I have been receiving bags of fanmail (mostly from Europe, where i'm huge) asking me, "why exactly were you just in Scotland a few weeks ago anyway?"
I was hired to go take photos of a golf course in development on the East Lothian coastline of Scotland, also known as "the cradle of golf". Now i can already hear you art nerd cynics out there going, "ewwwww golf??? how borrrring". And that's sad really, but understandable. Chalk golf up as yet another thing that americans have pirated, gutted, and frakensteined into some new monster cash cow with virtually no soul. The truth is, if you go back to the roots of the game, beneath all the bullshit that has been piled on top since, you will find one of the greatest games that Nature ever provided.
Nature? Yes, i said Nature. The Firth of Forth, a bay in the east of Scotland, is lined with sand dunes. Over time a grass became strong enough to tame those ever shifting dunes, locking them in a frozen undulation. Rabbits burrowed their homes there, feeding on the grass. When you walk the dunes still in Scotland, you see that the grass is mown with machine like precision to nearly half an inch high... Add all this to the primal human instinctual need to place things in holes (and pass time) and there you have it: Golf. Hitting rocks to rabbit holes with sticks over rabbit mown fairways on grass covered dunes.
Since, men have figured a way to tack on lots of bullshit to the game... making it elitist, exclusive, expensive and environmentally exhaustive. Sounds a bit like art, eh? And like art (and most things), underneath all of the constructs and destructs and dump trucks, something pure is still there. Something worth knowing and participating in.
Because golf is a practice, like yoga, spiritual and physical, that teaches one how to align mind and body all in conjunction with the natural world. All of the principles, all of the information for our Selves, is in golf.
Now there are some Americans trying to get back to the roots of the game. Golf course architect Tom Doak and his crew are an excellent example. They have crumpled up and recycled the American formula for CAD drawn golf courses. Tom spent much of his young life playing the courses of Scotland and studying all of the original mastery of courses hundreds of years old. He has surrounded himself with people that share the same love and have the same creativity and concern for the future of the game and the future of our planet, and together they make courses that are not only environmentally sound, but would make Andy Goldsworthy look like color by numbers.
In fact, walking Tom's course mid process, listening as he and his coworkers speak about all of their intents and purposes, seeing it all without a time worn social construct, i couldn't help but think that this was one of the greatest contemporary works i've seen in years.
So here are the photos. There are lots so browse as you like or not at all. My intent was to capture just the slimmest impressions of a work in the middle of its process. Just to get the hints of what is going to make this course, like all Tom's work, so amazing.
8.30.2006
The reason i was in the UK.
Posted by geoffrey at 11:31 AM
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9 comments:
Pacific Dunes in Bandon is always talked about here in Ashland. Rumor has it that 25 Lear jets fly in there a day. Golfers fly over the north pole to golf there. It sounds very interesting. My wife and I have discussed moving there and applying my high-end paint chops to the exploding economy.
Great photos. Do you have to pitch the client about their look? Or do they trust you and say, "Do what you think is right" or do you just take a wide range and cull later?
Where you looking at the tilt lense for this job?
Wow SL, your stock just continues to go up with me! I was just about 20 mins ago talking to my girlfriend about how much i love your blog and your world up there in Oregon that you have created. That i can just breath that fresh air through your site. I'm sure you have your own trials and tribs but i have really painted it into a rosy picture in my mind that i like to imagine myself in one day! (I'm starting to sound like the lady in "Misery" i know)
Anywhoozle... I'm guessing that you already know that Tom did Pacific Dunes, but i'll just let everyone else in on that. I had the great pleasure of walking that course when Tom was building it too. It was the first time i met him and i was along to take photos to go with an interview. It was how i got introduced to new ideas on the old traditions, and really just got to see all the thought he put into making a course. The concepts involved in what he is trying to do are just amazing. When Tom talks about things like this:
"Designers who work from plans have a tendency to fall in love with how the DRAWING of their design looks. An experienced designer with a technically minded brain may visualize all of the nuances of his design in 3-D, but more likely the draftsman is inking [or digitizing] his grading lines to look neat and tidy in 2-D, without regard for the unnaturally regular slopes his plan will produce in the field. Once you have made the contractor re-grade the site to a series of perfect slopes, it’s extremely hard to recreate the randomness of natural undulations, which is why it’s better to leave some parts of the terrain untouched and use those as the model for grading the rest."
as an artist, you get it...
Another thing i wanted to explain was the idea of a Links course, which is important in Pacific Dunes especially, because someone else who read this was asking me... Golf courses were originally referred to as Links courses because they linked the land to the ocean, usually on the dunes. Many courses now say that they are Links style, when really they are nothing but simulations. Tom actually can actually create Links courses instead of simulating them. Though i have heard him say that Pacific Dunes and the other courses in Bandon are technically not Links because they are up on those big cliffs above the water.
And you are right about the Lear Jets. Golfers will fly around the world to get any flavor of that original feel that golf first brought. It is the real thing they are looking for.
About the photos... I never asked anyone what they wanted, hee. I just went with it. I thought i would use a lot of different cameras and lenses, but once i started using the one lens, i knew that is what i was after. Good thing it worked, because it was all i shot! Detailed images of construction just didn't seem to fit.
And fiiiinally, i have your blog to thank for reminding me about my "lensbaby". (www.lensbabies.com) I threw it in my bag at the last minute thinking hmmmmm... I was looking at the tilt shift but it was too expensive to rent, and really they are just too knobby and scientific still. The lensbaby is all micro adjustic touchy feely. i really think you would love it.
Thanks for your comments... hope you had time to read all the response!
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