Light 11B - Stockton CA Project

Light 11B - Stockton CA Project A documentary project combining photography and the written word to explore the people of Stockton,

12/29/2012

Hello Stockton,

We hope you’ve had a wonderful holiday season.
Our best wishes to all of you for a very Happy New Year in 2013!

Towards the beginning of December we posted that we would be taking a small break from this project – mostly to attend to other commitments and year-end deadlines and engagements we needed to complete in order to keep paying our studio lease, the lights on, and more; this to ensure we continue to have enough resources to do the work that is closest to our hearts.

Unfortunately, this hiatus been a little longer than we planned – it’s been a bit of a tough ending for the year with Joe having to leave the state and take care of his mom who has sadly now passed away. And a few other rough patches intervened along the way as well.

So, we just wanted to let all of you who have been supporting us that we remain committed to the Stockton Project – we’re anxious to start things up again in January.

So thanks for your help and patience.

We look forward to being back in the community, meeting and listening and recording the many good works and stories that are the Stockton we are getting to know and appreciate so much.

Christian and Joe

11/01/2012

It’s been a little bit since we posted a Stockton Project update. Our last full day in town was well over a week ago on Saturday, October 20. We returned to follow-up on previous conversations with some of the many Stocktonians we met or made contact with through this page.

Our first stop was American Legion Park; to our eyes a place of remarkable design, nested as it is around several acres of Lake Yosemite fed by a large canal cut straight over to the San Joaquin some two miles west.

Soon, the two nearby residents we had come to meet, Lisa Jones and Rob Quaschnick, arrived. We all sat down together at a picnic table and talked for an hour or so about Stockton, the leafy street where they live just a block or so apart, and particularly about the Neighborhood Watch group they are both active in. Rob himself had started the group some twelve years ago.

It was a beautiful, sunny, fall day, still warm with just a hint of a breeze. Everything was quiet, felt calm, and relaxed.

Nonetheless, there had been trouble just a few days before – after gunplay, a car chased another down their street. The occupants of one them abandoned their vehicle it in front of a house across from Lisa’s home and ran into its backyard, from there they disappeared. After the police came things settled down.

Unlike Rob, Lisa is relatively new to her home. Rob and his wife had introduced themselves to her not long after she moved there. The three are friends but have disagreements, mostly over politics: Lisa is a democrat and a progressive; Rob and his wife are republicans and conservative.

Yet the values they share as neighbors and friends are clearly more important than their politics – they care about their city, about its schools, its quality of life – and about its future. Each holds affection for their town, its history, diverse communities, and the grit and spirit it has always seemed to have.

As Lisa and Rob discussed all these things, mutual respect shone through, along humor and civility, and values rooted in a common good.

After they had left and we had packed up we headed over to the Miracle Mile for our next appointment, it was hard not to reflect and feel a quiet optimism and sense of admiration for what we had just heard.

Our next stop: Eric Torres and the Slip Skate Shop at 3228 Pacific Avenue. We first got wind of him from several teens and young adults, so we dropped by to introduce ourselves a while back.

Eric, a Stockton native, started the shop at another location in 1997, was totally welcoming and friendly on our first visit. We spoke together for quite a while. He told us about growing up in the town, how he first got into the business, and how he had enjoyed watching his mostly youthful customers from the early days get into boarding, get good at it, inevitably grow up, only to be followed by a new crop of coming up talent, just as eager to go for it.

You would be hard-pressed to find easier going guy than Eric. He one of those persons who just plain likes people and treats them well. That said, without a hint of anger or resentment, he also mentioned that on a recent day a teenage dude had popped open the door, leaned into a display, grabbed a new board, and ran out with it.

Eric didn’t chase after him because “I didn’t know what he had…” meaning he didn’t know if the thief was armed – a very smart and well-reasoned response. It was the first time Slip Skate Shot had ever been robbed, ever – a so sad situation.

Anyway, we enjoyed our time at the shop so much we asked Eric if we could come back with our cameras and lights and spend some time making images of him in his place of business. He was nice enough to agree. So that’s what we did this time around, which was cool, because he was completely relaxed about the whole thing.

So, all in all, it was a good day for us on the Stockton Project. There is a long ways to go. We know we’re just scratching the surface so far. But we’re also getting to learn our way around and getting together with people.

It’s also a busy time of year for us, so we also know between now and January we’ll probably slow up on the project a bit before coming back strong early next year – doesn’t mean we won’t be around until then, just a little dialing back for a while.

In the meantime, we’d still love to hear from you – to get your suggestions and hear your comments. It’s all good and we appreciate it.

Christian and Joe – The Stockton Project

American Legion Park then on to Slip Skate Shop on Pacific
11/01/2012

American Legion Park then on to Slip Skate Shop on Pacific

Community Organiizations and Performances on the Miracle Mile - September 29, 2012
10/01/2012

Community Organiizations and Performances on the Miracle Mile - September 29, 2012

LIGHT AT 11B JOE GARAPPOLO
10/01/2012

LIGHT AT 11B JOE GARAPPOLO

Stockton CA

09/24/2012

We returned to Stockton this last Saturday – it was sunny and beautiful.

