Hailing from Minnesota, Wing’s work explores culture and identity through the creation of thoughtful, layered images that penetrate our preconceptions. After presenting his work to students, he began his “Chalk Talk” method of pairing participants with questions that explore identity, race, and connections between neighbors.
Wing Young Huie’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, and his most well-known projects are large-scale public installations, including Frogtown (1995), Lake Street USA (2000) and The University Avenue Project (2010), which transformed major thoroughfares in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota into epic photo galleries, reflecting the everyday lives of thousands of citizens. More recently, he served as artist in residence to the Penn Avenue North Small Area Plan, as part of Minneapolis’ Creative Citymaking initiative. More information about the artist and his ongoing projects can be found at http://www.wingyounghuie.com/.
Wing’s Chalk Talk exercise originated from a photo series he did in Minneapolis called The University Avenue Project. Workshop participants interview each other, write their responses on a blackboard in white chalk, and snap a picture of one another in order to connect the words on the blackboard with the person who expressed them. Students then went out into their neighborhoods and continued the exercise with the public. Through asking tough questions, students received some tough answers, opening up room for conversation and connection.
In this assignment you are to pick a fellow student to interview, ideally it will be someone you don't know very well or at all. You hill have them write a version of their answers on a black sheet of construction paper with chalk and then photograph them. Interviews should take 20-30 minutes and should include the following questions but are not limited to only these questions. Conversations should be focused on how they think people see them, how they see themselves, how they wish people would see them, and why (if any) there is a discrepancy between each?
THE ASSIGNMENT Working with your partner complete the following. Warm-up questions: (5 Minutes total)
What’s your name?
What grade are you in?
What makes a good photo?
Do you believe in luck or chance?
What is something you've always wanted to try but never had the courage to do?
Chalk Talk Questions (8-10 Minutes per person)
Below are the 7 questions that Wing Young Huie used in his original Chalk Talk conversations. For your activity you are tasked with asking the the person you are interviewing a minimum of four of the questions and have them write down 2 of their answers on a black piece of paper with chalk (one answer per side). Write down notes under each question
What are you?
How do you think others see you?
What don’t they see?
What advice would you give to a stranger?
What is your favorite word?
Describe an incident that changed you.
How have you been affected by race?
Photograph: Take 2 photos of the person you interviewed holding their chalk answers, convert to black and white, edit, and submit to chalk talk assignment in schoology.