I just get up and try to get things
going. I normally do most of my work in the first part of the day, whether it’s
things like emails, painting or design stuff… whatever I gotta do. I’ll try to
do that stuff in the morning and then go run some errands towards the
afternoon. I live in the woods near Santa Cruz so I typically have to go into
town for things. After that, I usually go surfing or skating
sometimes
I try to take it how it comes. I’m
always making art but if I have a big art show coming, I’ll
go more into that type of mode when needed. Making a bigger solo exhibition
usually take about 6 months or so to prepare. Or if
I’m in moviemaking mode, I’ll focus on that area and probably not paint as
much. Maybe some doodles here and there but nothing real serious.
I like it, though. I like working on different things because it helps
keep everything fresher.
And you work out of your garage, right?
Yeah, my garage has been converted into
a studio. Cars do not live in there. But it’s good to have a place like that
right there.
So many of your projects are holistic in
approach, with you basically taking care of everything from top to bottom. You
direct the film, you design the packaging, you distribute the project. Would
you say this comes from your making zines back in the day?
preparing for show at alleged gallery -brooklyn, 2000 photo: templeton |
Yeah, I think it definitely started for
me in zines and continued throughout working at skateboard magazines for so
long. It’s really influenced me to have an editor’s mind. You can start seeing
all the options for things, kinda like you’re cooking a lot of meals at once. I
need a little more salt over there, this isn’t quite done over here…
I’m comfortable with a lot of things
going on at once. It’s all sort of a balancing act. What are my main points? I
have this stuff already, what other supporting things do I need? That’s
basically how you make a magazine or the kind of movies I make.
They’re both really similar in that way.
T Campbell with Nikon FM2 - Wallenberg, 1994 photo: Yelland |
How did you get introduced to the seedy underbelly of underground skate zines?
I’d say what happened first was that my
friend in high school, Ky made a zine called “Kinky Transitions”. That was my
real introduction, I guess.
That’s an amazing title.
Yeah, I still didn’t really know
anything about zines at that point but I started working on one anyway with my
friend Tony Vadakan after that. It was called “Ground Beef” and I drew the
cartoon in it… which is so bad. I didn’t know how to draw at all and it’s
really horrible. The cartoon was called “Beef Chew” and I’m embarrassed of
it.
(Laughs)
But this was around the time when my friends and I started
going to skate Del Mar Skatepark and really looking at skate magazines. That’s
where I got to know about Swank and Blender. Those are the two big guys for me
as far as inspiring me to be creative.
I can’t remember the exact occurrence but I started
making my own zine shortly after that. I just wanted my zine to look a certain
way… but at the same time, I didn’t want my friend Tony to get mad that I was
starting my own zine so I called it “Joke”, trying to downplay it.
I got really into it, though. I took an offset
printing class in high school and started making my zines in class. I started
getting ads from Santa Cruz and Dogtown… my zine actually had a lot of ads in
it. I got all kinds of free boards for that.
That’s a pretty good racket.
Yeah, it really was.
But I was also starting to develop relationships through
making my zine. Grant Brittain was sending me photos to use and I was also
trading zines and stuff back and forth with Tod Swank. I remember when Tod put
my drawing on the cover of one of his zines, this one he did after Swank zine
called “Scrap”, it was seriously one of the best days of my life. I was so
stoked. My idol likes my drawing! It was a crappy drawing of Anne Frank but he
liked it. That meant so much to me.
It’s difficult to explain to the younger generation how all of these zines circulated around the country with so much distance between like-minded individuals. It’s taken for granted now with the internet but it really was like an underground network back then.
To be honest, a lot of it grew out of Thrasher. They had this thing
in the magazine called “The Zine Page” with different zines and addresses. You
could send a dollar or something and get zines straight from that. That’s
what connected a lot of us in the beginning.
Magazines, in a way, didn’t cover all that much back
then. You wanted to share what was going on in your scene.
But that’s what brought so many of us together,
relationships I still have. Like, I remember when I started trading zines
with Chris Johanson in the mail back when I was 16. I’d get his stuff and be
like, “Man, this guy’s fucked up!”
