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Posts Tagged ‘Scott Bass’
Friday, April 23rd, 2010
 Sacred Craft
This morning I woke up from a nightmare-dream at 3:30 am. In the dream I was glossing boards, and had lost the hot batch of finishing resin. I found it in the nick of time, and was just completing the last board as it went off. I even had the acrid smell of an over catalyzed hot batch in my nostrils as I hopped out of bed and felt my feet hit cool wood floor in the blackness. Yeesh, surfboard subliminals. I built surfboards for about 20 years. They have been on my mind a lot lately, obviously.
What makes a thing sacred is found in the root meaning of the very word. Sacred refers to the setting apart of something for a special purpose. So it follows that Scott Bass would call his surf culture show which retains primary focus on the surfboard and it’s creators, Sacred Craft.
Yesterday I saw an un named shot of an old guy at the Sacred Craft tribute, which was held in Ventura at The Fairgrounds April 10th and 11th and that honored one of the surfboard industry’s founding Fathers, Rennie Yater,. The un named shot of the old guy in the shaping room was of Dennis Ryder, who along with Bill Hubbina, started one of the first surf shops in Ventura, (William-Dennis), which still exists today, as Ventura Surf shop.
 Dennis Ryder
Dennis shaped what is probably the first incarnation of the shortboard, when he worked production at Morey-Pope and was doing the McTavish split vee in the 60′s. Having him back in Ventura after living for many years in Hawaii is very cool. One of the best guys around, along with Gene Cooper, and Yater, in terms of craftsmanship. All three live here on California’s Golden Coast
 Gold Rincon
The Tribute involved shaping a replica of a Yater spoon, which aside from a six channel bottom, is probably one of the more difficult designs to build.
Local shapers Todd Proctor, Matt Moore, Dennis Ryder, Wayne Rich and Michel Junod along with Nick Palandrini from Nor Cal, were the invitees.
The shaper who got the nod for doing the best replica of the Spoon was Wayne Rich. That was very cool, since he broke his neck surfing El Cap a few years ago, and almost did not make it back. An incredible come back, when you consider that he shapes surfboards for a living. Surfboard shaping is physically quite arduous, and demands a very high skill level and depth of experience. Master surfboard craftsmen are a dying breed. Quite literally, as the industry has changed so dramatically and the normal cottage industry apprenticeship chain, disappeared years ago.
 Surf Art
There was a hall way formed by two rows of Yaters, and each board had a picture and date on it. Pretty remarkable that Rennie is able to document so much of his and surfing’s past. Just mind blowing. I shaped around 16k surfboards over a 20 year period, and could not even think about accomplishing that. The Surfing Heritage Museum played a large role in this fantastic back marker. The organization had both Curator Barry Haun and head, Dick Metz, on hand the entire week end.
 Dick Metz in the Surf Story Hall
Surf Story by Rob Havassy (two different site links)
The entire second hall at Sacred Craft was about the book Surf Story, and the book tells the story of its own existence pretty well. Most surfers, if they read about what happened, will probably get a bit pissed off. The actual tale goes all the way back to when Abercrombie purloined one of the legendary Leroy Grannis’ images of a bunch of surf icons and used it in an ad campaign. And when the surfers took exception to that, and having their names and likenesses used to promote a company like A&F (and Hollister), were blown off, they sued A&F and forced the issue on an intellectual property rights violation basis. A&F ran a nationwide ad campaign of a monkey holding a surfboard, as their response to surfing and the people who had a large hand in making the sport what it is after the fact. (Got to admire having enough money and humor to do what they did, but it was a very obvious statement about what they really think of you all)
Then, when Rob’s art was taken, and duplicated in similar fashion, he went after them as well. Since A&F was buying somewhere around 10000 mags a month, the surf publishing industry ignored Rob as he sued A&F, not wanting to piss their vendor off. (It appeared as if surf publishing had sold out the sport, by not supporting one of their own, and instead, going with A&F by their silence, in some industry observers opinions)
So the book uses that as a catalyst. Everybody was invited to contribute, as this is the first of a likely series. So the people not IN the book this time around, are conspicuous in their absence. What that means, is they did not want to be in it, or like me, just did not really understand completely what the book was all about.( Rob would have included them.) I had been very busy when Mary Osborne first told me about the book project. I almost did not get my submission in.
