Hong kong teapot makers get super creative for annual contest
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Hongkongers are sometimes pilloried for lacking creativity, but you wouldn’t know it from this year’s entries for an annual pottery design contest – some of the most outrageous teapots
you’ll ever see. Advertisement Among the record 276 entrants for the 10th Tea Ware by Hong Kong contest, Vitus Szeto Kin, who works in the shipyard industry, was first runner-up in the open
category with teapots that look like submarines and Aladdin lamps with sails. Called “Two Poles”, his work-inspired entry also includes covered teacups in the shape of sea mines and mooring
buoys. Hilary Chan Hiu-lam, a Form Three student at St Stephen’s Girls’ College in Mid-Levels, came third in the school category with a statement on behalf of her peers. Called “Educational
Mishap” in English and “Death by studying” in Chinese, her teapot is shaped like a human skull, with a pencil, a triangle ruler and a candle – a reference to those all-night cramming
sessions, perhaps – jutting out of it. The pot and two smaller, skull-shaped cups sit in (ceramic) pools of crimson blood to create a wonderfully macabre display. This is the 10th Tea Ware
by Hong Kong Potters awards and more than 100 shortlisted entries are on display at the Flagstaff House Museum of Tea Ware until next November. The upper level rooms are filled with teapots
that don’t look like teapots. Betty Ko Yee-ling’s “Fire of Life (2): Alive” looks like burnt charcoal. Fung Ka-wai’s “Letters to My Dearest” are a collection of traditional letter boxes with
envelopes sticking out at the top. Cheng Poh-ling’s “Summer Favorites” feature a pineapple, an artichoke and two bundles of bananas. There are also entries that are geometric or classically
elegant, such as the overall winner in the open category. Alice Hui Shiu-chun’s “Reunion” is made up of a traditionally shaped teapot and two cups. It looks understated next to the more
playful entries, but the judges were impressed by the beautiful wood-fire glaze and her application of the wood ash. Advertisement “I made these in the US where I fired them for seven days
and nights,” Hui said following the awards ceremony on Tuesday.