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Surfers Against Sewage, “Protect Our Waves”

The UK-based group Surfers Against Sewage has launched a new campaign called Protect Our Waves. It is meant to raise awareness about the environmental hardships faced by surf spots on that side of the Atlantic. Here’s a further description:

The campaign aims to protect surf spots from unacceptable levels of environmental impact, degradation of surfing wave quality and to advance recreational water users right of access.

British surfing waves are under threat from a growing number of activities around our coastline that could destroy or have long-term devastating impact on some of our most prized surfing beaches. This includes coastal developments, pollution, and restricted access.

To promote their efforts, the group hired photographer Spencer Murphy to create an evocative series of images to dramatize the surf spots’ plight. Click here to see several of his images, and here to learn more about the campaign from the Surfers Against Sewage website.

Barry McGee retrospective at Berkeley Art Museum

One week from today the Berkeley Art Museum will open the first exhibition surveying the art of Barry McGee.

“Throughout his career,” writes Alex Baker in the exhibition catalog, “Barry McGee has continued to surprise and contradict expectations.” Including rarely seen early etchings, letterpress printing trays and liquor bottles painted with his trademark cast of down-and-out urban characters, constellations of vibrant op-art painted panels, animatronic taggers, and an elaborate re-creation of a cacophonous street-corner bodega, along with many new projects, this first midcareer survey of the globally influential San Francisco–based artist showcases the astonishing range of McGee’s compassionate and vivacious work.

The exhibition will travel to the ICA Boston in Spring 2013 and is accompanied by a catalogue featuring essays by Alex Baker, Natasha Boas, Germano Celant, and Jeffrey Deitch.

The Italian Surf Academy

Growing up in Italy, guitarist Marco Cappelli had little exposure to surf music, but what he heard he liked. As the Wall Street Journal notes in a profile of Cappelli, he learned mostly from the scores to spaghetti western films. “It was not very systematic, my approach,” said Mr. Cappelli, who is 47, last week by phone from outside Salerno. “When I was a teenager studying classical guitar and the folk music of my region, I was playing electric guitar too,” Mr. Cappelli continued. “I was very familiar with surf music from cinema: Those films and records were such big hits. When I moved to New York, I already had this sound in my ears.”

Cappelli now fronts a musical group called The Italian Surf Academy. He admits that the group’s “definition of surf is a little extended.” Hear for yourself by clicking here to read the article and listen to samples from its newest album.

Timothy “Speed” Levitch and the Art of Guiding a Tour

None who have seen the 1998 documentary The Cruise can forget its funny, eccentric, chattermouth star, Timothy “Speed” Levitch. He was a Gray Line tour guide in New York City who elevated the job to a form of avant-garde art, and his romantic monologues on art and sex and violence and depression in the big city filled the film from end to end. The director of that movie, Bennett Miller, would go on to direct the big-budget features Capote and Moneyball. But what happened to “Speed” Levitch?

It turns out that he moved to Kansas City and now leads barbecue-themed tours. But, according to the New Yorker, he was recently back in New York to film one of the episodes of a new series called “Up to Speed,” directed by the filmmaker Richard Linklater. The series is airing on Hulu. To read the story of a recent filming session, and Levitch’s musings on “the ancient craft of tour-guiding,” click here to be taken to the New Yorker‘s site. Or click here to go directly to the show’s page on Hulu.com.

Marfa Dialogues

The Ballroom, an art venue in Marfa, Texas, has just announced the program for its annual weekend-long program of talks, called the Marfa Dialogues. This year the events address the issue of environmental sustainability. Keynote speakers include Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma and In Defense of Food, among other books, and Rebecca Solnit, the author and activist who recently published the book A Paradise Built in Hell. To see the full program, which takes place during the weekend of August 31–September 2, click here.

California State Parks and “The First 70”

Last year, California governor Jerry Brown announced that due to budget constraints the state would be forced to close many of its beautiful state parks. The good news is that a few weeks ago state politicians passed a budget that allowed for most to stay open. Here’s an announcement from the Surfrider Foundation, which had created a campaign to save the parks:

In May of 2011, Governor Brown announced that nearly 25% of California State Parks would shut down in order to help “close the State’s budget gap”. Upon hearing the Governor’s decision, Surfrider and our partners from the “Save our State Parks” coalition engaged the Governor and the legislator by lobbying against drastic closures and by encouraging decision makers to seek long-term funding. A reprieve came when the Governor signed a budget that allocated millions of dollars to the state park system. In addition to receiving funding through the budget, State Parks are staying open due to local partnerships. Over the past year, the state has reached agreements with nonprofits, local governments and other entities to maintain and operate State parks. Of course, Surfrider realizes that this might be a short-term victory and we foresee other threats to Parks from budget cuts, but for now… we are celebrating this success and our hard work.

Even better news is that, inspired by the possibility that the parks might close, three young filmmakers traveled to seventy California parks and filmed their adventures. Based on the trailer for The First 70, it seems to be partly a documentary about resistance to the closures and partly a stunning gallery of nature footage. Here’s a link to the trailer, which is worth watching at full-screen size.

Saltwater Buddha

Mention that you’ve visited a surf mecca in Costa Rica, and a surprising number of people in your life reveal their own connections to the ocean. Yesterday someone I know mentioned that the best book he has read this summer is Jaimal Yogis’ Saltwater Buddha, which was published a few years ago. Here’s a review from Publishers Weekly:

A journalist, photographer, surfer and Zen practitioner, Yogis began the life of a roving seeker his junior year of high school, when he ran away from his Sacramento, Calif. home to learn how to surf in Hawaii. His subsequent travels include a handful of prime surfing spots, but Yogis’s more arresting journey is spiritual, taking him to monasteries in France and Berkley, Calif., and deep into the living tradition of Zen Buddhism. Captured here in short chapters and wonderful, visual prose, Yogis’s coming-of-age odyssey also takes readers into the culture of indigenous Hawaiians, who believe the gods were surfers. Yogis’s long-time surfing mentor Rom provides insight into the science of surfing, ocean swells, the bathymetry of the continental shelf, deep water canyons and sea mounts. Even land lovers will find Yogis’s lessons resonant and entertaining, but surfers will find this a quick, surprisingly deep tribute to the quest for surf and serenity.

The book came out in 2009, but right now filmmaker Lara Popyack is using Kickstarter to try and raise funds to make a film version–one that includes footage from Costa Rica. You can click here to view a trailer on the film’s site, or click here to be taken to the Kickstarter page. The campaign ends on August 14, so click through, read about the project, and, if you feel like it, donate a few dollars.

Surfland Revisited

Last chance to see these beautiful portraits by Joni Sternbach at Rick Wester Fine Art in NYC. Exhibit closes tomorrow, August 10.