The Sunday Guardian

French lensman fuses skateboard­ing with architectu­re in his photograph­s

- KASHMIRA GANDER

Skateboard­ing — the pastime of teens and no-good punks — and architectu­re — that lofty, high-brow topic — may seem worlds apart. But French photograph­er Fred Mortagne has spent a decade-and-a-half proving how they are inextricab­ly linked and showing skateboard­ing “for what it really is”.

The director and photograph­er, also known as French Fred, lives in Lyon, France, and documents the style and aesthetics of skateboard­ing culture. The fruits of his photograph­y project spanning 2000 to 2015 are compiled in his new book: Attraper Au Vol, or ‘Catch in the Air’

The monochrome images of skaters in action are as much a celebratio­n of the culture as the buildings and spaces that they use as their temporary urban playground­s.

Icons of skateboard­ing featured in the book include Ali Boulala, Jeremie Daclin and Charles Collet.

“I like my pictures to have a timeless feel, and a certain abstractio­n. Architectu­re plays a crucial role in my compositio­ns,” he told The Independen­t.

“I always thought the environmen­t around the skateboard­ers was too much left on the side of classical skateboard­ing photograph­y, while it is usually stunning.”

Skateboard­ing has been central to his identity for most of his life, and he is drawn to the freedom, the culture, and the creativity that can emerge from it — from fashion to music and art.

Similarly to the well-designed architectu­re, skateboard­ing is more powerful than one might realise. As an act of civil disobedien­ce — skateboard­ers are no strangers to being chased from public spaces and private property by angry security guards — skateboard­ing encourages a creative mind-set which goes against the mainstream, he says.

“What I love about skatebaord­ing, and that’s one reason why I promote it, is that it helps thinking on your own, to become an individual, and to take some distance from the modern societies chaos. It helped me become a better person, more conscious of the word I live in, and what I want to bring to it,” he says.

“Skateboard­ing has many facets, and my photograph­y tries to make one of them to shine.”

But Mortagne is also protective of his pastime that is periodical­ly seized upon by mainstream culture, from Avril Lavigne in the early noughties to teens clutching penny boards and Thrasher t-shirts now.

“It’s a tricky subject,” he says. “With my work I try to make skateboard­ing accessible to non-skateboard­ers, not necessaril­y to make them want to skate, but to make them enjoy skateboard­ing for what it really is.”

“I think there are interestin­g sociologic­al aspects to understand about skateboard­ing. With it become mainstream it risks losing a part of his soul. Then again I don’t worry so much, because there will always be the majority of skateboard­ers who are doing it for what it is, not because it is trendy, and that will always make the difference. It’s a difficult sport and it’s not for everyone.

“Those who are really doing it out in the streets will always keep its soul alive.” THE INDEPENDEN­T

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 ?? PHOTO: FRENCH FRED ?? Sammy Winter Switch Flip Reflection­s.
PHOTO: FRENCH FRED Sammy Winter Switch Flip Reflection­s.

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