.m. wrote: ↑Fri Apr 16, 2021 1:29 pm
mbanu wrote: ↑Fri Apr 16, 2021 9:43 am
I think it would also highlight an interesting quirk, which is that British teapots with English on them are often considered a little tacky, possibly because most of these were jokes, political slogans, or advertisements, while Chinese teapots with Chinese on them are often considered artistic because the impression is that these were all poems, even though there were a fair share of political slogans here as well.
Of course one could go even one step further and do it in a blue wedgewood.
British artists are too eager to transgress -- there's one artist whose latest artistic endeavor is taking photographs of himself with various pieces of Wedgwood porcelain inserted in his rear.

Maybe the new hype over unglazed stoneware will give Jasperware a new life.

There is also black basalt pottery, which is probably the closest to British Yixing, but I don't think anyone makes it anymore.