I didn’t get the humor. It was really dark and
tweaked. I’d get his zines and feel like he was on some other shit that I
didn’t even know about.
But it’s funny because I ended up meeting Chris for
the first time totally random on a bus in San Francisco 6 years later. Just
because I was wearing a Swank shirt. It was something that Tod had made and
given me so I guess it was pretty limited. But this guy on the bus looks at it
and says, “Do you know Tod?”
So many zine guys soon found themselves
with jobs at major skateboarding mags, yourself included. I know you did some
stuff with PowerEdge and Club Homeboy but how did you get involved with
Transworld specifically and what was it like working there during this pretty
wild period? I know you weren’t even taking photos at first, only
writing?
My friend Joe Lloyd used to take pictures under the
name Xeno. We had a ditch by our house called “the Shit Ditch” and it got
bulldozed. Somehow I ended up getting to write an obituary for it in Transworld
along with some of Joe's pictures. I couldn’t even really write but I tried
anyway.
After that, I think I might’ve made another zine, but
I really started focusing more on writing for magazines. I figured this was my
opportunity to really work towards something. So I basically just wrote for 5
years… like you said, mainly Transworld but there were some other mags, too,
including Big Brother. I was taking some pictures back then but mostly
portraits. I didn’t really want to take pictures back then, I just wanted to
skate. Taking pictures meant being responsible for camera stuff and not being
able to really skate during sessions because you were too busy.
But I was also insanely poor. Permanent couch tour
poor. You really don’t make anything being just a writer at a magazine so I was
running on empty all the time. That’s basically why I decided to start shooting
skate photos.
The big switch came during this one time when I was in
Spain. This guy in Madrid was trying to start a skateboarding magazine and I
was helping him organize photographers while I wrote for him. I remember he had
all this camera equipment and wanted me to take photos as well but I didn’t
really know how to use any of the stuff. I didn’t know how to use flashes back
then.
I started thinking of who I could call to help me out.
My favorite skateboard photographer at the time was Spike. I loved the way he
shot photos and used color gels. There’s always a lot of movement in his
photography. I’d known him for a long time, I think I’m gonna call him up and
ask him how to use all this stuff.
“Hey Spike, how do I do this? What do I
do?” (laughs)
He gave me the whole rundown! Set the
flash in front usually at 5.6 and the one behind the skater a little hotter…
this is back when you put the flash in the photo, which definitely does not
happen now. But yeah, he told me everything I needed to know and I wrote it all
down. I went out that day and shot more-or-less totally professional
pictures.
One thing I love about skate mags in the
late-80s was the sense of exploration and personality. Take monthly columns
like Room Without A View and Street Sheet, for example. You’d never have that
today. Like that photo you took of Chris Reed in his pajamas blowing bubbles.
That’s a two-page spread!
(laughs) No, that would never go today.
But that was such an interesting, unique time. It wasn’t so serious. Now
everything is so hammertime-oriented. Things could be more in the creative
realm back then. Obviously there was some super good skating, too, but mags
were more about showing a spectrum of what was happening.
What is going on in that Chris Reed
photo anyway?
Honestly, I don’t really know. We’d been really good
friends since high school, it just basically good friends out making weird
stuff one day. I sent it to Transworld and the next thing we knew, it was a
two-page spread… which is both awesome and fucked-up. That might’ve been when
GSD was designing the mag.
I know you worked on a lot of Pro
Spotlights back then but one thing I remember capturing my imagination were
your travel articles. You led quite a nomadic existence for several years that
you were then able to incorporate back into your writing and really make
something special. Taking a bunch of dudes to parts unknown for skating is a
standard concept now but it was rarely seen when you were doing that in the
1990s.
It’s interesting because when I’d travel
to Europe every year for those contests, I’d always go off on tours and stay
with people afterwards. One time in particular, I stayed at Skin’s house before
heading down to Spain and checking out their skateparks, eventually working my
way down to Morocco. Surfing and skating for a while.
