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Manufacturer
& exporter of antique & reproduction Ming & Qing furniture
& handicrafts from Beijng, Muebles chinos antiguos, chinesische
Möbel der Antike und der Wiedergabe von Beijing, Vente de
meubles chinois antiques de Chine
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Interesting Articles
Fortune
or Folly? How to determine authentic Chinese furniture.
http://www.artandantiques.net/Articles/Insider-Advice/Fortune-or-Folly.asp
by Bobbie Leigh at http://www.artandantiques.net
02/02/2004
Purchasing
authentic Chinese furniture is like driving at night
without your lights on—proceed with extreme
caution. Rookie collectors can easily be fooled since
fakes abound. Before 1980, most of the Chinese furniture
available was not made to deceive. Copies and fakes
were often assembled from various aprons, legs and
seat rails, among other pieces. Although they may
have been old, they didn’t originally belong
together. Incorporating old pieces into “new”
furniture gradually gave way to reproductions—fakes
whose goal was to pass as the real thing. To meet
the growing demand for Chinese furniture, talented
fabricators have been recently turning out fakes with
the form, joinery and even patina of top-quality pieces,
says Chinese furniture authority Lark E. Mason Jr.
With the exception of a handful of dealers and auction
houses, Ming dynasty (1368–1644) furniture,
made from tropical Asian hardwoods and characterized
by elegant simplicity and restraint, is quite rare.
Most galleries tend to have furniture from the middle
to late Qing dynasty (1644–1911). Authentic
pieces from the 18th and 19th centuries are often
country or vernacular furniture from Chinese towns
and villages. This regional furniture, as opposed
to fine classical pieces, tends to be made from softer
woods with freer, less controlled forms. However,
prospective buyers of these later, more readily available
pieces still must be skeptical. Clever fakes can be
compared to a wonderful ersatz vintage watch that
strikes the hour correctly, yet the minute hand is
rarely accurate. Here are some general guidelines
on how to select authentic Chinese furniture:
Woods
Fine
or classic Chinese furniture was made principally
from such dense, oily hardwoods as huanghuali and
zitan, which are extremely resistant to water and
insect damage. Conversely, most of the pieces available
today are made from so-called softwoods. Determining
wood type is complex, but you should at least check
that the wood in the furniture you are considering
is consistent to guard against reassembled parts,
suggests Nancy Berliner, curator of Chinese art at
the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts.
Seattle dealer John B. Fairman notes that many of
today’s fakes are made from pine, “a real
junkwood,” which will leak sap when rooms are
heated. He emphasizes that you should check where
the wood is worn and look for places that show constant
use. If a piece shows wear over its entire surface,
that could be a sign that it’s new. Someone
who is trying to age a piece rarely thinks of habitual
use and tends to age across the whole surface. For
example, Fairman has an early 20th-century bench,
priced around $6,000, that is worn on the right side
of the seat. “That’s a sign of habitual
use,” he says.
Lacquer
“Lacquer
furniture offers a wonderful opportunity for a collector,”
says Mason, who notes that many authentic pieces have
a thick burgundy, almost translucent lacquer finish.
“Black or red opaque are the types most often
faked,” he adds, cautioning collectors to watch
out for a heavy layer of lacquer that may hide new
construction. “Someone trying to produce a fake
will typically shortcut the lacquering process,”
Mason notes. “Authentic pieces have several
layers, clay mixed with grasses, covered with lacquer.
The imitators won’t make it as thick, particularly
for vernacular pieces they don’t value as highly,”
he says.
“Climate
changes are pretty harsh on lacquer, so older lacquer
will have more crackles,” Berliner adds. However,
keep in mind that a forger may use something as simple
as a hairdryer to induce crackling. A general caveat
is that if you see a bright-red lacquered rectangular
country table or wedding cabinet, it was probably
manufactured recently in southern China.
Nancy
Murphy of WaterMoon Gallery in New York City has a
black-lacquer, three-shelf display case priced at
about $20,000. “I saw it in pieces on the floor
of a reputable dealer’s shop in Beijing,”
she says, adding that she could determine its age
(probably early Qing) by examining the wood and the
joinery that had been exposed when the piece was taken
apart. Although the item was not in perfect condition,
Murphy bought the display case because it wasn’t
“buffed-up” and over-restored. “It’s
open, airy and has all the qualities and proportions
you would normally associate with classical Chinese
furniture,” she says.
Joinery
“If
you see a metal nail or signs of glue, you may have
a problem,” Berliner says, as even vernacular
pieces are rarely glued. Chinese furniture uses a
complex system of joinery where pieces fit together
like a jigsaw puzzle. “Look for tight joinery,
although some joints may have loosened over the years,
and someone may have slipped in a wedge to tighten
the fit,” she says. Many examples of classic
Chinese furniture were constructed so that they could
be easily dismantled, packed up and moved. An experienced
consultant might ask a dealer to take furniture apart
to make sure that the joints have not been made from
fresh or new wood. On older pieces, you might even
see a few Chinese characters, as furniture parts were
often marked for easy reassembling. “Dismantling
is one way to discover if a piece is fake or reworked,”
Berliner notes.
