{"id":317535,"date":"2021-12-14T14:17:44","date_gmt":"2021-12-14T14:17:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.nocomplynetwork.com\/?page_id=317535"},"modified":"2023-12-05T22:09:41","modified_gmt":"2023-12-05T22:09:41","slug":"javier-mendizabal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.nocomplynetwork.com\/javier-mendizabal\/","title":{"rendered":"Javier Mendizabal"},"content":{"rendered":"

Photo shot by<\/strong> @mikeomeally<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\r\n

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Javier Mendizabal is a skater and painter from Spain.\u00a0<\/strong>He burst onto the international skate scene with legendary sections for Clich\u00e9 where he showcased his unique flowing relaxed style on some of the gnarliest transitions available, whilst keeping things rolling on the streets and knocking out sick street bangers too.<\/strong><\/p>\r\n

We were interested to see that Javier had made a noteworthy transition from pro skater to becoming an artist and after being fans of his skating and now his artwork we were interested to find out how he had started to paint, and find out more about his skating too.<\/b><\/p>\r\n

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So we had to hit him up about it all and ask him some questions about his classic video parts, recent projects and his plans for the future.\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\r\n

We had a long chat with Javier about all that and<\/b> we’re hyped he was down to be a member of The No Comply Network <\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Read Javier\u2019s interview below to find out about his painting and skate career, find out about how he came up in the Basque Country, shredding La Kantera Skate Park, meeting Thomas Campbell, going to London as a kid and going to Slam City Skates in the early 90s, getting hyped on Hokus Pokus, Matt Hensley, his memories of Ben Raemers, living in Barcelona before it became a global skate mecca, getting hooked up by Cliche, J\u00e9r\u00e9mie Daclin, filming for Europa and Bon Appetit, shooting with French Fred, trips and travels, his favourite tricks and clips, going to Japan with Kenny Reed, defining his artistic style, inspirations and influences, recent projects, favourite spots, skaters, photographers, filmmakers, skate videos and more.<\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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@javiermendizabal<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Hey Javier, what have you been up to recently?<\/h1>\r\n

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I\u2019ve been painting. That\u2019s what I\u2019ve been doing most, especially the last few months,<\/p>\r\n

It has been a big change, not a big change, but since the beginning of the year, I\u2019ve been renting a proper studio for the first time in my life so that has changed a lot.<\/p>\r\n

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What were you up to before you got your studio?<\/h1>\r\n

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Before that I was doing a lot of different things.<\/p>\r\n

I was doing a lot of freelance things with Quiksilver, different stuff, but lately I\u2019ve just been waking up and going to my studio and painting and suddenly it has started to work.<\/p>\r\n

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I\u2019ve started to sell some paintings, here and there and yeah.<\/p>\r\n

I\u2019m still trying to figure out if it\u2019s realistic or not, because some months, it\u2019s incredible and then there\u2019s like months of nothing, so I\u2019m just trying to focus on painting and see where it goes.<\/p>\r\n

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People will discover your art and see you rip on a skateboard and be hyped on your art from that aspect.<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah totally. Before it was the opposite. It was like Javier is painting? Oh that\u2019s cool!<\/p>\r\n

But now there have been a few people who have been in touch with me who didn\u2019t know anything about my skateboarding and then they start following me because of my paintings and then I\u2019ll post some skating once in a while, and then people have been like woah! You skate pretty good.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Frontside Ollie, Saint Jean de Luz: Shot by @manuelschenck<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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It must be funny for you to experience that<\/h1>\r\n

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It\u2019s refreshing. I like it. It has only happened a couple times but yeah it\u2019s funny.<\/p>\r\n

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Your skating inspires a lot of people, the way you skate transition is unique.I saw you skate at Cantelowes and do a Front Rock on the cradle. Blew my mind at the time.<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, I remember that and going to that skatepark and that day. That was the first time that I met Ben Raemers<\/a> that day.<\/p>\r\n

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Really?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, he was there. It was a Quiksilver contest I think<\/a>.<\/p>\r\n

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That was a memorable day for both of us then. Ben was such a rad guy.<\/h1>\r\n

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I travelled with Ben Raemers<\/a>. There were a couple years where we were both on Converse at the same time, we did some trips together and I remember the last time I saw him was in Barcelona. I was not living there anymore. I had lived there for 15 years but at that time I had moved to France. It was just on a trip when I was back there for a few days.<\/p>\r\n

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Where did you see Ben?<\/h1>\r\n

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I saw him on the street at night, alone, it was raining, and yeah he was pretty drunk and it was just really weird.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

I was like woah Ben, what are you doing? And I was like ey come with us! And he was like, lost.<\/p>\r\n

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I didn\u2019t even really realise, I just thought woah, what is this guy doing, all by himself in the rain and I told him to come with us to the bar and he came with us, and then I looked around for him and he had disappeared. So he was already going through stuff at the time.<\/p>\r\n

