Tai'an artist brings Ningyang Wu family's clay sculptures back to life
One of Wu Xiguang's clay sculpture artworks showcases local folk's daily lives by shaping extremely exaggerated body shape and facial expressions. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Wu Xiguang is a sixth-generation inheritor of the Ningyang Wu family clay sculpture technique, an intangible cultural heritage (ICH) item in Tai'an, Shandong province.
The clay sculptures of the Ningyang Wu family, who hail from Ningyang county, are fashioned from local clay using a variety of techniques, including collecting, mixing, kneading, drying and baking clay.
The clay sculptures of the Ningyang Wu family are mainly divided into two categories: one is based on the furnace transmutation glazing to depict traditional Chinese cultures, and the other depicts folk customs and arts, as well as life in rural areas.
Wu Xiguang produced innovations based on earlier clay sculpture craftsman's experiences to give the Ningyang Wu family's clay sculptures greater local features and ornamental value.
Wu's clay sculpture artworks are good at exhibiting numerous living forms in Ningyang and people's hardworking, honest, and kind nature by sculpting exaggerated body shapes and facial expressions.
Tai'an ICH item Ningyang Wu family's clay sculptures are a Tai'an ICH item and are made with local clay through various processes, such as collecting, mixing, kneading, drying and baking clay. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Wu Xiguang, a sixth-generation inheritor of Ningyang Wu family's clay sculptures, shapes clay into a face. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]