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Culture cast through glass

After nearly four decades of dedicated work, liuli artist shares handmade warmth through her technically demanding pieces, Zhao Ruixue reports in Zibo, Shandong.

By Zhao Ruixue in Zibo, Shandong | China Daily | Updated: 2026-04-16 06:17

The glass works begin with the material itself, then light, and the weight of experience, to trace how the medium made the creators ruminate on philosophy. [Photo by Zhao Ruixue/China Daily]

Yang and her team started without any technical manuals or process documentation. Every step, from raw material ratios and temperature control to mold-making, required trial and error.

"Fail, come back, experiment again," she says.

Yang burned through $2.36 million with thousands of failed pieces piling up. "The technology was completely new to us. Of course, there would be difficulties," Yang says. "But if people elsewhere in the world could do it, if our own ancestors once mastered it, then it wasn't impossible. I just hadn't found the way yet."

Three and a half years later, they uncovered the lost-wax casting technique. "It was not merely a technical revival but an opening for new possibilities for Chinese liuli art within the contemporary art landscape," says Yang.

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