PIGUA
ZHANG
Pigua
Palm
PiGua
can be variously translated as Split-Deflect or Ax-Hitch Boxing. In
the old days this was a form of Kung Fu used when warriors wore armor.
The very famous Ming general Ch'i Chi-Kuang (Qi Jiguang) in his book
New Essays on Martial Arts the act of fighting while armor-clad.
In 1928
when the well known and influential National Wushu Institute was formed
a PiGua master of repute, Ma YingTu, was put in charge of the entire
operation. One of his first acts was to invite Guo Changsheng, another
PiGua practitioner from Hebei, to lecture at the institute. Together
they did one of the first restructurings of Wushu not only streamlining
the style, adding power moves but taking as inspiration the ancient
actions of 24 Movement TongBei Chuan (Through the Back Fist). Much
of the PiGua now popular came from the efforts of these two men and
the revised version they created. However much traditionally structured
PiGua remains. In Gansu province Pi Gua practices some of the following
fists:
PiGuaJia
Blue Dragon
Flying Tiger
DaChiaTau Chuan (Dajiazi)-Big Frame Fist
TaiShu Chuan
In the world famous Tsang (Cang) County, the home
of many great boxers, we have
PiGua Zhang
Blue Dragon
Slow and Fast PiGua
Canon Boxing
PiGua concentrates on movements which are complimentary,
actions that reinforce one another. A good PiGua demostrator exhibits
accuravy, fluency, agility, continuity, speed, power, subtlety and
ingenuity. PiGua players are known for slow stance work but very fast
hand motions. Arm strikes arrive from highly unusual angles often
tracking to a "return" flight to reach their targets. The
Key Words of the style include
Strangling
Tumbling
Splitting
Deflecting
Chopping
Scissoring
Picking
Brushing
Discarding
Stretching
Withdrawing
Probing
Feeling
Flixking
Hammering
Beating
PiGua, also known as Long-Armed Ape Style, is truly
unique in execution. The arms are move with such extreme looseness
that practitioners often seem to have no bones. (In fact, for emphasis,
many performers were their sleeves extra long to heighten the effect.
Because of this PiGua is particularily appropriate to female players
with high flexibility). PiGua is a popular style in China and sometimes
mixed with other forms. The most famous marriage is that of PiGua
and BaJi two styles which really seems to compliment each other. And,
indeed, there are bridge forms such as PiGua/BaJi first which cross
both styles. PiGua, due to its loose arm flapping and extremely sinuous
appearance is often said to resemble the animal actions of the Snake
and the Eagle.
Plum
Publications PiGua
Links:
PiGua is a great style but with few videos or books in English. Here
are some to check out...
PiGua
Structure-Video by Adam Hsu
PiGua
Palms-Video by Adam Hsu
Pi Gua Miao Dao Knife