Located in the Tao Xi Chuan Art Center in Jingdezhen, this district is a brilliant pearl where traditional ceramic culture collides with modern creative industries. The district operates on the concept of “Ceramic+,” integrating the artistic genes refined by the millennium kiln fire into contemporary design, creating an immersive space that combines artistic experiences, cultural and creative consumption, and trendy social interaction. Here, you can participate in hand-making experiences such as foot throwing and underglaze painting, or taste the thousand-year wine fragrance at “Tao Xi Chuan · China Lidou Liquor Industry.” The district also regularly hosts ceramic markets and design salons, allowing traditional skills to be reborn in contemporary contexts. Jingdezhen, since the Eastern Han Dynasty, has been renowned as “the City of Porcelain.” During the Song and Yuan Dynasties, it was the starting point of the Maritime Silk Road. Emperor Huizong of the Northern Song Dynasty personally participated in porcelain making, and his “Azure After Rain” glaze color is still the pinnacle of Ru ware. In the Ming Dynasty, ceramic craftsman He Yiwen innovated glaze formulas, allowing Jingdezhen porcelain to be exported overseas. Today, Tao Xi Chuan continues to express this millennium cultural lineage in a youthful way, allowing the world to see the infinite possibilities of Chinese ceramics.