Form
Fakes
are often unusual styles or shapes that have no place
in the annals of Chinese furniture. Hong Kong dealer
Andy Ng recalls seeing an “antique” low
table that was, in fact, a “great invention”:
A dealer had turned a small
luohan (bed) upside down, changed the top, joined
the legs with a stretcher, added a horizontal crosspiece
and sold it as a table.
To
verify authenticity in classic furniture, you need
a connoisseur’s eye and experience—or
at least a consultant like Mason or London-based Nicholas
Grindley. In his London gallery, Grindley has a pair
of 17th-century horseshoe armchairs, priced at about
$75,000. Only an expert such as himself could verify
that the chairs exhibit all of the proper, classic
forms of horseshoe-back construction—rear and
front posts that pass through the seat frame to form
legs, for example. So don’t be persuaded by
appearances. “A great deal of furniture has
been altered to suit Western taste,” he warns.
Wu
Tung, curator at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston once
commissioned a Hong Kong carpenter to create a Ming
chair copy so that visitors could sit in both a fake
and an original. “You can often tell the difference,”
he says. “The copies feel different because
of the texture and surface of the wood, the proportions
and form. Someone might spend large sums of money
to create a fake and copy every detail, but a true
connoisseur will still be able to tell the difference.”
In
terms of tables, you have to be most careful about
rectangular forms, which are in high demand and thus
in ample supply as reproductions. Mason suggests that
if you find a square table—a much less desirable
form from a market standpoint—you have a better
chance that it’s at least partially authentic.
If the size of a table or cabinet seems just right
for a modern living space, it most likely was reduced
in size, according to Mason, since “long tables
and tall cabinets were common in China’s lofty
halls.”
Patina
“One
of the great signs of fakes coming out of China is
the ridiculous patination,” says Murphy, referring
to highly polished new wood that has a glossy sheen
but no natural luster. Depth of color makes the difference,
notes New York City dealer Marcus Flacks. “When
you look at an old wood like huanghuali, the surface
patina is continually changing, whereas new wood,
stripped and stained, is basically flat,” he
says. “If the patina is too uniform, it is probably
new.” To evaluate patina, look for strongly
figured grain often colored by alternating streaks
of light and dark. Flacks often seeks out burlwood
furniture because it has an organic, undulating surface
with many knots and an “unbelievable depth of
color.” A 17th-century huanghuali and burlwood
incense stand at his gallery is currently priced at
about $75,000.
Essentials
There’s
no substitute for educating your eye, which means
reading about classic
as well as country Chinese furniture, visiting museum
exhibitions and above all, developing a relationship
with a reliable dealer or adviser. Buy the best you
can afford and keep in mind that grime, wear and tear
are evidence of the furniture’s valuable history.
In the battle between restoration and “found”
condition, most experts emphasize that signs of use
trump zealous refinishing every time.
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How
To Tell Genuine Antique Chinese Furniture From Reproductions
Reprinted from :http://channels.crienglish.com/information/content.aspx?id=1631
Furniture
of a classical Chinese style, whether a genuine antique
or a reproduction, can give great pleasure to its
owner, reflecting worldly tastes and reminding of
world travels. However, with so many reproductions
on the market, it's difficult to tell the real from
the reproduced, and hence easy to get swindled. Therefore,
here are a few things you can do to make sure you're
getting the real McCoy, if that's what you're after.
Examine
The Unfinished Areas:
Most Chinese wood furniture is coated with a finish.
However, there are usually unfinished areas, such
as drawer insides and furniture undersides. Examine
these areas. As wood oxidizes when exposed to air,
these unfinished areas should be darker in colour
than the finished areas. The darker the unfinished
wood (relative to the finished wood), the older the
piece is.
If you find a piece where the unfinished areas are
even lighter in colour than the finished areas, it
should be a red flag that the piece is new. The wood
has only recently been exposed to air, and the finished
areas are darker only because they have absorbed some
of the finish.
Check
Condition of Nicks:
Most
wood furniture will have a few nicks from being moved
and used. Remember, old furniture should have old
nicks. On truly old furniture, you should be able
to find a few old nicks that after years of oxidation
and friction look dark and smooth.
Examine
Craftsmanship:
A
very complicated design may point to a genuine antique,
as reproduction factories usually do not invest the
time and effort into creating complicated pieces.
And as with unintentional nicks, any carved work should
be smooth from years of use.
A "flex" slot at each joint may also point
to a genuine antique. The more painstakingly built
furniture of the past often has these slots to allow
for the expansion and contraction of the wood.
