Value Direction: Moving Crafts toward Sustainability in the Yangtze River Delta, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Defining the Values of Craft in the Context of Sustainability
2.1. Craft and Sustainability: A Consistent and Contradictory Relation
2.2. A Value Typology of Craft (Five Values Pertaining to Craft)
3. Craftworks in the YRD
3.1. Traditional-Decorative Crafts
“Fewer and fewer of the young generation are willing to learn this skill. It really needs composure and perseverance. When the government set up some programmes to encourage people to take apprenticeships in traditional skills, there were a few young people coming to learn in our studio, but most of them gave up halfway or after the programme ended. Now I have just one part-time apprentice”.
3.2. Cultural-Functional Crafts
“An artist (maker) who has no knowledge and techniques of blue and white, who doesn’t know how to control the whole process of glazing and kilning (in addition to painting), can hardly innovate while also retaining the essence of tradition”.
3.3. Utilitarian Craft-Products (Commercial)
Those bags are sold at prices ranging from 500–5000 yuan (1 yuan ≈ 0.11 British pounds in 2017). The revenue seems not bad, but the stores take out more than half of the profits. However, the sale volume is still very low.
I have studied the market quite a lot. It’s a bit hard to innovate because of the characteristics of the ICH item and the material. If it is changed too much, I wonder what the heritage item can leave for us. It becomes something else.
3.4. Art-Craft Works
I tried to carry it out myself many times. I’ve learnt it before, but it’s hard to carry out my idea… I came here (Jingdezhen) and was told that the artisans here can do everything. When I really started to get along with them I found they were really amazing—they can make the shapes, the patterns and the large pieces and whatever you want. I collaborate with several fixed artisans. At the beginning, it took a bit of time to get things through, you need to get them to really understand what effect you want. The communication between us is very important and I am always beside them to watch and comment. They also give me suggestions and show new patterns which I didn’t know before. This often informs me a lot.
Before these artists from other places came, we only produced the traditional version of dragon gallbladder-shaped vases… she [a contemporary artist] came and asked me to make greenware and special effects for her. After that we applied the expression to our products. It looked really good and turned out to be very welcome at the fair. I benefited a lot.
4. Evaluating the Craftworks in the YRD
- Traditional-decorative crafts: as analyzed above, this type of craft is economically in a state of dilemma with respect to creating monetary income for craftspeople. They are hard to sell. Culturally, they are more decorative and stick to traditional stereotypes, which degrades the vitality of the culture. Socially, due to economic non-viability and the loss of cultural vitality, these types of craft are unable to generate more jobs for young people in the current socioeconomic conditions. Consequently, this also diminishes their social value to a certain degree. However, the social norms and rituals related to some crafts or which are inherent in their making processes are still valuable, and this aspect needs to be recognized and protected. Also many traditional crafts have personal spiritual or religious meaning and thus embody high spiritual value. Some elderly women-embroiderers in Suzhou found they lost the meaning in their life after they moved to a new apartment and could not continue embroidering. Sometimes, the power generated from the craft’s spiritual value can even support a person and a craft in isolation from the influence of other value factors. This is why we found some craftspeople were very happy and content although they lived in poverty. Environmentally, craft in this category are not necessarily eco-friendly even though most of them are perceived as such. In fact, some of them are high energy consumers and materially wasteful. For example, imitative porcelain requires a large amount of firewood and the rate of successfully finished works is rather low.
- Cultural-function crafts: economically, this group of crafts look promising to modern China’s consumers because they are moderately priced and favoured by a rising Chinese middle-class who have an awareness of the loss of local culture and environmental ethics. Environmentally, compared to traditional crafts, they are relatively cost-effective. Since they have been modified by design and technological intervention, many of these crafts are more ecological, material-saving and energy-clean. Culturally, these crafts greatly retain the essence of traditions and local cultures while contemporary aesthetics and sensibilities are added-in, making the local culture more vibrant and alive to present daily life. Modern intervention and innovation do not harm or diminish the local-cultural value. Instead it increases the vitality of a once withered local culture. Socially, by providing jobs to craftspeople, income is increased and more people are motivated to participate in the craft practices. Therefore, the local-cultural value of the craft is enhanced. Spiritually, it brings enjoyment and fulfilment to the makers and consumers through the making and use of the object. Since the processes of manual control is largely retained the makers, they can still find the same spiritual value as gained from making the traditional crafts, including self-fulfilment, self-actualization and sense of being. However, the deep religious connotations conveyed by some crafts and craft making processes are at a risk of being lost because of alterations to these.
