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Jingdezhen Procelain in West Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | Collectibles shop



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Jingdezhen Procelain

Locality: West Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Phone: +61 3 9326 3238



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25.01.2022 High temperature small to medium decorative vases from Jingdezhen, China.



24.01.2022 Some pictures of new stock from Jingdezhen now available from Unique Corporation

23.01.2022 Jingdezhen dinner sets and tea sets, are high temperature porcelain products. The dinners sets are light and strong and made fine bone china.

22.01.2022 NEW STOCK has arrived. The CONTAINER has been unloaded now its time for unpacking and organising the DISPLAYS (Unique Corporation (Aust.) Pty. Ltd.



21.01.2022 Images of the Shop in West Melbourne and its range of Jingdezhen products and other artistic works from imported directly from China. All stock has been personally selected by the Directors of Unique Corporation (Aust.) Pty. Ltd.

18.01.2022 New Stock from Jingdezhen, China

18.01.2022 OUR NEW MAIN STORE Our newly opened store at 27-31 Peel Street, West Melbourne, across from Queen Victoria Market, just before Christmas 2009



17.01.2022 This collection of images provides examples of the beautiful reproductions created by the master potters of Jingdezhen. They illustrate the wide ramge of traditional styles covering many centuries of imperial porcelain making. Many of these reproduction are copies of original peices which can be worth tens of millions of dollars and are now held under tight security in major international museums or Beijing Castle. The expertise of the JIndgezhen master potters is well known world wide and many of these high-end reproductions require significant expertise to distinquish them from the orgiinals.

14.01.2022 UNIQUE Corporation (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. Australian owned Importers of genuine Jingdezhen porcelain. Located on Peel Street, behind Queen Victoria Market and in close proximity to tram stop 9, on route 55. Car parking is available in front of the store or at the Market.

13.01.2022 NEW RECORD for Ming Dynasty porcelain cup. HONG KONG - A cup from the Ming Dynasty more than 500 years old are sold reached US $ 36 million ( RM116.5 million ) at an auction. The sale broke the world record price of Chinese pottery. Sotheby ‘s firm handling the auction is told, the artifact was bought by tycoon Shanghai , Liu Yiqian .... Cup with a diameter of eight inches was named cup of chicken because it had a picture of a rooster , a hen and some chicks . Beverage containers that are produced during the reign of Emperor Chenghua of the Ming Dynasty that ruled China from 1465 to 1487. Records of porcelain China before this era belongs to a vase Qianlong Emperor sold for US $ 32.4 million ( RM104.9 million ) in 2010. AP

12.01.2022 LANTERN FESTIVAL DAY 1 Unique Corporation stall of porcelain tea sets, cups, figurines, umbellas and lanterns

12.01.2022 Stock held at Unique Corporation's shop in West Mebbourne as of 12 October 2013.



07.01.2022 During the Moon Cake Festival at QVM check out Unique Corporation's store in Peel Street adjacent to the Market for beautiful examples of hand-made Jingdezhen porcelain (the most famous porcelain in China).

05.01.2022 Unique Corporation specialises dealing with JIngdezhen porcelain but we also stock other unusual pieces from other regions in China. For example carved exotic timber furnture and screens. The timbers are rare and expotic. Other piece include hand sown silk screens, finely detailed hand carved stone and jade by master artists.

03.01.2022 CHINESE VASE FETCHES RECORD $69 MILLION in UK AUCTION (Reuters) - A Chinese vase discovered during a routine house clearance in a London suburb sold for 43 million pounds ($69 million) Thursday, 40 times its estimate and an auction record for any work of art from Asia, the auctioneer that sold it said. "It's a world record for a piece of Asian art," Helen Porter of West London auction house Bainbridges told Reuters.... "It's part of the end of Asian Art week, so there were a lot (of buyers) over for that and the room was absolutely full of Chinese people bidding against each other," she added. The hammer price did not include 20 percent in fees and taxes. "It (the bidding) went on for half an hour. We don't know exactly who the buyer is. I believe they're buying on behalf of someone, but I believe they're Chinese," she added. The sale highlights the intense and growing competition among wealthy Chinese buyers for rare pieces of their heritage, and anything associated with imperial China appears to be particularly attractive. According to the auctioneer, the vase dates from the 1740s from the Qianlong period, would have resided "no doubt" in the Chinese Royal Palace and was fired in the imperial kilns. The auctioneer said it was a mystery how the 16-inch high piece ended up in London. Its provenance was described simply as belonging to an English family collection, probably acquired during the 1930s. "It is a masterpiece," the auction house wrote in its blog before the sale. "If only it could talk!!" Earlier Thursday, a white jade dragon seal which belonged to the Chinese Qianlong Emperor (1711-1799), sold for 2.7 million pounds at auction house Bonhams. The four centimeter-square seal, which was expected to fetch 1.5-2.0 million pounds, was bought by an unidentified Chinese buyer from Beijing. In October, auction house Sotheby's sold a Chinese Qing dynasty vase for $32.4 million and their Asian auction series of art, jewelry, wine and watches in Hong Kong raised $400 million. (Reporting by Mohammed Abbas and Mike Collett-White; Editing by Peter Graff) 13 Nov 2010

02.01.2022 One of Peng Xiangsheng pieces framed.

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