E N D
Chinese Ceramics • Noah Riego - Nicholas Roberto
What • We are doing a type of pottery that originated during the reign of the Jiaqing Emperor. We are going to focus on the pots that they made. The pots would be used for storage or for just plain decoration. They made things like bricks and tiles to hand built pottery vessels, fired in bonfires or kilns.
Who • The Jiaqing Emperor was Born 13 November 1760 and died the 2nd September 1820.
When • The Jiaqing reigned only 1796-1820. During this time there was a lot of pottery made. This era was called the Palaeolithic era. In that period the range of construction was very wide.
Where • These kinds of pots were made all over china. In places that are now known as Tianjin, Wuhan, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Shenyang, Chongqing, New Taipei, Nanjing, Harbin, Xi’an, Chengdu, Changchun. Zhengzhou, Quanzhou. Urumqi, Anshan, Wuxi.
bibliography • "History of Ceramics, Chinese Pottery, Antique Porcelain, China." Chinese Porcelain, Mottahedeh, Imari, Export Porcelain at Arttiques.com - Imari Porcelain, Blue and White, Export Porcelain, Porcelain Products, Mottahedeh China, Chinese Vase. 05 June 2011. Web. 05 June 2011. <http://www.arttiques.com/about_history.html>. • "Chinese Ceramics." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 05 June 2011. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_ceramics>. • Antique Chinese Porcelain Collector's Help and Info Page. Web. 06 June 2011. <http://gotheborg.com/>. • "Chinese Pottery." DLTK's Holiday Crafts and Activities. Web. 06 June 2011. <http://www.dltk-holidays.com/china/m-pottery.htm>.