CORNWALL.- SURF! has opened this week at National Maritime Museum Cornwall - a major new exhibition exploring the history and cultural impact of surfing in Cornwall.
Celebrating the culture, craft, art and activism of Cornwalls surf scene, the exhibition documents a century of Cornish waveriding. From the wooden bellyboards of the 1920s made by local coffin makers, to charismatic stand-up surf pioneers of the 1930s and 1940s, through to the birth of the surf industry in the 1960s, iconic longboard artworks in the 2000s, to the para surfing World Champions of today, SURF! provides a unique deep-dive into how Cornwall has evolved into the California of the UK, becoming a breeding ground for world champion surfers and multiple creative industries, from board-building to wetsuit production, magazine media to filmmaking and fashion.
Curated by surf academic Dr. Sam Bleakley, the object-rich exhibition features a vast array of artefacts with exciting human stories and hidden histories sourced from private collections around the UK. Many of the objects, including some of the worlds most valuable surfboards, original tools, photographs, videos and artwork, have never before been on public display.
Highlights include 100 surfboards that collectively tell the story of 100 years of Cornish waveriding, from early 4-foot wooden bellyboards to pioneering eco and adaptive boards of the future. Among them are boards that have played a key role in Cornish surfing history, including those used by global surfing champions, such as Robyn Davies, Pegleg Bennett, Charlotte Banfield and Ben Skinner. Measuring in at an impressive 37-feet, the original record-setting worlds biggest surfboard is displayed, able to carry 15 surfers at any one time. A testimony to the impact of surfing on culture more broadly, there is also be a display of original artboards, including the first-ever public exhibition of Damian Hirsts stunning butterfly board on loan from the Maia Norman collection. Other artboards from renowned artists, such as Polly Morgan, Paul Smith, Julian Schnabel and Nina Blake, are also be featured, alongside a beautiful poetry-engraved wooden board from award-winning Cornish boardmaker James Otter.
Harking back to the surf industrys emergence in the 1960s, audiences are invited to step inside a recreation of Newquays original Bilbo Surf Shop, a hub of the Cornish surf scene, before peeping into an original 1965 VW Transporter campervan brought to life with the sounds and smells of the 60s. Further surf ephemera includes a selection of iconic surf posters from the past 100 years, spanning everything from sport to travel and tourism to cinema; a selection of vintage swimwear and wetsuits from the 1930s-1960; an array of surf magazines; iconic vintage surf photography. There is also be a presentation of the first and only surf film narrated in Cornish, made by musician, filmmaker and champion bodyboarder, Mickey Smith.
As well as surf culture and aesthetics, the exhibition also explores the politics of surfing. While tensions once existed between surfing and wider tourism, with surfing banned on some Cornish beaches (thought to attract the wrong kind of tourist), today waveriding is hugely significant to Cornwall, generating £150 million per year for the county. Surfing is also playing a key role in driving blue health and surf therapy initiatives, as well as environmental activism. Cascading into the exhibition space is a specially commissioned six-metre wave sculpture by artist Abigail Fallis, made of recycled plastic bottles, a homage to Cornish marine conservation charity Surfers Against Sewage and their work fighting to protect the oceans.
Running until 2027, SURF! is a celebration of a unique pastime that has transformed Cornwall over a hundred years into a place of aspiration, art, and the buzz of the new. The exhibition is accompanied by an ambitious programme including Museum Lates, lectures, film events, and surf art and craft workshops.
Sam Bleakley, surf academic and curator of SURF!, said: "Cornwall has been shaped by the cool of surfing for over 100 years. With its convoluted coastline, wide open to Atlantic swells, the region has become a breeding ground for blue health, art and activism. Cornish surfers were pivotal in founding Surfers Against Sewage in 1990 and in 2010, the NHS piloted the worlds first surf therapy programme in Cornwall, The Wave Project, which helped progress world champion para-surfers like Charlotte Banfield.
It is no longer simply surfers against sewage, but surfers for sustainability and for public health, spearheaded by the blue health movement that calls for us all to reconnect with ocean-based activities and keep our shared coastline clean. SURF! will not only be an inspiring journey through Cornwalls surfing heritage, but a sensory feast, celebrating the enormous impact of waveriding in Cornwall