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Wood-Fired Translucent Ice-Smoke Xishi Teapot

柴燒透光冰煙西施壺

黃冠綸 Huang Kuan-Lun

乙巳 2025

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She begins to reveal herself when heated.



The clay body carries a subtle translucency—
light can enter through the walls.

This condition does not present itself directly,
but appears only under specific circumstances,
existing as a latent layer within the vessel.



Wood-firing allows flame and ash to settle and permeate the surface,
forming interwoven traces of depth and granular texture.

The body is hand-pinched point by point,
retaining a fine field of pores
that later interact with moisture.



When hot water is poured in,
the vessel warms—

moisture slowly emerges along the surface,
forming a thin veil of mist around the body.

The mist adheres to the granular texture,
moving across rises and recesses,
continuously shifting and dissipating
with temperature and environment.



In stillness,
the surface appears complete.

But in use,
it enters another state.

The appearance of “smoke”
transforms the vessel from structure into phenomenon.



Translucency resides within,
while ice-smoke manifests on the surface.

They do not overlap,
yet together complete the vessel.



Fire leaves the texture,
moisture reveals it.

She retains an interior not fully seen,
and an exterior that continues to transform through use.

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