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What year was that?<\/h1>\r\n

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I can\u2019t remember. I would say this was roughly about 5 years ago.<\/p>\r\n

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He was globetrotting a lot, in San Jose, then back in London, and going on trips, it was hard for anyone to gauge how he was. What do you remember about Ben the most?<\/h1>\r\n

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Ben was the nicest guy.\u00a0I don\u2019t think we spent enough time together for him to open up to me 100 percent and be completely himself; he was taking his own time.<\/p>\r\n

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But he was always smiling. I have an amazing memory of him but as you say, I know how it is.<\/p>\r\n

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When you travel most of the time and you go from one group of people to another you never really spend a lot of time with anyone.<\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, everyone recognised that now. But they are doing good things through the Ben Raemers Foundation to bring awareness to it<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah totally, I was actually talking to John Rattray<\/a> today and he\u2019s doing an amazing job too.<\/p>\r\n

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He has also been dealing with promoting awareness of mental issues due to things he\u2019s experienced within his family, which I think is cool but also sad.<\/p>\r\n

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However the good side is that at least it\u2019s opening the door a little bit for people to realise that we all go through stuff and it\u2019s cool to talk and a necessary thing to do.<\/p>\r\n

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Yeah for sure. You\u2019ve got to be able to open up to your friends.<\/h1>\r\n

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Especially in the skateboarding world.<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s like most of the time, it\u2019s really young people, making good money and with a lot of freedom, so they have this constant party side that is fun but that can take a toll too and it sometimes can hide things.<\/p>\r\n

We can just party, drink alcohol and ignore that aspect of it.<\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, people act like everything is cool when it\u2019s not. But speaking about being young and getting into something exciting and cool, what was it that first got you into skateboarding?<\/h1>\r\n

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I\u2019m from Algorta. It\u2019s a small town in the Basque country where La Kantera Skatepark is but even before La Kantera, it was a little town with a surfing and skateboarding culture.<\/p>\r\n

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Even in the 70’s there was not much happening at least in Spain. Surfing arrived in Europe in France, through Biarritz, which is one hour and a half from my town. So that\u2019s how people started surfing first and then skating. When they first started skating it was more just skating downhill, hillbombs and stuff.<\/p>\r\n

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But because of that generation, there was a younger generation that came later, that was starting to build little banks and quarterpipes and because of them they started to build La Kantera Skatepark.<\/p>\r\n

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It wasn\u2019t the first skatepark in Spain but it was one of the first, either the second or the third one and that made an incredible skate scene.<\/p>\r\n

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I don\u2019t really know how to explain why there was not another skatepark in Spain with greater skaters, than the ones that at La Kantera were but also a lot of creative people came from that park.<\/p>\r\n

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Photographers, musicians, the first skate video ever made in Spain was coming from there too.<\/p>\r\n

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So I was 11, nearly 12 years old when I was living not in that town but right next to it. I was really young but my parents would take me there, every once in a while and I would slowly start to go there with some friends, I got influenced by all these people that I met down there and skated with.<\/p>\r\n

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La Kantera Skatepark<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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You made a book about La Kantera right?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, I made a book with my friends, Jon Amiano and Fernando Elvira about La Kantera. It\u2019s not just about the skatepark but about the whole scene that surrounded it.<\/p>\r\n

We tried to explain at least for us, the magic of the place.<\/p>\r\n

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The park looks amazing the way it\u2019s set on the beach by those cliffs.<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, it\u2019s still there, the location is incredible, it\u2019s beautiful. Skaters from other countries came to skate it and stayed for a while.<\/p>\r\n

Like Bill Danforth back in the day, he came and stayed for a while. Nicky Guerrero later but then Thomas Campbell came and he also stuck around.<\/p>\r\n

Yeah, there were so many people who came to visit and skate. So being a younger kid, I was influenced by the older skaters in the scene. Skate-wise but also by being creative with photography, video and painting.<\/p>\r\n

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Was there anybody in particular at La Kantera who inspired you?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah. 100 percent. There was this guy Fernando Elvira. He still skates, he\u2019s a bit older than me, and he\u2019s a great artist. Back in the day he was the editor of this skate magazine called Tres60 Skate Magazine.<\/p>\r\n

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Then Fernando met Thomas Campbell<\/a>. Thomas was travelling. He was shooting for Transworld at the time and he came, met Fernando and they started playing music together and they started talking about magazines, The magazine Fernando made was pretty open, they were not just talking about skateboarding in it but also music, art and all these different things.<\/p>\r\n

