4.1. Lacquerware Art Education Strategy
This study was based on the educational goals of cognition, affection, and skills as the analytical structure. From the in-depth interviews and textual data, three coding scholars firstly proposed the “Lacquerware Art Passing-On Education Framework Diagram”, as shown in
Figure 2 below.
This framework shows the comprehensive structure of the education of lacquerware art craft. In terms of cognition, the interviewees emphasized that learners should have an understanding of art history and the appearance and trends of the art market in modern society. Such knowledge is conducive to the confirmation of the future creation and development position of art apprentices. In other words, during the learning process, art apprentices should start thinking about and defining their own position in the art market to think about the direction of their possible future development. This cognitive mindset could benefit the art apprentice by confirming future creation and the development of art career. Regarding the knowledge of lacquer art technology, the artists should be able to understand and master lacquer-related knowledge, processes, tools, and pigment characteristics.
This framework shows the complete framework of education in lacquer art education. The knowledge of lacquer art should be understood and mastered in terms of lacquer-related knowledge, process, tools, and characteristics. As Taiwan’s lacquer art heritage conservator Master Wang Qing-Shuang said, “Lacquer art can be used as the decorator of all kind of art craft, and it can be expressed on almost any material, such as ceramics, bamboo weaving, wood carving, and metalworking, so learners must learn various art types in a diversified way”. For example, one of the interviewees, an artist who has been working in lacquer art for more than 30 years, specializes in the creation of ceramic-carcassed lacquerware. He chooses to use biscuit fired pottery as the medium for his lacquer art creation, and even experiments with a combination of glaze and lacquer materials, and shows the unexpected color expression under different temperatures! In other words, from the cognitive point of view, learners must master the properties of various materials, and through guidance and experience, they can gradually master the presentation of color.
In terms of skills, the transfer plan requires the art apprentices to study closely with the conservator during the period of transmission and preservation project and gradually master various lacquer techniques in their daily creation and work processes, especially the mastery of basic processes, tools, the characteristics and applications of composite materials, painting techniques, and style mastery. During the four-year period, although the transfer plan was conducted in the mode of “oral transmission and teaching” and “incidental teaching method”, it started from the cultivation of basic aesthetics, such as sketching, observation, deconstruction, and color mastery; only then did it gradually enter a higher level of techniques, as well as the final stage of creation, innovative operation, and discourses. Master Wang Xian-Min, a Nantou County registered lacquer art cultural heritage conservator, said, “although there are only two important steps in the creation of lacquer art, one is basing and the other is decorative painting, it is extremely time-consuming and it is common that each piece takes 1–2 years to complete, which is an essential process to cultivate an artist’s heart. As for the cultivation of aesthetic sense, we must start from sketching and drawing, and learn from nature by observing the colors of nature!” As for the techniques of lacquer art, they will be taught by means of apprenticeship, learning from imitation and copying. For example, an interviewed art apprentice who participated in the Transmission and Preservation project said: “We will first learn to draw peonies, which represent wealth and prosperity, or peacocks, which represent good luck and kindness, from our tutors. Though this has market considerations, it is essential to have these basic skills training in order to understand the application of color materials and the mastery of techniques”.
In terms of cognition, the interviewees emphasized that learners should have a deeper understanding of the history of art and of the patterns and trends of the art market in modern society. Such cognition is conducive to the confirmation of future creation and the development positioning of art apprentices, in other words, during the learning process, the art apprentices should also begin to think about and define their own position in the art market in order to determine the potential future development.
Finally, affection is regarded by the interviewees as the most central and important high-level educational goal in the learning process. If inheritance education can achieve the learning goal of affection, it signals a change in the personality, character, attitude, and values of the art apprentices. Judging from the connotation of its educational orientation, it includes understanding and recognition of the cultural context of the development of lacquer art craftsmanship, the sense of mission of inheritance education, the values, and the ability to comment on the formation of creative ideas, etc. In addition, the current “Transmission and Preservation Project” implemented by the Bureau of Cultural Heritage for allows preservationists or preservation groups to submit their own implementation plans, and the training period is three to four years, starting from the training of basic skills, and through continuous practices and creation, the students become capable of creating and interpreting artworks independently. The lacquer art conservator who participated in this project said: “The development of lacquer art in Taiwan is different from Japan’s single-technology specialization, since the development of lacquer art in Taiwan is rather late, so the creation of lacquer art artists in Taiwan usually incorporates different techniques, resulting in a special style of lacquer art in Taiwan. The lacquer artists often develop unique ways of presentation, using materials such as mother-of-pearl, gold leaf, eggshell, gold powder, and paste to express different color textures in their surface decorations, infusing their own spiritual energy into their works”.
