the technology is obsolete.
“It’s not like everything I make is thrown on the kick wheel. It’s too tiring. Times have changed. We have electric wheels now.”
Does knowing how to use the kick wheel give a potter a competitive edge? No, not really.
“Business people aren’t interested in whether an object is beautiful. You only make money from pots if you can make them in bulk,” he says.
Wu thinks that it is about more than commercial viability, however.
“The old ways do have an artistry about them,” he says, and, while nowadays many wares are made using prepared molds, “they just don’t have the same kind of feeling.”
Wu is well aware of how Yingge itself has changed — he saw his own father’s work evolve, and now sees his son making art, not functional wares. He has seen how commercial realities have transformed the industry of his own ancestral town. As a businessman himself, he knows full well the importance of keeping production costs down and output up.
So why keep it alive? And why pass it on to his son?
“It’s the culture of the past,” he says. “You cannot throw that away.”
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