Project Abstract

How do we advocate for the unmeasurable? At the entrance of the Cromarty Firth, where folklore greets industrial futures, a changing coastline threatens the landscape’s capacity to do what it has since time immemorial: tell story.

Etched Entanglings speculates a near-future where a coalition of carvers in Cromarty have successfully advocated for story to be valued as a landscape asset through the creation of a new stewardship order. Within the firth, where multi-species carving has long been a method of how stories are told, story becomes inseparable from stone.

Merging Michael Marker's “animate landscapes” methodology - which views the stories of place as real - with Karen Barad's “agential realism” – pushing that beings become through their entangling - the landscape’s capacity to story increases through new possibilities of connections at a set of anchor points. In turn, the coastline evolves as it entangles through stone, sediment and story.

 

Entrance to the Cromarty Firth
The Port of Nigg looks onto the town of Cromarty
Fieldwork in the Moray Firth

Stamping was used to document how beings within the first were interacting with one another, telling their stories. Throughout the wider Moray Firth, one minute of sound was recorded at each site and a set of colourful, circular stamps were used to show how loud each being was, with larger circles representing more dominant voices. 

Stamping map in the moray firth

Using cyanotype, fieldwork photographs are collaged with plant matter from the site, the stamping that represented voices present in the landscape, the minute sound recording and mapping data of the area's geology to capture how stories unfolded for a moment in the landscape. 

Building Story

Design interventions grow from the existing entanglings of beings within the landscape. This includes the creation of artificial tidepools, new stone carvings, and community planting initiatives. In doing so, old voices tell new stories within Cromarty Firth. 

Community plants flowers on the cliffside
A geology talk occurs at Nigg Beach
Community lays stones at Cromarty Links
A viewpoint shows people sitting
A curlew feeds in the intertidal area in front of a tidepool
A WW1 pillbox is transformed into a community hub

Cyanotype collages of site photos, existing conditions and proposed changes show how new stories grow from the entanglings in the anchor points. Beads are used to represent how the possibility of story could be experienced as beings move through the firth.

Skills & Experience
  • Earth Fellow Curriculum and Sustainability, Edinburgh Earth Initiative (2024/25)
  • Co-convenor, ESALA Climate Action (2024/25)
  • Events Coordinator, Landscape Architecture Society (2024/25)
  • Master of Landscape Architecture Student Representative (2023-2025)
  • Content Editor, Crumble Magazine (2023/24)
  • Proficient in Autocad, Adobe Creative Suite, Adobe Experience Management, Microsoft Office and QGIS
  • Excellent verbal and written communication
  • Experienced in event planning and community outreach
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