RESOURCES
Resources: Xinhua Published: 2017/01/09
Sangkhalok ceramics, an ancient product of the Silk Road and a combination of both Chinese and Thai cultures, are now being manufactured again and are winning new-found popularity due to the ceramics' unique colors and motifs. Forty years ago, a Thai farmer came across some ancient ceramic wares with distinctive detailing while he was plowing his fields.
The farmer, Prasert Mahothorn, was mesmerized by the vivid blue color and detailed patterns featuring fish and flowers. After that he devoted himself to studying the ancient techniques used to produce such spellbinding and beguiling artifacts.
The Sangkhalok ceramics originally uncovered by Prasert can be dated back to the Sukhothai Kingdom period (1238-1583) and the Ayutthaya kingdom period (1351-1767).
In the 1970s, more than 200 kilns were also found in the Si Satchanalai region, adjacent to Sukhothai city.
Locals set up a private museum to collect the excavated ceramic wares from this area and an entire village specializing on manufacturing new Sangkhalok ceramics emerged.
In a studio packed with Chinese porcelain, 72-year old Prasert told Xinhua that these delicate artifacts are exceedingly beautiful and that it was their beauty that drove him to learn how to make these ceramics when he was younger.
Imitating the motifs found on authentic ancient ceramic artifacts and combining them with other patterns he learned from books, Prasert's works, with their unique style, won him some Thai businesspeople as customers.
Once his business had become successful, Prasert set up a studio to teach his family members and residents of the village the technique of making Sangkhalok ceramics.
Though there is a local museum, most of the excavated ceramic artifacts are now kept by theSoutheast Asian Ceramics Museum of Bangkok University, which now boasts a collection ofmore than 16,000 ancient ceramic wares, and is the the biggest such collection in Thailand.
Ceramics from ancient China arrived in Thailand by Silk Road trade routes and inspired the Thaicraftsmen at the time. The local craftsmen at the time went on to imitate the Chinese technique ofmanufacturing and thus Sangkhalok ceramics were born, explained PariwatThammapreechakorn, curator of the Southeast Asian Ceramics Museum.
"There were ceramics indigenous to ancient Thailand but these original ceramics cannotcompete with Chinese ones in terms of technique or popularity around the world. That's whyancient Thai craftsmen decided to imitate the technique of Chinese ceramics, especiallyLongquan celadon from the Song Dynasty (960-1279)," said Pariwat.
The meaning of "Sangkhalok" is still uncertain. Some Thai scholars believe "Sang" may refer tothe Song Dynasty of China, while others believe Sangkhalok was the then Chinese or Japaneseinaccurate pronunciation of "Sawankhalok", a popular name in the city of Si satchanalai,according to Thai history.
Though it cannot be proved that its name comes from China, the birth of Sangkhalok ceramics iscertainly closely connected with Chinese history.
During China's Tang Dynasty (618-907), a large number of Chinese ceramics, the main productsof the maritime silk road, were exported to Southeast Asia. When it came to the Yuan Dynasty(1279-1368), China's blue and white porcelain was leading the world of fashion. The porcelainwas not only a treasure of the then royal family and aristocracies of Thailand, but also used assacred items in religious rituals.
However, the following Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) imposed a sea ban policy that restrictedprivate maritime trading and coastal settlement, which led to a huge decrease of Chineseceramics in global markets and thus encouraged Thai craftsmen to copy the technique of theChinese.
It was a golden age for Sangkhalok ceramics. However, when the Ming court decided to end thesea ban policy in 1567, and also due to some other reasons, the manufacturing of Sangkhalokceramics was stopped and the artifacts lost, until people found them in recent decades.
Many experts said the Sukhothai Kingdom sent men to China and brought Chinese craftsmenback with them to teach the technique of making ceramics, so there are patters on someSangkhalok ceramics that are very similar to Chinese traditional patterns.
Pariwat argued that there is no record of any Chinese craftsmen setting up a kiln in Thai history,and although both Sangkhalok ceramics and Chinese blue and white porcelain have patterns offlowers, birds and fish, there are obvious differences because Thai craftsmen added their ownunderstanding and depictions of nature to their work.
He said that Thais imitating Chinese ceramics reflects ancient Thais' craving for delicatenessand civilization.
Nowadays, the Southeast Asian Ceramics Museum, together with Chinese experts, has heldseveral seminars on ceramics trade from the end of the Yuan Dynasty to the beginning of theMing Dynasty in Thailand.
Prasert's village has become the only one in Thailand devoting itself to the art of makingSangkhalok ceramics.
According to Prasert, there are about 40 families manufacturing Sangkhalok ceramics there andtheir products have been sold to different provinces of Thailand and also to foreign countries, aswas the case in ancient times.