The Surfer’s Journal is proudly reader-supported since 1992. We rely on membership rather than advertising to remain commercially quiet. Become a member below and gain access to every article ever published along with many other TSJ member-only benefits.
Create a free account to access three complimentary articles, or become a member to unlock all editorial and become a supporter of independent surf journalism.
Subscribers to The Surfer’s Journal get access to all our online content as well as the TSJ archive. Become a member to unlock all editorial and become a supporter of independent surf journalism.
Australian surf photographer John Respondek works hard, plays harder, and just might be the most delighted photographer in the world…except when someone sets up next to him.
By Vaughan Blakey | Photos by John Respondek (All captions by the photographer)
Portfolio
Light / Dark
There’s a common misconception about surf photography which posits that the longer you’ve been in the game, the more likely you are to yell at children, hate dogs, and engage in other misanthropic behavior. This isn’t the natural predilection of the personalities who shoot surf, of course, but rather the inevitable decline of their passion for the craft (and, as a flow on, for life in general). Understandable after years of crappy pay, shots ripped off and shared across social media, technological advances creating swarms of flash-in-the-pan pretenders who barely know which end of the camera to look into, trips poached, girlfriends stolen while away on assignment, and brains cooked by the sun while everyone else is surfing.
It’s all gross generalization. The true masters of the craft are well beyond such trivialities. Take a look at 20 year Australian surf photography veteran John Respondek, for example.
“Oh, he gets grumpy,” explains long-time collaborator Taj Burrow of his best mate. “He’s had periods of being fed up about this and that and, at one point, he gave it away and started his own art gallery in Bondi. But eventually we got in his ear and got him back into it. And he came in so hot I reckon he’s in the best place he’s ever been with his career.”
The two met on a surf trip to the Mentawai Islands in 2001, and forged a firm bond built on fast living and even faster surfing. Few partnerships have yielded more extraordinary action imagery, and it was Respondek who captured the pre-drone helicopter angles of Taj in Western Australia, Indonesia, and Fiji.
“I love working with him because we both like the same things in terms of angles and composition,” says Taj. “He rarely misses anything and he gets dizzy when he’s got a project on the boil. About the only thing that really bends him out of shape is when another photographer sets up on the same beach. He’ll just pack up his gear and storm off like an angry little staffy [terrier].”
“I used to see him around Bondi a fair bit when I first started hanging out in the city,” adds Craig Anderson, who in the past few years has been hitting slabs in the Aussie desert with Respondek on a regular basis. “To be honest, it took a while to crack him. He’s always stoked, and I think the reason behind that is he’s on his own program. He organizes trips with his best friends and basically builds these opportunities for himself to have the best time possible while he’s working. He goes where he wants to go, hangs with the boys, and never misses the shot. And when you come in from a day’s surfing, he’ll be sitting there with his Pelican case open and the thing will be full of ice and beers. He loves life’s pleasures, which makes him the sickest traveling companion. Except that he hates the desert. He’s not really one for roughing it.”
Respondek, now 38, was brought up in the surf rich town of Angourie on the far north coast of New South Wales, but he got his start in photography 700 miles south in the Mt. Kosciuszko ski fields. “I was one of those guys who’d shoot all day and then sell the photos to the skiers and snowboarders in the afternoon. Eventually, I sent a few to some mags and that’s where I was first published—a postage stamp in some old snowboarding mag.”
Growing up with talented surfers, it wasn’t long before he made the inevitable leap to shooting his mates in the water, including Jeremy Walters, Navrin Fox, Ado Wiseman, and future founder of Stab Magazine, Sam McIntosh.
“Sam has had a huge influence on my career because some of the concepts he comes up with are exactly the kinds of things I love shooting,” says Respondek from his home in Bondi. “I love projects, having an idea, setting the goal, and seeing it through. That style of work is so much more rewarding and special for me than just turning up on any given day and pulling the trigger.”
His latest project entails curating two decades worth of images of his favorite subjects (Taj, Craig Anderson, Dion Agius) to produce high quality, limited edition, single-surfer books with an emphasis on high performance and minimal design. “I have so many images of those guys, seen and unseen, and it feels so good to take control and have the images I’ve really loved represented in a way that I’ve always thought they deserve. The Dion book was really well received, and the Taj book has just landed from the printers and I’m pretty stoked on it.”
Like Taj and Ando surmised, Respondek says he’s never been in a better place, disproving once and for all the notion that a surf photography career is a sure fire way to end up a bitter old curmudgeon sucking on a wheelbarrow full of lemons. “You just have to shoot on your own terms,” he says. “It took me a long time to figure that out, and I’ve never been happier.”
[Feature image: Taj Burrow in 2010, at a spot just over the hill from his house. I’ve been shooting with him for more than 15 years. It was massive to work with someone as high profile as Taj so early on in my career. Surfing wise, he’s as photogenic as they come.]