I was basically on a 5-year bender of
going all over the place on a shoestring. It was the best. I was working for Transworld
and eventually Skateboarder, I wanted to go to different places than what was
not normally where people would go to skate. I’d
already been to a few of these places and knew that there were spots. You could
get a different look and bring a different culture to people, too. Cool, let’s
go to Morocco.
Some people had beef with those articles
because they felt those countries didn’t support skateboarding. Whatever. Who
cares. We’re on the Earth. Go skate whatever you want. There are no
rules.
adrian lopez in hong kong, 1998 |
You were on that amazing 1992 UK tour
with a post-Blind Mark Gonzales, a SOTY-bound John Cardiel, and a prime Salman
Agah… in addition to Karma, Alan Petersen and Ron Chatman. Such a solid
crew and an amazing snapshot in time. What was up with Gonz during this time? And
was it obvious that a young Cards was on his way to greatness at that
point?
Yeah, that was a really good tour.
I’d met Skin Phillips at Tobin’s house
in San Francisco. He was this cool guy from
Wales trying to be a photographer. I think he was working for Thrasher a little
bit at the time but not too much. I remember telling him that I was trying to
go to Europe that summer when he invited me on this tour with them. He was
the van driver and the photographer for the whole thing.
I don’t really know what Mark was doing at that time.
He might’ve been thinking he was retired at that point. He wasn’t skating a
whole lot… I don’t even know if he had his own skateboard on the tour. He’d
borrow somebody else’s and shred here and there, not much though. I think at the time he was riding for 60/40 maybe.
One thing that stands out on that trip
is when he hippie jumped over the bars into South Bank. To this day, I don’t
know of anybody else who could possibly do that. That’s some serious ninja
shit.
Cardiel was a ball of energy at all
times. I remember him in the van eating candy, drinking Coke and smoking hash.
He was non-stop super-amped and as soon as the van door opened, he’d go
completely nuts. The tour basically went around to all the old skateparks in
England and Scotland. Everyplace we went, John would find the gnarliest thing
possible and do it. I think he was maybe 19 at the time. John’s
got an awesome energy.
mark in england, 1992 |
On another excursion, you basically discovered an unknown Chad Muska on a TWS trip to Vegas. Every town has their rippers, what was it that made him stick out like he did?
Yeah, that was with Tim Brauch, Jesse Paez, Chris
Pontius, Fernando Elvira, Floyd Williamson and Tobin Yelland.
It’s funny because I remember going to
pick up Jesse Paez at his house. He was only 16 at the time and as we’re
leaving to get in the car, I hear his mom say, “Please take care of Jesse!”
“For sure! No problem!”
We then get in the car and immediately
eat mushrooms. That’s like the worst thing ever: driving to Las Vegas at night
while super high on mushrooms. That’s not what you want to do. Fear and
Loathing is exactly that and the reality of it is not good. (laughs)
But yeah, we went to this spot and Chad just happened to be there. He was so good… like
really, really good. We were all blown away by him. He was a little gangstery,
hip hop-style dude wearing
Adidas with double-tongues. We all thought he was awesome.
We hooked up with him the next day for
more pictures and I remember going to this rail. I’d seen people skate small
rails before but never anything like this. This was a 12-stair rail and he’s
just attacking it, doing lipslides down it. He broke his board after two tries.
I let him borrow my board and he broke it. Tobin lets him borrow his board and
Chad breaks that one, too. We couldn’t get over it. He
was an animal.
When we all headed back to California at
the end of the trip, I tried to get him sponsored by several companies but for
whatever reason, it didn’t work out. I’ll leave the companies nameless but
they’re obviously retarded.
“Hey, I have this guy and he’s basically
better than your entire team put together. You should put him on.”
A few year later, he’s the biggest
skateboarder in the world. But Chad’s rad, man. He’s got a good vibe and his
skating is amazing, especially at the height of his powers. It was like
magic.
muska's hate |
I’d be remiss if I didn’t ask for your side of the Ethan Fowler/Iowa-to-SF story. I know you were the connection there. You talked about some guilt with the mushrooms-thing earlier, was there any with you essentially helping him run away?
