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The Best of Survey 2012

By Gary Bradnick • 28th December 2012 12:45pm • Posted in Art & Design

Cycling as a cultural attitude

Cycling as a cultural attitude. Not just style or ‘Streetstyle’, a phrase first expressed by anthropologist Ted Polhemus and one that is omnipresent across many sartorial blogs. This is what I think of when I think of the Rapha Survey blog:

To me Survey is a scrapbook documentation of people whose love and passion is cycling. This in turn exudes an attitude in both their attire, style and bike choices. That’s me just below: no brakes, no helmet, just a bit of gold and my cycling attitude. Say what you will but like all people we have the choice of what we do and how we wear ourselves to the outside world, and this is how I like to roll.

Below is my selection of city riding types whose attitude has made 2012 an intriguing year for Survey. A gallery of photography which has perhaps expanded, morphed and re-shaped its original purpose as a cycle sartorial blog.


Half-Inch

London / Photographer - George Marshall

“Don’t call me urban” the title of Simon Wheatly’s photographic book archiving the grime music scene speaks of the negative connotations of the word driven by commerce and media. This image reminds me of that work. For me this striking shot does not speak of 'urban' in the music sense, it only speaks of an inner city attitude and the style that supports it. From the attire to the customised Ridgeback hybrid, this image shouts "Great Britain", just as previously frowned upon youth subcultures like Punks and Skinheads did.

Gavin Watson - Gavin's brother sits on a BMX in High Wycombe, 1984


Basket Case

London / Photographer - George Marshall

This gentleman and his ride simply had to make it into my selection. You could say he desperately needs a van to put his cargo in. But no. This is not the attitude of a hardened cyclist. Everything serves a practical purpose here, which in turn naturally helps push out a cool, calm and effortless style. It starts from the loose, relaxed fit of his Kaftan and ends with the laid-back geometry and weaved baskets of his hybrid bike.


Mountain Man

Denver CO / Photographer - George Marshall

There is so much that is attitude in this shot, I don’t know where to begin. Clearly a man that wears his habitat, the Moccasins, ripped denim shorts a cut above the knee, wolf-man hair, a dog that matches and a car and a bike that form a perfect marriage of style-cool born from living rather than a glossy style mag.


The Archbishop

London / Photographer - George Marshall

Timeless signature style and an attitude of a man with respect. The bike itself is as traditional and as classy as the man with which it travels. Three gears is all the speed God needs.


MOKO

London / Photographer - George Marshall

Body adornment is no stranger to attitude and this man wears his passion for cycling on his skin regardless of what he puts on in the morning. Judging by the amount of slack in that chain, this gentlemen rides till it breaks. That sort of hardened attitude can only be found in courier culture or further south in the Pacific.


Outrigger

San Francisco / Photographer - John Reiss

With a look so cool and a swagger straight out of Wayne's World, this man should be sipping Coca Cola from a glass bottle weaving through traffic on a skateboard just before hanging out in an 80's arcade. But no, he cycles custom. He wants to turn heads and then take them as passengers for a party back home.

For that. I salute him.


Cavallino Meccanico

Melbourne / Photographer - Andy White

Survey wouldn't be Survey without the girls and their style that consistently begs the question "you can ride your bike, in that?" A question that is no more relavant than the lady above. When this was originally posted many shouted "fake" due to her attire not being practical enough for her steed.

Take a trip to Dalston in London, Harajuku in Japan or Mississippi Avenue in Portland and you will see that practicality in city riding often comes second after style. The very fact the outfit highlights the paint job simply shows this girl knows how to pull the style trigger and if the bike isn't hers, she does a damn good job of offering inspiration. The very reason we are celebrating Survey.

Comments

PAUL WITTE

28th December 2012 02:23pm

weird . get it . not rapha people .just sayin .

justin riley

28th December 2012 03:56pm

"When this was originally posted many shouted "fake" due to her attire not being practical enough for her steed."

They shouted fake beacuse it's not her bike. Check out the size of it - it belongs to Mr Fxyomatosis.

James Fairbank

28th December 2012 06:23pm

@Paul Witte. They may not match your perception of the Rapha person but we're a broader church than perhaps some appreciate and Survey helps us to articulate that a little. To give some context to this comment the author of this article, the subject in the first photo, is a key part of Rapha.

@justin riley: To quote from the above "and if the bike isn't hers, she does a damn good job of offering inspiration."

Thanks for the comments & Happy Christmas to you both.

Tom Mclaren

28th December 2012 07:29pm

"no brakes, no helmet, just a brain injury waiting to happen." FTFY.

justin riley

28th December 2012 10:43pm

@justin riley: To quote from the above "and if the bike isn't hers, she does a damn good job of offering inspiration."

I think she copied the look of Annabella from BowWowWow ;)
Happy xmas / new year to you too :)

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