Ming Tombs, Nanjing China
My name is Jia-Yuan Li. I am a San Francisco based ceramics potter; my journey with clay started in 2012, with the teachers and students of the Sharon Art Studio, in Golden Gate Park. The inspiration for my pottery comes from the art and traditions of East Asia, its mythologies and cultures. I am inspired by the pieces in museums held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the National Palace Museum in Taiwan, Shanghai Museum East, National Museum of Korea in Seoul and the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. My art is also equally inspired by the landscape and seascapes of the California coast.
The 5-kilns that I refer to in the name of this website comes from the famous 5 Great Imperial Kilns of ancient China, the sources of classic ceramics designs that capture the culture of dynasties and the inspiration of many modern modes . https://www.christies.com/en/stories/glazes-a-chinese-ceramics-collectors-guide-86302474ea03458fbb1bfc02bef58159
Every piece on this website is made by hand from beginning to end, without any molds. Therefore, every piece is unique and there will never be two that are identical. I also do not make pieces in large batches so the supply is always limited. Most pieces are made on a potter's wheel, trimmed, and hand-carved. Other pieces are built entirely by hand. The pieces are then bisque fired, glazed and then they undergo high-fire to bring out the brilliance of the glazes. The blue celadon pieces, including many that are carved, are made from the whitest porcelain clay that shows off the bright clear light blue glaze. Pieces with other colors are made from darker clay. The interplay of the color of the clay and the minerals in the glazes produces the jewel-like quality on these pieces.
Administrator's Garden, Suzhou, China
Carved Celadon Porcelain
This is the title of a classic Chinese novel written in the 18th century. Over the years, it was adapted for the stage, as a Chinese opera, in films and later it was written as a Western style opera. I attended an adaptation of this novel when it was performed at the San Francisco Opera in 2022. (https://www.sfopera.com/operas/dream-of-the-red-chamber). The tale begins with the telling of a story of a stone that nursed a crimson pearl flower with the dew it collected for 3,000 years. The stone and the flower prayed to be incarnated as human beings so they can experience a mortal existence. Their wish was granted. The stone was born into a wealthy family as a boy and the red flower was born as a girl. Thus began a story of love, political intrigue and the decline of a powerful family. This vase was hand carved and inspired by that story and depicts a flower growing in the crevice of a rock. In the West, we are used to stories that take place within a season or maybe a lifetime (happily ever after) but only in a country as ancient as China can there be stories that span thousands of years.
The dragon is a symbol of power, strength and authority throughout the Far East. The carving on this vase depicts a dragon looking for its pearl, which is sitting on a cloud just to the upper right side of the vase, almost at his finger tip. This pot was glazed in a very light blue celadon. The pattern where the glaze pooled gives this piece an iridescent quality.
This is a bud base in the shape of a lotus blossom, a powerful symbol in Buddhism. The lotus bud starts its life in the bottom of the pond, in the dirty mud. As the lotus grows, it slowly reaches for the sunlight until one day, it emerges onto the surface to water and bloom in its full glory. The lesson from the lotus is that no matter how difficult your current circumstance is, as long as you keep reaching for the sun, you will shine in your success.
I love the pattern of clouds in the sky. This vase is carved with stylized clouds modeled after ones found in the artwork of the Far East. This type of clouds can be found on various object d' art throughout the centuries from Tibetan weavings to Chinese paintings to Korean celadons to modern Japanese manga.
This is inspired by a whale watching trip in Monterey Bay. I imagined that our ancestors must have looked up in the sky to watch for dragons. Like in whale watching, it's rare that you see the entire animal. Rather, one would see an arched back, a fin or a tail among the waves of the ocean. In this case, the dragon is swirling among the clouds and you see parts of him but you never see his face.
Sometimes when I am obsessed with an idea, I re-use it repeatedly in many pieces. This is a second vase with carvings inspired by the idea of dragon watching in the sky. Like the other piece, the head of the dragon is never visible but when you traced the serpentine body around the vase, you almost anticipate that the face of the dragon will be revealed in the next horizon.
Gourds
In Chinese culture, the gourd is a symbol of good luck, fertility and health. It is carried by the Li Tie Guai, one of the Eight Immortals in the Taoist pantheon. Li TieGuai often depicted as an old crippled beggar with an iron crutch and a gourd in his hand from which he dispenses a special medicine to relieve sickness and suffering, especially that of the poor. Li TieGuai is the embodiment of compassion and empathy and he lives in service of others. He is also rough on the outside, soft on the inside. Perhaps he reminds you of someone you know.
This vase is inspired by the title of Walt Whitman's collection of poems that celebrates individuality and the voice of the common person. This vase is also inspired by the art nouveau design of the French glassmaker Lalique. In 1912, Lalique designed a heart shaped glass vase with grasshoppers sitting on the blades. The Lalique design was, in turn, inspired by Japanese art that shaped the European aesthetics of the Art Nouveau movement.
It is one of my favorite pieces and it will remain with me. I have since created other versions of this vase but this original will always be my favorite.
This piece was the result of an accident. The plan was to make a long necked bottle. As I was attempting to straighten the profile of the neck, it got more wobbly the more I tried to shape it. I finally decided to slice off the neck completely. Because I was obssesed with clouds at the time, I decided to carve the puffiest clouds on this piece. This mistake turned out to be beautiful. I keep this to remind myself that sometimes beautiful things happen despite one's plans.
I modeled the carving on this small bottle on the smoke arising from the tip of an incense stick. In East Asia and Southeast Asia, incense is used in Buddhist temples as a means to send our prayers to heaven. By an accident of the kiln, a slight "burn" happened at the top of the vase, which adds to the design of the bottle.
This vase is inspired by the story of the dragon gate, an ancient lore about the origins of dragons. On this vase, the fish is traveling up the waterfall alone. When she reaches the top where the dragon gate stands, she will transform into a powerful dragon. The pine tree along the way is a symbol of strength and portends a successful journey. I studied many paintings, both Chinese and Japanese to help be conceptualize the image of the waterfall. I let the shape of the vase create the illusion of a slipper slope. It looks like, at any moment, the little fish will fall off and be dashed in the rapids below. But, as you can see, the fish is strong and I believe it will reach the dragon gate. It is the master of it's own fate.