No, I didn’t feel guilty.
Yeah, you took that frontside grab photo
of him at Miley.
Yup. He was riding for Ed (Toy Machine) at the time and he was amazing. He just looked super good on a
skateboard. Like, he’s one of those people who can just roll straight and
you’re like, “Oh my God!”
But all of a sudden, his Mom wanted to
move him to Iowa. It really sucked. I even called his Mom, trying to make her
realize just how good Ethan was. Basically equating him to an Olympic-level
athlete, asking if he could still live in California with his brother or
possibly even Ed? But she wasn’t having it.
So he goes out to Iowa and is just partying and doing
drugs. It’s kinda whatever for him, he’s obviously the best skateboarder in
Iowa City but nobody is inspiring him. He’s not really skating all that
much.
Around this time, I had my first art show at Alleged
Gallery in NYC. Tobin had driven
out to the show with Julien Stranger, Rick Ibaseta and our friend Kiawa. Rick
and Julien decided to fly back to San Francisco so I ended up driving back
across the country with Tobin and Kiawa.
We were making stops along the way and I brought up
stopping by to see Ethan in Iowa, thinking we could possibly shoot some photos.
It wasn’t anything super planned, we
were just there and he was stoked to see us and shoot some pictures, he was
ripping. At one point, I was like, “Dude, do you
want to come with us? Maybe live in San Francisco or something?”
“Yeah, I want to go.”
Looking back on it, it seems way more
hectic than what it really was. But he went back to his house and filled a backpack full of stuff. He didn’t want to make it too obvious. And we went.
I don’t think he called his Mom for a
week afterwards… and I think Ed was pretty bummed that he left for Stereo. But
that summer, he went to Munster contest and
won pretty much what was the World
Championship at the time. He won Munster at 16 after basically taking 9 months off from skating. That’s how good he was.
ethan in france, 1996 |
One of my all-time favorites has gotta
be your Sean Sheffey TWS cover. Did you shoot a lot with Sheff back then?
That one was super random. I think that
was the same day that I shot that photo of Ethan there as well. I didn’t even know Sheffey at the time. I was shooting pictures of Ed and
Ethan and saw him skating that little corner of the bank so I took a couple
shots. I didn’t really think too much about it.
It’s funny because this was back when I’d shoot
pictures and literally send all
the film directly to Transworld through FedEx. I’d never even see anything, they’d do
all the developing and stuff. All of a sudden, they’re like, “Hey, you got a
cover with Sheffey!”
“What?!?”
I only shot maybe four pictures of him
that day but I guess all the timing was right and it worked out. I
saw Sheffey shortly after that on a fairy ride from Holland to England with the
whole skateboarding circus.
Were you at all bummed on how rigid
skateboarding got in the 1990s with all its rules? Why do you think that
was?
To be honest, that was pretty much one of the main
reasons I stopped working in skateboarding for a bit. I used to work a lot with
Tim Brauch, Ron Whaley and Israel Forbes because I lived in Santa Cruz and I
thought those guys were rad because they were the prototypes of skaters that
just would skate everything. People like Phil Shao and Dan Drehobl, guys that
just wanted to skate and would skate whatever. That’s what I’ve always felt
skating is.
“Oh, a backyard pool? Let’s go skate it! Let’s hit up
Derby! Let’s go street skate! Yeah, let’s just go skate!”
But they were the exceptions! I think a
lot of that separation came from the Girl camp. They were only into what they
were into and everything else was cut. I don’t think that’s too
far of the mark. At that point, you had your vert
guys, your street guys, your tech
street guys and then your gnar dog pool guys. It was all so divided, which
seemed really stupid to me.
What’s interesting is that in the long
run, I think the Beauty and the Beast tour
did a lot to break down those divisions. All of a sudden, the tech dudes were
like, “Oh, the Girl dudes are cool with the Anti Hero dudes.” And the gnar
tranny-type skaters probably thought the same. It's fascinating the dudes that
helped create the division helped close it.
