Pan Jia Yuan Antique Market |
Travel in Beijing | |||
Introduction Situated west of Panjiayuan ( pān jiā yuán 潘家园 ) Bridge and south of the East Third Ring Road, the Panjiayuan Antiques Market is very accessible. The market deals mainly in antiques and arts and crafts. It also has the reputation of being the most inexpensive antiques market in Beijing, attracting foreign and domestic tourists. Whether you want to sightsee, window-shop or buy collectors' items, there really is something for everyone. Even Hilary Clinton has famously shopped at Panjiayuan. With so many stalls selling similar items, this is a great place for bargain hunters. And although there are genuine articles to be found here, it is hard to tell the real deal from the fake, particularly if you aren't an expert. Panjiayuan market covers an area of 4.85 hectares of land and accommodates over 3,000 stalls. It is the largest antiques market of its kind both in China and Asia. Classic Furniture It used to be a weekend-only market. But, after some refurbishment work, it is now open for business seven days a week. However, Saturdays and Sundays are still the best days to go. Secondhand goods, arts and crafts and antiquities are the main transactions in the market. Also on offer are antique furniture imitations, what is known to the Chinese as the "Four Treasures of the Study" : writing brush ( bǐ 笔), ink stick ( mò 墨 ), paper (zhǐ 纸) and ink slab ( yàn 砚 ), old books and paintings, agate, jadeite, ceramics, ancient Chinese and foreign coins, bamboo and animal bone sculptures, leather puppets for shadow play ( pí yǐng xì 皮影戏 ) and a wide range of Chinese opera masks. Buddhist relics, costumes of ethnic minorities, apparels, "Cultural Revolution" (1966-76) articles and daily necessities can also be found here. Traders from 24 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions in China have stalls in the market, as do several ethnic minorities. Panjiayuan market is truly a market packed with Chinese traditional culture. History Hiding in the woods, hawkers spread out antiques in the shadows of boulders. Many of them were farmers from suburban Beijing or nearby provinces who sold items they had scraped together from their villages. It was only in 1994 that trade in art and auctions were legalized. Countless art markets have sprouted around the city ever since.Local authorities wanted to put an end to this business in the woods but failed. They then decided to build a proper market and have the hawkers pay rent. And so the Panjiayuan Antiques Market came into being in 1995, the first legal antiques market in Beijing. Stall space is so sought after here that many stall holders sub-let their stalls to others at daily rates much higher than theirs, making themselves a nice little profit without actually having to sell anything. Layout of the market Know your zone in the main market Moving round to the southwestern part, or Zone Three, visitors are treated to a display of Chinese ethnic minority arts and crafts, trinkets, antiques and apparel. Many of these traders are from Tibet. It has been said that one would find a more complete array of Tibetan cultural relics in Panjiayuan than in a Tibetan village. Chinese ceramics take up most of the space in Zone Four, the northwestern section. And what the shopper needs to know is that most of them aren't antiques at all. Fake ceramics makers are becoming very good at what they do, making it difficult for customers to tell the real and fake items apart. Some of the fake-making tricks they use include soaking bronzes in acid to rust them, and burying poor quality jade with dead poultry to give it that antiquated look. But now, if asked most sellers confess what they sell are fake ones, which are just for decorating houses, and of course, more reasonable prices are given. Tips for telling the real from the not-so-real Address 100m west of the Panjiayuan Bridge at the East Third Ring Road
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