Slammed Poetry
Chester Fritz show plays out to enthralled audience Monday night.
Kaitlin Ring
Issue date: 11/6/09 Section: Life
|
What may come as a surprise is the same audience that erupted with the answer to the previous questions fell silent when asked to name America's current Supreme Court justices.
Noting how hard it is to "find out real information and how easy it is to find out crap," Kip Fulbeck pointed this and several other thought-provoking ideas out at his presentation on Monday. An artist, writer, slam poet, spoken word performer, and professor of art at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Fulbeck was invited to campus by the Multicultural Awareness Committee of Student Government.
Fulbeck was down-to-earth and easily related to UND's student population through his sense of humor and the topics discussed. Describing his struggle to fit in racially throughout his life, Fulbeck gave a preview of two of his projects, The Hapa Project and his tattoo portrait project.
Embracing the term "hapa," a once-derogatory label derived from the Hawaiian word for "half," Fulbeck's work has turned the word into a well-known way to describe those of part Asian or Pacific Islander descent.
In The Hapa Project, Fulbeck photographed 1,200 people of all ages nationwide who fit the description of "hapa" and asked them to write, in their own words, the answer to a single question: What are you?
The project was first displayed in the Japanese American National Museum. Worrying that it wouldn't have the draw to keep people returning for its five-month run, Fulbeck added a personal element to the display. He allowed visitors to add a piece about themselves, allotting space for 500 visitor pieces in his exhibit. The 500 spots filled up within the first day.
One hundred portraits from the project are also available in his book, Part Asian, 100% Hapa.
The project includes portraits from young adults to the elderly who have struggled with being labeled throughout their lives. One child responds to the question by saying, "I'm a very little boy in fifth grade that has no friends." Fulbeck said he felt it was important to include this child into his presentations. "At some point in your life, you have been or you are now or you will be . . . this kid," he said.


Be the first to comment on this story