Error: 3002 Source: GeoIP.asp line 56: File could not be opened. China's stone workshops silenced by European crisis
The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 Tuesday, May 21, 2013
 
China's stone workshops silenced by European crisis
A woman washes a statue as a dog stands on a nearby sculpture at an outdoor workshop in the town of Dangcheng in Quyang county, 240 km (150 miles) southwest of Beijing December 7, 2011. Dangcheng applied the traditional stone-carving skills of this rocky party of Hebei province to boom as an exporter of ornate statues, busts, fountains and friezes to Europe and north America. Now this corner of northern China is struggling with the international slump and financial turmoil in formerly big markets, especially Italy and other euro zone countries. Picture taken December 7, 2011. REUTERS/David Gray.

By: Chris Buckley

DANGCHENG (REUTERS).- Mournful ancient Roman lovers, a boy Mozart and half a dozen angels lie in weeds behind the padlocked gates of an abandoned sculpture workshop in Dangcheng town, victims of economic waves rippling across the world to this corner of northern China.

Dangcheng applied the traditional stone-carving skills of this rocky part of Hebei province to boom as an exporter of ornate statues, busts, reliefs and fountains to Europe and North America. Now the town is struggling with the deep slump in once vibrant markets, especially Italy and other euro zone countries.

"The boss ran away, they say. He went broke a year or two ago. Don't know where he went," said Lu Jiguang, a brawny mason from a nearby workshop who stopped by the locked gate.

"There haven't been that many bankruptcies here. Most people find a way to get by, but business is certainly hard going," continued Lu, with the same stone dust-covered features and gnarled hands as nearly most other residents of the town.

"I've seen reports about the financial crisis in Europe on television," he said. "It's also had a bad effect here."

Dangcheng, a town of 20,000 people 240 km (150 miles) southwest of Beijing, is a microcosm of the risks that slowing exports pose for China -- risks that a commerce official laid out this week.

Reuters visited Dangcheng in 2009, when the downturn was beginning to bite. A return this week showed that the extended euro crisis and U.S. doldrums have mauled business, forcing some workshops to shut and many more to scale back or move.

And all surviving ones to court customers at home.

DEITIES, SAINTS AND HEROES

The stone workshops -- many still crowded with statues of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, Cupid, Zeus and legions of deities, saints and heroes from antiquity -- also reflect the challenges testing growth potential across China.

Asked about their deepest worries, sculpture workshop bosses here almost always named rising wages, the growing cost of stone and transport charges.

"I'm more worried about labour costs than about the euro," said Lu Xuhui, a 34-year-old owner of a sculpture company that has relied on orders from Italy, France and the United States.

"The European market is very, very tough. Prices we can charge are very low, but wages keep going up, and prices for stone are way up too, so our profits are tiny," said Lu, as he sat in a stuffed leather sofa bought in better times.

"We're trying to turn more to domestic buyers, but they're feeling the rising costs as well."

STATUES OF JESUS -- BUT NOT FOR EUROPE

Lu Shaolei, a cousin of Lu Xuhui, watched as several masons in his workshop carved and polished dozens of statues of Jesus, which illustrated the economic changes coursing through China.

He started his business a decade ago, specialising in religious statues for churches in southern Europe and the United States. But this order for 40 Jesus figures was, he said, a sign of the times: they were for Chinese customers.

Growing domestic prosperity and some loosening of Communist Party controls on churches have offered an escape route from disappearing foreign orders, Lu said, above a din of electric grinding and chiseling.

"We haven't had a foreign order since summer. Europe was our biggest buyer, but not now," said Lu, who like nearly everyone in the Dangcheng sculpture trade is a local.

"We used to focus on exports, but they're no good now, so now we're focusing on domestic buyers," he added.

"I've paid attention to the European crisis. That means we'll have even fewer exports, but domestic orders keep us going."

Other workshop bosses along Dangcheng's unpaved main street said sales to Europe and North America had picked up a little this year, after a grim slide two years ago. But many feared the latest euro crisis would again sap demand for carvings.

Quyang county, where Dangcheng lies, traces masonry skills back to the Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD), and that tradition survived war and revolution until traders from Italy arrived in the 1990s, hunting for cut-price copies of antiquity.