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I met Thomas thorough Fernando. But I didn\u2019t really speak much English at the time and Thomas didn\u2019t speak any Spanish. But we spent a few days together, we shot some photos and he made an article in Transworld with the big guys of the time in Spain and he also included me in it and nobody really knew who I was at the time. But it was through that that I got my very first sponsor.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Backside\u00a0Tailslide: Shot by <\/b>@thomascampbellart<\/a><\/p>\r\n

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Who was your first sponsor?<\/h1>\r\n

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It was a guy who was doing this distribution in Spain but just going back to Fernando. He was big influence for me for a very long time.<\/p>\r\n

He gave me my first photo camera when I was 14; it was a Nikon FM2, so I started shooting photos with that.<\/p>\r\n

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He was painting at the time and he inspired me to get me into drawing and try different things.<\/p>\r\n

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Never really got into the music. I\u2019ve always been fucking around with a guitar but I cannot call myself a musician. Fernando inspired me to try that too.<\/p>\r\n

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If somebody inspires you in one way then it can lead to you trying out other things you see them do, it becomes a new trick to learn<\/h1>\r\n

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He influenced a lot of people.<\/p>\r\n

Not as directly as with me because we hung out but as an editor of the magazine.<\/p>\r\n

A lot of people read his magazine.<\/p>\r\n

I would say not a whole generation but a big part of them were motivated by this guy.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, 180 Nosegrind: Shot by <\/b>@thomascampbellart<\/a><\/p>\r\n

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That\u2019s sick. So at La Kantera, you learned to skate but gained new interests beyond skating\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

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Fernando, Jon and I were trying to show that through the book.\u00a0We contacted pretty much everyone who was part of the La Kantera scene and there are a lot of people but we wanted it be made by everyone.<\/p>\r\n

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We were asking everyone to contribute, photos and writing and let them write about anything they wanted, from short stories of a memorable afternoon where something funny happened, to poetry to deeper longer tales.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

The book has no structure. That\u2019s how the book exists and was created. Chaos and Anarchy.<\/p>\r\n

That\u2019s how skating was at the time, I guess not so much anymore.<\/p>\r\n

But back in the day it was wild and free and we wanted the book to reflect that.<\/p>\r\n

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Iker Ondarra, Frontside Air,La Kantera Skatepark pool party, 2000: Shot by @terrefoto<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, things can be really standardised in skateboarding these days, it\u2019s a shame as it is a creative thing<\/h1>\r\n

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That aspect has a good part to it too. I\u2019m not against it. I\u2019m just happy I experienced and discovered skateboarding in the late 80\u2019s and 90’s.<\/p>\r\n

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But I think it\u2019s cool that there are so many opportunities in it now and it\u2019s so big. Just, the level of skating right now, the new guys, what they are doing is amazing. I can just be a little bit romantic sometimes but I\u2019m happy I discovered it when I did.<\/p>\r\n

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Definitely. Even in the 00s, you could tell somebody skated by the Kickflip mark on their shoe, whereas now, everyone has that style and looking like a skater is more accepted and widespread.<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, totally, I remember back in the days you would not only recognise someone from their shoes but when you would see a skater you would go up to them and talk to them because there were not that many skaters. Of course there was no internet or cellphones.<\/p>\r\n

So when you saw a skater walk down the street that, even if they did not have a board and you realised because of their shoes, you would be like \u2018Hey! You skate?\u2019 and you would just start talking to them.<\/p>\r\n

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Outside of Tres60 Magazine, did you read other skate magazines or watch skate videos?<\/h1>\r\n

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It\u2019s funny; I remember it took quite a lot of time for us in Spain to get new videos and magazines because there were not many skate shops. There were surf shops that had some but not much<\/p>\r\n

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But then I remember going to London when I was 14 with my parents.<\/p>\r\n

Somebody told me there was a skate shop called Slam City Skates<\/a> and they gave me an address, it was in Covent Garden? Is it still there?<\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, it moved from Neal\u2019s Yard to Endell Street a few years ago but it\u2019s still in Covent Garden.<\/h1>\r\n

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Anyway, I just remember I just had this address written on a piece of a paper and I went there with my parents. We got to Covent Garden and I told my parents, you guys wait here for me, just have a coffee and I\u2019m going to find the skate shop. I was looking for it but I could not find it at first because at the time it was in this really small street.<\/p>\r\n

Also there was a really big van parked in front of the entrance and I couldn\u2019t see it, also I couldn\u2019t really speak any English at the time too which didn\u2019t help but finally I found the skate shop\u00a0I walked in and it was full of people just sitting on the ground, it was the video premiere of Hokus Pokus, The H-Street video.<\/p>\r\n

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Sick<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah and my parents bought it for me. I watched that video and when I came back with the Hokus Pokus video, I was one year ahead of everyone.<\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, that video was sick, must have been amazing at the time. When you were in London did you go to Southbank?<\/h1>\r\n