I think skating is in a really good spot now as far as
the overall mentality and how
people are approaching all terrains and mixing styles fluidly. Attacking
everything and not giving a fuck. People like Evan Smith are the
personification of what skating is. Just not caring and doing anything. Wallie
up a rail, smith grinding down it, whatever. It’s what I’ve always thought of
skating. It’s not so divided anymore. People seem generally stoked on each
other. I am not that interested
in the televised side of skating but whatever.
blaize blouin, slob fastplant - chicken's pool, 1998 |
Curious what you think of skate
photography these days. I can’t help but feel there’s a formula that’s being
beaten to death and it’s all a bit too perfect… where as before, I think there
was charm was in the flaws.
I’m not very into where modern skateboard photography
is.
I feel like skateboarding is such an outlaw activity.
It's really raw, dirty and fucked up in the best way. In a lot of ways, I feel
the digital era, where everything’s super-processed and perfectly-lit, doesn’t
really document the real feeling skateboarding. It’s almost like that stuff
takes it out of context. Makes it to pretty and controlled when it's not.
There are some photographers who do it well. Almost
everyone is really skilled at getting the shots that are in the magazines. I’m
not saying that these photographers aren’t good. I just feel like with
photography and videos, it’s all so clean. Skateboarding is not clean. It’s
fucked and it’s heavy. The situations are heavy. But maybe I just relate to
film-based photography more. I do.
karma, switch crooks - wade speyer's mini - big brother, 1993 |
Agreed. Going back a bit, how did you
get involved with SMA’s Debunker project?
I was living in Santa Cruz in the early 90's and one
of my best friends was Steve Keenan, team manager at SMA. I can’t
remember exactly how it came about but I think he was already making it and
asked if I was interested in helping him.
I’ve always been super into music so I
started helping him organize some of the soundtrack. We started coming up with
more and more ideas for it. Obviously, we were heavily influenced by Alien
Workshop’s Memory Screen, which had just come out and was the
best thing ever to me at that time. There’s definitely some Alien aspects of it
but I was also going to video stores and trying to find the weirdest videos I
could to steal from. Making weird vocal stuff for it with my friend Adam… stuff
with alien’s talking.
What made SMA go the aliens route after
all those years with the airplane? It was a pretty big change in direction for
them.
That’s basically what we were all into
at the time. Reading books about aliens
and wondering what the hell is going on galactically. I mean, obviously, if you don’t think there are aliens,
you’re retarded. I mean… come on!
What’s the story behind Dave LeRoux’s
disclaimer? Warranted but still a bold choice.
We felt it needed to be there because we
didn’t think people at the time we’re going to understand what he was
doing.
Yeah, he was basically too far ahead of
his time.
I think we had to put that in there. I
don’t think people got how crazy he was skating anyway… and then to point out
that it was almost all
switchstance, we were hoping the disclaimer might get people thinking a little
more about what he was doing.
Why was Julien in the intro when he
didn’t have a part? I know he left shortly after but why was he in there at
all?
That was more Keenan’s decision. He was
the one getting the footage together and I don’t think Julien had tons of
footage.
harold hunter - brooklyn banks b side flip, 1995 |
Talk a little about your 1996 short A Love Supreme. How was that
made? And how was it received in the notoriously mucho macho NYC scene? Did
they get what you were trying to do?
I lived in New York from 1995 to 1998. I
was doing some exhibitions at Alleged Gallery at the time and I also fell in
love with a woman there so I basically
just ended up there. I started shooting a lot with Harold, Huff, Ryan Hickey,
Quim and Mike Cardona.
It’s interesting because before I moved
there, while I’d always listened to jazz, I was still mainly into indie rock.
But once I moved to New York, I really felt that jazz was the sound of the
place and began exploring it a lot deeper than I had before. Obviously Coltrane is one
of my all-time favorites and A
Love Supreme his best records ever. I
wanted to start shooting 16mm, too… maybe I could make a movie with all of this
stuff I have going on in my head? Maybe I could do it with the Supreme guys? So I skated over to Supreme and talked
to Giovanni Estevez like, “Hey, could I make a
movie for you guys?”
