|  | SURF ART: Artist Profile: ANDY DAVISCalifornia, USA
 
 
 
											  
 Uno dei più rispettati ed innovativi "surf artist" della California.Il suo amore per il mare, il surf  e l'arte.
 Biografia e opere     Hi, my name is Andy.If someone had invented a 25-hour day, Andy Davis might have had a website a
 year ago. But everyone has a choice to make. Andy’s is drawing, surfing, and
 spending time with his wife, Ashley, and their son, Noah. Much preferred options for
 a guy who admits he can barely send an email.
 If you’ve ever been stuck at a desk, then you know what he means. There are just
 other things Andy wants to do. In fact, Andy Davis knew from a very early age what
 he wanted out of life: to surf and to draw. Since then, his colorful, original artwork
 has found a growing audience through public and private shows among the surf
 culture elite, filmmakers, and musicians around the world.
 On being a professional artist
 “In the beginning, I wouldn’t even have called myself an artist. I just sort of started
 relaying my journeys on paper. The ideas kept spinning, so I’d do my own
 interpretation of them…. I never thought I’d make a living at it. It just sort of started
 coming together that way… when I started getting a response from people I didn’t
 know. In the first couple of years I recognized everybody who wore my shirts … and
 then it started to snowball. Then I realized that maybe people were connecting with
 this in some form.
 “That was the rewarding thing. To feel like I was giving something back.”
 On the environment
 As in THE environment. THE sky. THE ocean. Rather than carrying a big sign that
 says, “WE CARE,” Andy and friends simply, quietly do their part for the planet. “It’s
 tough because you can easily be branded a hypocrite,” Andy says. “The fact is: we
 all need to be educated about what’s going on. There’s an awareness now that
 people are tuning in to. Like a lot of people, I’m just trying to be more self-sufficient
 and do the right thing.”
 On what’s important
 “Having a child has taught me to be more patient, not so selfish. You no longer
 have a choice.”
 
 
 Artist BackgroundGrowing up
 Aren’t all artists in some way a reflection of where they grew up? Fullerton, Dana
 Point, Escondido, Encinitas. A swim coach for a father. A mom who encouraged his
 budding art and an abundance of good friends. “Friends were everything to me,”
 Andy says.
 “Coming from a broken home, it was about connecting with friends, riding bikes,
 listening to music.” Never far from the ocean, Andy felt the lure of water from the
 very beginning.
 A self-described “sports fanatic,” he indulged in the opportunities afforded by the
 ever-optimistic southland weather. Little league, youth soccer, then high school
 water polo, and then leaving it all behind for surfing.
 Catching the Surf Bug
 At age 12, Andy put a surfboard in the water and the rest of the world fell away.
 “Once I discovered surfing, I pretty much dropped everything else  except art.”
 Traveling
 Armed with a surfboard and sketchpad, Andy’s travels have taken him around the
 world. 26. His journeys to Indonesia, Hawaii, Costa Rica, Italy, Mexico, Australia,
 New Zealand, Japan and outer space, "when I ate a batch of weird cookies once,"
 have been as much voyages of self-discovery as they have been about surfing.
 The understanding that life can be simple  and meaningful  has always been
 there for the artist. But traveling around the world brought home the concept about
 not only depicting a world in harmony, but living within one.
 Artistic Style
 Artistic style described by the artist himself: “Loose and dreamy, fun and fancy free
 the way I think we all should be. (I have been reading lots of Dr. Seuss to my son
 Noah.)"
 The art of Andy Davis is about moments. Perfect moments. A roadside cactus that
 greets intrepid voyagers, beckoning you, its arms pointing due south. Andy would
 be the first one to tell you these moments are personal. Some can’t even be
 described in words. Which probably explains why Andy draws. Why he rearranges
 the view, the order, the perspective, the color. Because every time you look at
 something, you see it in a different way. A flush of emotion. A burst of happiness.
 The lure of adventure.
 Through his singularly unique fusion of mass media and surf culture surrealism,
 Andy Davis leaves nothing out of bounds. As the artist puts it, “Anything is fair
 game: billboards, photographs, a hike on the beach, music. I’ve always sprinkled
 my art with little pieces of the things I love.” With a style described as loose,
 whimsical, and dreamy, subjects blur and blend, always evolving, touching the
 subconscious. Surfing, scenes of domestic bliss, and yearnings of adolescence are
 filtered through Pop Art colors, bold lines, and an elegant simplicity that evokes
 simpler times, without sacrificing warmth and humanity.
 As Andy says, “I’ve never been able to help myself. I’ve fused all my loves into one
 thing… little pieces of my life that I self-consciously put back in the art. I’ve always
 been thankful for the people who came before, who touched me. They’ve given me
 so much, and now I have the opportunity to bring all of that into my work.”
 It starts with a sketch.
 Andy’s second grade report card might have said: Andy loves to draw.” Or, “He
 doodles constantly. If he doesn’t have his sketchbook he draws on a napkin, or a
 bag, or the sand. Of course, there’s Andy’s side of the story: “It’s something I’ve
 always done. My mom always encouraged me. She’s an artist herself. From my
 earliest memories, whatever I was doing  sports, walking down a street, going to
 school  I always had to come home and draw whatever experiences stuck in my
 mind. It was a way to look at things I’ve done and see how I could do them better.
 In some ways, it was to see how I could make myself a better person.”
 Shacking up.
 Although Andy’s work always starts with a sketch, where the final result ends up is
 often another matter. On a recent trip to Mexico, the artist and friends embarked on
 a mission to dress up abandoned chicken shacks and outhouses, where the only art
 critics were farmers, police, and local families. “The first one was a little scary,”
 Andy says. “We did it in the middle of Ensenada in the middle of the day. It’s hard
 to know what the locals will think, but there’s always that thought in the back of
 your mind that the last thing you’d want to do is spend an afternoon in a Mexican
 jail for painting a picture.”
 Guerrilla art aside, Andy’s mediums vary. He works with found objects, canvas,
 wood, silkscreen on textiles, sewn objects, paintings on surfboards, record covers,
 pen and ink, watercolor, even scrapbooks.
 On why faces are missing from his paintings.
 “You may notice none of the people have faces. But it’s really supposed to be
 about the feeling. It’s your interpretation about what’s going on there… Maybe it’s
 me  maybe it’s you. And that’s it. It’s a part of me and my friends, history, other
 photographers, other people, other places  all put into a blender. You can take
 what you see and make up your own concoction….”.
  
   
  
 
 
										 
 exhibit at Surf Indian,  2008
 
										 ___________________________________________Press contact for Andy Davis & mynameisandy.com:
 Bobby Knudtson | 714-625-9646 | contact@mynameisandy.com
 ____________________________________________
 
 Revolt Surf Journal |