Flowers in the Cracks

Ideal
The Flowers in the Cracks
Express the joy of renewal of our spirits
With beauty, truth, and love

Real
The Flowers in the Cracks
Is a cultural arts program
Celebrating the renewal of our spirits and communities

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Emma Scutelnic

A Tree Grows in San Francisco, 2006

Today I'd like to introduce you to another member of Flowers in the Cracks: Emma Scutelnic. She is a photographer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Specifically, Palo Alto. She lives not far from the first place I worked in California: the old corporate headquarters building of ComputerWare.

I met Emma the night of the 2006 Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Freedom Train. She was heading home, and smiled at me when I sang my little heart out at the San Francisco CalTrain station, as I am often wont to do. We struck up a conversation on the ride back home, and we've been good friends since. Emma came with me to the evening with Liz Perle at Books, Inc.

She is originally from Moldova, an Eastern European country bordered by the Prut and Dneister rivers, cozily nestled between Romania and Ukraine.

Since coming here, she has been using her camera to capture images of the San Francisco Bay Area. One of her favorite English expressions is "It is most beautiful." And Emma sees beauty almost everywhere she goes. In every nook and cranny she can see life, no matter how modest.

I'm sure she would laugh and assure me she often sees things that are not very beautiful! Yet still, she has the eyes of an aesthete, a mind and heart of an artist, and a good-natured soul.

Planet Planter
, 2006
Seeing the World with Emma's Eyes

Walking sopping wet
Camera-laden grasshopper
Espies the western world
With curious delight

A tree grows in San Francisco
A gnarled vine grips fast to a fence
Clover comes up through the cracks
An ant's-eye view makes a planter immense

Wildly wind-tossed scarf
Whips against the trusty backpack
She explores the world
Capturing life in light


The night after we met, I found Emma's photos elsewhere on the Internet, so I emailed her to continue our friendship and conversation. From the first I was impressed by her artistic sense. One of her photographs is now the background image of my Macintosh desktop. When I first mentioned Flowers in the Cracks to her, she was curious. As we talked, it was soon clear to her this was a project she would like to participate in. Since then she has been going around the Bay Area with her camera in hand and her keen eye to frame the world she lives in.


In the Clover, 2006













These images are from February of 2006. They are part of a series she took for Flowers in the Cracks. Some are in rain and others were in sunshine. We sat together and agreed which of the many photographs we'd put up for this first presentation. For now, we will show those with the a cool, wet nature. The sort of weather that causes us to throw on a sweater and duck indoors. Yet Emma walked about in the elements, considering the theme of the project until she finally found these emergent jewels of light and shape.

Feature & Poem Copyright © 2006 Peter Corless
Images Copyright © 2006 Emma Scutelnic

Friday, March 17, 2006

Sands of Time


Rockaway, NYC 2006

Nature images






I am interested in exploring sublime beauty in nature. These images were taken in Springfield, MA January 1st of this year using a macro 50mm Canon lens on a Canon 5D camera.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

A Big Day Yesterday

Tobey Mathews Live!

First, yesterday Tobey and I got together. We really got together. We got it together.

It was a true bonding experience. Man-to-man. Person-to-person. Grins all around. One of the best experiences you could ever hope to have.

We drove around and spoke about John Steinbeck's The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights. We spoke about his life, and his friends and his poetry and music, and I spoke a bit about mine.

We broke bread—quite literally by eating the soup bowls at Panera Bread in Cupertino.

We had lessons about microeconomics and business all afternoon. I told him about Vroom's Expectancy Theory, which I'm studying in graduate school for my MBA, and how that explains human motivation and personal drive. We went over inventory turns and theories of supply. (Demand and demand generation will come down the pike.) We worked on half-a-dozen things to make his life more professional, positive, presentable.

We celebrated the beginning of his own blog. His mother called and was delighted to hear about all we had accomplished in one day together.

We drove around listening—really listening—to Bob Marley's Legend album on the way home. We spoke about what the impact of the suicide of others meant to each of us. I invited him to come with me on The Overnight this summer. Other people can donate money. I thought it would be good for his soul if he wanted to walk on through the night. Especially after listening to "No Woman No Cry."
Good friends we have had, oh good friends we've lost along the way
In this bright future you can't forget your past
So dry your tears I say
...
My feet is my only carriage
So I've got to push on through
...
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Ev'rything's gonna be alright
Amen, Bob!

We listened to those words, and many other words of Bob Marley and the Wailers. We talked about history and how vital those years of Bob Marley's life were in history. How Biblical his lyrics were. Now we were making history, and we knew it. We had great grins on our faces. Legend is a great CD. I lent it to Tobey, along with a few books on King Arthur.

We parted each other's company to the transforming and transcendental strains of Steve Miller's Fly Like an Eagle. (Gotta love KFOG.)

Emma & Pete & Liz Perle & Luis Ignatio Nava & Books, Inc.

After dropping off Tobey, I met with Tatiana Emma Scutelnic, a Bay Area photographer also participating in Flowers in the Cracks.

Together we saw Liz Perle talk about Money, A Memoir at Books, Inc. I'll get a review of that event posted in due time. I took copious notes on my Treo, and even snapped a few pictures.

