The Old-Fashioned Way
Photographic time travel with longtime Patagonia contributor Gary Bigham.
All caption quotes by Gary Bigham听
You never ask what one does in Chamonix. It鈥檚 rude. You ask what they skied today.
Photographer Gary Bigham was one of the original American ski bums who moved to France鈥檚 Chamonix Valley in the late 1970s and spent 50 years skiing the area鈥檚 notoriously challenging terrain. He also took some of the most memorable images of 1980s and 鈥�90s ski culture, documenting a freewheeling era of neon one-pieces, monoskis, wild on-slope antics and perpetually untracked powder fields; it was a period of time sometimes referred to as the 鈥淎ge of Ski Bums.鈥�
But I know Gary for the other things he did in Chamonix, the off-snow existence his photos only hint at: Gary the musician, the showman, the rock star, a fun-making, joke-slinging, generally hilarious character with thunderous dark sides and legendary hangovers.

鈥淟ook! Somebody threw away a perfectly good baby!鈥� Ever the joker, Gary is fond of telling people that his daughter Guri came from the 鈥渇ree bin鈥� in Telluride, Colorado, and points to this photo as evidence. Three decades after it was first published in the Patagonia Fall 1993 Kids鈥� Catalog, it鈥檚 more iconic than ever. Photo: Gary Bigham

Can you spot the original?
The author holds up a sheet of slides unearthed from Gary鈥檚 archives, including the iconic 鈥淟amb Chop Dag鈥� image that Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard has called one of his favorite photos of fleece pile in use. When the photo first appeared in the Winter 1989 catalog, the caption read: 鈥淟amb Chop Dag about to set a World Lamb Speed Record.鈥� What it didn鈥檛 say was that 鈥淟amb Chop Dag鈥� was actually David Moe, co-founder of Powder Magazine. Photos: Layla Kerley (left), Gary Bigham (right)
By the time his daughter Guri and I were young teenagers, we rarely saw Gary on skis with a camera in his hand. Gary the Ski Photographer was a bygone character, stashed in a chaotic treasure chest of slides, or recollected in his classic apr茅s film and photo slideshows鈥攄one the old-fashioned way, to the whirring clunks of a carousel slide projector鈥攁nd set to a soundtrack of eccentric commentary.

Gary the Ski Photographer may be a bygone character, but Gary the Skier is very much alive鈥攁nd within his house, the rule 鈥渘o school (or work) on a powder day鈥� still applies. Photo: Layla Kerley
Gary鈥檚 house in Argenti猫re is itself a ski relic, a classic alpine chalet filled with memorabilia and humorous alcoves鈥攂ehind one picture, for example, is a hole you can put your face through to scare the daylights out of unsuspecting guests. The more doors you open, the bigger it becomes, a feeling enhanced by a host of unconventional add-ons: a wine cellar, a sauna, a swing in the living room and a seemingly never-ending dinner table which can鈥攁nd regularly does鈥攕eat 20 people.
Growing up in Europe鈥檚 capital of extreme sports鈥攐r its graveyard of failed extreme sport ambitions, depending on who you ask鈥攚as all you鈥檇 envision and much more. My parents were also ski bums and moved from England to Chamonix when I was a child. When I met Guri at age 11, she became my first non-French friend, and I became part of an extended, pleasantly dysfunctional family.
When it snowed, Gary鈥檚 house would snuggle into its own groovy tempo, firelight breathing life into the ballet skiers dancing in their picture frames. Because 鈥渘o school on a powder day鈥� was law between those walls, Guri and I would coordinate sleepovers with incoming storms, hoping we鈥檇 be snowed in or the road to Chamonix would close. Gary would take us to the Grand Montets ski area in the morning, where we鈥檇 load the tram alongside packs of slavering powder wolves. On the way down, he鈥檇 wait patiently for us as we ploughed through chest-deeper blower, howling wildly.

鈥淥ne ski is better than none 鈥� I guess.鈥� Monoskier Cathy Breyton and friends wiggle their way down the north face of the Grand Montets at the Jo毛l G茅ry Memorial in March of 1985. Photo: Gary Bigham
Our respective parents left us free to roam our mountainous backyard, and we never missed an opportunity to be part of Chamonix鈥檚 thriving, festive ski scene. Retro Sundays became our tribute to neon ski suits and ski ballet, and on Fridays, we鈥檇 cross the road from middle school to the MBC Chamonix Microbrewery and watch Gary鈥檚 band, Gary Bigham and the Crevasseholes. My dad would make guest appearances on his saxophone, everybody jamming to songs like 鈥淎ll You Need is GLOVEs.鈥� Beer would flow, and the crammed bar would go wild.