In this study, interviews with conservators, apprentice artists, and lacquer craftsmen revealed that the spirit of the “Transmission and Preservation Project” is in line with the traditional folk art apprenticeship system
Figure 2. presents the structure of the cultural assets preserved by the lacquer art of Taiwan in the educational transmission. In the current education of lacquer art in Taiwan, primary emphasis is placed upon the cultivation of techniques, such as lacquer materials, aesthetics, painting techniques, material knowledge, and the application of composite media, etc. In this process, the students are involved in the work, creation, and even living together with the conservators. During the process, apprentices not only learn lacquer techniques and gain experience from the conservators but also learn the conservators’ attitude towards the quality of their works and the constant pursuit of perfection, so as to establish a good creative attitude for the apprentices.
In the process of knowledge cultivation, the conservators often require the apprentices to diversify their knowledge acquisition, not only in terms of knowledge of lacquer art culture, lifestyle, market characteristics, lacquer materials, lacquer techniques, and development history, but also in terms of learning and reading across different craft categories. After three to four years of training, the conservators begin to guide the apprentices towards the construction of their own creative concepts, gradually moving from the stages of “capable of making”, “capable of thinking”, and finally “capable of self-explanation”, to cultivate the apprentices’ emotions and identification with the art of lacquer craft.
During the analysis process, this study also discovered that the past learning experience of an intangible cultural heritage conservator profoundly affects the teaching methods of the conservator as an educator. Although the transmission and preservation project was based on the model of “oral transmission and teaching” and the “incidental teaching method”, the system of educational content still requires the Cultural Heritage Bureau to arrange professional consultants to assist the conservators, which benefits the systematization of educational content. As a young generation of transmission and preservation project art apprentices, they also achieve the mission of organizing the experience and knowledge of the cultural heritage conservators throughout their lives. The interviewee, the Deputy Secretary of the Cultural Heritage Bureau, believes that intangible cultural assets are similar to an organic body in the context of cultural development, which grows and declines depending on the time and space. However, intangible cultural assets are inherited by “people”, and when a cultural asset preserver passes on his or her knowledge, skills, and feelings to the next generation, we should keep an open mind and let it develop naturally!
4.2. The Value Level and Learning Level of Lacquerware Art
In addition to the educational strategy of lacquer art in the previous paragraph, this study analyzes the in-depth interviews and textual data from the viewpoint of educational and artistic connotations during theoretical development. It is expected that through the expert meeting strategy, systematic procedures will be adopted to gradually disclose the viewpoints and meanings of the content of the materials, expecting to obtain a more psychological inclination, artistic discourse, and spiritual discourse of creation.
The result of the grounded theory enables us to develop a “Lacquerware Art Learning Framework”, which corresponds to the spiritual structure of arts and crafts values, as well as the creative structure. Therefore, after the expert meeting, we proposed a “Lacquerware Art Value and Learning Structure Diagram” (
Figure 3) by integrating the three parts, namely, the learning structure, the spiritual structure, and the creation structure. Due to the limited space, we are unable to fully present all the details of the integration process in this study, so we have placed a comprehensive and simplified
Table A1 of the “Lacquer Learning Framework Code” in the
Appendix A of this study.