He was into it and we figured out a way
to get a small budget. The first time I ever shot a 16mm camera was on the day
I started filming that movie. I think I shot it over the course of 4
or 5 months.
I think it captured the vibe of the place and the
scene. The
feeling of what it’s like to be there. Obviously the music was really good. But
it never really got released. I know there was a slightly edited version in 411
but not with the same music.
To be honest, I don’t think the Supreme guys really
got it at the time but I always liked it. I think in the long run, they appreciated it. It’s interesting
in that I think there may have been a slight nod to A Love Supreme in
Bill’s Cherry. The
Supreme dudes called and asked me come to the premiere since I did the first
one. They said Bill really wanted me to be there. That was cool. I really dug
Bill's Cherry film.
I was actually just thinking about how I
need to call them as next year makes 20 years since it came out. Maybe we could
do something for that.
some weird boards
strength mag, henry lindsey benefit, 2x krooked, element, 2x designarium
|
You’ve done some graphics for a wide
range of companies and I know your doing some stuff with Element now. What’s
your process like when working with riders and brands versus your own
aesthetic?
It’s different every time but they
generally just want you to do what you do. I gotta admit that sometimes it’s
really hard for me to do skateboard graphics because that’s when I feel the
most self-conscious. It’s not hard for me to make a painting but when it comes
to a skateboard graphic, I freak out!
“Oh my gosh, there’s going to be a lot of these. Everyone’s going to see this! Is it good enough? I don’t know! Ahhhh!”
Honestly, that’s probably held me back from doing a
lot more in the last 10 years. Different
companies will ask me a lot, but I haven't done that many recently. The thing
is that it’s kind of part of my job right now to work with Element and make
graphics so I’m trying not to be such a wuss.
Because I’m looking at them on my wall
right now, how did you come up with that crazy set for Designarium?
Oh yeah, those were just taken off of some cut-down
painted boards that I had already made. I was doing
that a lot where I’d take used boards, cut out a tweaked shape and paint on
them. I’d actually just finished those when Natas asked if I was interested in
making some boards for him… why don’t we just make these? We can make a pintail
and a swallowtail.
I think if you actually tried to ride
them, they’d be pretty dangerous but it’s art. I like that. I like taking
something like that and making it not functional so people will want to put it
on their wall.
sewing station installation - bolinas museum, 2015 |
I know you don’t want to reveal too much
but can you offer a little explanation behind some of the recurring themes in
your art? Like those hooded guys, for example.
As far as those bottle-shaped people I
draw, I’ve mentioned spending a lot of time in Morocco over the last 20 years
or so. The men and women there often wear this similar kind of robe called a
djellaba. I think I started drawing them from being there and have probably
been drawing them since the first time I went.
I like them because I can draw these
scenes with anonymous people in them who aren’t sex-specific. You can look at a
piece and make up whatever you want. I like that ambiguous idea. I think it’s
interesting and I like that point of reference. That’s probably why I’ve stuck
with it and evolved it.
I’m 46 and I started really trying to be an artist
when I was 13. I’ve just been working at it consistently. Style evolves. Ideas evolve. I don’t
know… I like to just go out in my studio, listen to music and get weird. It’s
fucking fun.
But there’s the full range of emotional shit going on
with making art, especially painting. Everything from serious loathing and
burnout to elation and really magic, connected moments. It's quite an emotional
journey.
"Ampersand" exhibition - joshua liner gallery - nyc, 2014 |
I think a lot of things that I write in
my paintings are more like self-affirmations. It’s like reiterating ideas to
myself through the paintings. Something like, “Sing Ding aling” is basically
saying to be thankful for what you have or what’s happening. Our lives are
short and can end at any time. A lot of it is trying to be present
where I am and trying to convey that. It’s not super heavy or
highly-conceptual, it’s kind of a natural dialogue.
Is that the same reasoning behind your
ubiquitous “yar”?
Yeah, I think “yar” is a sailing term
meaning that everything is good and ready to go. The boat is yar, the sails are
yar. It’s an actual term. It doesn’t sound like it should be but it is. I think
it’s funny.
