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This rare 15th-century Meiyintang "chicken cup," still holds the world auction record for Chinese porcelain. It sold for more than $36 million (HK$281,240,000) at a Sotheby's Hong Kong auction in 2014.
AARON TAM/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
"For anyone who is not in the field of Chinese ceramics it's a little bit of a downer when you see it," says Nicolas Chow, chairman of Chinese works of art at Sotheby's Asia.

The cup gets its name from the delicate chickens painted in bright enamels on the cup's side. "But this is about the most sought after piece in the history of Chinese porcelain."
DALE de la REY/AFP/Getty Images
"The theme of the chicken, this is a cock and hen looking after their little chicks, and so that's a kind of Confucian parable of the emperor looking after his subjects," Chow explains. "But they are very small, very tactile and the glaze on these little cups is incredibly silky...very few survived from the period."
Image: Courtesy Sotheby's New York
This vase spent several decades unprotected in the home of the former US ambassador to Israel and former publisher of the International Herald Tribune, Ogden Reid, who inherited the vase from his mother, according to Chow. Reid sold the vase at a Sotheby's Hong Kong auction in 2002 for $5.34 million (HK$41,500,000), an auction record for Qing Porcelain at that time.
Image: Courtesy Sotheby's London
This Ming dynasty jar was purchased by an anonymous buyer from a British antique shop in the 1980s for just $145. He later sold it at a Sotheby's London auction in 2001 for more than $900,000 (GBP 751,500).
Sotheby's New York
This rare Chinese "Ding" bowl was bought for about $3 from a New York state yard sale in the US in 2007 and subsequently sold for $2.2 million at a Sotheby's auction in New York in 2013. "At the time, the purchaser had no idea that they had happened upon a 1,000-year-old treasure," Cecilia Leung of Sotheby's told CNN of the find.
Image: Courtesy Sotheby's New York
This piece was used as a doorstop in a family's Long Island, New York, home in the US for decades and only came to light when the owners saw a similar piece in a Sotheby's advertisement. It subsequently sold for US$1,314,500 at a Sotheby's New York auction in 2012.
Sotheby's
"One of my absolute favorite pieces is the Southern Song dynasty (12th-14th century) Guanyao vase. It belonged to the late Japanese dealer and collector Goro Sakamoto and it is something that none of us knew he owned until he asked me to go and sit in his tea ceremony room on my own," Chow says. "It was an aesthetic revelation." The vase sold at a Sotheby's 2008 auction for more than $8.6 million (HK$67,527,500).
MIKE CLARKE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Pola Antebi, head of Chinese ceramics and works of art at Christie's Hong Kong, holds up a pair of famille-rose "peach" bowls. The small bowls, dated between 1723-1735, sold for more than $6.5 million (HK$50,720,000) at a Christie's 2007 auction.
BEN STANSALL/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
This rare polychrome-enameled moonflask sold for more than $1.2 million (GBP1,049,250) at a 2012 Sotheby's auction in London.
Image: Courtesy BEN STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images
An employee poses with a Yuan dynasty blue and white "Dragon and Phoenix" jar expected to realize 400,000-600,000 GBP ($637,600-$956,400USD) at auction as part of the forthcoming Sotheby's Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art auction in London on November 2, 2012.
AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
An employee poses with a Yuan dynasty blue and white "Dragon and Phoenix" jar expected to realize 400,000-600,000 GBP ($637,600-$956,400USD) at auction as part of the forthcoming Sotheby's Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art auction in London on November 2, 2012.
AARON TAM/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
This rare Chinese porcelain Ru guanyao brush washer dish from the Northern Song Dynasty (960 to 1127) sold for $26.7 million (HK$207,860,000) at a Sotheby's 2012 auction in Hong Kong, a record price for Song ceramics.
MIKE CLARKE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Chinese ceramics collector Alice Cheng holds an 18th century Chinese famille-rose "swallows bowl" she purchased at a Christie's auction in Hong Kong in 2006. The tiny bowl sold for $19.4 million (HK$151.3 million), breaking the record at that time for a piece of Chinese ceramic art at auction.
AARON TAM/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
This blue-and-white Ming dynasty "Bird" Charger dish was expected to fetch between $6.4 million to $10.3 million in a Sotheby's 2012 Hong Kong auction but failed to find a buyer.
Hong Kong CNN  — 

Stories of “undiscovered” Chinese ceramics that sell for spectacular prices at auction inspire some to hunt through their attics for potential hidden treasure. Occasional finds such as a Chinese “Ding” bowl that was purchased for $3 at a yard sale and subsequently sold at a 2013 New York auction for $2.2 million help keep local flea markets busy.

