http://www.insideoutproject.net/
“This project takes street photography and makes it personal by taking literally anyone’s photograph and putting it on a wall”Â
Expanding our lens through literature, art, talk, and play
http://www.insideoutproject.net/
“This project takes street photography and makes it personal by taking literally anyone’s photograph and putting it on a wall”Â
There are so many ways to study, read and enjoy Talking Walls. I have complied a list of themes and think it would fun for teachers and students to find the walls that align with the themes.  What walls are man-made? How may talk about architects? How many hats are in the book?  What stories do the hats tell?
Let me know if you have another theme to add to my list!
The world’s cities are coming up with ingenious ways to fight climate change, from massive sea walls to “sponge zones” and floating communities.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/energy/2015/07/150713-cities-thinking-ahead-on-climate-change/#/
From Talking Walls Discover Your World
Thousands of messages decorate the fence outside the home of Pablo Neruda, thanking him for his beautiful poems.At the age of ten Pablo wrote a poem so amazing that his father asked him who had really written him. Schoolmates made fun of the boy who said he was “hunting for poems.”
Pablo Neruda’s Fence still stands at Isla Negra, Chile, long after the poet’s 1973 death. It was built to keep his dogs from chasing sheep, and has become a message board, a shrine. On July 12, his birthday, people visit and pin paper messages to the wooden slats of the fence, carve words of love into posts, scrawl lines in charcoal that will be washed away and replaced with new messages, new prayers. A friend of his wrote: “There is not a scrap of the wood not written on. They all address him as though he were alive. With pencils or nail-points, each and all of them find a particular way of saying Thank you.”
http://www.latimes.com/local/orangecounty/la-me-dalai-lama-birthday-20150706-story.html
http://www.dalailamabirthday.net/
From Talking Walls Discover Your World
The Dalai Lama has lived and traveled in exile since he was twenty- three years old. The recipient of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, the Dalai Lama continues to speak about peaceful resistance and asks the world to respect Tibet’s traditions.
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Thanks to Lewiston teachers and Upward Bound students for telling me about this wall. Since 2012 letters have been discouraged because Juliet’s House is a World Heritage Site.
http://www.italia.it/en/travel-ideas/unesco-world-heritage-sites/verona-a-city-for-lovers.html