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Imperial Ming Dynasty porcelain exhibition opens at Palace Museum

An exhibition of 196 sets of imperial Chinese porcelain wares dating back to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) opened Tuesday at the Palace Museum in Beijing. The exhibits include the collections of the Palace Museum and some relics unearthed near Jingdezhen City which is well known as China's porcelain capital in east China's Jiangxi Province.

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Meet The Artist: Richard Notkin

All rights reserved. ©2009 Museum of Glass
Visiting Artist Residency: Richard Notkin
Dates of the residency: August 12 – 16, 2009
All images courtesy of the artist.
Directed by Derek Klein
Museum of Glass Executive Director: J. Timothy Close
Museum of Glass Hot Shop Team: Benjamin Cobb, Gabe Feenan , Alex Stisser, and Sarah Gilbert

The Visiting Artist Residency program is sponsored by
the Courtyard by Marriott -Tacoma Downtown

Throwing & decorating English slipware pots: Taena Pottery, Gloucestershire

I had the pleasure of filming two exceptional people and skilled potters demonstrating their craft! The historic Taena Pottery – surrounded by mulberry trees and bee-filled lavender – is having its first flirtation with the internet!

Vici and Sean Casserley are the second generation of potters to run the beautiful Taena Pottery. It was started in 1948 by a group of conscientious objectors and survived their dispersal in the 1960s.

Specialising in traditional English slipware, Vici and Sean make and sell their pots from a studio and shop nestled on the edge of the Cotswold escarpment. You can buy read-made or bespoke pieces.

Contact details:
Whitley Court,
Upton-St-Leonards,
Gloucester,
Gloucestershire,
GL4 8EB
Tel: +44 (0)1452 610908

Slipware is a traditional method of decorating clay pots, practiced globally in a variety of styles. English medieval pottery is often decorated with slip and sgraffito (the two techniques demonstrated here) and can be seen on the Tring Tiles at the British Museum:

I am an Art Historian at Cambridge University, with a deep admiration for practitioners of heritage crafts. I grew up near Sean and Vici and hope this film serves as a celebration of lives devoted to creating useful & beautiful things, or, as Sean puts it, 'making nice pots for nice people.'