Showing posts with label skateboard culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skateboard culture. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Remembering Brazil

Last week I attended Zoo York's latest flick premiere at the new Underworld music/events venue in downtown Montreal. The film is entitled "State of Mind". One particularity about this video is that two of the riders (Donny Barley and Aaron Suski) have namesake grinds. This tells something about the East-Coast skating style that has evolved in cities such as Philadelphia, Boston and New-York City. My favorite parts are Eli Reed, Matt Miller, Ron Deily, Forrest Kirby and Brandon Westgate's explosive intro.

I remember the first time I saw Westgate in a magazine. He had the back cover Emerica ad of a late 2005 SBC Skateboard with a crazy kickflip frontside wallride in a ditch. A few months later, I was invited by Red Bull to fly down to Brazil with my good friend Carl Labelle so that we could attend a huge skate contest the drink company had organized in Salvador (Bahia), the country's former capital.  Once in Brazil, we met up with Brandon Westgate and former Birdhouse team manager (now Zoo York's) Seamus Deegan. Both guys were in Montreal last week for the premiere and it was good to recall the Brazilian memories. Brandon just turned pro for Zoo York skateboards, and his part in "State of Mind" is simply insane. He starts off by skating most of New-York City's famous spots the opposite way. So if a hubba, straight ledge off stairs, rail or gap was usually skated from top to bottom, Brandon simply uses the terrain going up, meaning he needs trice as much speed and pop in order to make it. If you have ever tried to skate a ledge that goes upward you know how much pressure you face and how fast you need to go. My own experience is skating Montreal's Champ de Mars triangle ledges. Brandon is a short guy and it looks as if he can ollie up to his neck.

Here are two unreleased photos from Brazil that I found in my archives. Seamus told me that Brandon celebrated his 15th birthday on that trip. Carl and I did not stay to chill in Salvador thought, we flew to Sao Paolo for a week of intense street skating.


Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Sunny Tuesday Morning...

It was late at night on June 15th.  I was chatting with Calgary-based skateboarder and friend Kevin Lowry about his new project, a soon-to-be-released Canadian skateboard video featuring the likes of Antoine Asselin, Lee Yankou and himself.

Just as I told him I was going to bed a new message notified me that fellow half-Canadian half-Peruvian artist Chris Dyer was home and could sell me a copy of his art book/journal, The Sunlight Chronicles. Seeing a couple of pages from the publication online made me impatient about going through the sketchbook, where Chris documented in words and drawings his constant process of evolution and travels.

I drove to his place where he showed me a painting he's been working on since December, a piece representing his perspective of the evolution of humanity. We talked for a bit about possible ways of reaching a broader audience and I suggested a blog. Sure, he's already got a MySpace page, a Facebook artist page and multiple sites for his art, clothing line and book, but a blog is something different, closer to the journal style he is publishing as the Chronicles.

This morning Chris Dyer's blog was up, so I thought it would be a good time for me to create one as well. The copyright issues in Blogger seemed less ambiguous than in other social web services. They even mention public licenses such as Creative Commons. This should be enough incentive for me to publish material from my photo archive online.

Now the big question is how I'll manage to blog in Spanish and French as well...  Things could get messy if I can't split the three in an orderly manner.