Bailey Rebecca Roberts

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Q&A

Q: What song do you play on repeat?
A: “Eternal Light” by The Free Nationals.

Q: What’s the best way to start the day?
A: Bike ride to the beach, flat white, beach walk, and an ocean swim.

Q: What are you most looking forward to this year?
A: My life changes so much every year that itโ€™s hard to say. That said Iโ€™m really looking forward to soaking up time with my loved ones and also Iโ€™m looking forward to finishing a solo show Iโ€™ve been shooting.

Q: What is the most impactful project you’ve worked on and why.
A: I donโ€™t think I can really pinpoint just one. Every picture I shoot impacts the next and shapes who I am. I think my real goal is to cultivate a way of being as an artist that leaves people better in its wake. I hope to share inspiration and connection and I aim for that spirit to permeate all my work.

Q: Which art/photo exhibit that you’ve seen has impacted you the most?
A: Iโ€™m always deeply inspired by small exhibitions. Iโ€™m amazed by solo artists that have an idea that they bring to life and share with an audience. It takes SO much to pull that off and I have deep respect for that process. That said, if youโ€™re hoping for a specific show – there are two that come to mind. One was an exhibition called Image Gardeners at the McEvoy gallery in San Francisco and the other was a recent curation at the Getty Museum of works from the Kamoinge Workshop.

Q: What mystery do you wish you knew the answer to?
A: Hmmm. Well, I wish I could more fully experience perception. Like I truly think that we are only using a portion of our brains. I wanna light that shit up! Iโ€™m so in love with the sensorial experience of being alive but I believe that so much of how we think, feel, see and experience is shaped by what is valued as relevant in our current moment of civilization. Iโ€™d be so curious to witness what we could perceive if we werenโ€™t limited by contemporary influences. For instance, an indigenous person in the Amazon is going to have a level of perception that I totally canโ€™t relate to or understand. I think a whole world of mystery would be opened up if we could integrate the nuances of human experiences that are born from different cultures and ways of life. I realize thatโ€™s a difficult thing to explain in a small paragraph, but perhaps thatโ€™s why Iโ€™m interested in photography, it gives me a small excuse to broaden my senses by being open to garnering small insights into the parts of the world that I donโ€™t understand.

Q: What are some things you had to unlearn?
A: Disempowerment and impatience. I think often it can be easy to get stuck in a mindset of frustration when things donโ€™t seem to be going your way. Within the last few years Iโ€™ve really internalized a philosophy of accountability – what I give is directly correlated to what I get. That empowers me to understand that I can truly create the life I envision. I realize that my ability to say this comes from a place of extreme privilege; Iโ€™m safe, Iโ€™m healthy, I have food on the table, I am alive at a moment in history where Iโ€™m able to claim space for myself as a woman in society and more specifically in this industry. That said, privilege comes with responsibilities and I really feel that. That responsibility becomes my motivation to keep pushing and building. Even in the face of occasional failure, I am committed to building a life and sharing my voice in an authentic way in hopes of making a positive impact.

Q: What fictional place would you most like to go?
A: Oh man, my fictional place is real, I want to go to New Zealand. Iโ€™ve been there before but it reminds me of being home in Hawaii when I was a kid. Iโ€™ll know Iโ€™ve made it when I can figure out a way to live there.

Q: What have you only recently formed an opinion about?
A: I think something that has really clarified for me recently is priorities. In my 20โ€™s I moved through my life like a shark, I never stopped and I ended up paying the price for that. My gas tank was empty. Now, itโ€™s really clear to me how valuable it is to stay tight with a small core crew and to be very judicious with your time, your company, and your routines.

Q: What book impacted you the most?
A: The Wayfinders by Wade Davis – it discusses the value of indigenous knowledge as an integral part of human existence and really highlights what is at stake as the world turns towards a more homogeneous global society. Truly my favorite book and I would highly recommend everyone read it.

Q: What risks are worth taking?
A: Travel, failure, jumping off cliffs into the ocean.

Q: What do you spend the most time thinking about?
A: Oh man, right now I’ve been thinking about my career a lot. I’ve been really navigating striking the balance between building a smart business as a photographer and still staying in touch with my passion and childlike spirit of inspiration. I also think about New Zealand a lot lol.

Q: Best and worst advice you’ve ever received.
A: Best advice – Slow and steady, itโ€™s all coming to us. Worst advice… hmmm maybe I just ignore that stuff but nothing is coming to mind.

Q: How has your work evolved over the past few years?
A: I think I’ve really stepped into a phase where I can imbue my work with my spirit. Whether I’m shooting personal or commercial work, I feel like I’m more grounded in my workflow, a clearer vision, clearer leadership, and clearer purpose.

Q: One thing you can’t show up to a shoot without – Besides a camera ๐Ÿ˜‰
A: My playlists – Afrobeats, Reggae, Indie, and Folk. A real rollercoaster of vibes.

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