- Utilitarian craft-products: these crafts are largely modified into industrial mass-production and consumption to maximize their monetary value. Economically, they are significant due to the increased efficiency and reduced costs. The manual and controlling work once done by craftspeople are in the process of being transformed by machines and new technologies. Socially, this means that more jobs cannot be generated for craftspeople and instead of community production, mass-production factories are built which do not need skilled people. Culturally, because of the disruptive and significant alteration of the original ICH crafts, the local culture is greatly diminished and homogenized by mass-consumption. Environmentally, these products are beneficial to the environment because they often use traditional green materials or improve the traditional materials and energy use. However, this environmental value should be offset by the effect of mass-consumption. Spiritually, the value of the traditional craft making practice, the self-fulfilment offered by the integrated process of working, and sense of working with ones’ hands, disappear.
- Art-craft works: economically, these works can normally create considerable monetary income to the affiliated crafts, but they also belong to a minority. Socially, they are able to create opportunity for crafts people in terms of increasing jobs and income, but the craftspeople are not in a position of subjectivity. Craftspeople get much less income than the artists and often loses authorship of the works. Consequently, this results in exploitation and inequality where there is supposed to be an equal collaboration between artists (sometime designers) and artisans. However, there has been a lot of controversy regarding whose knowledge should be more valued and taken into account. Environmentally, since these works are often a piece of art artists do not consider the environmental costs and its disposal, and many works are discarded in or around museums (e.g., One Hundred Million Seeds by Ai Weiwei was shipped to London and discarded outside the museum after the exhibition). Culturally, these works often transcend their local traditions and meanings and emphasize a contemporary cultural expressions. Spiritually they are more contemporary conceptual arts beyond the physical and vernacular heritage, which is very different from the spiritual value the craft bequeaths to the maker. Nevertheless, there are some exceptions, e.g., the rare objects of purple clay teapots are culturally and spiritually valuable due to their resemblance to cultural-functional crafts in these regards.
- Commodification within the customizable and small-batch mode to increase economic value, so as to increase the social value by providing more employment, etc.
- Material and technical improvement to reduce environmental impact and increase production capability
- Community construction of craft objects to increase their social value in terms of raising the social status of craftspeople and conflict prevention.
- Protection of the local culture principally by retaining the essential handmade elements and human control, and more contextualized design
- Reducing quantity and improving quality to make allow small-batch customizable production
- Reducing technology mediation and excessive branding.
- Raising artists’ awareness of environmental issues that are actually caused by their works
- Facilitating equality in the collaboration between artists and craftspeople in terms of authorship and income distribution
- Keeping local materials, techniques and traditions more relevant to the artworks.
5. Discussion: Value Creation and Speculation
Porcelain uses so much energy (gas, electricity, especially wood) to fire the kiln, some even needs to be fired two or three times, especially artistic works and ‘imitative’ porcelain that need wood-fuelled kiln to fire.(Interview with a kiln operator in Jingdezhen, September 2017.)
Some crafts use more raw materials than machines because of the inaccuracy of human techniques, such as carving with precious wood and stone, even though most crafts are often made out of natural materials…and some natural materials are unrenewable.(Interview with Professor Zou at Tongji University, Shanghai, May 2017.)
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Relationship between Craft and Sustainability | |
---|---|
Accordances | Tensions |
Eco-effectiveness Natural materials, renewable resources, closed loop ecosystem | Cosmopolitanism Closed, isolated from technology and economy, lack of global view, being out of step with modern aesthetics |
Eco-communality Local resources, knowledge, local human needs, community-based living systems, diverse cultural identities | Efficiency & effectiveness Pre-industrial technique, uncompetitive, while modern production generally ignores social and environmental costs. |
Resilient system Small-scale, diverse, distributed, resilient to risks and crises | Economic viability Low-paid, low price, value diminished, cost-income gap |
Sense of being Authentic, relevant, creative, responsive, contextualized |
Five Values of Craft in Relation to Sustainability | ||
---|---|---|
Extrinsic | Environmental value | Eco-friendly materials, production processes, renewable resources-labour |
Economic value | Own consumption, increasing income, commercial use | |
Intrinsic | Social value | Employment, conflict prevention, social equality, community building, social norms |
Local-cultural value | Local distinctiveness, self-identified culture instead of cosmopolitan culture, changing cultural tradition instead of the static | |
Spiritual value | Beliefs, faith, sense of being, self-fulfilment through making |
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Zhan, X.; Walker, S. Value Direction: Moving Crafts toward Sustainability in the Yangtze River Delta, China. Sustainability 2018, 10, 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10041252
Zhan X, Walker S. Value Direction: Moving Crafts toward Sustainability in the Yangtze River Delta, China. Sustainability. 2018; 10(4):1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10041252
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhan, Xiaofang, and Stuart Walker. 2018. "Value Direction: Moving Crafts toward Sustainability in the Yangtze River Delta, China" Sustainability 10, no. 4: 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10041252
APA StyleZhan, X., & Walker, S. (2018). Value Direction: Moving Crafts toward Sustainability in the Yangtze River Delta, China. Sustainability, 10(4), 1252. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10041252