Visit Chengdu Song Xian Qiao Antique Market
There is a reason why I try to avoid the Beijing Dirt Market with unimaginable stuff but am drawn to any market like a moth to flame. One look at all the stuff displayed at small Song Xian Qiao in Chengdu and I knew that once again we'd come home with something.
We were fortunately flying home Business Class the next day and just checked the additional 50# through baggage!
Record Shopping at Chengdu's Art & Antique Market
The Song Xian Qiao Antique Market (送仙桥古玩市场) is the second largest antique market in all of China. It's a fun place to shop in Chengdu. The 20,000 square meter area is filled with over 500 small vendors selling art, artifacts, jewellery, books, and plenty more.
After exploring the outdoor area, we head deep into the buildings to search for some records. There are a ton of galleries and studios where you can witness people painting, doing calligraphy, and even sculpting. The quiet 2nd floor shops are like something out of Gremlins. We manage to find some records and antique suitcase record players.
If you're looking for a unique shopping experience in Chengdu, the Art and Antique Market is the place to go. After a couple hours of exploring, you might end up coming home with an eagle's head (not recommended).
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Doing Business with the World in Chengdu.
A city’s business environment is so important that it is a city’s call card and core competitiveness in global cooperation. In January 2019, Chengdu was named one of the Top 10 most business-friendly cities in China in 2018. In 2019, Chengdu will create a first-rate business environment for investment and development. More and more companies have taken advantage of it to do business with the world in Chengdu.
New Year market in Chengdu
The 20th Sichuan New Year Shopping Festival kicked off on Friday.
Over 2000 Chinese and foreign companies from 42 countries bring more than two hundred thousand products.
Streets of Chengdu
Just a quick video of the streets of Chengdu near my neighborhood.
2 weeks in Chengdu, China | Travel Vlog | Sian Victoria
See what I got up to, during two weeks travelling Chengdu, China. From visiting the panda base, street markets, historic sites, art galleries, museums, and hiking Mount Qingcheng with 10 other UK students and chinese volunteers.
Read my daily travel diary blog posts, to find out about the places I visited in Chengdu:
Overview of trip:
Day 1-2: Studying at Sichuan University
Day 3: Wangjiang park
Day 4: kuan-zhai-alley
Day 5: jinsha-site-museum
Day 6: wenshu-monastery
Day 7: chunxi-road
Day 8: song-xian-qiao-antique-market
Day 9: mount-qingcheng
Day 10: mao in tianfu square
Day 11: Night markets & The Moca
Day 12: Panda base
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Scott_Holmes_-_03_-_Inspiring_Corporate
Roman antiques on display in Xi'an
An exhibition of antiques dating back to the Roman empire kicked off on Sunday in the city of Xi'an in northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
Panjiayuan Antique Market - Beijing - China (3)
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Hong Kong ivory carvers suffer as ban nears
(10 Feb 2017) The decline of Hong Kong's once-flourishing ivory business is set to accelerate even further as plans move ahead to ban domestic ivory trading in the city and in mainland China.
In the ivory carving industry's heyday in the mid-1970s, Hong Kong factories employed as many as 3,500 carvers.
Today however only half-a-dozen part-time carvers are left, along with 10 to 20 full-time mammoth tusk carvers, according to Save the Elephants - thanks to an international ban on trading that was imposed in 1990 that also led to carvers switching from elephant ivory to the tusks of extinct woolly mammoths.
Lai-ngan Wong started carving ivory more than 50 years ago.
Now aged 77, he says the industry is pretty much dead now.
Beijing plans to start shutting China's ivory carving factories and shops by March and ban local sales by the end of 2017.
Hong Kong's blueprint would end local trading by 2021.
Those moves are raising pressure on European countries to do the same.
Researchers say Hong Kong is the world's biggest retail ivory market.
It's also a hub for illicit trading of all sorts of endangered wildlife.
Customs officers make regular busts of illegal shipments of ivory, rhino horns and pangolin scales destined for the Chinese mainland.
The crackdown on ivory is driven by concern over mass slaughter of Africa's elephants to meet demand from China, the world's biggest ivory consumer.
According to one recent study, the continent's savannah elephant population fell 30 percent from 2007 to 2014, to 352,000.
Chinese traditionally have prized ivory carved into bracelets, chopsticks and figurines.
Rising demand from the country's growing middle class has driven up prices, earning it the nickname white gold.
A one-off auction of African ivory to Japan and China in 2008 also unintentionally helped fuel demand.
Hong Kong has 72 shops whose licenses to sell ivory were obtained before the 1990 ban, according to a 2015 survey by Save the Elephants.
Most buyers are mainland Chinese, who smuggle it back home, it found.
There are also about 450 legally registered ivory traders in the city, the group found.