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No man! I was thinking about this a few days ago. I just don\u2019t remember where I went to skate, I can\u2019t remember the name of the spot but right next to the hotel where we were staying there was a bank to wall.<\/p>\r\n

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It was not Southbank. It was just a random spot but it was so good.\u00a0I was pretty young, just on a tourist trip with my parents and at the end of the day I\u2019d skate that for 2 hours by myself.<\/p>\r\n

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If you can imagine, what it would be like for me, to skate by myself in London as a kid? It\u2019s a great memory that\u2019s still fresh in my mind today.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Frontside Wallride, Shot by @samuelashley<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Rad. Were you sponsored then?<\/h1>\r\n

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My first sponsor was the distribution, I mentioned earlier but that was when I was about 16. It was more of a \u2018discount\u2019 than a sponsorship on boards and product but that was the beginning.<\/p>\r\n

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Okay. To take a step back, what was your favourite section in Hokus Pokus?<\/h1>\r\n

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I didn\u2019t know anything about anyone at the time but I was a big fan of Matt Hensley.<\/p>\r\n

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I grew up in a town where there was an older generation from surfing, so that\u2019s what the skateboarding was like.<\/p>\r\n

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I was influenced by them but when I saw that video, I saw street skating. I was a transition skater but that video made want to skate all-terrain, skate everything and Matt Hensley<\/a> was a big influence for me.<\/p>\r\n

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Even Brian Lotti, who was in that video, was big fan of Matt Hensley, he thought Hensley was next level.<\/h1>\r\n

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It was the tricks he did, the flow that he had and everything about him. The aesthetics. His hair and clothes, everything about him looked cool. He influenced a lot of people, he was quite unique.<\/p>\r\n

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He did tricks people don\u2019t do now, like he Fakie 540 Ollied a set of stairs. Where did you skate street?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, there were some street spots in Algorta too. We were skating the park most of the time but there were some street spots.<\/p>\r\n

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Then we\u2019d go to Bilbao, which was really close, get the train there, and travel around Spain.<\/p>\r\n

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We would go to Madrid. Barcelona wasn\u2019t really a destination at the time it was more Madrid. Madrid had a way bigger skate scene, so we\u2019d go there but then I moved to Barcelona when I was 19.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

There were not many skate parks, there was Turo Park? That doesn\u2019t exist anymore and there were a few others little skate parks too.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

But that was the beginning of MACBA. When I got there in 1999, there were about 10 skaters there. I spent my first 3 years in Barcelona skating MACBA every day.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

So there were days you would skate at MACBA and there was nobody there?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah. Totally. The first couple years, it was kind of gnarly too. The museum was there obviously but not many tourists, the neighbourhood was kind of sketchy.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

There was a group of bad boys hanging there and we got in trouble with them a few times but soon as there were more and more skaters coming to skate there those bad boy guys left.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

Javier, Bank to Bank Back Tail: Shot by @ryanallan<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

How did MACBA and the Barcelona scene blow up?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

You know what happened? First it was Jamie Thomas he got a cover, of Skateboarder not at MACBA but in Barcelona and then also it was Eric Koston and Rick McCrank filming for Menikmati.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

When Menikmati came out that video put Barcelona on the map.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s strange to hear, as it\u2019s such an international mecca for skating these days. I\u2019ve been to that spot where you did the Ollie down the huge double set into the bank in Fondo? How did that go down?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

You know what? I just went to that spot once and that was the day that I Ollied it. I never went there before and after. I don\u2019t even know where it is.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Really? Who filmed it and what happened that day?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

We were going somewhere else and we just saw it and were like wow, look at that.<\/p>\r\n

It was one of those days you don\u2019t think about what you\u2019re doing, and you just do it but you look back and you think, woah that was actually fuckin gnarly.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Was it Fred who filmed it?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

No it was not Fred. I remember because there was a sequence, my roommate at the time Quentin De Briey<\/a> shot the sequence, I can\u2019t remember who filmed it but it was not Fred.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

So it was just a spontaneous thing, that\u2019s funny. So what were you doing in Barcelona at the time?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I went to Barcelona to study for three years. It was during those years, I was not travelling. I was just in Barcelona, discovering the city and skating.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

But then as Barcelona got more popular and more people started to come that\u2019s when I started to travel to other places and skate.<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s funny because at one point I was living in Barcelona but I started to travel quite a lot and going on skate trips and coming back for a few days so I wasn\u2019t\u2019 really skating Barcelona anymore.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

So for the first three years, I skated there a lot, all the time but when I started travelling Barcelona was more of a place for me to relax and hang out with my friends before going on another trip.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

What other spots did you used to hit up in Barcelona?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

