Artist Lexi Laine
Lexi Laine is a U.K born artist with a B.F.A (Hons.) Fine Arts from the University of the Creative Arts. She is a free diving fine arts photographer with all of her amazingly being made whilst holding her breadth underwater.
What inspired you to start creating art?
I have always been drawn to making art since I was a child. It was my favourite subject at high school and I went on to study fine art at college. After graduating I started working as a commercial photographer which I found rewarding but soon realised that I needed to have a creative outlet that was purely for me. I began making underwater photographs without any end goal of where the pictures would be shown - I had no brief to fulfil or client to satisfy. And for this reason I could experiment and play and push boundaries within myself and what I am capable of achieving both physically and creatively. I trained to become a freediver and have learnt how to hold my breath for minutes at a time.
What inspires your work now?
I am hugely inspired by the underwater world. It is a natural resource that I feel compelled to celebrate and also be an advocate for change on how the oceans are treated by us as a human race. Aesthetically, I love how the light can interact with people underwater and I strive to create photographs that appear painterly. Blurring boundaries between mediums is something that I love the idea of. Another influence is definitely the work of baroque and renaissance artists and their dramatic use of light in their paintings.
What mediums do you work in and experiment with?
I am working entirely in digital photography at the moment. I love the idea of maybe switching this up at some point in the future and maybe combining photography and painting together but for now I’m happy with how I’m producing my work. I first started taking photos when I was at art school - back in the days of analogue film. I spent days at a time in the dark room and was completely seduced with the medium as a means for self expression. I often think I might return to traditional film photography too. Maybe soon!
Are there any particular brands of art supplies you prefer using (if so why)?
So as a photographer I guess my medium is camera equipment. I have found Sony equipment to be absolutely brilliant for what I do. I mainly use an A7Riii which produces huge file sizes so I can make enormous prints of my work. It also uses an insanely good focusing system which is the best thing for underwater work. In order to use my Sony gear underwater, I use an aluminum housing made by Nauticam. Print wise I am a fan of Hahnemuhle Photo Rag which is a gorgeous fine art paper.
Do you have any particular ways that you work through a creative block?
I think the tempting thing with a creative block is to stop producing. I think the only way that I personally can work through creative block is by just doing that - working through it. I carry on even if everything I make is hopeless. I have enough faith in myself to know that eventually I’ll come out the other side of the low.
Can you give any piece of advice to your fellow artists on what you have learned while you practiced your craft (that school or a book did not teach)?
Definitely I would say that mistakes and setbacks are a good thing. In the beginning I used to let things knock me down if they didn’t go to plan. For example, a trip where I spent four days driving along coastline in another country, desperately trying to find water clear enough to shoot in, only to fail. These kinds of setbacks can be time consuming, expensive and soul destroying. But now I try to look at each so called ‘failed’ shoot as inevitable. It makes those perfectly clear, stunning light days all the more sweet. And I also tell myself that if it were easy then everyone would be doing it! I guess what I’m trying to say is realise that there will always be ups and downs on the journey but it all shapes us as people and makes us into the artists we are meant to be.
To view more of Lexi Laine’s work