From reflections taken at the expert meeting, we attempt to unveil the connotation of the artistic value of lacquer art and the learning levels of the trainees. This study concluded from the expert meeting that the lacquer artists’ contemplation of the craft levels echoes the three extremes of the Tao system in the
Book of Changes as well as the core of Lao Tzu’s
Tao Te Ching, which quoted “The Way gave birth to one. One gave birth to two. Two gave birth to three. Three gave birth to all things. All things carry yin and embrace yang. They reach harmony by blending with the vital breath”. The “Lacquerware Art Value and Learning Structure Diagram” is summarized as shown in
Figure 3 below:
Lacquerware art preservation is not only the cultivation of techniques and knowledge but also the process of cultivating the personality and character of the art apprentices. The value level of creation can be divided into three levels: livelihood, living, and life.
The “Tool of Livelihood” corresponds to the level of learning, where the emphasis is on the cultivation of knowledge and skills of the art students. During the training, the interviewees, who are the preservers of lacquer art in Nantou County, said that in the process of learning lacquer art, they must rooted in their fundamental lacquer art skills and abilities so that they might be able to connect with the market and maintain their livelihoods after graduating. The “tool of livelihood” level is achieved in basic education and learning, which focuses on the cultivation of the knowledge and skills of transmission and preservation project art apprentices. First of all, the basic ability of art apprentices to integrate into the market to make a living after graduation is the main focus. In terms of lacquerware art, it is necessary to be familiar with the process, master the characteristics of various lacquer liquids, flexibly applying various tools and composite materials, and practice on different carcasses. The lacquerware art decoration techniques include lacquer applying, delineation, embedding, Maki-e, the Raden technique (it is a technique in which pieces of shell are attached to the surface of the carcass and then grinded to produce the characteristic color of the shell, and it is called “Luo-Dian” in Chinese,) multiply lacquer layers, stacking, and etching carved lacquer, etc. The surface of lacquer crafts can be treated with delicate painting techniques revealing different colors through different procedures such as polishing, delustering, and consider the texture, natural texture, cracks, and other variants. There are more composite materials such as jade, gold leaf, mother of pearl, eggshells, etc. These embellishments and decorations are the reasons that make lacquerware art unique and varying in visual changes [
22]. In addition, learning at this stage needs to cultivate the market demand and consumption characteristics of the domestic and international markets. From the interviews we learned that even the cultural heritage conservators continue to emphasize innovative expressions and visual symbols in each creation, which is also one of the critical points of inheritance education. Such an attitude of constant search for newness, change, and improvement is one of the key points of heritage education.
The “Way of Living”, proposed in
Figure 2, the Lacquerware Art Value and Learning Structure Diagram, discusses the internalization of knowledge and skills by creators, who can gradually construct their creative values and beliefs and communicate their ideas and demands with the market in the form of art collections. Artistic literacy stems from the combination of beauty and philosophy. It has gradually moved away from daily necessities and artifacts in the mass consumer market and towards art collections with conceptual expressions, echoing people’s yearning for life attitudes and lifestyles. The interviewee, who is a lacquer artist, said: “Lacquer art itself is an extraordinary craftsmanship, and students must recognize this and be determined to continue creating. It is important not to go overboard with superficial, superficial, experiential learning for a short period of time, and that is why the ’transmission and preservation project’ must be at least 3 years long”.
Due to the creative process of the lacquer process, it is necessary to continue the repetitive process of painting, polishing, repainting, and re-polishing, which has become the process of cultivating temperament, internalizing emotions, and comprehending the truth. Therefore, the highest level of value demonstrated by lacquerware art craftsmanship is the “Way of Life”.
In the “Philosophy of Life” level, creators have transcended the market mindset and emphasized self-practice instead and express their views and respect for society, culture, and ecology through their works. The interviewees who used basket as a form of lacquer art creation said, “our inspiration and materials are all from nature, and many crafts in Taiwan are are taken from nature and used in nature. Creation itself is symbiotic, coexisting and in dialogue with nature, such as bamboo art and lacquer art. The work will eventually decay and return to nature, just like each of our existence in the world. At such a level, art has transcend into beliefs that the art apprentices may carry on to preserve these intangible cultural heritage through their skills, and with such belief this will be the motives for future preservation, activation, innovation, and pass on as a lifelong task so that the skills can be passed on sustainably”. [
Figure 4 and
Figure 5 (photographed by author)].