Any
traces of glue will be a red flag that a piece is a
reproduction. Antique Chinese furniture won't use glue
in the construction. Check for any traces, especially
at the joints. |
Spotting
Fake Chinese Bronzes
http://www.artandantiques.net/Articles/AA-News/2002/February/Spotting-Fake-Chinese-Bronzes.asp
by Amy Page 02/01/2002 at www.artandantiques.net
LONDON
— Fakes are an ever-increasing problem for collectors
of ancient Chinese bronzes. According to Anna Bennett,
head of the Center for the Scientific Investigation
of Works of Art at London University, forgers have
become very sophisticated in producing credible bronze
copies made in the Shang, Warring States, Han and
T’ang periods.
One way to determine a bronze’s authenticity
is to look at the metal’s oxidation, which occurs
over a long period of time and is not easy to simulate
artificially. “Until a few years ago metal analysis
was pretty clear-cut because a piece either had corrosion
or it didn’t,” Bennett explains. “But,
in the last three years in China, they have been using
a low electrical current to simulate corrosion not
associated with a chemical attack. So we were all
fooled for a while.” Bennett says she was “fairly
quick” to catch on and has since alerted experts
at major institutions, including Tom Chase, a fellow
of Washington, D.C.’s Smithsonian Institution,
Peter Meyers at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
and Dick Stone at New York City’s Metropolitan
Museum of Art. “We now see a sort of fingerprint
on this corrosion and, when you know what to look
for, you can pinpoint it.”
Although
museums have been warned, the discovery has not been
widely publicized because they do not want forgers
to abandon this technique for a more sophisticated
one. “It is to our advantage at the moment,”
Bennett says.
Just
how widespread are fake bronzes? Bennett says the
pieces she sees have been edited by the time she examines
them, but approximately 50 percent are fake. Therefore,
she estimates, roughly 90 percent of the bronzes on
the market are not what they are cracked up to be.
For more information, e-mail Bennett at atnbennett@yahoo.com.
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New
Chinese 'Antiques' Draw Plenty of Interest
Reprinted from :http://homes.wsj.com/housegarden/artantiques/20021104-mazurkewich.html
By KAREN MAZURKEWICH
Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
ZHONGSHAN,
CHINA (Nov. 4, 2002) -- Standing amid piles of dirt-encrusted
Chinese furniture outside their shop, Li Chan and
Li Pang are debating just how honest they should be
about the age of some ancient-looking wooden doors.
The
paint on the 6-foot doors is peeling and the iron
fixtures are corroded, but they have the aged finish
that many antique hunters’ love. They were salvaged
from old buildings in Northern China, says Li Chan.
And the price is good, only $194.
Her
partner Li Pang interrupts. "Don't tell them
they are antiques," he says. "Say they are
20 or 30 years old."
Ms.
Li demurs. "No, tell them they're older."
But
Mr. Li's conscience is pricking him. The doors aren't
antique at all, he admits. He explains that he scavenges
old pine lumber from around China, fashions the wood
into doors outside his shop and leaves them out to
weather the timber and metalwork. Then comes a layer
of paint, and "before the paint is dry we add
mud," he says. "When we remove the mud,
the paint peels." The goal is to make the product
look, at the very least, 100 years old. Sometimes,
the finished products look like they were built to
hold back Mongol invaders.
Throughout
southern China, thousands of factories and countless
individuals are churning out brand-new furniture and
accessories that will be passed off as antiques and
later turn up with exorbitant price tags in antique
shops from New York to Hong Kong. The fakery is fueled
by the booming international market for antique Chinese
furniture, and by the fact that China is running out
of genuinely old pieces.
The
Gu He complex here in Zhongshan, which houses the
Lis' shop, is the nation's largest. Stalls and workshops
sprawl from either side of a dusty road, a jumble
of furniture and baubles spilling out into the fields:
red lacquer wedding cabinets, carved courtyard screens,
rectangular stools, Tang Dynasty terra-cotta horses
and Tibetan chests.
A
display in the Gu He market in Zhongshan, China. The
provenance of these products isn't known, but Gu He
craftsmen produce a substantial amount of fake antiques.
Some
of the offerings are the real thing, some are reproductions
billed as such, but most are fakes with fabricated
histories. Here, an undiscerning shopper scooping
up a narrow altar table labelled "late Qing Dynasty
elm wood," would be shocked to learn how hard
craftsmen have laboured to make it look old.
The
southern province of Guangdong is the heartland of
this growing industry. The area has a long history
as an authentic antiques centre, but "10 years
ago, many people came from the north and set up temporary
shacks on this vacant land to sell furniture,"
says Jin Xiang Yu, the entrepreneur behind Gu He.
