Watershed explores water as both a physical force and a point of connection between landscape, infrastructure, and human experience in South Devon. Moving between reservoirs, coastlines, rivers, and sites of control, the work traces how water shapes land while also revealing systems of management, containment, and vulnerability.

Through a slow, observational approach, the project focuses on thresholds and edges—where fresh and salt water meet, where natural processes are interrupted, and where absence is felt through traces, marks, and imprints. Flood defences, water towers, and engineered structures sit alongside tidal zones and open bodies of water, highlighting the tension between elemental movement and human attempts to regulate it.

Watershed treats water not as a singular subject but as a connective thread, linking disparate sites into a wider reflection on dependency, risk, and stewardship. The landscape is presented as active and unstable, shaped by cycles of accumulation and loss, and by the often-unseen systems that sustain everyday life.