Archive for June 5th, 2009

China Travel – Site of the Yaozhou Kiln in Huangpu Town

Friday, June 5th, 2009

The Site of the Yaozhou Kiln is located in Huangpu Town of Tongchuan City, Shaanxi Province.

The Yaozhou Kiln was one of the Six Famous Kilns in ancient China and also the main celadon-producing area in the north. It was reputed as the Ten-li Kiln (1 li=1/2 km.) for its grand scale.

Between 1984 and 1986, 14 pottery workshops from the Tang (618-907), Five Dynasties (907-960), Song (960-1279), Jin (1115-1234) and Yuan (1271-1368) periods were unearthed at the site, including 18 stoves, thousands of intact pottery wares and over 30,000 shards. All pottery wares and shards have a solid base of a high pottery content. The wares were adorned with hundreds of patterns, such as landscapes, human figures and flowers. The Yaozhou Kiln wares were painted with a greenish-black glaze to appear bright and smooth, like jade.

Also unearthed at the site are workshops that produced Tang San Cai (tri-colored glazed pottery of the Tang Dynasty) and over 1,000 other wares. Such a large scale indicated that the Yaozhou Kiln was a main base for making Tang San Cai. The long-lost Tang San Cai tiles and dragon decorations were also first unearthed at the site.

The discovery of the Yaozhou Kiln Site provides plenty of materials for the study of the Chinese history of ancient pottery, as well as the political, economical and cultural development of that period. The kiln site is reputed as a natural museum of ancient pottery due to its high academic value.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Cao Yu’s Plays

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Cao Yu (1910-1996), originally named Wan Jiabao, was born in Hubei but was raised in Tianjin, where his father was an official. In 1922, he began to study at Nankai Middle School, and became a very active member of Nankai New Troupe. Under the guide of Zhang Pengchun, a famous drama artist, he proved his brilliant talents in drama and his performance was warmly received by the audience. He graduated from Nankai University in 1934 and, after a period of graduate study in drama at Tsinghua University, began to teach, at the same time he continued to write plays. After Liberation Cao Yu held a variety of official posts. His first play performed after the Cultural Revolution was Wang Zhaojun in 1979.

Cao Yu is regarded as the most remarkable of the modern Chinese dramatists in the first half of the 20th century. He worked briefly as a drama instructor, but it was the plays he wrote in the 1930s, especially the first two, Thunderstorm (1933) and Sunrise (1936) that brought him to prominence. Although heavily influenced by Western theatre, his plays are thoroughly Chinese in manner and material. Later plays, such as Wilderness and Peking Man consolidated his position as the leading contributor to a new, but as it turned out, short-lived form of theatre.

Thunderstorm tells a tragedy of a woman who searches for love and freedom under the oppression of feudal power. This full-length modern drama features the complicated relationships among the members and servants of a large well-off family and the family disintegration as a result of the morbidity and corruption in old China. A son of a wealthy family, Zhou Puyuan, has an affair with the family maid, Shiping, and she bears two sons. After he marries a wealthy woman he keeps the eldest son and drives Shiping away with the youngest. Shiping marries a butler, Lu Gui, and they have a daughter, Sifeng. An entangled family history is played out in what turns out to be a tragic ending. The play has been also adapted into a film with the same name twice, and performed as a ballet by the Shanghai Ballet Troupe in 1983.

The drama Sunrise tells of the corruption and luxury of the rich and the suffering of the poor in old China. The plot revolves around Chen Balu, a high-class courtesan in old China in the 1930s. Chen enjoys a pleasure-seeking life in the city but in the end commits suicide in the face of her benefactor’s bankruptcy, the death of a teenage girl she has tried to save from forced prostitution, and the departure of her childhood boyfriend. It’s been adapted into a film by the Beijing Film Studio and music by the China Musical Center.

Cao Yu applied the writing skills of European modern theater into the creation of Chinese plays to show the reality of Chinese society, and was good at modeling dramatis personae, especially female characters, with distinctive character and disposition. He processed daily language into literature language, making the art of dialogue reach the perfection and his plays much readable and playable. His works were not only published and staged at home and received warm welcome among domestic readers and audiences, but also were translated into Japanese, Russian, English and other languages and staged in many foreign countries.

Source: chinaculture.org

Chinese Character – drum (music instrument):鼓

Friday, June 5th, 2009

drum (music instrument):

Chinese Pinyin: gu3

(Source: about.com)