“Asymbol came about through what I saw as a bit of a gap between creators and appreciators. I’ve been lucky enough to make a lot of good friends in the art and photography world, and a lot of these guys are sitting on an incredible life’s work and have stories to tell. It really shows the story of our culture—snowboarding culture—and the alternative lifestyles that surfing, skating and snowboarding bring.”
—Travis Rice,
The Snowboarder’s Journal Issue 9.3, circa 2011

Ernie Said, "Sure you can ride here." Travis Rice, Jackson, WY, 2011. As seen on the cover of TSNJ 9.3. Photo: Danny Zapalac
Eight year ago, Travis Rice gave me the tour of the fledgling Asymbol Gallery while visiting him in Jackson for a feature profile in The Snowboarder’s Journal. Collaborator Mike Parillo was there, checking quality, shipping prints, building momentum. They’d just completed their first big show in New York City. Travis and Brain Farm were just getting going on “The Art of Flight.”
It was the early years of a labor of love for Travis, Parillo and company—collecting iconic artistic artifacts from the snowboard world and distributing them to appreciators as archival prints. It grew into much more. A gathering place for photographers and artists from the snow world; a means of connection, communication and collaboration within this little subculture of innovative contemporaries; a vehicle for artistic growth within snowboarding’s creative community; a source of inspiration and preservation of a deeper narrative.
Here at The Snowboarder’s Journal, we began to work closely with Asymbol via limited-edition prints, feature stories and more over the years. We watched them grow and evolve and bring new visionaries into the fold—both new artists and new back-end talent like Alex Hillinger, Josi Stephens and Ashley Rice. Through it all, Asymbol remained true to an independent vision of snowboarding, one that celebrates our icons, artists and adventurers.
Then in late January, 2018, Asymbol announced it would be closing its doors for good on March 1. We got Travis on the phone to talk a decade of art, evolution, and assembling an enduring symbol of snowboard culture.
Perfect Track. Travis Rice, Mt Cook, New Zealand, 2007. Photo: Tim Zimmerman
The Snowboarder’s Journal: When we interviewed you seven or eight years ago, you didn’t have the gallery space yet. But you had all this energy. It seemed that just kept building right up to this finale that’s going on right now.
Travis Rice: We’re going out with a celebration and not a whimper. Once we announced there’s been such an amazing response. So many people have things that they were looking at but never dropped in, and now people are buying art because they know there’s only a little time left to get it. They can still have a tangible element of it.
I look at Asymbol as something that worked. Now, there’s a transition and there’s this organized community that already coexists and speaks to each other. We’re hoping to make our exit and allow that next thing, whatever it may be, to authentically grow itself.

Mistaya Straightline. Craig Kelly, Revelstoke, BC, 1998. Photo: Chris Brunkhart.
Let’s talk about momentum. How does Asymbol carry forth? What’s your hope in terms of legacy in snowboarding and the greater action sports community?
It started as just wanting to shine awareness on this other underground narrative that was almost more authentic than a lot of the stories that were being told . There is such a rich cultural history within snowboarding, one I’ve been lucky enough to learn over the course of my upbringing and pro career. I got to meet so many of these talented individuals. So Asymbol was born out of being a fan, of appreciating the arts and the fact that there are these people who were documenting and capturing the growth of our culture.
For Jamil. Summer 1998 and 2000. Art: Mike Parillo.
It was a way of assembling a visual narrative in a unique way?
I was ultimately a fan. There was this group that was not mainstream facing—talented, inspired creators that were writing this whole other narrative about the history of this small community as it was moving forward. In the beginning, it was about putting together that core thread, this original narrative that I started noticing in high school. It’s always been tough for artists and photographers to make a legitimate living doing that and we wanted to connect, appreciate and facilitate that narrative. It turned into this curated platform to put this cool visual story on blast.