The Teviot, the Flag and the Rich, Rich Soil As part of its year-round programme, Alchemy launched
The Teviot, the Flag and the Rich, Rich Soil in July 2021. Described as a "programme of artist residencies, film commissions, discussion events and community engagement exploring the borders, boundaries and lines of Hawick and the Scottish Borders", the project is part of Creative Scotland's Culture Collective Fund. Taking place between July 2021 and December 2023, the project "engages artists in working with communities to consider the pasts, presents and futures of Hawick while researching and investigating the town and wider region’s cultural identities in relation to land, water, industry, territory, place and environment". Residency artists include Mark Lyken, Jade Montserrat, Julia Parks and Jules Horne. Commissions include work by Jessie Growden, Andy Mackinnon, Leah Millar and Natasha Ruwona. The programme also offers an artist bursary and traineeships scheme.
Film Town In summer 2019, Alchemy launched
Film Town, an award-winning community filmmaking initiative that aims to work with local partners to widen access and cultural inclusion for Hawick and its communities. Community groups with whom Alchemy have partnered to make films include Branching Out Youth Group (Borders Additional Needs Group), After a Suicide Working Group (NHS Borders), Scottish Borders Rape Crisis Centre, Borders Women's Aid, Scouts Scotland, Hawick Congregational Community Church, Hadrian Creatives, Borders College, and Interest Link, a volunteer befriending service working with young people with learning disabilities and vulnerable adults across the Scottish Borders.
Outwith In April 2021, Alchemy launched
Outwith, a filmmaking academy and creative network programme for 16-25-year-olds in the Scottish Borders. Partnering groups include Branching Out Youth Group (Borders Additional Needs Group), Hadrian Creatives and LGBT Youth Borders.
Continue Watching From October 2020 to April 2021, Alchemy delivered
Continue Watching, an online season of film screenings, discussion events and critical writing, featuring work by Yashaswini Raghunandan, Noorafshan Mirza and Brad Butler, Joshua Bonnetta, Clemens Wilhelm and Jan Martinec, and two guest-curated programmes - by Marcus Jack, of artists' moving image in Scotland from 1970 to 2020, and Jonathan Ali, of experimental horror films from the Caribbean. Commissioned texts for the season were written by Jemma Desai, Sonya Dyer and Alix Rothnie. A discussion event,
Archive, Verb, exploring the ways in which experimental film can be considered archival, featured artists Ashanti Harris,
Onyeka Igwe, Sophie Lindsey and Ed Webb-Ingall. == References ==