Jingdezhen: China’s Porcelain Capital
Jingdezhen: China’s Porcelain Capital
About this Journey
Known as the “Porcelain City”, Jingdezhen was the designated source for all porcelain goods in the Imperial household for over 900 years. It has a history of porcelain making dating back near two millennia. The majority of the world’s fine Chinese ceramics dating from that time can be traced to Jingdezhen’s workshops.
Though it doesn’t at first glance look like a “porcelain city,” and the ancient wood-fired kilns and manual wheels have been replaced with more modern appliances, Jingdezhen nonetheless remains a major source of ceramic goods found around the world.
Itinerary
Day 1 Arrive in Jingdezhen
First Stop: Jingdezhen
Known as the “Porcelain City”, Jingdezhen was the designated source for all porcelain goods in the Imperial household for over 900 years. It has a history of porcelain making dating back near two millennia. The majority of the world’s fine Chinese ceramics dating from that time can be traced to Jingdezhen’s workshops. Though it doesn’t at first glance look like a “porcelain city,” and the ancient wood-fired kilns and manual wheels have been replaced with more modern appliances, Jingdezhen nonetheless remains a major source of ceramic goods found around the world.
Your Journey Begins
Today is the day, the start of your WanderEastern adventure. Step off the plane in Jingdezhen and meet your local WanderEastern guide in the airport arrivals hall. They’ll be waiting to welcome you and will have your private vehicle on standby, ready to whisk you off to your hotel for check in.
Tao Xi Chuan Art District
Start off with a leisurely stroll through Tao Xi Chuan Art District. Situated in an old ceramics factory, the revived Tao Xi Chuan Art District is now brimming with shops, cafes, and boutique hotels that make this area a bustling art mecca. With restored brick facades, you’ll find people doing photoshoots and students at the most prestigious ceramics university in China selling their recent creations.
Welcome Dinner
Many have heard that, when dining in China, it is considered rude to finish all the food on the table. What hardly gets mentioned is the fact that it is nearly impossible to polish off the entire spread at a typical Chinese group meal; portions are huge and the variety of dishes is seemingly unending. Tonight, celebrate your arrival in the local restaurant to enjoy the “Porcelain dinner”, as every dishes will be put in the porcelain tableware and during a feast for your eyes and stomach as you get to know your guide and fellow travelers.
Meals included: dinner
Day 2 Jingdezhen
The Ancient Kiln
Begin by learning the craft named after the country, porcelain (also known as China), at the Ancient Kiln. Since the 1200s, the Ancient Kiln made China’s iconic porcelain for the imperial court. Nowadays, you can find classically trained pottery masters making porcelain in the traditional manner and pass by the huge kilns that were once used to make the emperor’s prized possession. You’ll have the opportunity to purchase some of the most authentic porcelain money can buy.
Ceramic Folklore Museum
Next, step back in time and see tradition in action at the Ceramic Folklore Museum. The Ceramic Folklore museum is like a living timeline of the history of porcelain. Delicately preserved fine china show the evolution of porcelain style and technique that varied from dynasty to dynasty. Visitors will see porcelain archaeology in action as well as a showcase of pottery that’s survived the ages.
Pottery Workshop
After lunch at a local Jiangxi-style restaurant, get your hands dirty at a contemporary ceramics studio with a hands-on pottery workshop. Jingdezhen is the capital of all things porcelain, a stop by a contemporary ceramics studio will also let you become master of your own pottery wheel. Mold your creations with the precious local clay that made this region famous as the wheel spins under your hands. After it’s time to fire your creation, you can step into the next room and paint your own designs on the brilliant white porcelain.
Dig into the Imperial Kiln
After, witness ceramic excavation at the Imperial Kiln. Several feet below the earth’s surface, the Imperial Kiln is undergoing an archaeological excavation. Shards and remnants of the porcelain made in this giant kiln are still being found and archaeologists are using this opportunity to document the history of China’s porcelain culture. From the viewing hall, you can try to spot your own discoveries in the digging site below.
Walk to the Dragon Pavilion
After, stretch your legs with a leisurely walking to the Dragon Pavilion overlooking the city. Originally built during the Tang Dynasty, the structure features red bricks with upturned roofs in the classical Chinese style. Back in the day, officials supervised the production of porcelain wares for the imperial court from the top of this pavilion.
Local Porcelain Market
If you want a real, contemporary porcelain experience, you can visit a local porcelain market in the town. The tiny shops along this back alley are filled floor-to-ceiling with porcelain wares from tea sets to statues of Buddha.
Meals included: breakfast and lunch
Day 3 Jingdezhen to Wuyuan
Wuyuan Village
Secluded in the mountains and only accessible by cable car, Wuyuan Village features well-preserved Hui architecture and colorful tapestries of drying chili peppers and chrysanthemum flowers hanging atop roofs. Although a walk through Wuyuan and its courtyard homes is a step back in time, the village is most famous for its ornate tapestries. As the word has spread about Wuyuan’s hidden beauty, more and more local guesthouses and small coffee shops have sprung up in the village.
If the weather permits, you will enjoy your afternoon tea in Wuyuan and meanwhile view the rape flower.
