Shanghai Daily

Yixing — teaware not the only draw in the

- Louis Lee

When one thinks of China’s greatest export, one thinks of tea. Yet, how can good tea be had without good teaware?

And when one thinks of China’s greatest teaware, one thinks of those from Jingdezhen in Jiangxi Province. Jingdezhen, nicknamed the “capital of porcelain,” was where imperial kilns churned out masterpiec­e after masterpiec­e, now prized by museums worldwide.

Yet, how can discussion­s of great teaware be complete without regard to those from Yixing, affectiona­tely dubbed the “capital of pottery?” Teapots made of zisha (㍛⸲) are no less beloved (with auction prices to match). Zisha, literally “purple sand” or “purple clay,” are found in and only in Yixing.

Hence, I made a point of going to Yixing in Jiangsu Province to find out what zisha-ware is all about. My port of call is the twin-museum complex of the China Yixing Zisha-ware Museum and the China Yixing Ceramic Museum.

The complex is, unsurprisi­ngly, located in Dingshu Town, the center of zisha-ware production and a township named after the hillocks Dingshan and Shushan. The fabled zisha, however, is mined in Huanglongs­han, another hillock to the north.

You will get to see zisha in its myriad forms at the zisha-ware museum, which occupies the second floor of the Historical Ceramics Hall of the complex.

Scholars still debate when zisha teapot crafting began. However, its golden era was undoubtedl­y the Ming (13681644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, when key techniques were perfected, master makers emerged and zisha teapots became collector’s items for royalty and academics alike.

It is interestin­g to note that the master of tea Lu Yu praised tea from Yixing, formerly known as Yangxian, highly enough that Yangxian tea was designated a tribute item as early as the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907), long before zisha teapots became all the rage.

Yixing Museum is also twinned with the Yixing Art Museum. Although the museum gives a good account of the city’s rich history and has quite a few remarkable items on display — the most noteworthy being the stunning white marble paifang (a traditiona­l Chinese archway of a memorial or decorative nature) that greets you as soon as you step into the building — it is its twin that steals the limelight.

I long knew that Wu Guanzhong, considered by some — myself included — the greatest modern Chinese painter, was a Yixing native. I also knew that one of the greatest Chinese painters a generation before him, Xu Beihong of equine portraitur­e fame, hailed from the city. Little did I know, however, that

Yixing has been producing countless fabulous painters and calligraph­ers up till the present day. Discover them for yourself, as I did.

I did not leave the city hungry. Before catching the last direct train back to Shanghai, I made a pit stop at the noted restaurant Jiu Fu Lou at 258 Renmin Road S. and had a wonderful “lion’s head” (meatball) in broth — only that, unlike the common variety found in Shanghai, it is made of Chinese longsnout catfish meat rather than pork.

Oh, and delicious yellowhead catfish wontons too. Yixing prizes freshwater fish as much as any other city in Jiangnan, regions south of the lower reaches of Yangtze River.

 ?? ?? A stunning greets you as you enter Yixing Museum. — All photos by Louis Lee
A stunning greets you as you enter Yixing Museum. — All photos by Louis Lee
 ?? ?? Do not be fooled — this football is not leather-sewn, but made of
Do not be fooled — this football is not leather-sewn, but made of

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China