Starting early we spent the first half the day attending the Sikh Journey in America Centennial Conference at the University of the Pacific.

This month and next there are a series of events celebrating the first 100 years of the Stockton Shikh Gurdwara (Temple) – the very first in the United States.

At the conference, many papers and presentations were given exploring th arrival of the Sikh people to these shores and their subsequent trials and triumphs as they set down roots and built new lives in this new country.

Conference attendees included may locals – but also visitors from across the country – including at least one person from New York. We went there to learn and to meet with contacts in the local Sikh community we had set-up in advance.

In the afternoon we met with other Stocktonians who have generously offered to help us as we begin this project. We very grateful for all the encouragement we are getting – thank you!

We’ll be back next weekend Saturday and Sunday. We have a packed schedule and are looking forward to every minute of it.

Christian and Joe

Stockton 2012_09_22 Silkh 100th Anniversary  Conference
09/24/2012

Stockton 2012_09_22 Silkh 100th Anniversary Conference

09/07/2012
08/15/2012

July 31, 2012
Dear Ms. Sheil,

Please allow me to introduce myself. My name is Christian Pease and together with my business partner and cofounder, Joseph Garappolo, I am a working photographer and writer based in Mountain View, California, where we maintain a studio called Light at 11B.

I am writing you to ask if you might be willing to meet with us for an hour of so.

Some background - at 3:00am
on Wednesday, June 27 Joe picked me up at my house and we drove to Stockton. We had no particular place to go in the city – we just wanted to be there, to see the place for ourselves at sunrise, and to take photographs.

Both of us had driven through Stockton many times on our way to somewhere else. Once, years ago, I attended a two day meeting there. But other than that, neither of us knew much about it – and virtually nothing of its community.

We had done a little studying before we traveled over the Altamont Pass. In that, we confirmed Stockton rich history and role in the settling of California and its subsequent growth.

Of course for weeks we had heard reports of the city's impending financial collapse, laced with testaments to its bad decisions, high crime and poverty.

We armed ourselves with a GPS and a map and used them to navigate and explore. At mid-morning, we stopped a coffee shop and took breakfast.

Then, about 2pm we had to leave to return to contend with work and deadlines – but not before having discovered pleasant neighborhoods, nice parks, many places of worship, some of them quite surprising to us, and lots of flags – Old Glory – posted in the front yards of homes all over town.

We have talked together about that day several times since, mulling over and testing between ourselves the notion of spending a year or so getting to know Stockton and its denizens – its many communities – asking whether or not we could really do that and if we tried; if we could effectively tell their stories in words and pictures, maybe through a book, and whether or not that would be an honest and useful thing for us to do.

One idea we mulled is to contact some of the leaders of the many churches, temples, mosques, etc., located in the city and to ask them for advice about how we might proceed.

We weren’t sure why, but something compelled us to go Stockton and continues to compel us to think about doing this work.

Then on July 23 we read your piece in the New York Times – “The Bankruptcy and the Burglar.“

There, at the end of your article you said, “Bankruptcy isn’t a crime. Neither is poverty.” To us, that more or less said it all.

We would like to try to illuminate the spirit and tenacity of the people of Stockton. This, not to ignore its problems, but certainly not to dwell on them so much as to explore the flip side of that over-reported storyline – to focus on the story of all the folks whose aspirations, hopes, wishes, struggles, etc. are in fact something likely quite apart from most the headlines and rapid fire television news reports.

We think it’s probably a story all its own.

In sum, we would like to start by meeting with you, if you are willing, in hopes you can help us with context and maybe point us to others who also might be able to guide us.

Please consider this and let me know.

Thank you, Christian

08/15/2012

We are planning to engage a comprehensive photographic, multimedia, and publishing project to document and illuminate the diverse communities of Stockton, California and the many people who call it home.

With their help – indeed with your help – we hope to tell the story of Stockton from a decidedly local perspective – through its citizens and in their own words. This, because there is a strong and important role for both a spoken and written narrative if we are to create something that is as inclusive and as honest as we are capable of doing.

We expect this will take at least a year to do– probably longer. And once done, what emerges may include many elements, and exhibit, or book, or both, for example – as well as other works.

We invite and encourage you to follow our progress here.
And if you are willing, we also invite you to suggest individuals and groups – anyone, really, that you believe we should seek out in the larger community of Stockton and have a conversation with.

You can message us here and tell us whom you think we should contact, including yourself.

Or message us her with any other suggestions you might have – place we should see, things we should read; anything at all that you believe will help us do this well.

And should you choose to follow us and this project and for any reason believe we may be drifting in some unproductive way or wrong direction, then tell us that as well – we are asking for and are grateful for your guidance and support.

Below you will find the email we send July 31, 2012 to Paula Sheil at Delta Collage after reading her OpEd piece about Stockton that appeared in the New York Times on Monday of prior week. It provides some insight why we are motivated to do this project.

Thanks and best wishes, Christian and Joe

Address

Stockton, CA
95201–95213, 95215, 95219, 95267, 95269, 95296–95297

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