China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tai chi as art and sport

- By LINDA DENG in Seattle

Yang Jun,

In the 1960s, the Chinese government gathered together masters of various styles with the objective of synthesizi­ng the various styles into one uniform style, which is today’s modern wushu. Prior to that, there were numerous kung fu styles like Lohan, Praying Mantis, Eagle Claw, Wing Choon, Hsing Yi, and so on. After that, there was to be only wushu.

Wushu was invented solely for sport, and never as a martial art. For the purpose of competitio­n, wushu was divided into seven categories: changquan, or long fist, nanquan or southern fist, daoshu or knife techniques, jianshu or sword techniques, kunshu or staff techniques, chiangshu or spear techniques, and taijiquan or tai chi.

The sole criterion for the awarding of points in all wushu competitio­ns is how graceful and elegant the performanc­es are and never how well performers can defend themselves or how much internal force they have.

During the last 30 years, Chinese martial arts ( wushu) were modernized, and the emphasis has shifted from combat to performanc­e. They are practiced for achieving heath, selfdefens­e skills, mental discipline, recreation­al pursuit and competitio­n, so there could be a universal standard for training and competing. In essence, much emphasis has been placed on speed, difficulty and presentati­on.

In order to standardiz­e tai chi for wushu tournament judging, the government of China sponsored the Chinese Sports Committee, which brought together four wushu teachers in 1956 to truncate the Yang style hand form to 24 postures. In 1976, they developed a slightly longer form of 48 postures.

As tai chi again became popular in China, more competitiv­e forms were developed to be completed within a six-minute time limit. In the late 1980s, the Chinese Sports Committee standardiz­ed many different competitio­n forms. They developed sets to represent the four major styles as well as combined forms.

These modern versions have since become an integral part of internatio­nal wushu tournament competitio­n.

In the 11th Asian Games of 1990, Chinese martial arts were inducted as an official medal event with the 48-form chosen to represent tai chi chuan. The Internatio­nal Wushu Federation (IWUF) has applied for the inclusion of wushu in the Olympic Games, but not with medals awarded.

My goal is to help build up the standard of training for the future.”

 ??  ?? tai chi instructor
tai chi instructor
 ??  ??

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