Guyuexuan was an industrial art
that originated during the reign of Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
In the Qing Dynasty, vases of many shapes, sizes and styles were made for
daily use in palaces, as well as in less exalted surroundings; Guyuexuan
is one of the most popular ones.
Guyuexuan is
decorated with very finely painted enamel patterns and calligraphic
inscriptions. It is produced by painting on glass roughcast with enamel color
and treated at high temperatures. Due to the high degree of technical
difficulty, only small articles such as snuff bottles and cigarette dishes were
made at the imperial kiln.
The main difficulty in producing
Guyuexuan is that the temperature of the enamel must meet the melting
temperature of roughcast. The artisan, therefore, must be able to master the
kiln temperature and the thickness of the roughcast. Producing a piece of
Guyuexuan requires dozens of colorings and bluing. Even the slightest
hint of neglect could spoil all of the efforts.
Guyuexuan
articles are known for their high quality and rich colors. They are a painted
glass requiring numerous firing techniques. Nearly all of them contain the
artist's signature on the bottom in calligraphy. Guyuexuan articles are
decorated with rock, bamboo and rose designs in a landscape. The rocks are
painted with a variety of colors, while the roses are created with only one
shade of translucent pink enamel. The style of painting on the roses was only
possible due to major technological developments in enamel-making, which enabled
the production of pink, which is based on colloidal gold, and the production of
enamels that did not flow when fired. These stable enamels permitted the ceramic
decorator to achieve various densities of the same shade by applying the enamel
at different thickness levels. The decorator was also able to reserve the
outlines of the flower petals rather than painting them in a contrasting enamel
color.
In the past, there were three explanations
for the name Guyuanxuan: that during the reign of Emperor Qianlong
(1736-1796), there was a small room named Guyuanxuan; that
Guyuexuan was a kind of refined glassware made by an artisan surnamed Hu;
and that there was no Guyuexuan
in history at all, and the name was fabricated
by antique merchants for commercial purposes. In recent years, another
theory emerged which said Guyuexuan was actually enamel painted on
porcelains. All such speculations are groundless and do not hold much water.
Guyuexuan is still an enigma that museums and the community of industrial
arts cannot explain.