Once again, surf publishing sort of ignored Rob, so he wound up self published the biggest, most comprehensive book on surf culture ever. It was both an independent creative statement to surf publishing, and his war to take back our culture from the people who had whored it out, and have a history of contributing little or nothing to the sport’s existence. (Commercial fashion and the rag business)
 Rob's Salute to me for not manning my post
That is the gist of the story on Sacred Craft 2010, from where I stand. But the “lesser details” are rather fascinating. I intend to write about it in greater detail. Or you can simply ask Rob Havassy or Scott Bass.
The Surf Story Hall housed shows-work, from twelve of the books 88 contributors, as well as a phenomenal selection of highest end Yaters, done as a collaboration between Kevin Ancell and Rennie. Many of the artists were on site plying their disciplines live. Pretty remarkable to watch.
Here are a few images from the show. The pleasant looking guy is Craig Peterson, who along with Kevin Naughton, was among the first surf photojournalists- adventurers from the US, and pioneered much at Surfer Magazine. Rob Havassy, Craig and I were along the back wall, side by side. I consider that quite an honor. Glad I returned Rob’s call. I had a lot of stories to share with him.
Here is an addendum of sorts, as he just posted it. Seth Godin’s blog, that is a must read for every artist. Glad that Rob Havassy has this part down.
 Craig Peterson: Pioneer
Get Surf Culture’s book. It is a very profound effort by all. Pure is in short supply these days, and Authenticity is something to be both lauded and supported.
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- Sacred Craft
A child experiencing surfing. Mondos, Ventura California
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- Surf Art
My morning glide watercolor rendition of a Sean Tully turn.
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- Gold Rincon
A classic California Gold Coast Winter's day at Rincon Point, California
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- Rob's Salute to me for not manning my post
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- Craig Peterson: Pioneer
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- Dick Metz in the Surf Story Hall
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- Dennis Ryder
Tags: Barry Haun, California Gold Coast, Craftsmanship, Craig Peterson, David Pu'u, Dennis Ryder, Dick Metz, Ethics, Gene Cooper, Kevin Ancell, Kevin Naughton, Leroy Grannis, Matt Moore, Michel Junod, Rennie Yater, Rincon, Rob Havassey, Sacred Craft, Sacred Craft 2010, Scott Bass, Seth Godin, SHF, situational ethics, Surf Art, surf culture, Surf History, Surf Icons, Surf Publishing, Surf Story, Surf Story Show Ventura, Surfboard Industry, Surfboard shaping, Surfer magazine, surfing heritage foundation, Surfing History, Todd Proctor, Ventura Surf Expo, Ventura Surf Shop, Wayne Rich, William-Dennis Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Thursday, May 21st, 2009
 Connected
Connectedness |kəˈnɛktədnəs| noun
ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense [be united physically] ; rare before the 18th cent.): from Latin connectere, from con- ‘together’ + nectere ‘bind.’
Drew Kampion, co editor of The Surfers Path, to which I am a long time contributor, had dropped a simple note via the inet clothesline: “Hey I cannot believe you have not met Mark Gray, you two have so much in common. Mark meet Dave, Dave, Mark. He is coming down to Sacred Craft.”
Scott Bass, my friend and colleague from Surfer Magazine has formulated a unique cultural event based around the Surfboard as a cultural anchor in society. I was invited to attend. The event is the antithesis of the industry standard: Action Sports Retailer trade show. For when you walk in the door of one of his shows, you experience surfing itself, not some marketing generated facade of what surfing became after it was prostituted to social death. He calls it Sacred Craft. Brilliant concept.
My son Josh, a neophyte music producer, had told me that he and his younger brother Jon, would be performing at the Good Bar on Main St downtown. He calls his current project, Loves Secret Domain.