A lot of that stuff is trying to make
myself laugh, too.
working on max fish mural, 1997 photo: dunn |
For sure. How did your installations
inside the old Max Fish happen? Is that a nod to old Alleged connections?
I’ve done three installations in Max
Fish over the years. I lived two storefronts down from there in 1995.
Rent had to be a lot cheaper then.
Definitely. And it wasn’t a skater bar either. It was
far more artists and musicians back then, which I actually liked because I
could take a break from my skatelife and go there.
My days back then were basically painting or shooting
skate photos during the day, skating the metal curbs out on Houston a lot from
around 11 to 1am and then ending the day at Max Fish until close at 4. That was
kind of the routine.
All the people that worked at Max Fish were my
buddies. How Max Fish became a skater bar, my good friend I skated with was
Andre Razo. Whenever his underage younger brothers Marc and Tino would come
down from Vermont, we would get them into Max Fish and they’d be stoked. It’s
funny to see how they evolved and became bartenders as Max Fish became a total
skate bar… and now Marc is one of the owners.
It was a natural thing over the years
where they’d ask me if I wanted to paint the walls. The first one I did was
probably in 1997 or so. I did another one in 2004 and the last one I did was 3
or 4 years ago. They want me to do another one in the new spot but I haven’t
gotten out there to do it yet.
shooting "ye old destruction" with al parts |
What can you tell us about your new
project Ye Olde Destruction?
Yeah, I’ve been working slowly on this all 16-mm skate
film over the last few years. It’s a pretty solid cast of skaters: Evan Smith,
Colin Provost, Taylor Bingman, Nick Garcia, Suski, Chris Russell, Brent
Achtley, Al Parts, Ray Barbee, McCrank… there’s a bunch. So far, Jon Miner’s
helped me film a trip and French Fred had helped me film another.
I don’t want to give away too much but it’s really raw
and fun skating. A lot of DIY spots and loosely based around
automobiles. It’s not about hammertime, It’s people having fun, skating
shit. I’ll leave it at that.
Will it be along the same lines as Cuatro Suenos Pequenos?
I’m making it so it will have a similar
vibe but this one will be much more angsty and in the punk zone. Quatros is a bit more ethereal or dream-state
oriented.
filming Javier Mandizabal for CSP - photo: rip zinger |
How did Cuatro Suenos Pequenos come about?
Javi and I were just sitting around the table in my
house. I’d wanted him to be in
this other idea for a film I was working on but it didn't work out. He was working with Quiksilver at the time and I remember him
saying, “Those guys are big fans of your work. They’d probably let us make a
movie together if you wanted. “
We started talking about it and
seriously, within 15 minutes, we had the idea.
“Maybe it could be about dreams.”
It kept going from there. I hashed it
out a little more and got Quiksilver to give us some budget. We started working
on it and were actually almost done when Quiksilver closed down that side of
their business. No more skateboarding. But it was cool because they actually
paid for the movie and then gave it back to me.
In the beginning, it was going to be a
free movie in Europe, released on the internet. It was really made with the
European sensibility in mind. Lots of influence from Bertalucci, Fellini and
Godard.
Your use of colors in Quatros reminds me a lot of Godard’s Contempt… which I can’t say is
something I’ve ever said about a skate video before.
Yeah, I really like that European New
Wave stuff.
It was awesome working with French Fred
and having a really great, small crew that could move fluidly. Making
that film was really a nice time. It was a total pleasure.
self foot portrait - 16mm wheel filming rig "cuatro suenos pequenos" - santa cruz, 2012 |
How does that experience compare with
your work on SB Chronicles 3?
Yeah, I’m helping art direct for the new Chronicles movie and I went on a trip to Chile
with the guys not too long ago. I wasn’t filming as much as shooting portraits.
Just being like, “Hey guys, come over here and shoot this portrait with me real
quick.”
It’s a little different, for sure. On Quatros, for example, I’m the
boss. I’m the director. I’m making sure the vision is taken care of and
directing what is happening… and I don’t always like being that person.
Sometimes it’s more fun being a sideline person.
