Club Of The Waves
Ben DeCamp speaks to Club Of The Waves about his travels and experiences as a surf photographer...
BD: I grew up in Rhode Island and Upstate New York, and always went to Florida for Spring Break. I think in Rhody and Florida is where I found a love for the ocean.
BD: Gosh, I remember having a camera in my hand as early as 5 years old, one of those cheap disposable ones.
My Dad pushed it on me first because he used to take photos of patients during surgery.
BD: There are a lot of great surf photographers, but reading Philosophy and looking at art outside of the surf world gives me a great perspective.
BD: I grew up bodyboarding for years, I wouldn't call myself a surfer, bodyboarder or a photographer. I'm a guy who loves to be in the barrel and take photos. Any labels that result are fine.
BD: Surfshot Magazine, an unidentified guy riding in the barrel at Big Rock. It was a huge moment for me because all of a sudden I was getting money to have fun and create art. Although in the beginning it was far from art...
BD: Thanks! At 21, it's a wild time and a ton of opportunities are unfolding. I'm kind of blown away to be on a masthead with such legends, it's big shoes to fill and I'm ready to step up to the plate.
Surfer Magazine
BD: I think my favourite trip so far has been to Chile. The locals welcomed me with open arms and I'm like a part of the family down there.
BD: I like shooting fisheye in big warm barrels. Puerto, Off the Wall, Backdoor etc... Anything mushy like shooting from the land at lower Trestles drives me batty.
BD: I want to explore more of the Pacific and find new waves, if you look at a detailed map there are tons of islands that haven't seen man in hundreds of years.
BD: Well all of that stuff has happened, the dog biting was in Chile when I was on a bike and it grabbed my leg and ripped me down onto the street. After screaming and waving my tripod at it went away. Near drownings... came close 3 times in one day in Hawaii, during 3 different sessions. Couldn't believe I went to sleep in one piece that night. I think the scariest thing I've seen is a pack of desert wolves on the beach coming towards me in Chile early one morning. I've never jumped into the lineup so quickly!
BD: Without a doubt from the water. I just love being part of the wave and experiencing the power.
BD: I've been hurt a few times, but it comes with the territory. I do a lot of training mostly involving running and swimming underwater laps. The Philosophy degree has helped me think in different ways and keep me relaxed in those really heavy situations.
BD: I love Hawaii. At times its frustrating with so many photographers congested into one strip of sand, but that's the reason we go: for the congestion of beauty and talent loaded into a small coastline.
BD: It's the same as for surfers. It's the guys who are locals or who have been there the longest get priority. There's nothing worse than having a splash of someone else's waterhousing in your photo, but sometimes it gives a nice scale to your photo when you see how big an empty wave is. I generally do my own thing, if there are a ton of guys shooting fisheye I'll go to another spot or work a different angle with a longer lens in the water.
BD: At times it's hard when a company passes on a good photo because they can't see a logo, or it's too pulled back. As much as I like shooting the locals at each place I travel to, the scenery, and the adventure... the reality is that stuff doesn't sell. The problem is when you become so engrossed into shooting ads that all of your photos look and feel the same, you become one-dimensional in your photographic approach. Someone should look at your photo and say ahhh yes that's a Jeff Divine or whoever. I try to create a balance between frontlit-surf action, lineups, and lifestyle.
BD: Since I started working at Surfer, there are a ton of opportunities unfolding. I'm actually in Brazil right now soaking up some rays and lurking Ipanema. I've got a few experimental ideas up my sleeve that waterhousing genius Chad Stickney created for me, stay tuned to bendecamp.com and Surfer to see what I've been working on. Thanks for showcasing my work on COTW!
Thanks again Ben for this insight into your work.
COTW