Jeanette Ortiz (one of my regular models) is soon leaving to study in Spain. Her Mom has a company called Reigns of Hope which I am going to be shooting this week and needed to do locations work for. Time for a family portrait.
A pal had caught up with me earlier this week and asked, “Hey are you coming to the bike race Saturday?” Bike Race?
I grew up as a surfer in Goleta. Graduating over the years from ruining the floor of my parents garage as I built surfboards for family and friends from the age of 12, to my final exodus out of board building at 40 having built close to 40,000 of the things. I competed and surfed the world as a Santa Barbara based professional surfer and board builder. Roots run deep there. My friends and surf family have literally built the sport and industry.
My other life and world, and where I was allowed and yes, encouraged to be an aggressive type A personality, was in racing, both cars and bikes. I had morphed from competitive swimmer to cyclist at the age of 17 and went into the Olympics Development program. I actually had two fruitful cycling careers where, largely due to my team, the Santa Barbara Bike Club, I won a fair amount. Though I would no more consider racing a bike today than I would paddling out at third reef anywhere in Hawaii, I have a strong affinity for the people and cachet of both worlds.
Mark Gray arrived and due to a depth of life experience and commonality of interests and manner of approach, we had time tripped the weekend away. He recounted exploits in Japan and beyond and I had side barred all over the darned map. Our time together caused a flow back and forth that literally felt as if we had been softly thumbing through the pages of the book of our lives. Two live wires united, for a time.
Connectedness. We could all use a dose. In a time when markets fail, as things may grow increasingly uncertain, being connected is vitality.
A VERY well produced video that espouses and utilizes connectedness is here. It is from FORD. Yes, that’s right!
An excellent blog by Seth Godin on marketing intolerance and connection is here.
Between The Lines, Scott Bass’ and Ty Ponders amazing film on surfers, war and generational connectedness is here.
There are many things which may keep someone from connecting. Life’s trials and tempo, hardship, insecurity, feelings of inadequacy. But the primary element and ultimately a conductant, is to love em all, both those that do, and those that cannot: connect.
Any image in this blog is a tale unto itself. But as a collage it is a stream of consciousness that today flashes like cards being shuffled at the hand of an experienced dealer.
The gallery below is a sampling from the 16 gigs of camera RAW I collected in about 32 hours. Click on any of the images for a full view as well, at what may be a fascinating back story.
Bon Voyage Jeanette. Enjoy Bracelona!
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- Connected
Andy, Jeanette and Marie Ortiz, at Reigns of Hope in Ojai
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- LSD: Josh and Jon
ventura
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- LSD:Nick
ventura
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- LSD: Josh, Eddie and Nick
ventura
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- LSD: Nick
ventura
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- LSD: Josh
ventura
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- Ultimate Boarder booth, Sacred Craft
ventura. UB creator Tim Hoover is from Goleta and was one of our surf shop denizens. Goleta loves Tim, and the sport loves UB.
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- Paul Jenkin
Paul is Environmental Director for the Ventura Surfrider Chapter. If Al Gore won a Pulitzer for his controversial piece on Global Warming, then this man deserves a thousand of them for his tireless, science based efforts to improve his community. Connected. A hero in every sense of the word.
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- Bruce Fowler
Bruce ran Bahne Goleta then Goleta Surf N Wear. He was the inspiration for an entire generation of surfers of which I am one. We worked together for years in board manufacturing till he tried to take out a telephone pole with his head. First time I had seen him in 15 years! Sacred Craft. Connected.
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- Sam George
We have known each other since our early teens when I inadvertently took him out in my first surf contest at Secos. As competitors, colleagues and friends, we have seen a lot together.
Sam is one of the sports best assets and much of my accomplishments in the sport, industry and photography I owe to this great example of flow and enthusiasm.
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- Road Sign: Yater Sacred Craft Booth
Yater, mentor to us all. John Bradbury an inspiring thread and yes, a former glasser. Connected.
