Jenny Sampson's New Book Skater Girls - We've Got A Sneak Peek!
Photographer Jenny Sampson's new book Skater Girls
Foreword by Becky Beal
Contributions by Cindy Whitehead
We can not wait for photographer Jenny Sampson's new book Skater Girls , a follow up to her 2017 book Skaters, both published by Daylight. Skater Girls
drops in September 2020 and we know so many girls out there will want
get their hands on it. The new book retails for $45.00 USD and $58.99 CN. Stay tuned for more info and a sneak peek!
"These
women are my skate sisters -- we are the only ones who really know what
it was like to forge that path, blaze that trail, and dare to be
'different.' Sometimes we were celebrated for being female, but not for
the reasons we may have wanted. Other times, we were ignored because we
were girls and young women ...Through it all, we skated and never let
any of the negatives diminish the feeling we had when we jumped on our
skateboards and were flying through the bowls and pools that we loved."
-- Cindy Whitehead, '70s pro skateboarder, 2016 Skateboard Hall of Fame inductee
In Jenny Sampson's follow-up monograph to Skaters (Daylight,
2017) featuring her acclaimed collection of tintype portraits of male
and female skateboarders, the American photographer, who is based in
Berkeley, California, chose to focus exclusively on female
skateboarders. Although historically a male-dominated sport, there have
always been girls in the skateboarding landscape. By turning her lens on
these fearless females in skate parks and at events all over
California, Washington and Oregon, Sampson hopes Skater Girls (Daylight,
September, 2020) will increase visibility and celebrate these girls and
non-binary people, young and older, who have been breaking down this
gender wall with their skater girl power.
The idea for Skater Girls was born in 2017 when Sampson was approaching the deadline to deliver work for her first book. One
day in early 2017, she was setting up to photograph at Emeryville skate
park in Northern California when to her delight she noticed there were
many more women skateboarders in the park than usual. She observed and
then introduced herself to a small group of skater girls and asked if
she could photograph them. They agreed and Sampson led them to her
camera and portable darkroom to make their portraits.
That
day was a turning point for Sampson. She felt a kinship with these
women who opened up to her so warmly and knew that moving forward she
would focus on making portraits of female skateboarders. That same day
she learned of an organization called Skate Like a Girl, and a few weeks
later went to an event they held in Santa Rosa. "There I discovered a
whole new world-to me. Girl skaters abounded."
Jazzmen and Nathalie, Seattle, 2019 |
Jasmine, Seattle, 2018 |
The
portraits featured in this book were all made in a portable darkroom
using a 160-year-old photographic process known as wet plate collodion
that requires long exposure times and the subjects to be perfectly
still. "There is a connection that takes place when I photograph them
using the slow photographic process, wet plate collodion. The
photographic practice requires patience, interaction and collaboration
and it mirrors the inclusive landscape in which these photographs are
made."
Lucia, Oakland, 2019 |
Ohmala, Grass Valley, 2018 |
Part
of the beauty of a tintype is the timelessness that it imbues. While
Sampson's subjects are wearing contemporary styles and plenty of logos,
there still remains a timelessness in their portraits. "Ultimately,
despite the contemporary subject matter and modern details, we see a
unique honesty and are struck by the strength and determination of these
skaters. They are purposeful and courageous, open, playful and
supportive; I admire their respectful and shrewd fight for a place in
the world," says Sampson.
Amelia, Seattle 2019 |
Carly, Samantha, Tabitha, Suzy, Encinitas, 2018 |
In her essay Becky Beal, EdD, Professor of Kinesiology, Cal State East Bay, and co-author of Moving Boarders: Skateboarding and the Shifting Landscape of Urban Youth Sports writes, "Jenny Sampson's collection of portraits encourages us to re-examine our assumptions of who is a skateboarder by acknowledging the variety of gender expressions that are cultivated in and articulated through skateboarding. I find Sampson's photos powerful in their representation of women as complex and confident, and I find them joyful because of the wide-ranging forms of skateboarder identity being supported in these communities. Sampson's collection celebrates skateboarding while simultaneously challenging traditional narratives of 'authenticity,' extending the notion of what it means to be a skateboarder."
Kristen and Holly, Oakland 2019 |
The
growing popularity of female skateboarders was in play at the Academy
Awards in 2020, when a film about girls skateboarding in Afghanistan,
"Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You're a Girl)," won the Oscar
for best documentary (short subject) -- the first Oscar ever given to a
film that features skateboarding. In 2021, the Tokyo Olympic Games will
include skateboarding as an official event, for both men and women, for
the first time.
You can Pre-Order Skater Girls here
You can Pre-Order Skater Girls here
All images © copyright Jenny Sampson from the book Skater Girls published by Daylight.