Journey into the past at Juqi Antique Market
You have to learn the jargon to make yourself look like a veteran at the Juqi Antique Market on Lingshi Road. If not, you would be seen as a rookie and lose the haggle battle.
鈥淥ne yuan鈥 implies 100 yuan, and 鈥3.5 yuan鈥 is actually 350 yuan. No one knows how and when this jargon became popular at the market, but it is a sort of hidden rule to match wits with the vendors.
As Shanghai鈥檚 biggest and busiest bazaar opened every Friday morning, the Juqi (literally treasure gather) Market covers two floors and sells anything you can and can鈥檛 imagine.
Early birds catch the worms and the earlier you come the better deals you might get. Otherwise, you have to choose among the leftovers.
At 5am every Friday the market is already thronged with all kinds of visitors, some hunting for treasures at low prices, others simply idling away the morning after retirement and some posting the scene on social media.
鈥淪ome are serious customers and some come just for fun. We can spot them in a glance,鈥 said Qin. She and her husband from Henan Province have rented a stall here for six years. They regularly go back to Henan to collect antiques to sell at the market. 鈥淐ustomers in Shanghai have a stronger purchasing power,鈥 she said.
Stalls have their goods spread out on the ground, including porcelain, jadeware, toys, old books, family photos and furniture. Treasure or trash, it all depends on a buyer鈥檚 knowledge and bargaining skills.
Be brave and offer half the price and wait for the vendor鈥檚 reaction. If a flat rejection, you can raise your offer a little to test the water. It鈥檚 a fun, brain-stretching game that combines luck, keen observation and a bit of psychology.
There are frequent quarrels. A price is agreed, but then one party regrets it and refuses to sell or buy. Swear words are hurled back and forth, but verbal abuse seldom becomes physical.
Take care when walking through goods sprawled in a jumble on the ground. Once a careless customer stamped on a vase and had to pay 2,000 yuan in compensation. If the vase was worth that price, only the vendor knew.
Zhou Dexing, 65, has been a regular customer for many years. He comes to kill time in retirement and hunt for some bargains at the same time. His latest was a second-hand saxophone, which he haggled down from 1,900 yuan to 1,000 yuan. 鈥淔or a saxophone beginner, it鈥檚 good enough,鈥 he said. 鈥淧laying the saxophone is an expensive hobby and I have to save my pension for lessons.鈥
Xu Yunshan, 52, is crazy about collecting old-fashioned cassette radios. 鈥淚 was struck the first time when I heard beautiful music flowing out of that little box,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淏ut I was only a teenage boy in a poor family when those radios were imported to China.鈥
Xu鈥檚 dream of owning a cassette radio are finally realized today. From a Sharp 777 to Sanyo 4500, he has a full list of classic models from 1980s. 鈥淭here is no regret for that little boy four decades ago,鈥 he said.
Dong Yining, who loves collecting old cassettes and records, shares the same memories. He was only 15 years old when he heard the songs of Taiwan pop singer Teresa Teng (1953-1995). She sang about romantic love, her sweet hometown and the joys and sorrows of adolescence in a tender voice. 鈥淭hey were so different from the forceful songs of revolutions we had always heard before,鈥 Dong said.
He has been collecting Teng鈥檚 albums, posters and CDs for years, and become fascinated with pop music and rock鈥檔鈥檙oll. 鈥淪he鈥檚 my muse, who enlightened me to pop culture and the music world, and her songs always recall my youth,鈥 he said.
The times progress constantly, embracing new things and leaving the old behind. But there are always people who are nostalgic for the past.
Photographer Wen Zhang, 47, pays regular visits to the market for old family photos and letters, and he has spent a lot on his collection. Most of the photos and letters were thrown away as rubbish during the city鈥檚 relocation projects.
鈥淎 family鈥檚 history was eradicated in the urbanization process. It鈥檚 human nature to abandon the old for the new. It鈥檚 sad,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat I鈥檓 doing is to keep the memory of how we ordinary people lived in the past.鈥
He once bought a complete family album for 500 yuan. It recorded the life of a Shanghai woman named Wang Yue鈥檈. From her girlhood in Nanyang Middle School to years spent in Xinjiang to answer the national call to 鈥渟upport the borders鈥 during the 1960s, from her wedding party to retirement and with her grandchildren. 鈥淪he was nobody special, but she witnessed the whole process of China鈥檚 development. It鈥檚 the past we should keep today for the future,鈥 Wen said.
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