He bought the land in 1998 and started charging rent
to the stallholders. Other immigrants moved in. "Then
naturally, the place became a furniture market,"
Mr. Jin says.
Last
year, Guangdong exported $2 billion of wooden furniture,
half of it going to the U.S. Data on how much of that
is marketed as antique aren't available, but dealers
can charge far more for items that are believed to
be old.
Heeding
the call of this massive market, Chinese craftsmen
are working harder and harder to fashion cheap new
furniture into expensive antique items.
"It
takes a long time to learn the tricks," says
Deng Gao Fa, as he smooths clay on a table. His upstairs
workshop is crammed with plastic buckets filled with
dark chemicals and bags of silk yarn used to rub solvents
into a stack of new wooden tables. Mr. Deng says the
chemicals make the new wood more stable and less likely
to crack, but he admits that the ingredients also
serve to make the new tables look old enough that
a dealer can present them as antiques. "We can
even make it look older depending on what the clients
want," says Mr. Deng, before family members working
alongside him tell him to hush up.
All
that hard work makes it difficult even for professionals
to spot the fakes. "In the beginning ... they
didn't have the chemicals and knowledge to make good
fakes," says New York dealer William Lipton,
who has been dealing in Chinese antique furniture
since the late 1970s. "Now they have more savvy.
When I go to China the fakes are so good, I tell them
that I'm going back to my warehouse and I'm going
to dissemble the piece -- if it's not right I'm going
to bring it back. It's the only way I can tell."
Taipei
dealer John Ang, who conducts seminars twice a year
on Chinese furniture, attributes' the mainland craftsmen's
expertise to the hundreds of pieces that go through
their workshops every year. "They know exactly
how to reproduce the joints and age the patina,"
he says.
Still,
to the practiced eye, there are good fakes and bad
fakes. Strolling through Gu He, Hong Kong antiques
dealer Oi Ling Chiang picks out dozens of items that
have been manufactured to look old. She determines
immediately that doors from the Lis' shop are fake.
Bending down to examine the smooth timber at the bottom
of the doors, she sees the circular imprint of an
electric saw. If the door were original, there would
be wear and tear evident, and no signs of modern tools.
Ms.
Chiang has visited many large antique and reproduction
factories in Guangdong, but this market upsets her.
Much of it is junk, she says. "I hate this market
-- it comes across that Chinese things are trashy,
cheap rubbish."
At
the Wan Feng Antiques shop, Ms. Chiang studies a Tibetan
drum, which might once have been used by monks during
religious ceremonies. The wood and leather instrument
has a painted red and green dragon around its circumference.
Sales assistant Cheng Yu Ping tries to convince Ms.
Chiang that it's old. But Ms. Chiang isn't fooled.
The painting is too colourful and the strong smell
of shellac suggests that it was recently applied.
To
demonstrate her honesty, Ms. Cheng points to floral-patterned
Tibetan cabinets in another corner and declares that
they are new.
"That's
what kills me, because she says some are old and some
are new, so you believe her," says Ms. Chiang.
The
director of the Zhongshan Furniture Trade Association,
a Mr. Deng (he wouldn't reveal his first name), isn't
bothered by the deceptions. He believes the onus is
on the buyer.
"The
stores in the [Gu He] market in general sell genuine
antique furniture," he says. "But it's up
to the customers to bring along an expert to help
them verify the antiquity of the piece. For tourists,
they should not expect the furniture to be 100% guaranteed."
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Test
sorts fakes from priceless porcelains
26 September 2005
From New Scientist Print Edition.
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18725185.600
http://www.newscientist.com
Test
sorts fakes from priceless porcelains
26 September 2005
From New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and
get 4 free issues.
The days of antiques collectors being fooled by
fake Chinese vases may be numbered.
Researchers
at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia,
can now pinpoint the geographical region, sometimes
even the precise kiln, that a porcelain artefact
came from by analysing its geochemical profile and
comparing it against a database of authentic porcelains.
"When
it comes to forgeries, we can identify them easily,"
says Jian-xin Zhao, who is leading the work.
His
team has collected broken fragments of authentic
antique porcelain from across China and drilled
out tiny samples from museum pieces in order to
analyse them and create the database.
Tang
dynasty
These include porcelain from kilns in operation
during the famous porcelain production period of
the Tang dynasty, from AD 618 to 907, and also from
the Ming dynasty, from AD 1368 to 1644 (Journal
of Archaeological Science, DOI: 10.1016/j.jasa.2005.06.007).
To
analyse a sample, the concentration of 40 elements
in the clay is mapped and the ratio of different
isotopes of a number of these elements is measured,
including strontium and lead. The result is a distinctive
profile that is impossible to copy, says Zhao.
A
Yuan dynasty jar sold in London for £15.68
million in July. "With such huge profits, people
find all sorts of ways to make fakes," says
Zhao.
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