Pottery Is The Eyes Of The Beholder

In the days of ancient Egypt, when the pharaohs rule the Nile

and Osiris lorded over them, and before the age of the Maoist

communism in China way back in the age of great dynasties and

divided kingdoms there was one distinct craft that was

considered the toast of kings and queens.



In those times the streets are filled and lined up with all

sorts of creations by different master that acclaim for

themselves the right to be called "master potter."



>From days of long ago when the art of pottery was considered to

be the greatest career anyone could ever venture and the pottery

techniques are solely-owned by one family.



Just like martial arts in some parts of the Asian region where

they pass on to the next generation of the family lines the

secret technique that can be found in their martial arts,

potters have handed down from generation to generation the

secret to what makes their pots stand out from the other.



And from generation to generation the secret to pottery making

has been a closely guarded knowledge up until the time when

commercial pottery has taken over the good old hand made pots,

vases, jars and other products of pottery.



Today's way of life has taken off by leaps and bounds and the

way we see pottery has greatly deteriorated from the time of the

great kings. Potters nowadays rides a broomstick, waves his

magic wand, has an owl for a pet and plays an out of this world

game where you can literally die.



The good years of the art of pottery has taken a back seat to a

different kind of potter. Sad as it is children, even adults at

this time never really recognize the historical and cultural

impact of pottery in our society.



Besides being one of the oldest means of livelihood in the post

cavemen society, pottery speaks about the kind of life that an

early civilization has. Pottery in ancient China was one of the

major industries back then.



Palaces were adorned with all shapes, sizes and kinds of

pottery. Yet, unlike the crude concoction of mud and water baked

until golden brown or dried under done for a day, the Chinese

discovered the wonderful use of ceramic. Chinaware--which is

what it's commonly called nowadays--is the pioneer product of

the pottery world.



Chinaware is intricately designed with scenery and calligraphy.

Potteries during the age of the dynasties are abundant because

of the diverse cultural influence of the Chinese.



Unlike in the pottery in ancient Egypt, where everything was

either made from red clay or dyed red and then painted on

designs with the juice of berries and trees, Chinese pottery has

reached a certain level of sophistication when it comes to

production process.



Pottery are not just crudely placed on a rotating wheel, shaped

to a certain form, and afterwards baked in the sun. Pottery

making in china offered not just a view at the kinds of

industries they had but the kind of culture that they have

developed.



And way before the western colonizers ever set sail to the

Newfoundland, the Asian and the African side of the world have

set up a civilization based on camaraderie and progress. And

thanks to the presence of ancient pottery, these truths are

realized today to give us an idea what's it like to the pottery

in the eye of the beholder.