There were so many and no one really knew about them.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Most people skated Sants already; nobody was trying to discover new things. Barcelona changed really quickly around this time, they built a lot of stuff super-fast, and so there was a lot of stuff to discover.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It was through this guy Alexis Zavialof who I met on my very first trip to Barcelona, when I was looking for a school and looking for a place to live.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I met him at MACBA and we became friends, he was a photographer. He was the guy who had a car and we\u2019d get in that and drive and look for spots.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I spent a few years shooting photos with him and it was because of him that I got on to Clich\u00e9. He\u2019s a really good friend of J\u00e9r\u00e9mie Daclin<\/a> and so Alexis helped me to start skating for them.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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\r\n
\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Backside Ollie, South Africa: Shot by @anttonmiettinen<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

J\u00e9r\u00e9mie Daclin is a legend.<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah, we don\u2019t see each other so often but I just made a graphic for his board brand Into The Wild<\/a>.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

We\u2019ve been in touch lately because of that. But I was like man, you skate every fuckin day. He skates every single day. He\u2019s older than me. He must be 47-48 years old.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

\"\"<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

He does some sick shit, he used to do big gnarly stuff but now he still lays down low impact bangers.<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I was giving him some shit recently. I was like man, you just don’t do Ollies anymore, you just do Slappies! But really I think that it\u2019s incredible, how he can skate every day at his age. Respect.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

For sure, he\u2019s the French Gonz. He just keeps going. So were you the first person on Clich\u00e9 then?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

No, before me, there was a full team. Clich\u00e9 started in 1997 and I got on in 1999. So it was going for a year and half before I got on.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Manuel Palacios, from Madrid, was already pro for them. Now I think about it, Manuel was just as big a reason why I got on to Clich\u00e9 as well as Alexis too.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Ricardo Fonseca from Portugal was already skating for them. Seb Daurel from France and myself. Lots of different people. So I was not on from day one but day two.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Clich\u00e9 stood out at the time, it was such a great skate brand. What was it like filming for Europa?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

For Europa, I did pretty much everything for that in those first two years in Barcelona. Spending time with Alexis who was taking photos but he was also filming.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

So I didn\u2019t really get much travelling in with the rest of the team for that. It was really cool. I was getting some boards from that distributor at the time and I just remember meeting Alexis who asked me if I would like to get Clich\u00e9 boxes instead and I was like yeah that sounds amazing.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I remember just telling my friends, I\u2019m going to start skating for Clich\u00e9. At the beginning it was European but for my friends they were like why are you going to skate for a \u2018French Brand\u2019!?<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

They didn\u2019t get it. I didn\u2019t know at the time that Clich\u00e9 was going to become what it became you know, but I don\u2019t know I wanted to ride for something that felt natural and closer and people I can see and talk to it.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

People at that distro didn\u2019t know that I existed. Clich\u00e9 felt more real to me. So that\u2019s why I rode for them.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Then Pontus came on-board, I got along with Pontus right away, so that was really cool.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\r\n
\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Javier, 180 Nosegrind, Shot by @pontus_alv<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Watching your part, you skate a lot of transition Switch and Nollie, how did you get into that?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah I do, yeah I still do, and I try anyway. I like to do that.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah, there was no plan for skating ramps like that. You see people do stuff you like, you try it. It\u2019s just a good way to pull tricks. I started doing Nollies on the streets and then taking it to ramps and the same thing happened with Switch.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

How did you go about filming your Europa section?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

In the beginning there was nothing planned. I was just going to skate and we\u2019d find spots and skate whatever. Sometimes get footage and photos.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Then later in the years, I could do this or that, let\u2019s try to have some more street, thinking of the whole concept of the part and planning it a bit but that came later after Bon Appetit. Those two video parts were nothing planned just pure skating.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

You came from a creative background in skating. How did you end up skating in so many big contests over the years?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I did some contests at the beginning because when I was in Barcelona I wasn\u2019t making any money at all, so I was just trying to survive. I was selling shoes and boards in the streets to friends or whatever and then go to contests to make it into the top 3 and make a little money. It was just survival mode.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Okay<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

But as soon as I started making enough money, I stopped skating contests. Then with Quiksilver, they started ding the Marseille Bowlriders contest and the Malmo Bowlriders contests. Because of that they were the only contests that I was doing because I was sponsored by Quiksilver at the time. But I was just doing one of those every year and a few qualifiers for those. But I never really enjoyed those contests. It\u2019s not really my thing.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

What did you think about the Olympics?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

No. I never watch Street League or The Olympics or anything like that.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

How long were you filming for Bon Appetit?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I would say there were 2 years between Europa and Bon Appetit. Maybe three. I was not filming most of the time during that thought. We went to Australia; a lot of stuff came out of that.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

There\u2019s a lot of stuff in my hometown in Algorta, then Barcelona and a couple of trips with Clich\u00e9.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Javier, Backside Nosegrind: Shot by @benjamin_deberdt_photography<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