Dangcheng's carvers set themselves to mastering foreign tastes, cribbing from sculpture books to recreate Renaissance and classical figures. Their skills, increasingly rare and costly in Europe, and the ease of the Internet brought plenty of orders from Europe and North America.

By 2008, exports accounted for over 90 percent of sculpture sales from Dangcheng, a county official told Reuters in 2009.

"Italy is dead for us now," said Wu Huanzhen, a co-owner of the Shuangfei Sculpture Workshop in the town. "When business was good, we exported about 900,000 yuan a year," she said, adding those most of those orders went to Italy.

"This year we might clear 300,000 yuan, if we get some more orders soon," she said in a yard strewn with statues.

GO DOMESTIC OR GO BROKE

Wang Shixiong, a deputy director of the Quyang county office for the sculpture industry, said he could not give recent statistics for exports. They had fallen so far that his office had given up trying to collect numbers, he said.

"The financial crisis has been a huge blow here," said Wang.

"The impact has been so bad that the businesses won't tell us their export numbers anymore, because they could look too bad in front of their competition. So we can't collect them."

Exports now account for only a few percent of the county's sculpture trade, Wang guessed.

"Now it's basically all domestic," he said.

A dozen business owners interviewed in Dangcheng, however, also said their biggest worries have more to do with domestic pressures in the hands of Beijing, not Brussels.

"Our biggest pressure is rising wages and rising costs for materials," said Lu, the sculpture businessman making the 40 statues of Christ. "It's just hard to find and keep workers."

Masons and stone workers in the town mostly said their incomes had risen from 3,000-4,000 yuan ($472-$629) three years ago to 5,000 to 6,000 yuan or more now, depending on their level of skill.

A cubic metre of white marble hauled from Hunan province in southern China now costs about 3,700 yuan, compared with 2,000 yuan three years ago, largely due to rising transport costs, said Lu Xuhui, the sculpture trader.

But workers, too, said they were feeling economic chills.

"Wages have gone down again, because orders are down," said Li Erhu, a 35-year-old mason taking a short break from carving a bust of an ancient Roman soldier. He explained that workers are paid piece-rate, reflecting how much work they finish.

"When business was good, I'd easily make 4,000 yuan a month. Now I'm lucky to make 3,000, even with higher piece rates."

The works sell for hundreds to hundreds of thousands of dollars, depending on their size, intricacy and quality of stone.

For now, domestic sales and a trickle of export sales have helped offset rising costs, but profit margins are dangerously thin, said the trader Lu.

"I'd guess about 10 to 20 percent of the workshops here have gone out of business in the past three years," he said, then running through the names of neighbouring businesses who had shut their doors. "The pressure is tremendous."

Those pressures could worsen if, as some economists believe, torpid growth in rich nations reinforces slowing growth in China. Many Dangcheng sculpture traders voiced confidence that the country's growth and middle class love of European style would keep up business. But some saw gathering clouds too, as government stimulus spending and real estate markets cool.

"In 2009 we switched our focus to domestic customers, but that's starting to fall off too," said Peng Xuefeng, as he supervised workers grinding away at seven statues of Jesus Christ. He wasn't sure if the order, made through a trading agent, was destined for home or abroad.

"Before, local (Chinese) governments and real estate developers were ordering lots, but domestic orders have been falling off too," Peng said above the screech of grinders.

But not even the latest euro crisis will end orders from Europe, insisted Lu Xuhui, the trader.

"Churches will always have orders, even if there is a financial crisis," he said. "They will always need Jesus and Mary statues."

(Reporting by Chris Buckley, Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)



Last Week News

December 9, 2011

Experts stumped by mysterious stone carvings made thousands of years ago

Lincoln-signed copy of 13th Amendment restored at Presidential Library and Museum

Marian Goodman Gallery presents photographs by Canadian artist Jeff Wall

Dianne Lister, ROM governors recognized as top fundraising executive and woman of influence

Robert Mapplethorpe's Shoe (Melody), 1987 brings $47,800 in Heritage New York Photography Auction

Art app from Tate: Guide to modern art terms now available for iPad and iPhone

Vibrant street art exhibition at Ulster Museum showcases over 30 street artists

London Art Fair announces the 29 galleries taking part in next edition of Art Projects

