The Sentinel-Record

Delicate designs

Hong Kong’s last hand-painted porcelain factory continues its work

- KATIE TAM

HONG KONG — Step into Yuet Tung China Works, Hong Kong’s last remaining hand-painted porcelain factory, and you find yourself surrounded by stacks of dinnerware, each piece painstakin­gly decorated by hand with vibrant motifs of flowers, fruits and animals.

Joseph Tso, the third-generation owner of the factory, and his small team are among the few people in Hong Kong who have mastered the traditiona­l technique of painting “guangcai,” or Canton porcelain.

It is a fading art in this modern metropolis, as fewer young people are willing to put in the time and effort required to master the craft or to work at the factory fulltime.

“The business environmen­t in Hong Kong is not suitable for labor-intensive industries,” Tso said. “Hong Kong’s traditiona­l handicraft industry is gradually declining. It will eventually disappear.”

Guangcai, which comes from the nearby Chinese city of Guangzhou, is characteri­zed by an overglaze technique in which the painter sketches a design on white porcelain and then fills it in with color using thin brushes before firing the piece in a kiln.

Tso’s grandfathe­r establishe­d the factory in Hong Kong’s Kowloon City in 1928. It rose to prominence over the years, becoming famous for its delicate craftmansh­ip and custom dinnerware.

The factory is known for its Canton rose porcelain painted with a pigment called “xihong,” which means “Western red.” Its ingredient­s include lead oxide, quartz and gold dust.

“Hong Kong’s export sector was booming from the 1960s to the 1980s, and many well-known department stores came to buy products,” Tso said. “Foreign trade firms would bring us business from (American) department stores.”

The factory sometimes paints family crests on dinnerware for foreign customers.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong before the city was returned to China in 1997, visited Yuet Tung China Works to buy some porcelain before returning to Britain.

The factory is an important part of Hong Kong’s history, said Yim Wai-wai, founding president of The Hong Kong Ceramics Research Society.

“The porcelain factory breathed at the same pace as the developmen­t of Hong Kong,” said Yim. “If it ceases to exist, it will be an immeasurab­le loss.”

 ?? (AP/KIN Cheung) ?? Joseph Tso, owner of Yuet Tung China Works, Hong Kong’s last hand-painted porcelain factory, holds a plate with dragon print June 8 in Hong Kong.
(AP/KIN Cheung) Joseph Tso, owner of Yuet Tung China Works, Hong Kong’s last hand-painted porcelain factory, holds a plate with dragon print June 8 in Hong Kong.
 ?? ?? Porcelains are seen June 8 at the factory.
Porcelains are seen June 8 at the factory.
 ?? ?? A pattern named Canton Rose painted with Xihung (“Western Red”) is displayed June 8 at the factory.
A pattern named Canton Rose painted with Xihung (“Western Red”) is displayed June 8 at the factory.
 ?? ?? A staff member is seen among the many works at the porcelain factory.
A staff member is seen among the many works at the porcelain factory.
 ?? ?? A staff member is seen painting at the porcelain factory.
A staff member is seen painting at the porcelain factory.
 ?? ?? Tso paints an old porcelain plate June 8 in Hong Kong.
Tso paints an old porcelain plate June 8 in Hong Kong.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States