28 June 2025, 11:00 – 15:00
Walkerburn
Through walking, photography, writing and gathering, photographers Zoe Hamill and Kat Gollock seek to create alternative maps of the middle section of the River Tweed by collecting and marking the lesser-heard memories and stories that are housed within its banks and landscapes.
At Walkerburn this June, the pair lead a group walk to take photos, share stories and gather plants for making ecological photo-developer. The session involves collecting materials, sharing and printing images using the developer, as well as the chance to discuss the possibilities of less toxic darkroom processes. The contributions to this walk form part of the ongoing ‘collections’ in this alternative mapping project.
This event is free. Please email connectingthreads@sup.org.uk to reserve your place.
This is the second event in Terra Incognita, a new project conceived and delivered by photographers Zoe Hamill and Kat Gollock, and part of the Watery Commons 2025 programme by Connecting Threads.
"All these stories from below - rarely documented in the shift from feudalism to capitalism, agriculture to industry, analogue to digital - are the casualties of a history of power. In these worrying times, as things shift so far to the right, and the wrong 1% continue to dictate narratives, it feels more important than ever to work towards a shared commons."
Read more from artists Kat Gollock and Zoe Hamill on the thinking behind Terra Incognita.
About the artists
Kat Gollock
Kat Gollock is a photographer based in both Edinburgh and the Scottish Borders. As well as her commercial work, she is a teacher of photography, an exhibited photographic artist, and a published writer on the subject. Her personal work focuses predominantly on landscape and walking, often incorporating text to complement and enhance the images. Inspired by walking the landscape both on her own and with other people, the work she makes is an exploration into our place in the world, the landscape itself and the spaces we inhabit both physically and emotionally.
www.katgollock.com
Zoe Hamill
Zoe Hamill is a photographer from Co. Antrim, now living in Edinburgh. She is interested in the relationship between humans and the environment, as well as the systems of classification that we use to make sense of the world around us. As well as working on her own fine art photography projects, she is a freelance photography educator, archivist and technician where her work involves continued research into alternative processes and plant-based photography developers.
www.zoehamill.com