Aesthetics and Cultural Expression in Chinese Ceramic Calligraphy

Liu Ying *

Academy of Arts & Design, Changsha Normal University, Changsha, 410100, China.

Chen Tingting

Academy of Arts & Design, Changsha Normal University, Changsha, 410100, China.

Zhang Jia

Academy of Arts & Design, Changsha Normal University, Changsha, 410100, China.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

With the development of ceramic techniques and artistic media, calligraphy has moved beyond paper and ink. So it has produced more kinds of expressive forms. Ceramic calligraphy is one such form, combining calligraphy and ceramics. It shows different aesthetic features and cultural meanings from traditional ink-on-paper calligraphy. This paper adopts a literature review method based on relevant studies from Google Scholar and CNKI.  Reviews relevant literature, historical cases, and representative works, and analyses current research from four aspects: material, medium, craftsmanship and technique, writing style, and application context. This paper shows that the aesthetic value of ceramic calligraphy mainly comes from the interaction between material, technique, and writing style. This interaction moves calligraphy from a flat written form to a form with spatial and material qualities. Then, this paper shows that ceramic calligraphy has developed richer cultural meaning over time. From initial pottery inscriptions to Ming and Qing scholar inscriptions to contemporary research and applications in public art and culturally continuous practices, this paper traces the evolution of ceramic calligraphy's cultural meaning. Additionally, in different periods, ceramic calligraphy serves as a form of cultural memory communication and identity expression, and this is true for different contexts. In the context of the contemporary era, ceramic calligraphy has shown a clear trend of cross- disciplinary integration and diverse development. In the context of contemporary art, design practice, and public space creation, ceramic calligraphy has entered contemporary culture. It is not a simple extension and development of ink-on-paper calligraphy. This paper shows that ceramic calligraphy is a more distinctive art form with its own unique characteristics, shaped by material, craftsmanship, and culture.

Keywords: Ceramic calligraphy, aesthetic characteristics, cultural expression, modern and contemporary applications, cross-media.


How to Cite

Ying, Liu, Chen Tingting, and Zhang Jia. 2026. “Aesthetics and Cultural Expression in Chinese Ceramic Calligraphy”. Asian Research Journal of Arts & Social Sciences 24 (4):66-76. https://doi.org/10.9734/arjass/2026/v24i4900.

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