From a Fujian hearth, paired with the dragon
I first saw the prototype for this phoenix in a courtyard workshop on the outskirts of Dehua, Fujian — a place known for white porcelain, but one corner of the family compound has been reserved for zhuni water‑spitters for three generations. The master, a quiet man in his sixties, had just finished a dragon and was carving the phoenix’s beak with the same fine‑edged bamboo tool. He explained that the pair belong together: dragon on one side of the tea tray, phoenix on the other, their sputtering a small duet for your session.
We spent the afternoon testing the firing curve, because zhuni is temperamental. Too high and the clay loses the micro‑porosity that makes it sing — the water slides off without a whisper. Too low and the figure stays mute, the throat clogging with unfused particles. The batch we settled on hits 1080 °C in the final push, just enough to mature the clay while keeping the throat open. Each piece is hand‑pinched, not moulded, so the beak angle and the inner reservoir differ slightly — which is why every phoenix gargles in its own rhythm.
I brought back a dozen, and this one — numbered FZW‑014 — caught my eye because the cinnabar deepened to almost a lacquer‑red after the kiln, with a faint iridescence on the wing feathers where the ash settled. It’s a piece that gets better with every pour, as the zhuni darkens along the path where the water flows.