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The Ru Kiln
was established in 1107 AD, in the Northern Song Dynasty.
Its location was believed to be in the Linru County, Henan
Province. However, the archeologist never found the exact
location of the kiln after many year's research. In 1986,
the ruins of the kiln was found in the neighboring Baofeng
County. 22 porcelain vessels were excavated, thus answered
the question that confused the archeologist for many years.
In the Song Dynasty, the Baofeng County was called Ruzhou,
so the kiln was named as Ru Kiln.
Ru Kiln was built up to produce royal utilities only. Its
design was affected by another big kiln the Yue Kiln in
South China. Therefore the Ru Kiln produced celadon as its
major product. The roughcast, glaze and design were all
exquisite and well controlled, demonstrating a very high
standard of porcelain producing. The cast of the Ru Kiln
porcelains were very smooth, fully covered by bluish glaze,
with some tiny fine crackles. The Ru Kiln made utilities
such as bowls, plates, bottles, basins and boxes. It was
very difficult and complicated to made a perfect Ru
porcelain, since small pieces were easier to control, the Ru
Kiln almost never produce vessels larger than 30cm diameter.
Usually it was between 10 -16 cm.
The Ru Kiln was only opened for a few decades. It was closed
when the Northern Song was defeated by the Jin Dynasty in
1127. Therefore even in the next Southern Song Dynasty, the
Ru porcelains were considered very valuable. Today, only 65
pieces of Ru porcelains are well kept. Among them 23 are
reserved in the Taipei National Palace Museum, 17 in the
Beijing Forbidden City Museum, 8 in the Shanghai Museum, 7
in the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art in Britain,
others reserved by the private collectors. In 1992, a small
Ru porcelain plate with the diameter of 8 cm was sold in New
York at the price of 1.54 million US dollars. Another Ru
Kiln Vessel was sold at the price of 50 million Hong Kong
Yuan (about 6 million USD).
The Ru Kiln porcelains have a special sapphire like clear
blue. Many collectors call it "the blue sky after shower".
This is an important character of the Ru porcelains.
Background
Knowledge:
History of China
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