You have a banging section in that. The Back Tail at Canyelles Skatepark was steez, how did it go down?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I was skating that park the most in Barcelona. I like skateparks that are a little bit fucked. That\u2019s the stuff I like the most. I was skating there most of the time and the mini ramps there.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I have some clips skating that bit also in the Europa video. I have some lines there.\u00a0I don\u2019t know if you know Julian Furones? I used to go there with him quite a lot as he was the only guy I know who liked it too.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

Why do you like skating such rough steep transition?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s just the way I like it. Some people worry about that stuff, I like it when it\u2019s a bit different.<\/p>\r\n

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\r\n
\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

Javier, Frontside Tailslide, Canary Islands: Shot by Leo Sharp<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah, it\u2019s an acquired taste. It\u2019s gnarly. You do a rad Nosebluntslide on a bank to ledge in Barcelona, it\u2019s so sick, how did that go down?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I\u2019ve only been there a couple times. It\u2019s a cool spot I like it. Yeah, the ledge there is weird, it has this angle on the ledge, it makes it hard to skate but with time you figure it out.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

How did the Switch Backside Ollie down the double set go down in those iPaths?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I didn\u2019t even remember I did that!\u00a0Yeah I was on iPath for a while. I became really good friends with Kenny Reed<\/a> and through him I met the other guys, I was in San Francisco with Kenny and they told me that they were going to Japan on a iPath tour and they asked me if I wanted to go.<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0I was sponsored by some other shoe brand but I was like fuck it! I went to Japan and they kind of asked me to ride for them and I was down. I rode for them for a couple years.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Who else was on that iPath Japan trip?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It was Kenny Reed, Nate Jones, Matt Field, Tony Cox and some others, Gabe Morford was taking photos and Dan Wolfe was filming.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

That\u2019s a sick crew. What was that tour like?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

At that time iPath was huge in Japan. It was the number one selling skate shoe brand. So they were taking care of us really well, we did some demos but we also went to the mountains to some hot springs, it was a really good trip. It was different to everything else in the market.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I really liked the guys there. I became good friends with Tony, it was just great vibes in general and the shoes were good too.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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\r\n
\"\"<\/figure>\r\n<\/div>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Javier, Kickflip the Hip: Shot by @sergiomartinphoto<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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How did your Bilbao bump to ledge 5-0 grind go down?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s in Barakaldo? It\u2019s next to Bilbao, near my hometown. That spot is incredible, it\u2019s still there.\u00a0I have no idea what it\u2019s for. Somebody just had a great idea to build it.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s in the middle of a neighbourhood and within the middle of the buildings, there are these fountains, and these concrete waves. It\u2019s quite big.<\/p>\r\n

A lot of things have been done over the years. There has been a Transworld cover shot there. For one little spot so much has gone down there.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

<\/p>\r\n

Bon Appetit was sick. Did you expect Fred to do such a good job on it?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

When it came out I really liked it. I\u2019m a big fan of Fred Mortagne<\/a>, he\u2019s a good friend.\u00a0We are actually working on a little piece together at the moment that\u2019s going to be coming out in a couple of months but that\u2019s another story.\u00a0Europa wasn\u2019t Fred; it was another guy, Ben Derenne.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Bon Appetit was the first one by Fred.<\/p>\r\n

He was coming from doing Menikmati and then Sorry. Filming with the best skaters. Rowley, Koston, Arto and those guys. Clich\u00e9, he\u2019s from Lyon, he\u2019s from there, Fred knew everyone, so for him, it was getting back to his roots and film with people he\u2019d knew for a long time.<\/p>\r\n

Fred had the freedom to do whatever he wanted and Bon Appetit was the result of that. Fred doing what he wanted. It was just a bunch of friends travelling. Fred knew how to get that joy of skating and travelling and get that to come through in the video and that\u2019s it.<\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

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<\/figure>\r\n

Yeah for sure, what was it like working with Fred on it?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Every time he came with his unique style and people started to copy his stuff. He has the eye, and was true to himself and came up with new stuff. He\u2019s a methodical perfectionist type of person and he puts everything on it, time and energy, everything.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0It\u2019s incredible to work with him. When you see someone put in so much, it makes you just put in your 100 percent.<\/p>\r\n

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\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Javier and Fred Mortagne<\/a>: Shot by @thomascampbellart<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

 <\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah and it makes you more confident the trick will look banging.<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Yeah, it\u2019s just trust you know. You just know it\u2019s going to look good, even with the music. When he was editing the videos, I was going to Lyon when he was working on my part and I had some ideas for music, some options I would propose.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Every time I suggested something he was like yeah, yeah that\u2019s good but listen to this! And we\u2019d always end up using his ideas and most of the time he would find music, I\u2019d never have heard of, ever. Even with Bon Appetit for my section the musician Raul Seixas? He is this Brazilian musician who is huge in Brazil but that I\u2019d never heard of before at all.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

