Close Menu
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
What's Hot

Wealthy Boomers collected blue-chip paintings. Gen Z is opting for collectibles. Who will come up trumps?

May 17, 2026

A snapshot of the last Deloitte Private and ArtTactic Art & Finance Report | Deloitte Luxembourg

May 17, 2026

Rising music artist sings original songs in the streets of Philadelphia

May 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
Rate My ArtRate My Art
Home»Artist»‘Surfers say, that board is so sick!’ The French artist redesigning the surfboard like you’ve never seen before | Design
Artist

‘Surfers say, that board is so sick!’ The French artist redesigning the surfboard like you’ve never seen before | Design

By MilyeMay 16, 20266 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


A surfboard split in the middle to create crab pincers. Another that looks like an exaggerated take on a stingray. A surfboard with a webbed bottom contour, like a duck’s foot. And a fire-engine red skateboard shaped like a cartoon-like flame on wheels.

All of Lucas Lecacheur’s surfboards and skateboards push the boundaries of accepted norms – and incredibly, they are all also functional. Beachgoers on the French holiday island Île de Ré, where Lecacheur grew up, have become accustomed to seeing his black leather-clad figure on the sand, holding the Brutalist – an enormous and sharply contoured board – under his arm.

Lecacheur is a French designer and has surfed since he was a child. He spent years as a rock musician, touring and travelling with his underground band Bad Pelicans. His experiments in surfboard design grew out of a lifelong desire to do things differently; to synthesise his two greatest passions – performance and surfing – and “reinterpret it”.

“In rock’n’roll, I was always looking for a new sound, a new energy,” he says. “I thought, how can I bring that to surfing? What if I made a cowboy boot surfboard? A guillotine surfboard? A brutalist one? A crab?”

‘What if I made a cowboy boot surfboard?’ Rocker and designer Lucas Lecacheur. Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

Lecacheur is in Australia as part of Melbourne Design Week, living and working out of At The Above gallery on Fitzroy’s Gertrude Street. When I go there to meet him, I ascend into a cavernous, light-filled space. No one else is there but Lecacheur. He is dressed entirely in black: leather jacket, cowboy boots, sunglasses. He is strumming a guitar, seated by the windows. With a jolt, I realise he has created this tableau in anticipation of my arrival. It’s like a scene from a movie; I can’t help but appreciate the dedication.

Lecacheur is spending his six-week residency ensconced in the gallery, sleeping on a double mattress on the floor. Nearby, old box televisions show flickering scenes from a documentary made about his previous work. There are two Scarpa lounge chairs flanking a turntable on the floor, alongside scattered vinyl records. Photos are tacked all over the walls, while part of the floor is covered in photos of his various surfboards.

‘It’s a beautiful feeling, to try something that no one else has tried.’ Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

While his surfboards are outlandish, the designer has tried surfing with several of them, including the Brutalist and the sleek, pearlescent Medusa. “The Medusa is very challenging because it has a massive flex tail, it’s all made in epoxy and there is no leash loop, so you have to be very careful,” he says.

“But otherwise it’s a beautiful feeling, to try something that no one else has tried. It feels like being a beginner again, having the feeling of the first wave “

How do other surfers respond to his boards? “It’s always an event on the beach. I went to Bells Beach this week with the board I just made. We parked the car and within a minute we could hear, “Oh God, that’s so sick! What’s your Instagram? That board is so sick!”

‘Style is a muscle,’ Lecacheur says. Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

Lecacheur was born in Paris but was raised on Île de Ré, off of France’s west coast. His boards are made the traditional way, in surfboard factories, and use regular materials like fibreglass. On the days he goes into the factor to shape his boards, Lecacheur dresses in one of his many 80s and 90s suits by the likes of Yves Saint Laurent, Armani and Givenchy, some picked up in Paris vintage stores for as little as 1 euro.

“When you dress in a different way, you might end up with a different result,” he explains. “Style is a muscle.”

