Friday, May 25, 2007

Lord of the fleas


Can I tell you...about the Panjiyuan flea market. This world famous "yard sale" is a weekend tradition in Beijing. As early the Ming dynasty, wealthy families who had fallen into debt would go here during the wee hours of the morning under the cover of the dark to sell their valuables in the market only to escape once broad daylight hit for fear of being recognized in public for doing something so disgraceful. Today there is nothing to be ashamed of. Vendors come from nearby villages every weekend to sell their family "heirlooms". Some are real, most are not.

I'm a total flea market junkie so naturally this was on my itinerary, equally as important as seeing the Forbidden City. I was warned to really haggle here. Cut prices by less than half of the asking price! Insult the vendors if you had to. I came armed with my friends Foster and Winnie from Hong Kong, both fluent in Mandarin. I don't know what I would have done without them. We bargained and played the game. We'd quote a price, frown when the seller wouldn't budge, walk away only to be chased down and then settle on the price we wanted to pay in the first place. All this got tiring after a while but when you're getting everything you want for not much, it's a bit of a rush.
I came specifically looking for "lotus shoes". I had bought some a few years ago in Shanghai and wanted some more to add to my collection. Lotus shoes were made for women with bound feet which up until maybe the early 30s was still being done to young girls all across China. They're essentially exquisite torture devices. Don't get me wrong, I hate what they represent but they are intriguing little objets d'art. They're also not that easy to find and only a few vendors had them. They're not what tourists typically look for at these markets so I had a bit of an advantage because the vendors just wanted to sell what they had. I also got a pair of "fu" lions or dogs that may or may not be antique but I didn't care. I like them and that's enough reason as far as I'm concerned. Besides, I got them for less than half the asking price.
This market runs the gamut from stalls that sold nothing but coral in all shapes and colors, Communist propaganda postcards and posters, Comrade figurines and of Chairman Mao, vintage perfume ( okay, snuff opium) bottles to jade rocks that are brought in suitcases!

I focused on the vendors in the open air sections without roofed stalls. Someone told me these vendors are most likely to yield more interesting and possibly more authentic pieces because they come just for the weekend and don't have the means to have a regular location under the pavilion or to rent a stall. I got my best bargains from these vendors.
I walked away with a few pairs of 'lotus shoes', a scandalous figurine of a couple in a compromising position and my 'fu' lions.
This flea market was everything I expected it to be and more but for less! Who doesn't love a fabulous bargain.

17 comments:

Ming_the_Merciless said...

I think those perfume bottles you mentioned are actually snuff bottles. A lot of wealthy Chinese in the early 1900s were addicted to opium and its derivatives. They usually store those in the pretty bottles. I could be wrong but I always thought they were snuff bottles.

I LOVE corals since Donatella Versace used them on the dresses many, many, many seasons ago. Actually, I like the stick/branch type corals. Are they the same as the coral beads in your photo??

Rafe Totengco said...

Ming, you're absolutely correct, they are 'snuff bottles'. I was trying to be 'euphemistic' about them. It is what it is and I should just let it be.

Olivier said...

merci pour cette promenade dans ce marché. il y a des choses surprenantes


thank you for this walk in this market. there are surprising things

stilettoheights said...

oh, I was going to say the same thing about the snuff bottles...

I would have gone crazy at that flea market, love the fact that you collect lotus shoes too.

CountryGirl_CityLife said...

I am insanely jealous, that flea market is simply fantastic. The perfume/snuff bottles would make fab-o reconstructed necklaces and I could think of a few starlets in need.

Ming_the_Merciless said...

Errr...where's your photo of the view outside the bedroom? :-)

Snuff bottles, Smolzt bottles, they are all the same.

Oy vey!

thwany said...

great post!

Oh for the love of food! said...

Rafe, I am soooooooooooooo Jealous! Wish I was there. I love collecting Chinese antiques myself, mainly restored furniture pieces from the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). My aunt got her hands on a beautiful teapot for me from an auction some years back and she's got some box-framed lotus shoes waiting for me at her shop for when I see her later this year.
Can't wait to go to China some day. Wonder what 'll do when i need the toilet. I have heard many yucky stories about them in some parts of China. How were the toilets around the flea market?
I really enjoyed reading your post , Rafe. Thanks for sharing!

Angel said...

I am so very proud you are a Filipino ;-)

Carolina Lange said...

Going to that market must have been a fantastic experience! I to visit places like that, I never know what you are going to find!

Alice Olive said...

I love this post! The way you've written it is so descriptive. Those lotus shoes do look like beautiful objects of art - so delicate. Sounds like a wonderful time!

Christine said...

I love the pictures. It would be a nice place to visit one day.

Amina said...

Hi there! dropped by your site. Glad to see that even big shot international designers like you have time to blog away! haha Its Amina Aranaz by the way, my mom, Becky, did some things for you in the past ;)

Jennifer said...

Oh wow that market looks so amazing, I wish I was there!

The Stiletto Effect said...

Great post :)
x0x0
Su

McDreamer said...

900 to 200 RMB?? wow!!!

Candid Cool said...

wow! I don't think I could do the "haggling" game.

Hmm...it sounds like you got some interesting swag from the markets.