6:30 - 8:30 WEDNESDAY 9TH JULY
Join artists Ray Malone and Lu Firth for a screening of Uncanny Waters, a short documentary capturing their 6-month intergenerational LGBTQ+ project developed at Somerset House, the National Maritime Museum, and Creekside Discovery Centre.
The film conjures the Deptford Necker, a shape-shifting South London river hag, and blends myth with documentation from the project and a community event. It captures a powerful intergenerational gathering of queer voices reclaiming heritage, and imagining new systems of care, through costume making and performance.
Ray Malone will be joined for a post-screening panel discussion by project participants bug! and Medusa Has Been.
Uncanny Waters - Costumes That Carry Stories
Deptford Creekside Discovery Centre
10th May, 2025
“The Creek procession was hugely memorable and the collective feel of us queers on the bridge was filmic, and a bearing witness moment that will stay with me…very special. It was so good to be transported and connected with our ancestors, old, current, in the moment and future ones…”
— Audience member, Uncanny Waters, Deptford Creekside
“Being immersed in time travel, transported by costume, words and environments”
— Audience Member, Uncanny Waters, Deptford Creekside
“Surreal beauty and authentic expression”
— Audience members, Uncanny Waters Deptford Creekside
“It was so poetic and surprising. The boat appearing was like a dream… Clearly the time spent together had been used profoundly. A very thoughtful and provoking exploration of queer bodies, culture, resilience and community..”
— Uncanny Waters, Uncanny Waters Deptford Creekside
“I loved that politics was there through and through time and performance content and visuals.”
— Audience Member, Uncanny Waters, Deptford Creekside
A COSTUME & PERFORMANCE PROJECT
Uncanny Waters is an intergenerational costume and performance project led by collaborative artists Lu Firth & Ray Malone, bringing together 10 uncanny participants aged under 30 and over 50 to explore the intersections of water and queer resistance through costume-making.
Through a series of workshops, our uncanny participants explored the symbolism of water as a site of connection and transformation. From mythical figures like the Deptford Necker (a South London river hag) to personal stories of migration and border-crossing, the project creates costumes and textiles from the stories that shape our identities and connect us to time and place.
Workshops have included costume design and creation, as well as explorations of queer resistance, the uncanny, and historical research. Participants also engage in activities such as mudlarking and low tide walks, that connect their creative work to London’s rivers.
Uncanny Waters
a costume and performance project
by Lu Firth & Ray Malone

Somerset House Workshops
Running from January to April 2025, Uncanny Waters workshops took place in the iconic setting of Somerset House. Led by artist Lu Firth, these hands-on sessions introduced participants to the basics of sewing and encouraged experimental approaches to costume-making. The workshops provided a welcoming space to play and create as a community.
Fanny Bleach & Teabag
Photo: Ray Malone

“Everyone looks sexy in waders.”
Medusa Has Been

National Maritime Museum Workshops
From November 2024, Uncanny Waters
workshops took place at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich. Ray Malone led workshops, Exploring the Uncanny, Folklore, Queer activism , and participants Stories of personal and collective heritage and resistance.
Shakleton’s Endurance Expedition
Frank Hurley, 1915. © Scott Polar Research Institute