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- Dennis Ryder
One of the shapers in the Ventura Based Morey-Pope factory which produced the McTavish split vee, a design thought to be the first shortboard. Dennis walked into my surfboard shop in SB one day as he endeavored to return full time to board building. I told him about the William- Dennis shortboard I had for awhile at the age of 15 in Goleta. He was kind enough to become my laminator and has been my friend ever since. Connected.
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- Shades of Perfection: Yaters
Always the bar in ethics and craftsmanship. Sacred Craft.
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- Gerry Lopez Shaping
Some of my own outline curves and design philosophy are Gerry's via Rich Reed, ex Surfline Hawaii and Lightning Bolt shaper who showed me the virtue of the contrived straight from a Lopez template. Connected. Bobby Martinez won a plethora of National Titles on boards that I shaped him which utilized that concept as part of their design composition. Connected.
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- Randy Cone
I have known Randy since he was 12. One of the most talented to ever come out of Goleta as a surfer, shaper and waterman. We transitioned through it all and he is without a doubt the most opinionated, talented, gifted and closest friend I have had in a lifetime. I snuck up on him as he shaped his difficult draw in the event. A stringerless styro. As I saw him make a turn with the planer I quietly opened the shaping room door and screamed "CONE!" He jumped, then smiled. First time we had seen each other since Mavericks on the cliff a few years back. His Bradbury rendition was FLAWLESS. I checked. Connected.
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- Peter Townend
Competitors, friends, I had always wanted to surf against him as a Pro. So conservative, he was the antithesis of Dave Smith and I's uber radical approach. Never happened till we were old and Masters and I realized mid heat that I truly did not care if I beat him. I sat and watched instead. Responsible in large part for surfing as it is today, in greater depth than I can write here. The black dots on his face? Skin cancers just burned off. His look says it all and is why he is such an asset to surfing. Connected.
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- Craftsmanship
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- Connectedness
We have all worked with and for each other. Each person on this page.
Then there was John Bradbury. We remember him. He was us. He is us. Connected.
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- Ventura, Adopted home town
Criterium, Ventura Stage Race
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- Peloton: Connectedness
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- Human River
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- Flow Rush
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- Exhuberance
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- Interlacing
Amazing what you get with a 12 MM lens and a pan at 1/30 a second and the subject going 35 MPH. Canon 5DM2
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- Dominance
In a classic tactic this guy went away with five laps to go or thereabouts. One person managed to go with him. He dropped the guy with one lap to go and simply rode away to the win. Confidence, bravado: in racing as in life, you make your own luck. And fortune? Well she frequently favors the brave. A life lesson on a grey Sunday evening.
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- Main Street
Ventura Stage Race
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- Backfocus
Everyone always focuses on the winner. I have been where he is right now a lot. But the true story of the moment is in the dropped rider behind. Hanging on for second. The field sprinters jockeying for a shot at third in the bottom corner. Ventura looking like Europe.
Racing really IS life. This image is my best analogy. I thought about it. Canon 5DM2 and Canon 300MM F2.8 IS lens
Tags: Beach culture, best commercial ever, Canon 300mm F2.8 IS lens, Canon 5D Mark 2, Cultural Event, Dennis Ryder, Drew Kampion, Ford, Gerry Lopez, Jeanette Ortiz, Jon Pu'u, Josh Pu'u, Loves Secret Domain, LSD, Mark Grey, Paul Jenkin, Peter Townend, Randy Cone, Reigns of Hope, Sam George, Scott Bass, Seth Godin, Steve Pezman, Surfboard Industry, Surfer magazine, Surfers Journal, The Surfers Path, ventura, Ventura Chapter Surfrider, Ventura Stage Race Posted in Uncategorized | 10 Comments »
Monday, April 27th, 2009

Ventura has been in the throes of an art boom the past few years. I have watched amusedly as a diverse group of people have been drawn to our little berg from far flung corners of the earth and served as cultural and intellectual fodder for a renaissance of sorts. Creative seedlings they all are, putting down root, bearing fruit that the town will benefit from.
No where has this been more obvious to me than in the recent Ventura Film Fest event where during a period of four days, film makers, artists and musicians mingled with a diverse cross section of the public to create an organic phenomenon that served to inspire and connect people.
