Sunday, January 27, 2008
Thursday, April 05, 2007
The Happening

Don't miss this event in NYC on April 13, 2007. Esteban will be exhibiting some new pieces and be there in person.
Art, music, film, surfing and skateboarding converge for one day. The official website with details is here.
Monday, March 26, 2007
Sunday, September 17, 2006
The Good, The Bad and The Stubby
Esteban contributes and is featured in a recent edition of Surfer's Journal.

This is a great 24 page article with plenty of vintage, never-published photos and many contributing writers.
The Surfer's Journal is a deluxe, reader-supported publication that covers travel, profiles, art, adventure and history.
Friday, May 12, 2006
Some Bojorquez art pieces
This is from the book “Super X Media Combine” by Takuji Masuda, First Point Productions
Text by C.R. Stecyk III
Steve Don Esteban Stephen Krajewski Kilgore Bojorquez is a man out of time. Equal portions of early Spanish settler, aboriginal Californian, modern Malibu master, surfboard designer, and contemporary artiste comprise his identity. The combinator’s family was among the first European expeditions to come to the Golden State. Bojorquez challenges his environment with his riding, a well balanced blending of velocity and critical positioning. He lives in his art, creating elaborate sculptural tableaux vivants, which require years of dedicated work to complete. The art critics refer to Esteban’s work as being Gestamkunstwork (allover art), while Bojorquez makes no reference to it at all. He just does it, for no other reason than it’s there to be done.

The Pig, 2000
Mixed media, 48 x 30 x 5 inches

Malibu Perpetual Surfboard, 2000
Mixed media, 17 x 11 x 3 inches

Tri-Finity, 2000
Mixed media, 69 x 48 x 4 inches
Text by C.R. Stecyk III
Steve Don Esteban Stephen Krajewski Kilgore Bojorquez is a man out of time. Equal portions of early Spanish settler, aboriginal Californian, modern Malibu master, surfboard designer, and contemporary artiste comprise his identity. The combinator’s family was among the first European expeditions to come to the Golden State. Bojorquez challenges his environment with his riding, a well balanced blending of velocity and critical positioning. He lives in his art, creating elaborate sculptural tableaux vivants, which require years of dedicated work to complete. The art critics refer to Esteban’s work as being Gestamkunstwork (allover art), while Bojorquez makes no reference to it at all. He just does it, for no other reason than it’s there to be done.

The Pig, 2000
Mixed media, 48 x 30 x 5 inches

Malibu Perpetual Surfboard, 2000
Mixed media, 17 x 11 x 3 inches

Tri-Finity, 2000
Mixed media, 69 x 48 x 4 inches
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Two Kooks and the King of Creedle
Here's a review of Esteban Bojorquez, Alex Kopps and Thomas Campbell's show by the OC Weekly.

Surfing is so carefully planned, designed, marketed and sold that it’s hard to see past the expensive ephemera and realize how fleeting it really is. But a cryptically named new art show in Laguna Beach, “Two Kooks and the King of Creedle,” capitalizes on—and captures—the pastime’s temporal, ethereal nature, as seen through the eyes of artists Thomas Campbell, Alex Kopps and Steve Krajewski, a.k.a. Estaban Bojorquez: surfers in youth and early middle age who understand that you never ride the same wave twice.
“It’s such a pure thing,” says Krajewski of Malibu, whose artistic—and actual—surname is Bojorquez, who’s designed an Anderson surfboard model and who’s known for his found-object assemblages. “It’s kind of like those sand paintings before they started gluing them down: you create, but then you return it to nature. That’s what surfing has always meant to me.”
That’s also the way he’s always surfed, in a style Kopps, a graffiti artist from Oakland, calls “creedle”: “Slang for someone who crouches a lot and spends their time in the steepest part of the wave,” Kopps explains. “It’s maybe more of a personal place to be on the wave. Steve was the king of crouching in the steepest part of the wave, and he’s a much better surfer than we are.” Kopps and Campbell, a Dana Point native perhaps best known for his surf film Sprout or else his cuddly, carefully painted little monsters, are the kooks: the lesser surfers.
In art, however, all three men are on a par. A painter who quit his day job a generation ago, Bojorquez will show a series of assemblages—large-scale collages of flotsam and jetsam, hubcaps, pieces of chandeliers, light rings from an old pool—that recall surfing’s humble beginnings and its inherent simplicity. The board leashes, the rash guards, the sunblock are all the icing; his compilations—some blown through with actual surf foam—resemble what you might find washed up onshore a couple of hours south of Ensenada. Like a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich at the beach, you can taste the sand in his work.
Similar is Kopps, the secret painter, whose work sometimes comes in photograph form, mounted in or on rough-hewn shadow boxes on gallery walls, framed by flame-shaped waves. His “Kooks” material is mixed media—paintings and drawings—but his influences are the same. “Spending time in the ocean has inherently affected me as a person,” he says. “You can’t deny that when you spend hundreds of hours staring into the sea, waiting.”
Nor can Campbell, whose “Kooks” offerings—hazy surf photos stitched onto paper—bridge the span between the cute, big-eyed monsters he’s painted at places like RVCA in Costa Mesa and his surf film. Taken with a Polaroid instant camera, they’re redolent of days at the beach, with the kind of near overexposures that come from gazing into the sun. It’s not too far ahead of where the surfwear giants are going with their graphics—but the motivation, of course, is completely different.
“I don’t find that the modern surf media or the companies relate or really even care about anything except selling products to the pawns,” Campbell says via telephone. “To me surfing’s just a beautiful activity.”
As it is seen here.
“TWO KOOKS AND THE KING OF CREEDLE,” THE SURF GALLERY, 911 S. COAST HWY., LAGUNA BEACH, (949) 376-9155; WWW.THESURFGALLERY.COM.

