Frontside SF Magazine #4 One Year Edition

Page 1


Frontside San Francisco Is: Ryan Abraham Editor in Chief Contributing Editors Evan Collisson Hank Hansen Daniel Beck Staff Photographer Shivizle Siwajek Emotional Support Featuring the Photography and Art Of: Tim Aguilar Evan Collisson Christian Ericksen Brandon Getty Patrick Sean Gibson: (Responsible for the illustrated logo below) Terry Worona Wanna Submit To The Magazine? Want A Shirt or Stickers? Want To Advertise? Send Hate Mail? Questions? Lurk at Frontsidesf.com, Our Facebook Page, or Contact Us Via info@frontsidesf.com

Issue #4 3. Selected Photographs 30. Skateboarding and pyschogeography 32. The Art of Patrick Sean Gibson Cover: Steven Tran Hippie Hop Oakland, CA Photo: Christian Ericksen Back Cover: Jesse Vieira Hurricane San Francisco, CA Photo: Brandon Getty Inner Cover: Gold Nuggets Photo: Ryan Abraham





The Photography Of

Evan Collisson


Mike Lemnitzer Ollie San Francisco, CA


Mike Lemnitzer Front Board San Francisco, CA


John Lindsay Boardslide San Francisco, CA


Jarod Taber Wallie San Francisco, CA



John Lindsay Rock Climbing San Francisco, CA



The Photography Of

Christian Ericksen

Steven Tran FS Smith Alameda, CA



Eddie Higuera Back Tailslide Oakland, CA



Eddie Higuera Krooks Emeryville, CA


Eddie Higuera Blunt Oakland, CA



This Cover Photo Was too Gnarly to Crop. There’s Nothin’ Hippie Dippie about this Hippie Hop.

Steven Tran Hippie Hop Oakland, CA


The Photography Of

Tim Aguilar


Alec Teffeteller Kickflip La, CA


(Left) Christian Holt Hardflip La Habra, CA (Right) Christian Holt FS 180 Los Angeles, CA


Either Christian Doesn’t Change His Clothes or he somehow accomplished this hardflip and 180 the same day. Either way it’s super gnarly.


(Left) Luigi Tinoco Crook Somewhere, CA (Right) Jeremy Leabres Noseblunt Corona, CA


Check Out Jeremy Leabres’s (Right) Toy Machine Ads; This guy always skates with a fiendish grin. Here, for whatever reason, not so much.


Manuel Castillo FS Flip Los Angeles, CA


Some Rando Meanderings & Art Poop


Skateboarding and PyschoGeography Photo By Terry Worona Words By Hank Hansen

Congratulations: even though you probably didn’t know, you are a practicing psychogeog-

rapher. No, not you vert guys. Not you either, park chargers. Y’all rule, but I’m talking to the street dudes on this one. Sorry. No idea what I’m talking about? That’s OK. I’ll explain. It’s your day off. You’ve just spent all morning hungover, drinking coffee and watching A Visu-

al Sound. Now it’s almost noon and you’re ready to stop being a pile, so you hit up your buddies to skate, but they all have work or class. Unfazed, you head out the door with nothing but your board and some stoke, and start pushing towards whatever random spots you can find. When you’re out drifting down alleys and hunting down some untapped urban gems, this is unconscious psychogeography in action.

The concept of psychogeography came out of the Situationist movement of the 50s and 60s.

The Situationists sought to break out of a cyclical, unfulfilling way of life that they believed was the result of Capitalism’s emphasis on objects rather than experiences. One of the best ways to invigorate one’s experiences and therefore, they reasoned, improve one’s quality of life, was to find new ways of interacting with the built environment that gets taken for granted on a daily basis.

The movement may have faded into the fringes since those days, but the ideas still live on via

groups like the Bay Area Rapid Transit Psychogeographical Association, among others. But listen up, dudes. Maybe it’s time for us to more knowingly carry that torch a bit, too. Think about it: we slam our bodies into curbs and handrails and walls. We get familiar with sidewalk fissures and stagnant puddles. We know better than any other urban observer how the built environment feels. Skateboarders take Walter Benjamin’s concept of the flâneur and drag him through gutters and ditches, feeding him a psychedelic urethane cocktail until he sees in the environment around him an


Evan Collisson Ollie Berkeley, CA

endless concrete cityscape of

unfathomable possibility.

The great thing is, it’s not like

you have to do anything differently. Besides, we’re all here because we don’t like being told what to do, right? But just consider: the drunken godfather himself, Dubord, claimed that the only way to really fathom the ‘beautiful language’ of Situationist urbanism was to put it into practice. And that practice is, well, it’s exactly what we’ve all been doing for so long that most of us can’t remember things being any other way. You’ve got the membership card now, dudes. In fact, it’s been in your wallet this whole time. If you ask me, that’s enough to make me crack at least a hint of a smile and keep pushing for a few more blocks. The spots are out there, waiting to be brought to life.

31.


The Artwork Of

Patrick Sean Gibson (Rad Artist and Human)





Celebrating legendary pool skaters. minimalskateboards.bigcartel.com

Scott Foss Handplant Malibu, CA Photo: Lorrie Palmos



THANK

YOU


U

To all of the readers, distributors, photographers, and

skaters who make this magazine possible. We believe in this magazine and its mission to stay submission based, accessible, and free. We absorb our large printing costs and keep the mag free in order to ensure that kids have one more reason to visit their local skateshop, to provide a platform to promote Bay Area skate and photographic talent, and to give people the rad sensation of seeing their homies in print.

As of now, at our one year anniversary, we have several

thousand readers, some good companies backing us, and some high-quality skate-porn submissions. Help us keep this thing free while expanding to meet our overwhelming demands. Submit your photos or artwork and Check out our Fundraising campaign at frontsidesf.com and scope the rewards for helping out.


Like FSSF? Pick up a copy at any of these bay area locations: San Francisco: DLX FTC Mission Skateboards Adobe Books Needles & Pens Dog Ear Books Book & Job Gallery East Bay: 510 Skateshop San Jose: Seeing Things Gallery NC Skateshop Sunnyvale Skate Supply Santa Cruz: Bill’s Wheels Skateworks Bookshop Santa Cruz And Many More! For The Most Up-TO-Date List, Check Out Frontsidesf.com Would Your Business Like to Carry FSSF? Contact Info@Frontsidesf.com for Details


Frontside San Francisco Issue #4 One Year Edition Printed in Santa Cruz, CA Visit Frontsidesf.com



Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.