But discoveries like these are the exception rather than the rule, according to Nicolas Chow, chairman of Chinese works of art at Sotheby’s Asia. He says that while a rapid two-decade rise in prices for fine Chinese porcelain has uncovered a few rare treasures, it has mostly encouraged a large number of sophisticated fakes.

As Chow notes, after a small but very rare Chinese “chicken cup” set an auction record after it sold for $36 million at Sotheby’s auction in 2014, the vessels became “the most faked Chinese porcelain objects in China.”

CNN spoke with Chow to find out what makes Chinese ceramics so special, what to look for when appraising a piece and how to avoid getting duped.

CNN: What key factors have driven the growth in prices for fine Chinese ceramics over the past decade?

Nicolas Chow: The market for Chinese ceramics and works of art has really been rising over the last century, but what we’ve seen since the dramatic rise of the Chinese economy, particularly since the late 1990’s, is a staggering rise in prices in this field.

You have all this new wealth in China and very high net worth individuals who are extremely hungry to reclaim their past.

CNN: Why are ceramics so important in Chinese history?

NC: Ceramics has always had an important place in China and although you’ve got traditions elsewhere – in the Middle East, in Europe – the history in China goes back thousands of years. The Chinese refined the technology over time and their advances are unmatched anywhere else in the world.

The appreciation and a tradition of collecting Chinese ceramics also goes back a long way; beginning from the Tang dynasty (8th century) and the Song dynasty (9th to 13th centuries), many scholars and poets wrote about and compared the virtues of various wares. This is connected to the tradition of tea-drinking.

CNN: What makes one piece of Chinese porcelain more valuable than another?

NC: There are a few fundamental tenants when you look at an object. These are rarity, quality, beauty, condition and provenance. You could also add historical value.

MIKE CLARKE/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
This 18th century Chinese famille rose "swallows bowl" sold for $19.5 million (HK$151.3 million) in 2006, breaking the auction record at that time

CNN: What advice would you give someone who is thinking about becoming a collector of fine Chinese ceramics?

NC: Firstly start on the right track. Develop your interest through museum visits, and then come to auction previews. Not necessarily to buy the first time but they are an open space, a transparent platform. You can look, touch, you can get a feel for what these objects should look and feel like without having to buy anything.

And I would say give yourself at least one or two seasons to get familiar and really find what it is you are particularly interested in, because Chinese ceramics is a vast subject. Then do price research to get a sense of where the market sits.

CNN: You mentioned that rising prices have resulted in an increasing number of sophisticated fakes in the collecting market. Have you met many people who have a collection they believe is real but has turned out to be fake?

NC: This is the story of my life basically (laughs). My real fear for anyone starting to collect is getting on the wrong track, because once you’re there it’s hard to extract yourself and I meet people who have spent a lifetime buying fakes.

It can sound quite scary for anyone wanting to buy Chinese porcelain but the truth is, there wouldn’t be so much money in our field if there was not such great consensus between auction house specialists, art dealers and museum curators as to what is genuine and what is fake. That’s why I recommend starting in a transparent environment.

The fake industry is sophisticated, but rarely do these two paths cross.

CNN: How have the ‘fakers’ gotten so sophisticated?

NC: Before the imperial kiln site in Jingdezhen had been excavated in the mid 1990s, fakers couldn’t work with the real thing and so they couldn’t feel or tell how it felt. But since the kilns have been properly excavated, there are so many shards there, the fakers can get a hold of this material and get a sense of how an eighteenth century or fifteenth century body should feel.

So since then there’s been a huge leap in faking the clay and the body of these porcelains.

CNN: How can someone starting out as a collector avoid getting duped by fake ceramics?

NC: With fakes, when it seems too good to be true, it is too good to be true, especially for someone who is collecting part time.

CNN: How can you assess whether a piece of porcelain is real or fake?

NC: It’s complex, but it’s like when you see your mother. What makes her is the voice, the demeanor, the physical appearance, the smell, it’s all these elements together, so it’s the same with an object.

What makes a fine piece of Chinese porcelain is the weight, the tactile feel of the glaze and the body on the base, how the mark is inscribed on the base. It’s how the design is painted, the enamel used for that design, how does it shine, and how do the colors appear.

AARON TAM/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
A blue and white 'Bird On A Lychee Branch Charger,' held by the deputy chairman for Sotheby's Asia, Nicolas Chow prior to auction

One other thing, when you make a decision, you must have had a good night’s sleep because when you are tired you look at things very differently.

About 17 years ago when I was just starting out I went on a valuation and went to a very clever dealer who served us bit of wine and it was late at night, there was just a little lamp there. He showed us (some pieces) and I thought I’d discovered a treasure trove.

He brought them into the office the next morning and it was an absolute disaster! You need to be wide awake and alert.