“I shoot underwater because it’s where I feel safe and comfortable. My work comes from a place of weakness, not strength. There is a certain loveliness to that, I think, making something beautiful out of a limitation. I’m an introvert, prone to depression and anxiety and easily overwhelmed when around groups of people. After years of trying to fight it, I’ve accepted that this is the way I am wired.
My primary business is high school senior editorial-style portrait photography. I love the transition from childhood to adulting that a 17-year-old is going through, and I think it’s very important to capture that in a way that truly represents who that person is. Because I am so devoted to my seniors’ uniqueness, I focus on capturing them and not creatively interjecting myself. As a working artist it’s important to have an outlet for your own creativity. My underwater work is all about me and my story rather than the person I’m photographing. Being underwater allows me to do that in a way that is most conducive to my personality. Every image I create has a story behind it, often about overcoming the troubles in my own life. My models are graceful, strong, beautiful, competent, fearless, relaxed, and everything that I am not. The one thing we have in common is that we are where we want to be, doing what we want to be doing. I just want to be with one other person, in a dark, slow-moving, quiet place.
The set of a photo shoot can be a horrible place to feel creative – too many people and lights and gear and talking and people moving things around behind you and trying to be encouraging but then they are just talking more and it’s all just too much and I can’t think straight. The very first time I took a photo underwater, with a simple point-and-shoot camera, I knew that was the place for me to be. At the bottom of my pool it’s quiet and there is just one other person, whom I like very much, everything moves in slow motion, the colors are more intense, the light is less intense, and no one can bother me. Underwater fine art photography is both an art and a science — you can’t have one without the other. It took me years to figure out the exact science so that I could simply focus on the art. Now that I have that dialed in, it’s just a dream come true to be able to create there. It’s my own private studio, where I can connect with humanity on my own terms.” Cherry Walsh
Here a behind-the-scene footage of the shoot:
Image via Cherry Walsh.