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Thread: Hong Kong Martial Arts Living Archive

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Lam Sai Wing meets the Hong Kong Martial Arts Living Archive

    Too cool. I would love to see this.
    This is great, Gene you guys should do a trial run of like 5 Animals Shaolin and legends of Kung Fu masters series dolls lol...I mean with this 3d Blender software imaging any Hung Ga fan could sends the blueprints to a local toy maker online and have a figurine like GI Joe or Star Wars probably for a few hundred bucks..do it right with enough fancy characters MARVEL could pick it up for future Iron Fist comic lines promotions.



    Like I would like to have a figurine of every move in every form in the martial arts world. You could make $30 dollar ones and collector $3000 dollar ones and go smart make a $20 dollar grab bag of colorful mini masters like the old bags of green army men.

    It`s too bad Golden harvest and Shaw Bro`s etc didn`t branch out into Nintendo and Sony Hong Kong for Kung Fu video games. The various Chinese weapons are just asking to be animated for PS4 at an epic scale like all the work LucasFilms did promoting LightSabers.
    Last edited by diego; 09-09-2017 at 03:48 AM.

  2. #17
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    STAGE (Scientists, Technologists and Artists Generating Exploration)

    Scientific process inspires UChicago art/science lab, whose latest play entangles quantum concepts and kung fu


    STAGE Lab members (from left) Collin Van Son, Sunanda Prabhu-Gaunkar, Ellen Wiese, Madeleine Kerr and Edison Hong take a class with kung fu Master Oscar Lam (right) as part of a workshop in Hong Kong.

    Photo by Willy Tang

    By Louise Lerner
    Dec 12, 2019

    Scholars and students use technology to create new stories for the theater

    Scientists stage experiments all the time—but only a few stage plays. But at the University of Chicago, an innovative art/science lab embedded in its Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering has found inspiration in a unique place: the scientific process.

    “We use research, brainstorming and improvisation to generate and investigate new ideas, with continuous analysis and feedback,” said Prof. Nancy Kawalek, the director, actor and writer who heads STAGE (Scientists, Technologists and Artists Generating Exploration).

    But these are not science lectures disguised as plays, she said: “By creating emotionally engaging stories, we get the public interested in and excited about science.”

    STAGE is based at the PME, the first school in the nation dedicated to defining molecular engineering—an emerging field that builds on advances in basic science to design technology from the molecular level up. In turn, Kawalek works with scholars, students, scientists and artists from across the University, as well as externally, to also use technology as an integral part of staging stories about science.

    The STAGE lab group is comprised of scientists and artists who collaboratively develop new theater work through a unique process of improvisation and iteration. Each theater project centers on a scientific concept, which is integrated over months of rehearsals into a story that has an emotional parallel to the scientific topic. For example, the lab’s latest project melds quantum entanglement and kung fu.


    A STAGE Lab brainstorming session on the use of technology to tell a story.
    Photo courtesy STAGE Lab

    The project was inspired when Kawalek became aware of a museum exhibit that used motion capture and other technology to map a young kung fu master’s moves onto a lifelike avatar of his long-deceased great-grandfather, the revered Master Lam Sai Wing.

    “In this way, the singular style of kung fu originated by Lam Sai Wing, and in some sense the master himself, were brought back to life on film,” Kawalek said. “Though still in the very early stages, Entanglement is evolving into a play about science, technology, memory and heritage. Quantum entanglement takes us into the remarkable future of technology, while the intangible cultural heritage of kung fu offers inextricable links to the past.”

    Kawalek was fascinated by the museum exhibit, especially after learning that the words “kung fu” carry, among other things, the connotation of energy and time. Additional links emerged through discussions with Tian Zhong, a PME assistant professor and STAGE collaborator, who has been doing research on a quantum phenomenon called time-energy entanglement.

    Zhong said the exhibit is a powerful demonstration of the type of connections STAGE wants to draw. “The avatar represents a collapsing of time, spanning two generations through movement. This is exactly the essence of time-energy entanglement, so we thought this was a perfect way to inform an audience about the concepts of quantum physics,” he said.

    This past summer, the STAGE group worked with The Hong Kong Jockey Club University of Chicago Academic Complex | The University of Chicago Francis and Rose Yuen Campus in Hong Kong, traveling to Hong Kong to research kung fu and quantum science. Students and faculty met with Master Oscar Lam, Lam Sai Wing’s great-grandson; Hing Chao, a leading advocate for the preservation of Chinese martial arts; and the museum exhibit’s artist, Prof. Jeffrey Shaw, a distinguished media artist at the City University of Hong Kong.

    Throughout the Hong Kong workshop, research, kung fu lessons, and brainstorming and motion capture sessions provided compelling material for developing Entanglement, Kawalek said. For example, Zhong and the STAGE group had a fruitful discussion with Chao about the role of energy in martial arts. When Zhong raised questions about scientific concepts like conservation, Chao offered an impromptu demonstration of forces specific to different martial arts, such as the linear punches of boxing, versus the arcing shapes of many methods of attack in other types of Chinese martial arts.


    A scene from the workshop production of a previous STAGE play, "The Art of Questionable Provenance."
    Photo by HMS Media

    As the play develops, Zhong said, he hopes it will increase public awareness and knowledge about quantum science, especially among younger generations. “Some of the concepts in quantum physics are very counterintuitive, and it’s a struggle to relate them to our everyday experiences,” he said. “But I believe earlier and greater exposure to ‘bizarre’ concepts such as these will generate many more innovative ideas down the road.”

    STAGE continues to investigate the ideas discovered during their Hong Kong research trip, and Kawalek said the lab hopes to present a workshop production in 2020.

    As with all STAGE lab projects, Kawalek said, the goal of Entanglement is to excite the public about science and technology through theater that is relevant to our lives, which are influenced by technological and scientific advances at every turn.

    “These connections between science and art—at some level, they’re about the same thing,” Zhong said. “Both start with asking intriguing questions. Then you use existing knowledge to inquire and explore, and the outcome is creation—new knowledge or new art. It’s just the toolsets that are different.”
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    Hong Kong Martial Arts Living Archive
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