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The Texan-born artist with a non-stop analytical mind has garnered a following for her personal journey through intimate, surrealistic portrait and landscape photography. Having recently returned from South America, Edie chatted with us about her deeper aspirations to travel to rural, exotic lands, her challenged mental and physical capacities, as well as the craft behind journaling herself awake.
Capturing the photo is more of a compulsion to act on my feelings, to channel them rather than sit and let them consume me. We all know how that ends.
If I capture the moment as it truly is, if I create something beautiful out of my mess of emotions, maybe I will understand them in visual form, and maybe someone else will too. Maybe myself and others will derive comfort from what I made in that dark moment. What meanings have been revealed from your own self-portraits that have surprised you? My self-portraits help me live with myself a little better.
I escape my own internal negative filter of feeling flawed, undesirable or broken, into just feeling human. I see my own energy and spirit as not perfect but unique, I see my body as not that of a supermodel but beautiful nonetheless, and I see my face as one that people connect with and want to know. The greatest gift photography has given me is to be more open to seeing myself objectively from the outside in, and to realise that I am no different than anyone else. I can be curious about myself rather than judge myself.