Victor douieb

Victor Douieb’s passions run deep and are many, appearing to combine these notions of beauty and the sublime into one singular yet somewhat circular activity: when he sees a beautiful animal in its natural surroundings, he experiences something impossible to describe with words alone and is compelled to re-create the encounter in artistic form. Through this process, he closes the circle — from natural beautiful form to artistically beautiful form. Asked where his true passion ultimately lies, Victor cites the crossroad of his elemental love of all animals and the sense of adventure he derives from the pursuit of getting as close to them as he can. Whether it’s scuba diving with sharks of all manner or getting into an enclosure with a tiger or wolf, witnessing these beings in their world with such deep respect for them is key to this distinctive rendering of immersion therapy. One of his first and still current passions is deep sea diving; an avocation he’d once hoped might have become his profession. As a boy growing up on the outskirts of Paris, France, animals with wildlife in particular captivated Victor as far back as he could remember. One of his earliest childhood memories was around age seven and skipping school to sneak into the circus when it had come to town. Standing as close as possible to the elephant and lion enclosures the scent of those powerful creatures became seared into his memory. To such a young boy their immensity created a potent and indelible impression. At 13 his family would vacation on the beaches of Spain each summer while he would instead spend his time at a nearby equestrian center, trading chores in the stable for a chance to learn how to ride horses. Victor would eventually become an excellent horseman and even own several Appaloosas as an adult. But his passion for animals truly ignited when he read Jacques Cousteau’s seminal work Le Monde Du Silence (The Silent World). Its subtitle “A story of undersea discovery and adventure, by the first men to swim at record depths with the freedom of fish” bewitched the young teen. He yearned to grow up and become one Dr. Cousteau’s “Aquanauts” so that he too could experience the magic of this hidden underwater universe. Although that particular variation of his diving pursuits went unrealized, in the coastal waters of southern France when he was 18 Victor received his scuba diving certification. During the following decades, the adventurer would travel extensively to dive the exotic locales of Fiji, the Bahamas, the coast of Egypt, and elsewhere. He would go to Kenya on a safari to see great wild beasts such as the rhino and hippo, each new experience effectively building upon the previous. “I’d seen my first shark when I was diving in Egypt,” Victor remembers, “and as I kid I was always crazy about sharks for some reason. To get that close to one of the world’s greatest apex predators, knowing that they are tolerating your presence in their world, is a humbling experience.”
With respect to art, Victor’s only real interest in it was drawing. He would create designs for the backs of Levi jackets and logos for rock bands in Los Angeles when he moved there in the late 1980s, but sculpting never crossed his mind. The closest he’d come to that was as a dental technician handcrafting and casting crowns and other dental prosthodontics while briefly owning his own dental lab when still living in France. But it was in 2007 when he and a friend traveled to La Paz, Mexico to dive the Sea of Cortez hoping to glimpse the very shy and reclusive Great Hammerhead. These waters were then well-known as the preferred nursery for the local hammerheads, though sadly no longer the case due to an increase in commercial fishing. With their tanks nearly depleted and without having seen the elusive sharks to that point, Victor and his dive buddy prepared to begin their ascent to the surface. They’d planned on adhering to the customary safety stops every 15 to 20 feet to allow for the elimination of dangerous nitrogen bubbles from their bloodstream. Suddenly out of the murky distance, a trio of hammerhead scouts emerged and encircled the divers who were backed up against an outcropping of large underwater boulders. The sharks were most likely scouts that swim ahead of the school to ensure there isn’t danger. Almost as quickly as they appeared they were suddenly gone. Thrilled to have been witness to this, Victor and his friend signaled to one another to ascend. Just then, out of the nebulous abyss the trio of sharks reappeared. Repositioning themselves against the rocks the divers again marveled at the majesty of the enormous creatures investigating their presence. Quickly once more the sharks swam away. With scuba tanks now dangerously low, the men quickly began to make their way to the surface. Victor’s tank ran out of air half way up which meant he was unable to perform the final safety stop and fearing decompression sickness (the bends), he resumed breathing compressed air from a fresh tank once back aboard the ship. As a precaution, he was advised to spend a day in a decompression chamber: the closest was nearly 100 miles away in Cabo San Lucas. The combination of a maniacal taxi driver and his mad dash to Cabo, a day in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, and a missed flight to Los Angeles, was no match for deflating Victor’s exuberance from his encounter with the hammerheads. He was determined to find a memento of his experience and spent the following day scouring small boutiques and other trinket outlets in Cabo. The tourist trap was known for its souvenirs and novelties but Victor was unable to locate anything befitting his otherworldly adventure.

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