Xinhua Insight: Drifters chasing dreams in "Porcelain Capital"
Xinhua, February 16, 2016 Adjust font size:
Near Jingdezhen's bustling Lianshe Road, Hu Weiping crams into his tiny studio and toils for hours bringing bland china vases to life with delicately painted landscapes.
Eight years ago, Hu left a well-paid job in his hometown Nanchang, capital of east China's Jiangxi Province, to make and sell porcelain paintings in Jingdezhen, a city dubbed China's "Porcelain Capital." But with little reputation, his business is "just so-so" and now he is struggling to make ends meet.
"Sometimes I do not sell a single vase for a whole week," the 53-year-old said with resignation. "Of course life in Nanchang was much better, but this is where my passion lies."
Hu is among the many who have flocked to Jingdezhen to seek success in the porcelain industry. Known as "Jingpiao" - "floating population in Jingdezhen" - this group of people mainly consists of Chinese painters and ceramics graduates.
Around 20,000 "Jingpiao" lead a life adrift in Jingdezhen currently, according to figures released this week by the Jingdezhen government. But making dreams come true proves no easy task in the ancient city. Many Jingpiao are put off by a lack of recognition, poor work environment and low market prices.
ATTRACTION OF "PORCELAIN CAPITAL"
Known as the Porcelain Capital, Jingdezhen's history of porcelain-making spans 1,700 years. The city's unique clay resources and time-honored craftsmanship have made it a mecca for porcelain admirers and tourists alike.
With increasing disposable income, government support and a good reputation, porcelain business has soared in Jingdezhen, leading many to settle in the city, according to Li Wei, associate professor with Jingdezhen Ceramics Institute.
"The effect of porcelain paintings can be amazing after being burnt in the kiln, so a good number of Chinese painters come to learn porcelain painting in Jingdezhen, to seek artistic breakthroughs," said the professor.
"Jingdezhen's porcelain is a famous hot commodity throughout the world," Li explains. "Paper painters can make more money by selling the porcelain paintings, while graduates with porcelain-making techniques can also strike gold in the business. That's why so many people choose to become 'Jingpiao.'"
The city government has also set up porcelain markets and hosts a variety of exchange activities to support the porcelain industry.
Each year, 30 to 40 percent of graduates from Jingdezhen Ceramics Institute, China's only college centering on porcelain and ceramics, choose to stay in the city to become "Jingpiao," according to official statistics from the institute.
TOUGH DRIFTING LIFE
Leading the life of a drifter is not easy, however. Whether they come to seek artistic breakthroughs or to make it in the porcelain business, they must survive by starting from scratch. Most choose to make and sell porcelain products to earn living expenses.
To save money, many Jingpiao choose to live in Laochang and Laoyatan, two of Jingdezhen's cheap rural-urban fringe zones, to craft porcelain products.
Yu Jingfeng, a painter from Anhui Province, said his studio in Laochang, a suburb area with poor housing facilities, costs less than 1,000 yuan (154 U.S. dollars) a month. His neighborhood is full of garbage and deserted houses. Yu's studio is filled with peeling paint, mud and clay.
"I once posted a picture of me making a porcelain vase on the Internet," Yu said. "Many of my friends asked if I were working at the site of an earthquake."
Porcelain prices are also quite low, unless "you have become a well-known porcelain master" in Jingdezhen, Yu said.
A famous craftsman's work can fetch as high as one million yuan, while the work of a non-famous craftsman is only a few thousand.
"It's not that their work is insanely amazing, it's purely celebrity effect," said Yu.
Even on good days, Yu's average daily income is less than 100 yuan.
"If you don't sell your work cheap, people will buy from other artists who do," Yu said.
Many Jingpiao have to work for the "famous masters" free of charge to "accumulate experience" before they can start on their own, Yu added.
"TOMORROW WILL BE BETTER"
Despite all the hardships, many young drifters seem optimistic about their transient lives.
Xiao Ye, 25, came to Jingdezhen to start her own porcelain business after graduating from the Hubei Academy of Governance four years ago. Her current monthly salary ranges from 2,000 yuan to a few thousand more, depending on the business of selling porcelain souvenirs on weekend markets. She also rents a shabby studio of a few hundred yuan to make the souvenirs.
"I came here because I am interested in porcelain," she said. "I don't think I am drifting, because I have a place to live, and I am doing exactly what I want to do," she smiled.
Since coming to Jingdezhen, Xiao Ye has already sent much of her savings to her poverty-stricken family in Hubei.
"It's not so bad here," she said. "My friends often tell me 'tomorrow will be better,' and I always believe in that."
To help Jingpiao develop businesses, the city government has rolled out a series of preferential policies in recent years, including giving out low-interest microcredit and subsidies, and establishing "entrepreneurship incubators" to encourage entrepreneurship. So far, 7,909 Jingpiao have benefited from the microloans, according to the government.
"Today's Jingdezhen is a huge magnet, attracting countless Jingpiao from across the country," said Li Wei, the associate professor. "They choose to stay because they have hope in their dreams, their career and their future." Enditem (Gao Haoliang and Shen Yang from Jiangxi contributed to the sto