Fun, vibrant, and full of colour – Rebecca Fahey’s creations are exactly what we’ve been missing since Covid began
When you first visit Irish photographer Rebecca Fahey’s Instagram page, it’s sure to blow the cobwebs off. Neon shades of yellow and pink punctuate attitude-filled street style shots, in settings from New York to Dublin. If this is what the inside of Fahey’s brain looks like, I had to know more.
As it turns out, Fahey’s fascination with colour is aided by a rare neurological condition that affects how her brain perceives colour – synaesthesia. From using the condition to her advantage in college, to branching out to New York, IMAGE chatted with Fahey about what it means to be a creative in 2020.
I recently made the move to New York just because I wanted something different for myself. Living in Ireland for 22 years, I had never experienced what the design scene was like outside of the country. I went on holidays to New York when I was 14, and even though it was a short trip, I just fell in love with it instantly, and planned to move there after college.
The design, the art scene and the people especially just attracted me. It was all so interesting to me, and I couldn’t wait to experience it.
My style has always been really colourful and bold, and in Ireland, people saw that as quite strange. But when I went to the U.S, there was no issue in expressing myself. Ireland has some amazing creatives, and I didn’t feel held back, but my art was definitely elevated when I moved to New York.
The vibrancy of the people and how expressive they are just made it a bit easier for me to be creative, especially with my style of art. It’s very different to Ireland, and I personally feel like it adds to my work.
I actually only realised I had synaesthesia for the first time during college. The way you perceive your work can be really different to how others perceive it, and I actually don’t see my images as being as colourful as other people see it.
The type of synaesthesia that I have affects how I see numbers and colours, and how I relate different people back to colours as well. Sometimes I use the colours that I associate with a model to base the set off of for a shoot – I’ll try and pick complementary colours and tones to the colour that I see them as in my head. Say the subject might be an orange or might have violet tones – I’ll try to use that in the shoot around them.
I’m also a graphic designer and even when it comes to typography, I use certain words and certain letter sizes in the colours that I perceive them.
I had to come home from New York before lockdown hit, and am using this time to experiment with new ways of shooting, like over Zoom calls, or using apps like Facetime to manipulate photos. It’s been really challenging because it’s not something I was used to, but I really think that it’s going to be a new practice that creatives are going to make use of in the future because of Covid.
I actually was reunited with some lighting and photography equipment that I couldn’t bring with me to New York when I came home, so I’ve been making use of that while shooting myself, and expressing myself through clothing and different backgrounds.
This environment has been restrictive, but creatives are great at asking ‘how can I be as experimental as I can in this space?’ and using it to their advantage.
Oh, absolutely. Being restricted does give you a way to explore and experiment, and with Covid, there are so many creatives who used it as a way to get out of their comfort zone and express their feelings and emotions during lockdown.
Oh God, there’s a few! I’m really into this American music artist Dorian Electra, who’s non-binary, they’re really cool.
And then Juno Birch is a U.K-based drag artist and I just think she’s fabulous. They’re both people that I’d love to work with.
I’m going to stay and work in Dublin for a while, while waiting for my visa to come through to return to New York. I’m just designing and experimenting with what I have, and now that things are opening up, hopefully I can do so much more on the outside.
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