20th Century Decorative Art & Design showcased in Christie's December sale in New York

Pearl Harbor Day memories live on at National World War II Museum in New Orleans

Sotheby's Results: Important Watches & Clocks bring $8.8 million in New York

Colombian sculptor and painter Fernando Botero released from hospital in Bogota

Midwest collectors drive sale of important Tiffany Glass at Christie's New York

Jerry Robinson, Batman's Joker artist, dies in US

The Misplaced Stuff: NASA loses moon, space rocks

Walking 40 miles in Jesus' shoes

Sotheby's to offer archive of Noble Prize winning writer Naguib Mahfouz

Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University appoints Alison Gass as curator

A brave new world: Royal Institute of British Architects President's Medals Student Awards 2011

December 8, 2011

First major William Blake exhibition opens at Russia's Pushkin State Museum of Fine Art

Leonardo da Vinci exhibition at National Gallery in London coming to world movie screens

Onassis Cultural Center presents Transition to Christianity: Art of Late Antiquity, 3rd-7th Century AD

Haunch of Venison in London presents exhibition of ten of Britain's most important post-war painters

Serpentine Gallery in London presents Brazilian artist Lygia Pape's 'Magnetized Space'

Staley-Wise Gallery presents exhibition of works from famed photographer Michael Dweck

Sotheby's sets auction record for Jan Steen in £20 million Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale

Contemporary art and fashion photographer Russell James' Nomad Two Worlds returns to New York

Newly discovered portrait by Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velázquez sells for £3 million at Bonhams

Museo Arte Ponce to hold on-line auction as part of its year-end fundraising initiative

Artists and their families welcome Government's decision on the Artist's Resale Right

Louvre, High, Crystal Bridges and Terra Foundation launch multi-year collaboration devoted to American Art

New to market painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds to be sold at Grogan and Company Fine Art Auctioneers

Hermès Diamond Birkin brings world record price of $203,150 at Heritage Auctions

Cooper-Hewitt announces the completion of the capital campaign for the redesign

Leonardo da Vinci to get second life as automaton

Artprize announces new $100,000 Juried award

Highly charged psychological family portraits in The Mark of Abel by Lydia Panas

December 7, 2011

Städel Museum purchases portrait of Pope Julius II, one of Raphael's most famous works

Rediscovered Velazquez among old masters for sale at Christie's, Sotheby's and Bonhams

Tutankhamun Exhibition international tour finishes with 8 million visitors; sets Australian visitor record

Getty Museum acquires rare sculpture by the accomplished Master of the Harburger Altar

World Chess Hall of Fame presents highlights from the Dr. George and Vivian Dean Collection

Work by Eva Rothschild is first contemporary art acquisition for the Hepworth Wakefield

Charles Dickens' 200th birthday celebrated with coin made up of portrait with author's titles

9th annual New Art Dealers Alliance Miami Beach reports most successful year to date

18th annual SOFA Chicago 2011 and Intuit show of Folk & Outsider art wraps with successful edition

The Three Stooges in Three Little Beers movie poster brings $59,750 to lead movie poster auction

Art that tells the story of 900 years of Monarchy: A new eight-part series from BBC Radio 4

Collection of thirty seven Doctor Who costumes for sale at Bonhams' Entertainment Memorabilia auction

Subject in Kertész photograph discovers herself in image at Academy Art Museum exhibition

Carnegie Mellon creates computerized method for matching images in photos, paintings, sketches

Leslie Hindman Auctioneers' Fine Jewelry and Timepieces auction realizes $4.4 million

Ruben Ochoa's exhibition, Cores and Cutouts, at Locust Projects in Miami

Michener Art Museum looking ahead to expansion of education wing

David Zimmerman's "Last Refuge" opens at Sous Les Etoiles Gallery

3 charged for murder plot against Swedish artist

Exhibition of recent paintings by Serge Strosberg at Ludwig Trossaert Gallery in Antwerp

December 6, 2011

Bookmakers' favorite Martin Boyce scoops art world's most prestigious prize

Extraordinary works translate into strong sales at the 10th edition of Art Basel Miami Beach

Major exhibition by Cai Guo-Qiang opens at Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art