But the trip was super fun. Everyone was really cool and they were
all ripping. I love Kevin Bradley’s skating and with Cory, anything can happen
at any time. That’s my favorite. And Koston was awesome. It was a great
vibe.
ed templeton - lipslide - garden grove, 1993 |
We talked about Swank and Blender
earlier. Why don’t we see as many pros doing their own graphics and taking on
these artistic pursuits like we used to? Is skateboarding still attracting the
same weirdos?
I think in the 80s when all the art
stuff came to the forefront, being a professional skateboarder wasn’t as
structured. The amount of stuff that needed to be done wasn’t on that crazy of
a level. The level of skating wasn’t that high yet. I think this left a lot of
room to do other things and be creative. The demand now is so high for what
people have to do in order to be competitive, it doesn’t lend them as much
time.
If you look at companies like Magenta or
Welcome, those guys are having fun. There is a quantifiable balance: skating
good but not killing themselves. Maybe that opens up their brains more towards
being weird and making weird shit… instead of a serious gnar athlete
obsessing over that next crushing maneuver they’re going to take P-Rod out with
in the comp.
t campbell, back d - le vague, paris, 1994 photo: deberdt |
Let’s inspire some weirdos with this
last question: Recommend one album, one book and one film.
Okay, I’d say probably one of the
records I’ve listened to the most in the last decade is from this band, Girls.
It’s their first record, called “Album”. All their records are really good but
I think that one is just amazing. Even though a lot of people hate it… which is
probably a good sign.
The movie that’s coming to mind right
now is one I’ve always loved called Birdy. It’s with Mathew Modine and
Nicolas Cage and is a full-on 80’s movie but it’s really good.
And I just saw Madars at Element Skate Camp… I’d told him
a while ago that he should read Miles Davis’ autobiography. Since then, he got
around to reading it and was amped about it. It’s
super raw. It’s Miles telling all these stories like, “You broke dick dog
motherfucker!”…cutting everyone down, telling jazz history according to
Miles.
He’s such a dark character. It’s called
“Miles” and its pretty long but when you’re done, you’ll wish it was longer.
It’s really good.
big thanks to Whiteley and T-Muck for taking the time,,,
I am so siked to see some thomas campbell love on the cbi! Incredible interview!
ReplyDeleteThank you Chops and Thomas.
ReplyDeleteyes!
ReplyDeleteSheffey has never been on a fairy ride
ReplyDeleteAWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Can't wait for the new movie. Kicking myself for not grabbing his Designerium decks (and the Dave Kinsey one). Thanks once again!!
ReplyDeleteThis interview struck really deep cords for me.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your hard work and mainly being true to life and not turning this fun thing into a fucking marketing campaign, in the same breath happy that skating made travel and art possible
Cheers
Amazing! Dug his take on skateboarding's divide and current state. Long time fan of his photography, art & positive vibes. Tried getting one of his paintings in the early 2000s, but the day after contacting him, my car engine blew and there went my savings. Bummer, but the car is still humming along today.
ReplyDeleteGood job, once again!
ReplyDeleteI will leave this here, about that one photo I shot in there…
In all honesty, it should say "self-portrait", as Thomas set up all the flashes, told my aspiring photographer's ass to lie down there, and all I had to do was click, then shake his camera for the light effects... It was a cold night, and we were skating what was our favorite spot in Paris: the sundial known as La Vague. Thomas was willing to shoot a Paris story for @transworldskate and had arranged to meet Stephane Larance there to take photos of him, but he never showed up. So we ended up shooting photos of each others to keep warm.
Great interview & some really interesting history - keep up the good work.
ReplyDeletethansk for the interview,Eric and Thomas.
ReplyDeletethe name of Thomas Campbell brings me back to mid 90's being an asocial kid,only skateboarder in a town from rural Spain(pre-internet era),Tres60 SkateMag was my only connection with the rest of the world.This magazine was really exciting for a few years including not only amazing photos and interviews but also,art,poetry,music and the sense that skateboarding was more than just riding your skate.i remember thomas's name was all over that magazine over those years.