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Meaning(s) (in English) Daan Chi Sau 单黐手: 單黐手: daan 1 chi 1 sau 2: dān chī shǒu single sticky hands [4] Luk Sau 碌手 (as simp.) luk 1 sau 2: lù shǒu rolling arms Seung Chi Sau 双黐手: 雙黐手: seung 1 chi 1 sau 2: shuāng chī shǒu double sticky hands Chi Geuk 黐脚: 黐腳: chi 1 geuk 3: chī jiǎo sticky feet
Chan has been commissioned by various organisations to produce work for both galleries and public spaces; including Science Gallery Dublin, [9] Film and Video Umbrella, [10] Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art, [11] The Young Foundation, Art on the Underground [12] and Aspex Gallery.
Su Yu-chang (Chinese: 蘇昱彰; pinyin: Sū Yùzhāng; () 24 June 1940 – () 29 April 2019), [1] was a Taiwanese martial artist, scholar and practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine who devoted his life to teaching kung fu, traditional Chinese philosophy and medicine all over the world.
At the core of Rikyū's aesthetic was the tea room smaller than 4.5 tatami mats. Rikyū sought to mold chanoyu into a spiritual path. His radical simplification of the tea-room interior, his reduction of space to the bare minimum needed for "a sitting", was the most practical way of focusing tea practice on the communion of host and guests.
Born during the late Qing Dynasty, So Chan was from Nanhai District, Foshan, Guangdong, or Hunan according to one source, [1] he was skilled in unarmed Chinese martial arts skills, Drunken Eight Immortals Boxing (醉八仙), Shaolin staff (少林棍棒) said to be taught by the Shaolin monk Chan Fook, [2] and also brutal boxing (殘拳).
Come On, Cousin (Traditional Chinese: 老表,你好hea!; literally "Cousin, You Are So Lazy") (Chinese: 老表,你好hea!; Jyutping: Lou5 Biu2, Nei5 Hou2 hea!) is a 2014 Hong Kong modern comedy drama produced by TVB.
Liuhebafa quan (Chinese: 六合八法拳; pinyin: liùhébāfǎ quán; lit. 'Six-Harmonies Eight-Methods Boxing') is an internal Chinese martial art. It has been called "xinyi liuhebafa" (心意六合八法拳) and is also referred to as "water boxing" (水拳; shuǐquán) due to its principles.
Yang Luchan (Chinese: 杨露禅; pinyin: Yáng Lùchán; Wade–Giles: Yang Lu-ch'an), also known as Yang Fukui (1799–1872), was an influential Chinese practitioner and teacher of the internal style tai chi martial art. He is known as the founder of Yang-style tai chi, the most popular and widely practised tai chi style in the world today. [1 ...