World-first: Matisse exhibition marks Gallery of Modern Art's 5th anniversary

David Hockney returns to his native Yorkshire in A Bigger Picture by filmmaker Bruno Wollheim

Barry Flanagan's 'Built like a tree, flows like a river' at Richard Saltoun in London

James Hughes-Hallet to succeed Nicholas Ferguson as Chairman of the Courtauld Institute of Art

Band signed copy of 1964 Meet The Beatles expected to bring $75,000+ in HA.'s Music & Entertainment event

German artist Thomas Demand's installation in the Städel Museum's Metzler Hall

Haus der Kunst chooses Base Design to develop a new visual identity for the museum

Art Miami closes with record attendance of 55,000 and significant sales of blue-chip artists

The Crisis Commission contemporary art greats unite for landmark exhibition to help homeless people

Early Marilyn Monroe photos by Joseph Jasgur sell for over $300,000 at Julien's Auctions

EB&Flow present an exhibition of new work from Threadneedle Prize 2011 Visitor's Choice Winner

Emilio Ambasz, Inventions: architecture and design at the Museo Reina Sofia

Inaugural Palm Springs Fine Art Fair to contemporary art to America's mid-century cultural capital

Treasures from the Imprimerie Nationale on public view at the Grolier Club in New York

New book by one of the "new talent" discoveries at Houston FotoFest this year

December 5, 2011

Sotheby's old master and British paintings evening sale includes masterpiece by Jan Steen

Important portrait by Ernest Biéler from a private Swiss collection for sale at Hôtel des Ventes Winter sales

Homage to the 18th Century Adriano Ribolzi - Antiquaire: Sale brings a strong total of almost $6.5 million

MAXXI in Rome devotes major exhibition to the architecture of the third millennium

An example of 18th century English glass shatters world record at Bonhams this week

Artist named for $1M sculpture commission at GOMA 5th birthday party

Modernist outsider Borys Kosarev's exhibition opens at The Ukrainian Museum

Indianapolis Museum of Art presents "Art of the American Indians: The Thaw Collection"

Deutsche Börse Photography Prize 2012 shortlist announced by The Photographer's Gallery

With a robust roster of new and returning exhibitors, Metro Show leaps onto the art fair circuit

Tel Aviv Museum of Art Presents Roundabout: Face to Face

1953 Austin-Healey "100" special test car sells for world record £843,000 at Bonhams

Corcoran Gallery of Art presents Claire Healy and Sean Cordeiro: Are we there yet?

For the first time in Austria, Lecia Dole-Recio presents a selection of her latest works at the Secession

Steven Holl Architects presents new publication: Horizontal Skyscraper

The Craft and Folk Art Museum launches the online finding aid for the first 32 years of the CAFAM archives

Florida Atlantic University exhibition features selections from the John Morrissey Collection

Miami International Art Fair unveils highlights

December 4, 2011

Pablo Picasso 1936: Traces of an exhibition at Museu Picasso in Barcelona

Velázquez's equestrian portraits regain their quality and original composition

Elizabeth Taylor auction at Christie's in New York tells the story of her life and loves

Building the Western Wall: Israel Antiquities Authority finds King Herod began it but didn't finish it

MFA Boston opens new Indian/Southeast Asian galleries this December

Famed Civil War photographer Mathew Brady's studio camera readies for public auction

Toledo Museum of Art's Small Worlds exhibition offers new perspectives on size, scale

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art selects Laura Jacobs Communications Director

Exhibition on the theme of the counter-culture in Switzerland at The Musée de l'Elysée

Mirador master plan complete: To be unveiled at Guatemala's National Palace of Culture

An Artist Remembers: Hanukkah Lamps selected by Maurice Sendak at The Jewish Museum

Occupying Wall Street: A visual diary by Accra Shepp at Steven Kasher Gallery

Collectors and museum professionals continue to show strong support for quality works at Art Miami

The San Diego Museum of Art acquires Anton Raphael Mengs portrait

Collages, films, and architectural mises-en-scene by David Maljkovic at Vienna's Secession

Art-theft suspect pleads not guilty in NYC

Walker Art Center launches newly-redesigned website and publishing platform

Art Miami, LLC announces the launch of Art Wynwood for President's Day Weekend

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site