Activists suspect some traders use their legal stockpiles to launder illegal ivory.
They worry that the four-year gap between the enforcement of China's ban and Hong Kong's could encourage this.
The problem will be even more serious because as China is squeezing out its domestic trade, Hong Kong is still having an open market, said Cheryl Lo, a wildlife crime officer at the World Wildlife Fund.
Traders in mainland China could be targeting Hong Kong to liquidate their stock or to ship it to other markets such as Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand, which have fewer restrictions, she said.
Hong Kong's traders say five years is not enough time to sell off their inventory.
They want compensation if they have to give up their 75-ton stockpile of legally registered ivory worth billions of dollars.
Officials have indicated that's not an option.
Wong's employer, Daniel Chan, managing director of Lise Carving and Jewellery, says he doesn't know anything about illegal ivory.
Chan's workshop is filled with hundreds of unsold shrink-wrapped ivory carvings of dragons and Buddha figurines.
Department stores stopped selling Chan's ivory on consignment after protests by conservation groups, he complains.
He denies the ivory industry is responsible for elephant deaths in Africa, despite clear evidence that poaching is the main factor.
The ebbing ivory trade mirrors the decline of other crafts that once helped define Hong Kong's identity but have been pushed out by changing tastes, rising rents and new technology.
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Chunxi Road & Qingshiqiao Market - Chengdu - Sichuan - China (3)
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Panjiayuan Market
Studying Chinese? Master Chinese with the Hero method! Download HSK Hero - Learn Chinese - available for iOS and Android. See how it works here!
Dongtai Road Antique Market in Shanghai
Paige Claassen is a professional rock climber from the USA. She traveled with China Highlights to discover Shanghai. Dongtai road antique market reflects old style of the city.For more about Shanghai, please check it out:
Singing in Dongtailu Antique Market in Shanghai
Dongtailu Antique Market was one of our favorite places to bargain for art and cool stuff in Shanghai. We got an antique trunk there that even still had a piece of a dead animal in it. Very authentic and old! They were tearing it down to make way for new office buildings when we left. So sad!
The final days of Dongtai Lu Antique Market | That's Shanghai
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Xian Jiaotong University, Chinese Opera Performance on New Year Party 2019
Episode 120 - More Antiques
June 22. It seems everywhere you go there are antiques to look at. This is part two of my Chengdu antiques shopping trip with Iris.
Here is my travel blog for traveling in China:
My travel pics are at
Both of these are kind of rough and untidy (unsorted) because outside websites are slow in China and I don't have time to sit in front of a computer all day.
Shopping for antiques in Shanghai
Liulichang Antiques Street - Beijing - China (1 last)
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Collecting Insanity
Every country has a past it likes to celebrate and another it would rather forget. In China, where history still falls under the tight control of government-run museums and officially approved textbooks, the omissions appear especially stark. An unusual museum dedicated largely to what is absent in China’s self-presentation is the subject of Joshua Frank’s short film “Collecting Insanity.” Frank tours the Jianchuan Museum Cluster, of Fan Jianchuan, an ex-official and real estate magnate, in the town of Anren, near Chengdu. The group of exhibits, named after Fan himself, display their owner’s collection of millions of historical artifacts, gathered over a lifetime of obsessive accumulation. Fan’s museum displays objects from various historical events, including the officially memorialized Sino-Japanese War and the far more taboo fallout of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.
But Frank, and Fan himself, place special emphasis on galleries devoted to the “Red Era” and, in particular, the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), a period when the collection and proper enshrinement of Maoist paraphernalia became a necessity for political respectability and thereby survival, when, in essence, anyone who hoped to remain free of persecution was forced to become a collector. Fan, himself, got his start during those days, gathering up leaflets and posters denouncing his father as a “capitalist roader.”
His museums recall the era through a deliberately grotesque (and well-financed) reenactment of its frenzied accumulation and display, piling up Little Red Books, porcelain busts of Mao, and household items emblazoned with exhortations to “serve the people.”
Much goes unsaid at Fan’s museum, and that is by design, as well. But it is unique in China, if not in the world, as a testament to one man’s will to spend his wealth and influence probing the boundaries of what can permissibly be remembered, and perhaps inspiring others to do the same.
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Zhuge Liang
Zhuge Liang (181–234), courtesy name Kongming, was a chancellor of the state of Shu Han during the Three Kingdoms period. He is recognised as the greatest and most accomplished strategist of his era, and has been compared to another great ancient Chinese strategist, Sun Tzu.
Often depicted wearing a robe and holding a hand fan made of crane feathers, Zhuge Liang was not only an important military strategist and statesman; he was also an accomplished scholar and inventor. His reputation as an intelligent and learned scholar grew even while he was living in relative seclusion, earning him the nickname Wolong (literally: Sleeping Dragon).
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