Emma and I had dinner at Pasta? on Castro Street in Mountain View. During dinner we spoke about many things, from Adam Smith and Karl Marx, to the concepts of extended reciprocity. Emma spoke about her family. I shared some of my own personal history.

We considered Liz Perle's book some more. Liz Perle had saliently pointed out how important, and at the same time unimportant, thoughts about money are to women. (What was also important to us both at the time was dinner! I had the chicken. Emma the spaghetti. It was very good!)

After dinner we went back to Books, Inc. to go over photographs Emma has taken for the project. Before we settled down to work, the man at the next table introduced himself. I had spied a cover of The Economist he was reading, about the war: Iraq, At War With Itself.

We spoke about the article I wrote: No Dog Tags Allowed.

His name was Luis Ignacio Nava. A gymnastics coach. He was wearing an old faded jacket from the US Olympics Training Center. He spoke about his life in Mexico. He spoke about his past coaching at SJSU. He was passionate about Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn, and showed me a DVD he had of them both and another speaker from 2003, just at the start of the US-Iraq war. I could tell there was a great deal of the story I hadn't heard about his past. He was very pro-peace. Yet here was a man who was alienated in some way. In a way I could tell he had no peace. He was searching for answers. He had answers he wanted others to hear. We shared email addresses, and maybe we'll cross paths again.

When we parted I bid him "Vaya con Dios!" And he smiled and chattered back in rapid-fire Spanish I couldn't catch. I just saw that broad grin.

Today, preparing writing this, I found out his nickname is "Nacho." Onwards to adventure, Nacho!

Emma and I got down to work. We huddled around my faithful Macintosh. We slipped in the CD of her photos. Up they came in Photoshop. They are simply beautiful! Trees! Vines! Grass! Algae! Clover! Bricks and fences! Grilles and hydrants! Pavement and asphalt! The organic and the inorganic was right there along with the rain and the sunshine and the human and natural elements of her experience.

In due time, we will present some here.

We spent the rest of the time until Books, Inc. stacked the chairs in the upstairs café and shuttered its doors talking about beauty and flowers and photography and Emma's vision and philosophy. In due time we will post that interview here too. Because Emma is Moldovan, and is still learning English, she is more comfortable speaking to me directly. For now, she will be my "eyes" with a camera, and I will be her "words" upon the page. Much the same way Ilona will be the project's "eyes" in New York City.

On our way to drop Emma off, we found we both like Bob Marley. We sang together Is This Love?

This project is about a renewal of life, good feelings and spirits. Yesterday was a banner day. A big day.

I hope you had a good one too. If it wasn't, as the Buddha would say, "This too shall pass." Remember Bob Marley's words of hope: "Everything's gonna be alright."

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Introducing Tobey Mathews, Poet

Tobey Mathews is a new, emerging San Francisco Bay Area poet. Today, on a pleasant Saturday morning, Tobey, his mother Vickie, and I met for brunch at Hobee's Restaurant in Mountain View. It was a great conversation that roved from poetry to business, the Internet, publishing, education and intellectual property law, to rap music and personal ethics. Tobey and I are going to work together over the coming months on a number of different projects, not least of which is getting his poetry published. For now, here's a poem from his own imagination. He wrote it as we sat and waited for our breakfast.

— Peter Corless, 4 March 2006

CrookedSidewalks

Cold, dry, traffic
Running through your cranium.
Sleepless, aware, lost
Wandering through the dark.
You're thinking about
That last resort.
About the consequences.
"Don't die tonight."

Pray up to heaven sky,
You're living dead.
You needed the spirit to
Walk with you,
Walk you through,
Caught in the middle of confusion.
Feels like the devil is doing
nothing but stalking you.

Outside it's cold
but pay no mind.
It's evil inside of
a man's mind.
Overcome my fear,
Overcome yourself,
Overcome his spear.

Champions envision victory
when others see defeat?
You dropped to the floor
soon as the cannon took you off your feet.

Head down tears falling
So scary so startling.
Throughout the whole demented nation
Your practice your indignation.

You threaten God with your
Questions about the situations?
It's all for a reason,
It's all for a reason.

Why?

"Lord, insanity is all that's come over me.
I spend my time premeditating
Demons in my sleep.
They keep a hold of me.
Protect my soul,
Protect my vicinity."

All in mind that this place is breaking me
So close to taking another's life for survival
101 enemies
200-something rivals.
Seems like that's how it is but
You're a champion
Living through the fire.


Copyright © 2006 Tarik "Tobey" Mathews

Liz Perle in Mountain View, 7 March 2006

Liz Perle will be in Mountain View, California at Book's Inc. on Castro Street this Tuesday, 7 March 2006.

I still have to do my report on Max Barry, who was also recently at Books, Inc. (That review will be over on my own personal blog, petercorless.blogspot.com site in due time).

My friend has been reading the copy of Liz' book I bought. With all the other stuff on my plate I'll only just be able to snag a look at it before Tuesday! Meanwhile, I've been hearing episodes from the story, plus my friend's interpretation and commentary. It's been curious to hear about Liz. It's delightful to think, "Ah! Here's an author I could meet on a Tuesday night."

Hopefully nothing will intercede with my schedule between now and then.

-Peter.