Then when the video came out a lot of people from Brazil would come up to me and like say in conversation, yeah Javier it\u2019s great you chose that artist for your section. I was like thank you but I\u2019m not that guy! That was Fred.<\/p>\r\n

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<\/p>\r\n

That\u2019s cool. So at this time, were you painting then or just drawing?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I\u2019ve always been drawing and carrying my sketchbooks. It\u2019s been that way since I was 17. But I was not painting that much because I didn\u2019t have the time or the space. I was just skating and travelling a lot. I didn\u2019t have a studio.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I was taking photos but it was when I moved to France that I kind of stopped skating professionally, I was skating for myself and also moving to a new place that was different to Barcelona, where there are a lot of people, social life and distractions.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

So when I moved to this house in France in the mountains that\u2019s when I started painting.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0That was 8 years ago. So since then every year I\u2019ve just been putting more energy and time into it.<\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

Yeah, new creative ideas can come when you have space, time and capacity. Which artists inspired you?<\/h1>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

I told you that I was influenced by my friend Fernando, who\u2019s always been a big influence but just in my approach to being creative and exploring, definitely there are some influences in my style but directly there are two people that I\u2019ve met in the last 8 years that have influenced me in my painting<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

One is Julio Lorenzo who is a skater, a really good skater from Spain, who lives in Barcelona.\u00a0He went to art school and I didn\u2019t and so I don\u2019t have a formal art background, so I didn\u2019t originally really have the technique to make things the way I wanted to.<\/p>\r\n

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\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

I was in France, he was in Spain, he was coming over, I\u2019d call him and ask him questions on how to do things I wanted to do and then we did some exhibitions together and then we did some art residencies together and we were spending weeks together so I learned a lot from him.<\/p>\r\n

Then another guy that I met through Thomas Campbell called Julian Smith, he\u2019s a great artist too.<\/p>\r\n

\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/p>\r\n

He moved to France for a year, he\u2019s not here anymore, but we\u2019re still good friends, we\u2019ve been painting together a lot and just having people right next you, you get the influence like that.<\/p>\r\n

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Also nature is my biggest influence and shapes and colours and lately human body shapes have been getting into work.<\/p>\r\n

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How long do you spend on each of your paintings?<\/h1>\r\n

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It can go from 3 days to 3 weeks. No longer than 3 weeks. I\u2019ve done some art residencies where you have 10 days, like the one I did with Julio in France that I mentioned earlier.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

The space where we were going to show the work was huge, so we had to do big paintings and we spent 10 days, painting for 14-15 hours a day. Non-stop.<\/p>\r\n

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So at that time, I was doing paintings in 3 days but normally in 2-3 weeks. But it really depends, because I never really paint for 8 hours a day. I have a family, I have daughter, I have other stuff going on, I go surfing, so yeah, these days, I\u2019ll spend a few hours a day and some day\u2019s I\u2019ll spend 6 hours a day painting.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

I\u2019m not in a rush, I like to take my time. I do it for myself for now.<\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

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Aside from your recent collaboration with J\u00e9r\u00e9mie have you done work for other brands or clients?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, I have done some graphics for Element because I\u2019m good friends with Phil Zwijsen, he lives close to me here in France.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

Lately he\u2019s been travelling so we haven\u2019t been skating so much together but we were skating together quite a lot and he asked me to make a graphic for his next pro model and I made a sketch for it. They really liked it and I ended up doing three more for them.<\/p>\r\n

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And then there\u2019s another graphic coming out for Magenta, I did a graphic for Soy Panday.<\/p>\r\n

There\u2019s been a few skate brands who\u2019ve asked me to do graphics, but I don\u2019t really don\u2019t want to go too far into that direction. I did it for J\u00e9r\u00e9mie and Soy and Phil because they are my friends and that\u2019s it.\u00a0And then I also did a collaboration with some brands outside of skateboarding, I\u2019ve done a snowboard graphic because it was for a good friend too.<\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0I\u2019ve got a collection with Quiksilver coming out too; I\u2019ve been on Quiksilver forever so it made sense.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n

I\u2019ve also did a towel graphic for a towel brand from America called Slow Tide? Few things here and there.<\/p>\r\n

I also did a t-shirt graphic for Nike SB recently.<\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

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Sick, how did the Nike SB job come about?<\/h1>\r\n

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That came out of the blue. This guy contacted me on Instagram and asked me if he wanted to do the t-shirt…There were supposed to be some other guys doing that as part of a series with one guy from North America, South America and Europe but in the end it was just me. Something happened in the middle. Only my graphic came out, it was cool.<\/p>\r\n

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Sick<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah.<\/p>\r\n

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Do you have a website?<\/h1>\r\n

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That\u2019s my goal for this winter, I\u2019m working on it.<\/p>\r\n

