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By ULA ILNYTZKY
(AP)
– Thursday, Aug. 13, 2009
NEW YORK — Andy Kessler, a trailblazer during New York City's
nascent 1970s skateboarding scene and a designer of skate parks who was
admired by boarders on both coasts, has died. He was 48.
Kessler
died Monday [Aug. 10, 2009] after suffering a heart attack following an
allergic
reaction to a wasp sting, said Moose Huerta, a close friend and fellow
skateboarder.
He was dismantling old wood on a shack in Montauk,
Long Island, when he was stung, said Tony Farmer, a skateboarding
friend and West Coast native who now lives in Brooklyn.
Kessler
got his start in the 1970s with a loose-knit group of skateboarders and
graffiti artists known as the Soul Artists of Zoo York. They skated all
over Manhattan's Upper West Side, where Kessler lived. Central Park's
Bandshell was a favorite spot.
In the 1990s, Kessler persuaded
the city's Parks Department to build a skateboard facility in Riverside
Park. He went on to design other skate parks in Manhattan, Brooklyn and
Montauk.
Huerta said Kessler also developed a zeal for surfing in the
past
decade.
"The
two groups are completely different from each other," he said. "But the
level of friends, and how he transcended age and demographics with the
people he touched, was amazing."
Kessler had no health insurance
in 2005 when he took a spill on his board and dislocated his femur.
When he was unable to pay a $51,000 medical bill, several dozen
surfers, skaters and artists — Julian Schnabel, Mickey Eskimo, Zephyr
and Wes Humpston reportedly among them — helped raise the money with a
benefit party, Farmer said.
When he healed from the injury, he hopped back on his board,
Farmer
said.
"Flowing
through traffic, timing lights, shooting reds, dodging pedestrians ...
dude just had the streets so wired," Farmer said. "Suffice to say, he
was an amazing cat."
Huerta, who was too young to have skated
with Kessler during the early days, said the sport started as "a
counterculture activity" but never carried the cache that California
skateboarding did. But Kessler didn't care.
"He did it out of love," he said. "He didn't receive anything
out of
it. It spoke to him."
In
2008, Kessler was featured in a documentary, "From Deathbowl to
Downtown: The Evolution of Skateboarding in New York." The producers,
NCP Films, described it as "an anthropological overview of skating's
epochal shift from the parks and pools of the 70's, to ramp skating in
the 80's, to the street ascendancy of the 1990's as seen from a New
York-centric perspective.
It is scheduled for international release on DVD on Sept. 15.
In
addition to his love for the sport, Huerta said Kessler's first big
success was orchestrating the building of the city's first skate park,
near the Hudson River. At the time of his death, he was trying to
update the Montauk skate park he had designed about a decade earlier,
Huerta said.
On Friday evening, surfers planned to paddle out
together and circle around Ditch Plains Beach in Montauk in remembrance
of Kessler, Huerta said. Friends also planned a get-together Saturday
at the Autumn Bowl, a semiprivate warehouse facility in Brooklyn that
was one of Kessler's favorite hangouts.
Kessler's burial is scheduled for Sunday at Cedar Park
Cemetery in
Paramus, N.J.
Copyright
© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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In
this photo provided by tcolla, Andy Kessler skateboards in Greenpoint
Brooklyn's Autumn Bowl on May 22, 2007, in New York. Kessler, a
trailblazer during New York City's nascent 1970s skateboarding scene
and a designer of skate parks who was admired by boarders on both
coasts, died Monday Aug. 10, 2009 at the age of 48. Kessler died after
suffering a heart attack following an allergic reaction to a wasp
sting, a close friend and fellow skateboarder said Thursday. (AP
Photo/tcolla)
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