The driving forces behind the festival are myriad, but when one needs to put a finger on the actual pulse, it was film maker and writer Lorenzo DeStefano whose vision for a festival that focused on interactive participation and community based cinema, fostered what proved to be a unique experience. Simply put, Lorenzo wanted everyone to come and stay four days. What would arise was intended to be a collaboration of sorts that would motivate both film makers and art enthusiasts of all types to migrate here every year to experience, create and encourage. Though I could only attend for two of the days, my own experience illustrates well what happens when the creative commune. The following is one of many stories that developed.
I had been in an entertaining discussion with Director, Writer and Producer Robert Young, whose fantastic career was being profiled at the festival, when I was reluctantly drawn away to shoot something. I was collecting some stills and video footage for the VFF. It was a difficult conversation to leave since Robert was being incredibly generous.
The thing with creatives, is that we like to listen, we enjoy communicating, we drink of each others energies and feed off our collective experiences in a manner which in derivative fashion, expands us as people and artists. There is an enthusiastic charge that pulses through a crowd like the one at the event. You simply step into the flow and it carries you along without much effort on your own part. Easy as a languid swim in tropical waters, the experience is simultaneously relaxing, and energizing. Once you step in.
I found myself with film maker William Farley, whose film Shadow and Light was to screen later in the day. He wanted a cup of coffee. I wanted to hear more in a conversation that had immediately hooked me: the communication of things spiritual via the medium of cinematography. As we strolled down Main St and into Starbucks we shared some of the fantastic things that we had experienced over the years in the course of our work, where when we simply listened, a project would draw us into another world and show us things, tell us tales, that we would never have expected at the onset.
As he sat down in the City Bus stop next to the Elks Lodge, coffee in hand, William expounded on metaphysical reality, quantum physics and the energy signature that is both our lives and the not so workaday process of listening and communicating the voices we hear via sound, imagery and creative intent. He recounted a few of his startling experiences in working with Native Peoples. I in turn shared a couple of mine, and for a period of time that seemed like minutes but was actually two hours, that bus stop became a heiau, a house on a reservation, a distant shore. We simply waved off the bus drivers piloting the lumbering beasts past.
The key thing that transported us into the time and reality warp of that bus stop was the re enforcement that yes there are others like us out there. People who peer into a world possibly not evident to all, and whose prescient wish is to share a little of it. Though at times the localized creative process may feel a little like carrying water to a desert, when one has a colleague, the task seems to become it’s own reward. I was so grateful to have been included.
Click on any of the gallery images for a larger view and a little back story on the subject.
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- Lorenzo DeStefano
VFF director in a post screening chat.
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- The Elks Entry Hall
Was a meeting place where film makers expounded on their work post screening.
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- Scott Bass
Writer and film collaborator of the finely done surf and war documentary: Between The Lines.
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- Zuri Star
Zuri was one of many artists who performed and donated effort, talent, and more at the festival.
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- Vino Vaqueros
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- Stanley Bodner
New York artist Stanley Bodner. A friend and eventual colleague of New York art savant, Andy Warhol.
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- Robert Young
Robert Young engaging colleagues and viewers post screening
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- William Farley
The photo I ran off from Robert Young to take.
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- William Farley
William being my metaphysical Pied Piper.
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- William Farley
Bus stop metaphysics
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- Ventura Pier
A unique California Beach town, and excellent hosting venue for a film festival, the area offers a seaside retreat that is a relaxing beautiful venue for art pilgrims from around the world.
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- Sundown Cityscape
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Tags: Art town, Between The Lines, California Beach town, California Film Festival, cinematography, colleagues, creatives, cultural rennaisance, David Pu'u, film makers, Lorenzo DeStefano, Robert Young, Scott Bass, Shadow and Light, Stanley Bodner, ventura, Ventura Elks Lodge, Ventura Film Fest, Ventura Film Festival, Ventura Film makers, VFF, William Farley, Zuri Star Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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© 2009 David Pu'u. All rights reserved. |
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