‘Two Kooks and the King of Creedle" is surfing verite
By THEO DOUGLAS
Surfing is so carefully planned, designed, marketed and sold that it’s hard to see past the expensive ephemera and realize how fleeting it really is. But a cryptically named new art show in Laguna Beach, “Two Kooks and the King of Creedle,” capitalizes on—and captures—the pastime’s temporal, ethereal nature, as seen through the eyes of artists Thomas Campbell, Alex Kopps and Steve Krajewski, a.k.a. Estaban Bojorquez: surfers in youth and early middle age who understand that you never ride the same wave twice.
“It’s such a pure thing,” says Krajewski of Malibu, whose artistic—and actual—surname is Bojorquez, who’s designed an Anderson surfboard model and who’s known for his found-object assemblages. “It’s kind of like those sand paintings before they started gluing them down: you create, but then you return it to nature. That’s what surfing has always meant to me.”
That’s also the way he’s always surfed, in a style Kopps, a graffiti artist from Oakland, calls “creedle”: “Slang for someone who crouches a lot and spends their time in the steepest part of the wave,” Kopps explains. “It’s maybe more of a personal place to be on the wave. Steve was the king of crouching in the steepest part of the wave, and he’s a much better surfer than we are.” Kopps and Campbell, a Dana Point native perhaps best known for his surf film Sprout or else his cuddly, carefully painted little monsters, are the kooks: the lesser surfers.
In art, however, all three men are on a par. A painter who quit his day job a generation ago, Bojorquez will show a series of assemblages—large-scale collages of flotsam and jetsam, hubcaps, pieces of chandeliers, light rings from an old pool—that recall surfing’s humble beginnings and its inherent simplicity. The board leashes, the rash guards, the sunblock are all the icing; his compilations—some blown through with actual surf foam—resemble what you might find washed up onshore a couple of hours south of Ensenada. Like a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich at the beach, you can taste the sand in his work.
Similar is Kopps, the secret painter, whose work sometimes comes in photograph form, mounted in or on rough-hewn shadow boxes on gallery walls, framed by flame-shaped waves. His “Kooks” material is mixed media—paintings and drawings—but his influences are the same. “Spending time in the ocean has inherently affected me as a person,” he says. “You can’t deny that when you spend hundreds of hours staring into the sea, waiting.”
Nor can Campbell, whose “Kooks” offerings—hazy surf photos stitched onto paper—bridge the span between the cute, big-eyed monsters he’s painted at places like RVCA in Costa Mesa and his surf film. Taken with a Polaroid instant camera, they’re redolent of days at the beach, with the kind of near overexposures that come from gazing into the sun. It’s not too far ahead of where the surfwear giants are going with their graphics—but the motivation, of course, is completely different.
“I don’t find that the modern surf media or the companies relate or really even care about anything except selling products to the pawns,” Campbell says via telephone. “To me surfing’s just a beautiful activity.”
As it is seen here.
“TWO KOOKS AND THE KING OF CREEDLE,” THE SURF GALLERY, 911 S. COAST HWY., LAGUNA BEACH, (949) 376-9155; WWW.THESURFGALLERY.COM.
Monday, May 01, 2006
Surf Culture: The Art History of Surfing
Surf Culture: The Art History of Surfing, is an exhibit that was organized by the Laguna Art Museum.The exhibition traveled to The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, in January 2003 and to the San Jose Museum of Art in August 2003. The Museum’s most well attended show in its history, the exhibit was shown again at the Laguna Art Museum in the summer of 2005 and was titled Surf Culture Redux.
About the exhibit

Past, present, and future links between surfing and art are explored through works of art by surfers and artists influenced by surfing.

Esteban was part of the show and had several art pieces included.
Surf Culture is accompanied by a 240-page full color book designed by Dave Carson, co-published and distributed internationally by Gingko Press, with essays by writer Deanne Stillman, anthropolist Ben Finney, LAM guest curator Tyler Stallings, LAM director Bolton Colburn (a former U.S. amateur surfing champion), and guest curator Craig Stecyk.
The book can be purchased via Amazon here.

Visit the Laguna Art Museum.
About the exhibit

Past, present, and future links between surfing and art are explored through works of art by surfers and artists influenced by surfing.

Esteban was part of the show and had several art pieces included.
Surf Culture is accompanied by a 240-page full color book designed by Dave Carson, co-published and distributed internationally by Gingko Press, with essays by writer Deanne Stillman, anthropolist Ben Finney, LAM guest curator Tyler Stallings, LAM director Bolton Colburn (a former U.S. amateur surfing champion), and guest curator Craig Stecyk.
The book can be purchased via Amazon here.

Visit the Laguna Art Museum.








