With the longest coastline of any county in Ireland, Donegal boasts stunning scenery and some of the world’s finest beaches.
From Malin Head to Killybegs, from Ardara to Arranmore and from Bundoran to Dunfanaghy, the county is a photographer’s dream canvas, steeped in history and heritage, with a wealth of flora and fauna.
Growing up in the countryside outside Stranorlar, and later moving to Barnesmore in southeast Donegal, Kate Slevin has always been surrounded by Donegal’s rugged beauty. However, it wasn’t until her husband’s death that she began photographing it.
“Our favourite way to enjoy a day off was to travel the length and breadth of the county. John passed away suddenly in 2014 and it was then that photography and its invitation to explore the raw, natural beauty around me helped clear the head and mend the heart a little bit,” she explains.
“Somehow it rekindled my creativity and became a part of the healing process, so our journey together continues through my photographs.
“Bereavement became part of my life again recently with the death of my beloved nephew Stephen.”
The act of taking the photographs was, says Kate, “a blessing that drew me back into the creative healing journey of photography”.
Whether it’s the windswept slopes of Errigal or Slieve League’s wave-pummelled cliffs, the vast plains of Bloody Foreland or the secluded beach of St John’s Point, Kate has captured the county’s wild beauty in her book Donegal: From Waves to Wilderness.
Her captivating photographs are grouped into five areas: Donegal Bay; The Bluestacks to Ardara; The Rosses and Gweedore; Sheephaven Bay to Fanad Peninsula; and Inishowen Peninsula.
“Exploring Donegal at different times of the day and in different seasons is what inspires me and rewards me with those special moments of being a photographer,” she says. “It is a feast for the senses.”
“I believe in creating photos by choice and yet there is a magic in finding a photo opportunity by chance. Add a sunrise or sunset, and the land, sea and sky collide in a kaleidoscope of colour.”