The history of ancient porcelain, bronzes, calligraphy, painting and jade. (One or two sentences for each item)

Porcelain: It evolved from pottery in primitive society. In the Tang Dynasty, the south was blue and the north was white. In Song Dynasty, there were five kilns: Ru kiln, Ge kiln, Guan kiln, Jun kiln and Ding kiln. In the Yuan Dynasty, blue and white porcelain was produced.

Bronze: copper-tin alloy. Most of the artifacts in the Shang and Zhou Dynasties were made of bronze, and there were even bronze inscriptions on them.

Calligraphy: In the legendary era, characters have evolved for a long time, from Oracle Bone Inscriptions on the tortoise shell with ox bones to the seal script of Qin Dynasty. In the evolution of characters, calligraphy came into being, running script and cursive script appeared in the gold of harmony, and regular script prevailed after the Tang Dynasty.

Painting: Rock paintings in primitive society with simple and monotonous lines. The tomb murals in the Qin and Han Dynasties and the Jin and Southern Dynasties outline the social scene at that time with simple lines, figure paintings, landscape paintings in the Southern Jin Dynasty and pictures of ladies in the Tang Dynasty.

Jade: Confucianism has the idea that "a gentleman values jade". Jade was given to princes and ministers by the royal family in the early days, and became a collection from the royal family to the people's homes in the Ming and Qing Dynasties.