wei-wu-wei

parachutes — en attendant l’arrivée de l’OEUVRE

suspense dans la chute

achille et la tortue

(…)

» la créativité est un état de conscience tout à fait paradoxal.

C’est l’action par l’inaction, ce que Lao Tseu appelle wei-wu-wei. — C’est permettre à quelque chose d’arriver à travers vous. Ce n’est pas une action, c’est une permission. C’est devenir un passage pour que le tout puisse couler à travers vous.

Cela vient toujours de l’au-delà. Si vous la créez, elle n’est qu’ordinaire, banale. Quand vous êtes le canal, elle est d’une grande beauté, elle contient un peu d’inconnu.«

OSHO
essaie sur la créativité

surfpunk invitational

setup and »judges panel«

heavy heat : darth vader, the pope, chicken-man, merlin the magician, butcher-boy

pre-heat board blessing

surf check

post-service

we happily took part in this awesome event… the surfpunk invitational :)
thank you the »switched kickout surf syndicate«!!

ϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟϟ

SURFING COMPETITION // Call 9AM // Spot to be announced last minute

RANDOM BOARD ROULETTE + RANDOM FANCY DRESS ROULETTE /// Invitational Only.

cut up! :)

off the wall

in the pocket — (portrait of the Duke as a young man)

gone surfing — (sticker: Bunker Spreckels as seen by Art Brewer)

quick in and out … (sticker : point de beg, finistère)

i recently got hooked on the product of the cornwall-based brand »finisterre« … what should i say… they are young and need the money ;) — so the stickers are theirs.

l’intensif et l’extensif

jolie fleur, 2014

Extrait du prologue du roman »l’Alchimiste«, de Paulo Coelho

(…)
L’Alchimiste connaissait bien la légende de Narcisse, ce beau jeune home qui allait tous les jours contempler sa propre beauté dans l’eau d’un lac. Il était si fasciné par son image qu’on jour il tomba dans le lac et s’y noya. A l’endroit où il était tombé naquit une fleur qui fut appelée narcisse.

Mais ce n’était pas de cette manière qu’Oscar Wilde terminait l’histoire.

Il disait qu’à à la mort de Narcisse les Oréades, divinités des bois, étaient venues au bord de ce lac d’eau douce et l’avaient trouvé transformé en urne de larmes amères.

»Pourquoi pleures-tu? demandèrent les Oréades. — Je pleure pour Narcisse, répondit le lac. — Voilà qui ne nous étonne guère, dirent-elles alors. Nous avions beau être toutes constamment à sa poursuite dans les bois, tu étais le seul à pouvoir contempler de près sa beauté.
— Narcisse était donc beau? demanda le lac.
— Oui, mieux que toi, pouvait le savoir? répliquèrent les Oréades, surprises. C’étati bien sur tes rives, tout de même, qu’il se penchait chaque jour!»

Le lac resta un moment sans rien dire.

Puis: »Je pleure pour Narcisse, mais je ne m’étais jamais aperçu que Narcisse était beau. Je pleure pour Narcisse parce que, chaque fois qu’il se penchait sur mes rives, je pouvais voir, au fond de ses yeux, le reflet de ma propre beauté.«

… its old style. We talk.


on Barry Kanaiaupuni — with aloha*
Passionately involved with surfing, I try to root this love-affair in good grounds of surf-related knowledge. We learn from others and the surfing culture abounds of fascinating characters and their lives speak books of pure insight.

As surfers it is our bond to the ocean that relates us and that oceanic feeling caters our bodies and souls. The Hawaiian Islands are not only the birth place of modern day surfing, but even more so, a place that embodies the essence of the soul of surfing. Luckily this remote island chain was home to me, when I became a surfer and I soaked up as much as I could of the precious surfing spirit, that the place and its people transpire.

An avid reader of the Surfers Journal I recently came across a portrait and interview of Barry Kanaiaupuni, revered power surfer from Haleiwa, Hawai’i; world ranked # 9 in 1976, but best known for his innovative and never-duplicated approach at Sunset Beach.*1

The clearly hawaiian traits in his portrait struck a soft chord in me, called upon my attention and made me follow up my reading of the article resulting in the present glance of reflection.

Grace and power instantly come to mind as the dominant characteristics in the hawaiian style of surfing. This approach combined with the natural ability of hawaiian surfriders in the midst of the tempest — which is what their ocean-garden is to the uninitiated. Their lives have been shaped by the pacific — and their poetic sense for loving togetherness, the aloha spirit, might have been a response to the über-powerful element that surrounds them.

Sunset, 1971. Photo : Art Brewer

As far as Barry Kanaiaupuni is concerned, his biographical facts speak for themselves and there can hardly be any doubt about the ability of the man. Yet, most touching to me is his soul, the pure soul of an hawaiian waterman that approaches life like he would face the crushing peaks of Sunset Beach — with grace, power and determination.

While reserved, Kanaiaupuni is forthright and convivial. He defies penetrating inquiry. It’s something attitudinal. His values come across quietly, with power and wry humor. He simply shuns the inconsequential, keeping his opinions to himself. That said, when one of the lesser- studied chapters from his life is brought up, he leans forward. (…)

What’s your shaping program like today?
Basically I make guns and high-performance longboards from 7’4” up. Sunset guns. Some of the guys I make boards for, I’ve been shaping for them for over 30 years. One guy is a local fireman: I’ve been shaping his boards since he was a teenager. Another guy works for the post office…he’s 58 years old, he comes in and we just know what to do…it’s like a friend, you know? Nothing like a “customer.” It’s old style. We talk.
*2

North Shore, 1970. Photo: Brad Barrett

*alo∙ha
alo :: presence ; hâ :: breath
hawaiian language means :: affection, love, peace, compassion and mercy. it also has come to be used as an english greeting to say hello and goodbye.

*1 Encyclopedia of Surfing : http://encyclopediaofsurfing.com/entries/kanaiaupuni-barry
*2 Surfers Journal : http://www.surfersjournal.com/23-1/go-deeper/interview-barry-kanaiaupuni