About

Kat is an interdisciplinary artist, composer and researcher whose work treats imagination as a tool for cultural change. She combines sound, surreal folklore and research to build experiences that encourage people to think differently; not as a slogan, but as a way of noticing, relating and understanding the wider world beyond human habit.

Rather than explaining concepts at people, Kat invites them into strange stories and sideways perspectives: a hydrogen atom narrating the climate emergency, time-travelling goats revealing local history, stones on the Thames telling London’s geology, ADHD soundscapes making attention patterns audible. These playful narrative systems are portals; ways to spark new ideas, reframe assumptions and reconnect people with place, ecology and each other.

Kat’s work is grounded in real research, data and sector knowledge (she also writes reports, cultural briefs and climate strategies). Her core belief is that imagination and evidence are not opposites; they’re two halves of how societies change. She often works across science, heritage, sustainability and music to de-silo expertise and make complex topics more accessible.

She is co-founder of Kerbside Collective (creative climate research), LEO Reader (award-winning neurodivergent accessibility platform) and Medway Collective (sound/ecology network). She has worked with organisations including Tate Modern, GCDN, Historic England, City of London, Radiophonic Institute, BBC and Arts Council England.

Kat holds an MA with Distinction from Goldsmiths, where she received the Warden’s Climate Award for research.