Title
Surf OdysseyPosted in
BookEditor
Andrew Groves, GestaltenPublisher
Gestalten VerlagFormat
24 x 30 cmDetails
Full color, hardcover, 320 pages
ISBN
978-3-89955-653-7Price
€39.90 / $55.00 / £35.00Detailed Information | |||||
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Title | Surf Odyssey | Posted in | Book | Editor | Andrew Groves, Gestalten |
Publisher | Gestalten Verlag | Format | 24 x 30 cm | Details | Full color, hardcover, 320 pages |
ISBN | 978-3-89955-653-7 | Price | €39.90 / $55.00 / £35.00 | E-shop | http://shop.gestalten.com/surf-odyssey.html |
As expected, “Surf Odyssey” has an abundance of photographs featuring stunning surfing locations around the globe, from the stretching shores below Table Mountain in Cape Town, the swelling sea under the daunting cliffs of Moher in Ireland and the gigantic waves of Nazaré in Portugal, to cold-water surfing paradises such as the rugged coasts of Tasmania, the Norwegian fjords and the snow-covered beaches of Canada, all the way to the most unexpected places, like the Amazon River, where surfers ride the tidal waves that travel upstream. Breath-taking shots of surfers are also showcased as seen in the likes of world-renowned, award-winning photographer Brian Bielmann, Dylan Gordon’s images of surfers silhouetted against majestic landscapes and Sarah Lee’s mesmerizing, balletic images of surfers and swimmers above and below the water.
Complementing the photos are stories from adventurers like Gary Conley, who on a surf expedition across the west coast of Africa on his motorbike navigated his way through Kalashnikov-wielding bandits, hostile border patrols and truck-sized puddles, and Freddie Meadows who spends the few hours of daylight during autumn in his native Sweden braving the freezing weather searching for the finest waves in the Baltic Sea.
The book also showcases graphic works from the best surf-themed illustrators, designers and artists around the world alongside a hand-picked selection of world-class products such as eco-friendly, hand-crafted surfboards, biodegradable wetsuits and skateboards made from recycled fishing nets, all echoing surfing’s emerging environmental sense of conscience for causes such as stopping coastal and oceanic pollution, recovering biodiversity and creating surfing preserves. For at the end of the day, what surfing comes down to is having empathy with nature, or, as Thomas Berry says, the human need to identify with the non-human, something this book both admirably and beautifully illustrates.