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szdaily -> Shenzhen -> 
Exhibition presents Dehua porcelain’s timeless craft
    2026-05-08  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Cao Zhen

caozhen0806@126.com

AN exhibition celebrating Blanc de Chine — literally “white from China” — has opened at the Guan Shanyue Art Museum. Titled “The Uncommon White: Blanc de Chine · Dehua Porcelain Aesthetics Exhibition,” it honors Dehua County’s 3,700-year-old porcelain-making tradition.

Dehua County, in central Fujian Province, is renowned for its white porcelain featuring snow-like texture and radiant glaze and exquisite craftsmanship. The porcelain products were exported in large quantities to Asian countries during the Song (960-1279) and Yuan (1271-1368) dynasties, and beginning in the 17th century, to Europe.

The exhibition brings together 30 ancient treasures and 190 contemporary masterpieces. Featuring sculptures, tea wares, study-room objects, ritual vessels, daily-use items, and innovative creations, it traces the glorious history of Dehua white porcelain, its cultural evolution, and its technical strengths — showcasing Eastern aesthetics and the enduring vitality of Dehua porcelain.

The show also gathers 78 contemporary ceramic artists. In the smooth, lustrous, jade-like whiteness of Dehua porcelain, visitors can see how a historic craft has inspired modern breakthroughs.

At the exhibition, crowds gathered around a graceful sculpture titled “Myth.” Created by Lian Deli in 2022, the work draws inspiration from a princess character in Jackie Chan’s film “The Myth.”

Its charm lies in the painstaking detail of a “chiffon” robe — so thin it measures no more than 0.2 millimeters. At first glance, it looks like sheer gauze, but it is actually porcelain, demonstrating the extraordinary skill and innovation behind today’s Dehua porcelain artistry.

Lian previously noted that producing such a piece requires constantly adjusting clay composition and controlling kiln temperatures. Only with meticulous expertise can porcelain be made as tough as it is “as thin as a cicada’s wing.”

Another standout work, “Paper,” created by Su Xianzhong in 2015, is equally astonishing. What appears to be soft, layered paper is, in fact, hard white porcelain — pushing the contrast of “hardness and softness” to an extreme.

Young artist Zhang Heirui (known as Hery) shaped a Mid-Autumn moon into an ice-cream ball, with the jade rabbit perched beside it — prompting a simple realization for many visitors: Yes, porcelain can do that.

Dates: Through July 9

Venue: Guan Shanyue Art Museum, Futian District (关山月美术馆)

Metro: Line 3 or 4 to Children’s Palace Station (少年宫站), Exit F

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