Left: 鈥淲ho says psychedelics are bad for you? I can鈥檛 remember this guy鈥檚 name, but he didn鈥檛 say no to drugs.鈥� Chamonix, May of 1991. Photo: Gary Bigham
Right: She called it the 鈥淓.T. look.鈥� An unnamed skier does her best extra-terrestrial impression at the top of the Grand Montets in the early 1980s. Photo: Gary Bigham
For a little English girl, the parade of vibrantly colored ski-lebrities flowing through Gary鈥檚 house鈥攅ach more awesome (and, now I realize, probably more intoxicated) than the last鈥攚as a revelation. It was a new vision of how our existence could play out, a shiny dimension where it was somehow possible to both make a living and ski all winter, or even all year.

鈥淛orge Colon in typical laidback mode鈥攊t鈥檚 always a treat to see a picture of him with some kind of clothing on. Jorge kicks back on the roof of his van next to my house in the 1980s. A special thanks to Jorge for sending Kristine McDivitt Tompkins, John Wasson and Yvon Chouinard my way for a stay those many years ago!鈥� Photo: Gary Bigham
Fifteen years later, as a ski photographer myself, it鈥檚 my turn to dance with those powder-hungry snow wolves, to tame them, even become one of them. I spent years of hard-fought boot-packing to be closer to the man I fell in love with (a skier, of course), and now I live out my wildest teenage fantasies following him into cathedrals of ice and limestone.

鈥淚f it鈥檚 not in English, don鈥檛 worry about it!鈥� Out-of-bounds skiing was still strictly prohibited by most US resorts in the early 1980s, and some American skiers relocated to places like Chamonix for the less restrictive rules. One such nameless duo hops the gate off the top of the Grand Montets (no word on whether they noticed the skull and crossbones). Photo: Gary Bigham
When the opportunity came up to write a story about Gary, it gave me and Guri an excuse to do something we鈥檇 talked about for years. The magnetic pull of childhood nostalgia drew us back to the attic and Gary鈥檚 stash of images. This time, our photographic time traveling had a purpose: to digitize and save the countless one-of-a-kind photos and films, while cataloging the stories and quotes that keep them alive.

The Bigham household is a lesson in poetic chaos. Bjorn Bertoft and Gary and Guri Bigham venture into a huge chest of old slides, pulled from Gary鈥檚 attic after years of gathering dust. Originally hesitant, Gary ended up orchestrating the whole show with his wooden spoon (he was making banana bread for his grandson, Kaikane, at the time). Photo: Layla Kerley
Poring over the slides, I felt a pang of longing for an era we never knew. 欧博会员入口 were holding the coattails of that golden age, the Age of Ski Bums, and the landscapes鈥攐ur backyard draped in a pristine white cloak, now vanished along with its fabled medieval dragons and soon-to-be fabled glaciers鈥攑ulled powerfully on my heartstrings. The Kodachrome patina glamourized the seracs, granite pinnacles and damn-right dodgy places where I have since stood to take my own photographs. I recognized the youthful, familiar faces of those whose achievements or tragedies have written this valley鈥檚 history.

Left: Gary wasn鈥檛 just a still photographer; he also shot four ski movies on 16mm film, which Guri and Layla also digitized. Randy Wieman throws down a monster spread eagle while filming for Gary鈥檚 1986 movie,听Ski Tangle Tango, on the north face of the Grands Montets. Photo: Gary Bigham
Right: 鈥淢ichel Pell茅 used to be a guide on the Stages Vallen莽ant, a course started by the famous skier Patrick Vallen莽ant to teach steep skiing. I took this photo while filming for Vallen莽ant, in the Passerelle Couloir off the Aiguille du Midi. Or maybe it was the Gervasutti Couloir on Mont Blanc du Tacul 鈥� I can鈥檛 remember due to brain damage.鈥� Chamonix, April of 1982. Photo: Gary Bigham
The Age of Ski Bums has passed. But the unnamed one that replaced it has led to a place I鈥檝e longed to be part of since I first sat at Gary鈥檚 endless dinner table, starry-eyed, listening to legends ask each other what they鈥檇 skied that day.
It鈥檚 Chamonix, after all. Anything else would be rude.

It鈥檚 rude to ask what one does in Chamonix, but there鈥檚 no shortage of skiing to talk about. A lot has changed in the 60 years since Gary moved to Chamonix, but the sunset powder turns are just as dreamy and the views of town are just as stunning. Photos: Layla Kerley