NATHAN PAUL GIBBS | SURF ARTIST INTERVIEW [01.07.2009]Other

NATHAN PAUL GIBBS | SURF ARTIST INTERVIEW "Welcome to the world of Nathan Paul Gibbs"

It all started…
 
Well if you want to know where I really got started, I was in grade school and I used to doodle. I would draw a lot of military scenes. Stickmen fighting, explosions, planes etc. When I was told all of that “death and destruction, was unbecoming of a student of my stature”, I started random lines and squiggles that when looked at a certain way, would give each viewer a different picture. I then went to mechanical drawing of buildings since I wanted to become an architect. That fizzled out and I gave up on art until after high school, when wanting to explore colour. I decided to give up drawing almost altogether, and paint. A good buddy of mine had an MFA, gave me a few colour theory and application tips and off I went. Totally self-taught. I am very good at looking at a style, tweaking it, assimilating it, and spitting out my own version.
    
So what's your art all about Nathan?
My style has been referred to this: “If Jackson Pollack, Cézanne and Duccio melded into a painting surfer, it would be Nathan Paul Gibbs”. As you can see from my art samples, I dabble in many styles sometimes combining more than one. My overall theme centres on the environment and our relationship with it. I try to give life to the lifeless, and send a message. Every painting I do, minus the floral ones, beckons the viewer to figure out the message and theme. Much of my art has hidden images. My work revolves around, transcends and invokes a sense of wonder within an ocean-nurtured lifestyle. Through the exploration of surf, water landscapes, peoples faces and rural images I free the boundaries of their realistic attributes. Opening the dream-like qualities of moments revisited, thoughts recognized and landscapes explored

Through the use of acrylic on panel I loosely apply the paint trying only to control the content leaving the nature created waves of wood grain often exposed. The found object sculptures I create openly reinvent the energy of ocean waves and the way they move, form and break. I take an optimistic point of view trying to imagine surf everywhere and paying respect to the idea that wood gave us surfing. . I also create hand turned wood bowls, bitiks, digital art, furniture, and found wood sculptures.

How long have you been enjoying the life of an artist?
Well if you count my childhood, then always. But, as a true artist in the sense that I leave a part of my soul on every piece, and then sell it, for about the last 15 years.

Can you give our readers a quick run through on what it takes to make one of your amazing pieces
Amazingly this is a tough question to answer. While most artists have defined style and each piece uses the same process, not every piece of mine has the same method. In fact I may have 3-5 pieces going at one time each in a different style. Some I whip out in 8-10 hours, some I have been tweaking for years. I don’t ever consider a painting finished until it is sold and out of my possession.

I may put magenta on one piece, look over to another and wipe that same colour in a haphazard fashion on another. Some are planned; some are random from the paint left over from the planned. Then I get to the later stages and define it with details. My “Workbench Monologues Series” is like that. I truly do not know the end product until the end. Others are planned from the start. My favourites tend to be the unplanned. It is like I keep opening a present, sent to me from my future self with each brushstroke.

So let me give you a general sense of my style. Most of my work in the last 3 years has been strictly on wood panel however I have used it since the start. It is much more malleable, cheaper, and more importantly that it was once living. From water comes wood. The wood grain plays a major role. I comb the lumber stores looking for a piece that tells me something. They all have a story to tell. I just turn the woods’ words into picture. Once the piece is chosen, I generally pick an overall colour scheme (cool, warm, earthy etc.) For landscapes, I quickly sketch on top of the wood grain any images I may see. Faces, waves, islands, or anything else that jumps off.

Then I apply the paint, loosely affixing the colour layers. Once again, depending on the style I choose, I may then focus on one aspect of the piece, giving it depth and detail. I think when you view my work; you will see why I have trouble answering this question!