And you will also have chance to visit the local tea plantation to pick up tea leaves and taste the local tea as well.
After the visiting in Wuyuan, you’ll be transferred back to Jingdezhen.
Meals included: breakfast and lunch
Day 4 Depart From Jingdezhen
Saturday Morning Porcelain Market
Wake up early and join the bustling Saturday morning porcelain market where students and locals from all over Jingdezhen come to showcase and sell their wares. Here, you’ll find everything from traditional pottery made by old masters to contemporary designs made by students at the leading ceramics university in China. You can even buy ceramic jewelry, mugs, and tea sets to take home as souvenirs
Hike Gaoling Mountain
After, hike the slopes of Gaoling Mountain, where the original kaolin clay was excavated from the clay mines by industrious men. You can find life-size replicas of these workers performing the various labors needed to extract the clay from the inside of the mountain. A worthwhile hike in-and-of-itself, tracing these ancient clay supply lines makes for a history lesson out in the great outdoors.
Stroll Through Dongbu Village
At the base of Gaoling Mountain is the centuries-old Dongbu Village (and your lunch). The village was once a major hub for the trade of the kaolin clay used to make porcelain in the city of Jingdezhen. This quaint little village is now home to a small museum where you can find artifacts of the tools used to mine for porcelain as well as scaled-down replicas of the trading routes taken to trade the clay.
Meals included: breakfast and lunch
Your Flight Back Home
Your WanderEastern guide will escort you to the airport and help you check in for your flight home.
Your Accommodations
TAO XICHUAN INTERNATIONAL TRADE HOTEL Thematic Boutique
When it comes to the history and culture of Jingdezhen, it doesn’t get any more immersive than this high-end thematic boutique. Set amidst the industrial ruins of a state-owned porcelain kiln complex, Tao Xichuan is an art district reminiscent of Beijing’s legendary 798: a contemporary ensemble of galleries, restaurants and shops at the avant-garde of Jingdezhen’s modern ceramics culture.
Details
What’s Included
- All on-ground transfers with in-transport refreshments
- Services of a WanderEastern English-speaking guide
- All accommodation costs, based on double-occupancy, as noted in the itinerary
- Meals as noted in the itinerary, and drinking water throughout all the journey
- Private chauffeur service to and from airport/train station at start and end of your trip
What’s Excluded
- International and domestic flights, domestic trains, plus relevant taxes
- Chinese tourist visa, which is required for most foreign passport holders
- Travel and medical insurance
- Meals, apart from those included in the itinerary, and alcohol
- Expenses of a personal nature
- Excursions and activities not included in the itinerary
- Discretionary gratuities for guides and drivers
TRIP COST
$2480 USD per person
Single Supplement $980 USD per person
Next Steps
Next Steps
How do I secure my spot on this tour?
We will continue to work with you until your trip is perfect.
For international bookings: Once you are ready to book, a USD$500 planning fee, per booking, is required to begin reserving your arrangements. This will go towards your trip costs and will be taken off your final balance amount.
For bookings made in China: Once you are ready to book, a RMB1,000 deposit, per person, is required. This will go towards your trip costs and will be taken off your final balance amount.
What is the payment schedule?
1. Deposit:
A deposit is required to secure your reservation. Once your deposit has been received, we will send your confirmation along with a detailed itinerary and all the information you’ll need to prepare for your journey.
2. Full payment:
Full trip payment should be made 30 days prior to departure. If you’re booking within 30 days of your departure, you may be asked to pay make the full payment straight away.
Payments can be made via Paypal, credit card, bank transfer, WeChat or Alipay
Is this trip guaranteed to run?
This trip will be scheduled to run once we receive bookings from 2 passengers. Should the journey be cancelled due to lack of sign-ups or government restrictions, WanderEastern will fully refund any deposits or fees paid.
What is your cancelation policy?
See our full terms and conditions for more information.
Why WanderEastern
Why WanderEastern
We’re on the ground with you
Our team of advisors will design every detail of the trip with you through close consultation, then orchestrate your entire journey while on the ground. We’re in the same time zone as you, so we can fulfill requests and handle issues without a hitch. With over 40 staff in Beijing and an expansive network of operational partners across the country, we have the manpower to ensure your journey is safe, reliable and comfortable from beginning to end.
Your trip, your way
Flexibility is our highest-ranking compliment. We pull off journeys for pioneers with a 6-hour layover to Hollywood’s elite, and everywhere in between. Our team regularly pulls off unprecedented logistical feats; nearly any time frame or budget is within our realm. No matter how you wish to experience China, we are here to bring that dream to life.
We embody passion
WanderEastern guides are carefully handpicked for their knowledge and charisma, then meticulously trained to maintain our exceptional service standards. They are expert storytellers and passionate natives of the regions where they guide, having the perfect combination of local insights and service know-how to bring you seamless once-in-a- lifetime moments all across China.
The little things, the big picture
Supporting inspired local economies allows you to experience the soul of the destination, while also protecting and cultivating China’s artisanal culture. From watching artisans hand make shoes in Yunnan, to picking organic vegetables for dinner on a local farm in Fujian, our tours are designed to showcase and protect China’s heritage, both natural and human.
Have Questions?
Have Questions?
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