Video: Los Angeles skate culture through the eyes of photographer Jacob Messex

Video: Los Angeles skate culture through the eyes of photographer Jacob Messex
Analogue snaps of LA youth — The Berrics’ Hellchild video profile on Jacob Messex coincides with the twenty-year-old skate and youth culture documentarian’s solo show and Filmus zine release at Kingswell.

“I really like the harsh light, its warm and the city is fun to skate around all day. Downtown is crazy,” says Los Angeles born-and-bred photographer Jacob Messex, as he tries to explain what makes the city’s skate scene unique. “Great local kids at the parks… Like Lincoln Park is my go to skatepark, everyone there is super sick and fun to hang out with… never kooky kids.”

Aged just twenty, Messex is already on to his third annual Filmus photo show and zine launch at LA skate mecca, Kingswell – and for good measure Steven Andrew Garcia shot Hellchild, the killer video profile for The Berrics, above.

Jacob pic 1Jacob 8Jacob 3

With a solid portfolio of work for The Skateboard Mag already under his belt, the young Angelino has made moments fast – but then he did learn from the best.

“I was lucky enough to start working for TSM at an early age and I must have been like 17 when Grant [Brittain] wrote me a list of portrait photographers I needed to look into – I still have that piece of paper pinned to my wall,” Jacob explains.

Jacob 9Jacob 6Jacob 2

After establishing his name with action shots, Jacob has been drawing his focus back to capture the people and the culture that surround skate culture in LA. “Skate portraits are a new thing under my belt,” he explains. “My newest show Filmus3 is a years work of shooting my friends and our journey as skateboarders.”

Jacob 4 Jacob 5Jacob 7Jacob 10

His eye for capturing motion and skateboarding’s quieter moments is clearly on display. But he feels discovering film has really transformed the work he produces and Filmus3 – both the zine and the show – is an all-analogue affair.

“That was sort of because I put out a whole issue using the same camera that so many skate photographers used to shoot with back in the day,” he explains. “I really wanted to shoot film and keep that style alive; it’s something that people use less and less these days, so to focus on a project like this has been super exciting!”

Grab yourself a copy of Filmus3 by Jacob Messex.

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