Photos of Oauhu’s North Shore – a surfing mecca

Hold your breath — For 10 years, Vava Ribeiro has captured one of surf’s most mythical spots – a stretch of coast in Hawaii that has captivated him since he was a kid.

Growing up in 1980s Rio as a devout surfer, Vava Ribeiro would dash down to the local newsstand to swoop up the latest issue of Surfer magazine. He’d pore over the pages, marvelling at photos of the North Shore of Oahu: surfing’s mecca. The crystal blue waves were big. The boards were bright. The surfers exuded a rebel swagger. Young Ribeiro wanted a part of it. It was a kind of portal into which he’d mentally swan dive.

It would take a good 20 years before he would actually make it to the North Shore. In the meantime he’d become as fluent with a camera as he was with a surfboard.

“It haunted me for decades, and then I woke up and I was in that imaginary world, except it was no longer imagination, it was reality,” he says of his first trip there, in the winter of 1998/99. “I felt this strange sense of a déjà vu, like I was reliving the experiences that I dreamed as a kid. That’s where this body of work developed from.”

Ribeiro shot intuitively. Rather than a preconceived approach, he allowed himself to get lost in his subjects. “It was more a sensorial experiment, and trying to bring that into photography. I was throwing myself and my camera at situations where that magic might happen.”

When we think of Hawaii, we typically think of bright sun and vibrant colours. But after a few trips there, Ribeiro tapped into more obscure elements. “There’s something about the North Shore that makes you feel like you’re surrounded by ghosts. So I started to photograph darker environments in darker light, and compose where the dark part of the frame was more significant, just to bring that mystery and imagination into the photo.”

Ribeiro worked on this project for nearly a decade. He’d go to the North Shore for several winters in a row, then take a couple off, spending long hours in the darkroom printing up his photographs. He pinned them to the walls of his New York apartment, and they lived in his head the same way those images in the surf magazines did when he was a teenager in Rio.

Only now the images were malleable, he could go back and make revisions. “It was like I would let it cure, let it rest for a while to see if the work still held up. This was before social media made photography so immediate. As the years went by, I fine-tuned my approach, I learned what works and what doesn’t. Hawaii kind of shaped my work – and also my life.”

Edited by Nick Waplington, designed by Jonny Lu, and published by Jesus Blue Books, North Shore launches on November 23. For Ribeiro, the themes of the work resonate on a universal scale – whether you know the North Shore or not. 

“There’s nothing really to know,” he says. “There’s more to feel. The characters in the book exist. The places exist. But it’s more a state of mind where you play with desire and imagination. If you’re a surfer, you do that a lot – you’re mind-surfing waves, you’re hoping you are someplace where the swell is – so there’s a kind of playfulness. With these images I want to suggest possibilities. It’s a suggestion of a place and a feeling rather than a descriptive documentary.”

The North Shore is available now from Jesus Blue Books

Jamie Brisick is a Contributing Editor at Huck. Follow him on Twitter

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter


You might like

Boxing trainer in black tracksuit instructing young boxer wearing headgear in gym ring under bright lights.
Sport

Warm, tender photos of London’s amateur boxing scene

Where The Fire Went — Sana Badri’s new photobook captures the wider support networks and community spirit around the grassroots sport, as well as the significance of its competitions to the athletes who take part.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Black and white collage of people with bright yellow "STREET JUSTICE" text overlaid in centre.
Culture

As Kneecap and Bob Vylan face outcry, who really deserves to see justice?

Street Justice — Standing in for regular newsletter columnist Emma Garland, Huck’s Hard Feelings host Rob Kazandjian reflects on splatters of strange catharsis in sport and culture, while urging that the bigger picture remains at the forefront of people’s minds.

Written by: Robert Kazandjian

Man with glasses and beard sitting in green chair, wearing dark blue shirt and jeans in office or waiting room with wood panelling.
Culture

Alex Kazemi’s Y2K period novel reminds us that the manosphere is nothing new

New Millennium Boyz — Replete with MTV and endless band t-shirt references, the book follows three teenage boys living in 1999 USA as they descend into a pit of darkness. We spoke to its author about masculinity, the accelerated aging of teenagers, and the rebirth of subcultures in the algorithm age.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Dimly lit, derelict indoor area with wooden ramps and a lone figure in the distance.
Sport

“Moment of escape”: Maen Hammad’s defiant West Bank skate photos

Landing — Choosing to return to Palestine after growing up in the USA, the photographer found himself drawn to Ramallah’s burgeoning skate scene. His debut monograph explores the city’s rebellious youth, who pull tricks in the face of occupation.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Surreal abstract illustration featuring pink and grey organic shapes and forms on a dark background.
Culture

Inside the weird world of audio porn

Porn without pictures — Storyline-driven and ethical, imageless erotica exploded during the pandemic. Jess Thomson speaks to the creators behind the microphones.

Written by: Jess Thomson

Huck 79

We are all Mia Khalifa

How humour, therapy and community help Huck's latest cover star control her narrative.

Written by: Alya Mooro

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members. It is also made possible by sponsorship from:

Signup to our newsletter

Sign up to our newsletter to informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture, featuring personal takes on the state of media and pop culture from Emma Garland, former Digital Editor of Huck, exclusive interviews, recommendations and more.

Please wait...