I did an open door at my studio and I\u2019ve been selling locally but yeah I\u2019ve definitely have to get a website but I\u2019m not worrying about it at the moment, I\u2019m just focusing on painting.<\/p>\r\n

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\u00a0<\/h1>\r\n

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What is the project you are working on with Fred?<\/h1>\r\n

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I\u2019ve made a collection for Quiksilver of my designs on some clothing. So we\u2019re making a video about it.\u00a0My only condition was that I wouldn\u2019t talk into the video! I just want to show my inspirations<\/p>\r\n

There will be a little skateboarding, but it\u2019s going to be artistic let\u2019s say, we\u2019ve been getting creative.<\/p>\r\n

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Look forward to seeing it. Where\u2019s your favourite place to go skate in the world and why?<\/h1>\r\n

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A spot that comes to mind is Burnside. I like the whole DIY thing and it\u2019s a really fun skatepark to skate too. I don\u2019t know if it\u2019s my favourite in the world but its\u2019 the first thing that came to mind.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Tweaked Stalefish Transfer, Burnside: Shot by @artofoto<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, it\u2019s 30 years old this year.<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, has to be, it\u2019s the same age as La Kantera.<\/p>\r\n

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Who\u2019s your favourite skate photographer?<\/h1>\r\n

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I really like Brian Gaberman.<\/a><\/p>\r\n

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I think he has something really unique. I was lucky enough to travel with him too a few times. He\u2019s an incredible human being. His black and white photography is something that you recognise straight away, it\u2019s his own style and I really like it.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Stalefish, La Kantera, Shot by @b_gaberman<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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I really like Mike O\u2019Meally<\/a> too. He\u2019s a really good friend but he\u2019s not one of my favourites just because of that.<\/p>\r\n

He\u2019s an incredible photographer. He\u2019s maybe less artistic than Brian but his technique is really good.<\/p>\r\n

He has a pure love for skateboarding, he\u2019s a hard worker and he\u2019s really talented too. Some of the best photos I have are from Mike for sure.<\/p>\r\n

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Javier, Frontside Ollie: Shot by Mike O’Meally<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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O\u2019Meally is a legend! He knows how to light a spark into a session.<\/h1>\r\n

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He made me do tricks that I never tried before in my life and that I never did again after and I was just like what!?<\/p>\r\n

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Also Thomas Campbell.\u00a0Not many people know that he was a skate photographer and still is too.\u00a0When I met him he was bringing colour flashes, a lot of funny and new stuff to skate photography that nobody was using at the time.<\/p>\r\n

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He was the editor of Skateboarder Magazine back in the day. He was one of the first guys to go and skate and shoot in exotic destinations, he was shooting skaters getting covers in magazines in places like Japan and Australia.\u00a0Exotic I mean because they were just places outside of America.<\/p>\r\n

He was making trips with Geoff Rowley, with young Steve Olson and Donny Barley to places like Morocco and Vietnam a long, long time ago.<\/p>\r\n

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He was the guy who discovered Chad Muska!<\/p>\r\n

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Really?<\/h1>\r\n

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Yeah, they did a Transworld trip to Las Vegas and they met this young homeless skater and it was Chad Muska.\u00a0Thomas just called Transworld and was like we need to do something with this guy. They flew him to California and that\u2019s it. I have a lot of respect for Thomas he\u2019s a good friend.<\/p>\r\n

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That\u2019s a cool story. What\u2019s your favourite skate photo?<\/h1>\r\n

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The photo of Matt Hensley that was in his pro spotlight in Transworld a long time ago. He\u2019s under a bridge, going over the highway, somewhere in California.<\/p>\r\n

\u00a0He\u2019s under the bridge, over the highway and the bridge has this huge transition and he\u2019s doing a Frontside Ollie.<\/p>\r\n

It\u2019s the first photo that came to my mind.\u00a0It\u2019s just pure Matt Hensley style.<\/p>\r\n

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Matt Hensley, Frontside Ollie: Shot by Daniel Sturt<\/strong><\/p>\r\n

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Yeah, it\u2019s such a rad Frontside Ollie photo<\/h1>\r\n

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I love Frontside Ollies on transition. I have a thousand Frontside and Backside Ollie photos. It\u2019s a trick I love and if it\u2019s Matt Hensley even more.\u00a0Also just the fact it\u2019s not a skatepark, it\u2019s just a spot not made for skateboarding, also the fact that it looks pretty fucking gnarly just to get up there too.\u00a0I had that photo on my wall as a kid.<\/p>\r\n

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What\u2019s your favourite skate video?<\/h1>\r\n

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Welcome to Hell, Toy Machine.<\/p>\r\n

Every single part is incredible. Brian Anderson, everyone.<\/p>\r\n

Also, Eastern Exposure with Donny Barley by Dan Wolfe, really liked that one.<\/p>\r\n

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