-
Slot defends League Cup selection despite not meeting 'Liverpool standards'
-
'Poor' PSG retain Ligue 1 lead despite stalemate and Doue injury
-
Liverpool crisis mounts after League Cup exit against Palace
-
Kane scores twice as Bayern set European wins record
-
Radio Free Asia suspends operations after Trump cuts and shutdown
-
Meta shares sink as $16 bn US tax charge tanks profit
-
Dollar rises after Fed chair says December rate cut not a given
-
Google parent Alphabet posts first $100 bn quarter as AI drives growth
-
Rob Jetten: ex-athlete setting the pace in Dutch politics
-
Juve bounce back after Tudor sacking as Roma keep pace with leaders Napoli
-
Favorite Sovereignty scratched from Breeders' Cup Classic after fever
-
Doue injured as PSG held at Lorient in Ligue 1
-
Leverkusen win late in German Cup, Stuttgart progress
-
Jihadist fuel blockade makes life a struggle in Mali's capital
-
Uber plans San Francisco robotaxis in Waymo challenge
-
Paramilitary chief vows united Sudan as his forces are accused of mass killings
-
Trump, Xi to meet seeking truce in damaging trade war
-
Divided US Fed backs second quarter-point rate cut of 2025
-
'Amazing' feeling for Rees-Zammit on Wales return after NFL adventure
-
'Cruel' police raids help, not hinder, Rio's criminal gangs: expert
-
S. African president eyes better US tariff deal 'soon'
-
Sinner cruises in Paris Masters opener, Zverev keeps title defence alive
-
Winter Olympics - 100 days to go to 'unforgettable Games'
-
Kiwi Plumtree to step down as Sharks head coach
-
US media mogul John Malone to step down as head of business empire
-
'Never been this bad': Jamaica surveys ruins in hurricane's wake
-
Zverev survives scare to kickstart Paris Masters title defence
-
Rabat to host 2026 African World Cup play-offs
-
WHO urges Sudan ceasefire after alleged massacres in El-Fasher
-
Under-fire UK govt deports migrant sex offender with £500
-
AI chip giant Nvidia becomes world's first $5 trillion company
-
Arsenal depth fuels Saka's belief in Premier League title charge
-
Startup Character.AI to ban direct chat for minors after teen suicide
-
132 killed in massive Rio police crackdown on gang: public defender
-
Pedri joins growing Barcelona sickbay
-
Zambia and former Chelsea manager Grant part ways
-
Russia sends teen who performed anti-war songs back to jail
-
Caribbean reels from hurricane as homes, streets destroyed
-
Boeing reports $5.4-bn loss on large hit from 777X aircraft delays
-
Real Madrid's Vinicius says sorry for Clasico substitution huff
-
Dutch vote in snap election seen as test for Europe's far-right
-
Jihadist fuel blockade makes daily life a struggle for Bamako residents
-
De Bruyne goes under the knife for hamstring injury
-
Wolvaardt's 169 fires South Africa to 319-7 in World Cup semis
-
EU seeks 'urgent solutions' with China over chipmaker Nexperia
-
Paris prosecutor promises update in Louvre heist probe
-
Funds for climate adaptation 'lifeline' far off track: UN
-
Record Vietnam rains kill seven and flood 100,000 homes
-
Markets extend record run as trade dominates
-
Sudan govt accuses RSF of attacking mosques in El-Fasher takeover
Salvaged shipwreck porcelain gets new life in Malaysia
Chinese porcelain shards salvaged from a famous shipwreck are being reimagined in Malaysia, hundreds of years after the Portuguese vessel is said to have sunk in battle.
The smashed 17th-century crockery was almost consigned to the scrap heap before Malaysian artist Alice Chang saw the potential to transform the shattered plates and cups.
After chancing upon a social media post selling the porcelain fragments, the 57-year-old bought about 50 kilograms (110 pounds) for more than 10,000 ringgit ($2,370).
Her recent solo exhibition "Me, Then Blue" at her studio in Ampang, a suburb of the capital Kuala Lumpur, turned the porcelain into sculptures representing submerged dreamscapes.
Her materials are fragments of a once-great cargo of blue-and-white pottery made in Jingdezhen, China's renowned porcelain capital.
The cargo was carried by a Portuguese merchant vessel that sank around 1625, likely due to a battle off Malaysia's coast.
It was discovered in 1998 after pottery appeared in fishermen's nets, with the vessel then named the Wanli after the Ming Dynasty emperor who ruled when the ship sank.
It was hailed as one of the most significant maritime finds in Southeast Asia and is now recognised under UNESCO's Silk Roads Programme.
But while intact porcelain pieces were preserved in museums, Chang said the broken shards were "cast aside as useless".
"The 400 years of broken porcelain tell a story of our past and a look into our future. If nobody wanted them, they would be thrown away, and that is such a waste," said Chang.
She used the shards to create the "ambience of this exhibition like it's immersed in the deep blue sea", Chang told AFP.
"This is part of Malaysia's history... its maritime legacy often goes unrecognised, and this discovery felt like a forgotten chapter waiting to be told," she said.
- 'Beauty in brokenness' -
At the heart of Chang's exhibition stood 11 sculptures, adorned with salvaged shards, accompanied by 20 oil paintings.
Working with the broken porcelain pieces was "deeply personal" for Chang, a second-generation Malaysian with Chinese roots who often felt culturally unmoored.
"Through the Wanli shipwreck and working with the pieces, I feel reconnected... I have been told I'm not very Chinese because I'm married to an Italian. So I'm neither here nor there," she chuckled.
"This project reconnected me to my Chinese roots. I actually travelled to China to search and understand my culture."
Some of her sculptures evoked ornate vases while others resembled cascading waves, with mirrors beneath them mimicking the glimmering seabed.
They show "the beauty in brokenness", Chang said.
"Depending on your perspective, you can turn brokenness into something beautiful."
D.Schlegel--VB