For Melbourne Design Week, Lecacheur has created two entirely new surfboards. One, called Château Rouge, is a 10-foot long surfboard with a cowboy boot nose and a forked tail. Lecacheur describes the other as being shaped by the land of Australia: “I attached a blank surfboard form to a chain, attached it to a ute in the Australian bush, and I drove the car, dragging it behind. You can see pieces of wood inside, grass, lots of dirt.” That board will be cast in resin to preserve all the collected debris of the bush.

Lecacheur’s surfboard that is inspired and formed by the Australian landscape. Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

The exhibition also features drawings and examples of dozens of experimental fins designed by Lecacheur. These include a spiky metal fin named Total Mayhem, the terrifying Hook, and the aptly named Bat Fin no.6, which looks like a bat wing.

Lecacheur’s enormous and sharp-looking Guillotine board is now held in a gallery in Tokyo. He has built a solid following in Japan and the US, and spends large parts of each year in both countries, and six months of each year on the road. He is now on a world tour – he was in Japan and Indonesia before Australia – and, in an unguarded moment, admits it can be a lonely life. But such is his dedication to his craft.

“I believe if we go outside the box and explore, we could find something that could be an advancement, a progression,” he tells me. “But someone has to try, someone has to do it. Otherwise you’re not evolving.”

Individuality and flair: Lucas Lecacheur Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

Aside from his out-there boards, Lecacheur is also behind a playful photography series called the White Fin Project: a tongue-in-cheek idea that sees him attach a white surfboard fin to various objects, such as a grandfather clock, a cutting board, a post box, an ATM, a bathroom mirror and even the Eiffel Tower. In his world anything can be a surfboard.

Before interviewing him, I watch an Instagram video where he flamboyantly attaches the fin to a chair leg, to the whoops and cheers of an assembled crowd. The video makes no sense to me, but after we meet it falls into place: for a brief moment an ordinary object is turned into “a vehicle of magic”, as Lecacheur puts it, “that helps people to dream a little more”. It is all part of his push against the boundaries of craft and design, injecting it with more individuality and flair.

“It’s a quest,” Lecacheur says, a little sheepishly, as if he knows that the earnestness of the comment rubs against his carefully curated image. “I do it to help other people dream more and accept their own ideas.”



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticlePeople-Watching at Frieze New York 2026
Next Article Fine Arts Fiesta celebrates ’70 trips around the square’ in Wilkes-Barre

Related Posts

Artist

Rising music artist sings original songs in the streets of Philadelphia

May 17, 2026
Artist

Major graffiti and hip-hop festival comes to Wales

May 16, 2026
Artist

Ella Langley Named ACM Artist-Songwriter Of The Year

May 16, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How can I avoid art investment scams?

August 26, 2024

Art Investment Strategies: How to Capitalize on the Buyer’s Art Market

August 26, 2024

Investing in Fine Art Made Simple

August 26, 2024
Monthly Featured
Invest in Art

You Want to Buy Art. Is It About Love or Money?

MilyeOctober 27, 2024
Fine Art

Uncover the human body in new light at ‘The Body Improper’

MilyeMay 13, 2026
Art Rate

ART Corporation Exports Up 13 % Amid Exchange Rate Stability

MilyeOctober 15, 2024
Most Popular

Xcel Energy backs off plans for another gas rate hike in Colorado

October 21, 2024

WWE Hall Of Famer Praises Roman Reigns As “A True Artist”; Compares Success To Seth Rollins’ Rise

October 16, 2024

Write a funny caption for artist Banksy’s new animal-themed collection

August 26, 2024
Our Picks

Don’t miss the Moray School of Art Fine Art Degree Show

November 18, 2025

this restless rock-star artist is about to blow your mind

September 3, 2025

Fife artist Carole Robinson to debut solo show in Fife

July 1, 2025
Weekly Featured

School of Visual Arts Brings Together 15 Alumni Artists in Wavelengths

October 7, 2025

Fine Arts encapsulate the Halls of Deer Point Elementary

May 2, 2025

Study finds Gen Zs in Singapore experience highest rate of burnout and stress, Lifestyle News

October 27, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
  • Get In Touch
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2026 Rate My Art

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.