Where may we have seen some of your amazing work?
My work has been in Longboard Magazine, Water Magazine, a few issues of Alma Surf, Location 3, and other local pubs. I have an ongoing exhibit at both Beachfire Restaurant Galleries in Orange County with over 30 pieces on exhibit. I have a couple of pieces in the California Surf Museum’s permanent collection as well. Online you can see my entire body of work at an art site I founded, DefineArt.com, also NathanGibbsArt.com, MeSurf (wink), and soon Waveriders Gallery. You can also see a book I wrote an illustrated, “The Betrayal of Man, Water a story of what is and what will be.” This contains some of my earlier work. Check it at TheBetrayalOfMan.com

And what’s your connection with the ocean and surfers?
I grew up around water from birth, then started competitive Body Boarding for a few years and was ranked as high as 7th in the US as an amateur. Then got bored with that and have surfer now for 14 years. Long board, short board, fish, quad, you name it, I ride it. The ocean and surfers play a big part in my work. I consider us all messengers of the ocean. That is why I do a lot of philanthropic work for water related non-profits and children’s’ charities.

Do you have a favourite piece of artwork?
My favourite always changes. It is like a parent of children. How can you ever really choose a favourite? But at this time it would be “The Release”. This has many levels, but I would like to point out that it depicts what we all strive for. That feeling of leaving all of our concerns, worries, fears and troubles behind. We are released as surfers from the constraints demanded of a life on land. For those few seconds we release ourselves from our bonds and become one with the sea. I hope this shows it.



A lot of artists like to listen to music while in the zone. Do you listen while making are and if so what’s hot on your music list at the moment?
I am big on songs with low lyrics. Mainly when painting I listen to Afro Beat like Fela Kuti or Antibalas. They have so much soul and passion behind every song. Also, Don McClosky, Bob, Widespread Panic, Xavier Rudd, and Quantic. I could give you my I Tunes library with all 2897 songs if you like…

What do you see down the sweet road ahead?
More shows, finish my screenplay, and I am looking to continue to grow as an artist. I want to promote surf art as a fine art style and show that you can use the theme of surf with a fine art style, instead of just a pretty wave. Not that there is anything wrong with that, just not my style. I would like to get all Surf Artists into a sort of collective group or association to further the style, and make our mark in art history.
 
Flick off:  
Finally before you get back to your next creation…

Tea or coffee?      If it is not Devonshire Tea, then coffee
Films or music?   Films to watch music to work
Airs or barrels?    Barrels, unless you call going over the falls an air.
Local or abroad? Abroad, but don’t tell my wife
Soul or new age? All soul in the bowl baby!.

Thanks for giving mesurf readers a peek into the world of an inspiring artist. We appreciate it.


Website  
www.DefineArt.com
www.NathanGibbsArt.com
www.DefineSurf.com
www.TheBetrayalofMan.com

Contact

ngibbs@defineart.com





Share this:
Share

User Comments


Other Magazine
  • JAMIE O’BRIEN VS 15FT PIPE. LOOK OUT VOLCOM PRO [24.Jan.2011]

    “I wouldn’t swap nothing for Pipeline. That’s where I want to live for the rest of my life. That’s where I’ll die.” When Jamie O’Brien talks about Pipeline you know he means business. It’s the only time he does when referring to competitive surfing. On the eve of the Volcom Pipe Pro, the event’s remaining field is well aware of this, and sleeps restlessly in knowing.

  • RIP CURL PRO PORTUGAL 2010 | ROUND 4 [14.Oct.2010]

    BELGAS, Peniche/Portugal | Tour veteran and nine-time World Champion Kelly Slater appeared to take a more calculated and cautious approach in the ASP’s new non-elimination Round 4 as play resumed overnight at the Rip Curl Pro Portugal...

  • BILLABONG PRO JEFFREYS BAY - DAY 10 OF 11 [23.Jul.2011]

    The world’s best surfers put on a high-performance clinic today in pumping six-to-eight foot (2 – 2.5 metre) surf as the Billabong Pro Jeffreys Bay rampaged through Rounds 3, 4 and 5. Julian Wilson scored the first 10 of his World Tour career and the event.

mesurf on Facebook

subscribe to mesurf
Your email: