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Love is Not a Finite Resource

Re: convening, re: connecting, re: imagining – reflections on a 2-day creative workshop

By Ruth Catlow and Elly Clarke

Elly and Ruth have been organising workshops and conversations for Furtherfields’ latest project in Felixstowe, Reimagine This Coastal Town. This correspondence followed a 2-day workshop that took place in December 2025 at Hamilton MAS with artists and young visionaries from Felixstowe and East Anglia, exploring crossovers in art and ecology, and possible futures of the town. Creative Participants: Ruth Catlow (Furtherfield) and Elly Clarke (co-curators and hosts); Lora Aziz Josh Hall (Possible Worlds) and Simon Read. Young Visionaries: Lily Hammond, Courtney Hessey and Stan Willey.

 

Elly: Monday 5th January, 2026

It’s not yet been a month since our two-day co-creation workshop in December, but it already feels so long ago. Christmas happened. Betwixmas happened. And the New Year happened. And then the Venuzeulan president was kidnapped in an extraordinary Stranger Things-style military ambush led by the US president, and the world is waiting for the next rupture [which turned out to be the violently suppressed uprising in Iran.] This is the world we live in, breathe in, are trying to survive in, trying to remain calm in, keep healthy in, care in, look after our bodies and the bodies of others and other species in. But it is also the world we are resilient in. The world we are creating in, imagining in, dreaming in, loving in and living in. The unignorable multiple troubles of our current era – ecological, political, economic, and technological – mean that more and more people are talking about the things that are not working… And these, I believe, are the cracks where (to reference Leonard Cohen) the light can get in. Discussion about the desire for change is entering more and more conversations – and that is a good thing.

For me, and I think for the others, the workshop provided a moment of pause, of calm, of happy being together-ness with people I knew, and people I didn’t. We intentionally structured the workshop only loosely, to give space and time to acknowledge the many ills of our times, but also, importantly, to feel what we actually are feeling in this context. The result was the embodied, palpable sense that so long as we keep meeting and being together over a selection of teas, oranges, and Stan’s delish homemade curry, and forget about the 1-hour meeting format with strictly prescribed lists of actions, we might just be ok. 

Thinking together, and sharing collective experiences with people aged in their 20s to 70s made time expand in a way that most templates of organisation today do not allow. Through Simon, we were taken to 1980s Thatcher’s London with the closing down of art spaces. As he was talking I thought of Derek Jarman’s films from that period, and earlier – [for example, Studio Bankside, 1971, which shows the gritty post-industrial site of what is now Tate Modern, occupied by queer punks gleefully cavorting around burning barrels] – even though I don’t think he was part of that scene. Meanwhile, Courtney, who has lived in Felixstowe all her life, speaks for the people she meets. She asks, “but when are we actually going to do these things? What is the action?” 

Workshop lunch – Reimagine This Coastal Town Co-creation workshop in Felixstowe, December 2025

Ruth: Thursday 8th January

Yes Elly, I was struck too, by Courtney’s sense of urgency for action.

I’ve just got back from the Listening to the Land Day, a symposium dedicated to artistic and scientific animist practices (as part of the Oxford Real Farming Conference for agroecology and food sovereignty). There, I was reminded that imagination is the place where reality starts for us, and from where we create the blueprint for our actions. When we discuss our hopes and desires with others, we seed patterns in the imaginal realm. 

During our workshop at Hamilton MAS, we seeded patterns for future conversations, imaginings, and action not only with other townspeople but also the more-than-human life in the town and its surroundings.

Everyone made crucial contributions to the development of our upcoming public art commission in Felixstowe. The ideas flowed and grew between us as we discussed the proposal by one of our younger LARP participants last spring called Rewilding the Ruins. This proposal also inspired and enthused visitors to our exhibition last summer. The act of ceding sites abandoned by humans to other creatures of the town honours human heritage while recognising the biodiverse communities that emerge and thrive there. Lora suggested the term “renaturing” rather than “rewilding,” as we are prioritising biodiversity in relatively small sites rather than introducing apex predators to large areas of land.  

Hopefully, the artwork that Lily goes on to make will not only inspire everyone in the town to get involved in our creative activities and other practical environmental actions, but also support a conversation about how everyone can make simple but important nature-connections – just by turning curious attention to the other lives that thrive in these places.  

Life loves to be appreciated! Noticing and appreciation are the first steps to caring.

There was a moment in the workshop where I heard you talk about the importance of love. We were talking about political developments down the English East coast and the wider Earth crisis, and how to “stay with the troubles”.

You asked, “How can we care for anything if we don’t first love it?”

This really struck me because after years of working with critical practice in the artworld I was shocked to realise how rare it is to hear someone talk about love. And when the embers of love fade, the world becomes arid, and our eyes and hearts dull.

Noticing and appreciating the brambles that provide food and shelter for insects and birds around the old military placements of Landguard, and the peacock butterflies that overwinter there, and loving the magical foxes that make their homes in the quiet spaces of abandoned railway stations might be the most important thing anyone can do. 

There’s already such a spirited mutualism here in places like Cuppa, our community cafe, and community growing project Edible Felixstowe. And plans are afoot for other inspiring projects to create new pathways for young people to make this town their own in imaginative and creative ways. By generating loving attention and care for other beings, we aim to create the conditions necessary to support these emerging plans for coordinated, human and more-than-human action in the town. 

And so the things that remain with me from that day are: Josh’s rage for the cruelty of the politics on the streets of Great Yarmouth and the creative and loving social engine, he and his partner Gabby have established to counter that cruelty, with good food served at a mutual aid cafe (visit the Bakehouse) and bitingly funny poster campaigns; the light in Lora’s eyes, she talked about clambering through barbed wire and brambles to the source of her beloved local river, and the importance of regular encounters with that spring to her spirit. Also, the joy of introducing a group of school children to plum trees, having them pick and taste them for the first time; Lily’s calm love of beauty, pattern and colour in the lives of other beings; Stan’s quick, imaginative, and inspiring transformation of proposals into plans he would like to realise for a local permaculture, growing, and anarchist zine production project. Simon’s slow (years-long) conversations with the estuary are based on a deep ecological knowledge and relationship gained over decades. All contrasting with, and complemented by, Courtney’s sense of urgency. 

I realise there is something we can do right now – all of us – and that is to greet the birds as friends every morning. Get to know individuals, observe their ways, learn what they do and what they like, and where they live. We can do that already –  all of us – without any additional money, resources, knowledge, plans – and we will probably find ourselves more connected and alive. 

Artists Elly Clarke, Simon Read, Josh Hall, Lora Aziz, Ruth Catlow, with Nick the dog standing in front of 2 unused billboards in Felixstowe.

Billboards in Felixstowe – with artists Elly Clarke, Simon Read, Josh Hall, Lora Aziz, Ruth Catlow, with Nick the dog.

Elly: Saturday 20th Jan

Hi Ruth,

This sentence: imagination is the place where reality starts for us, and from there we create the blueprint for our actions. is where I want to start… Because I love the poetry of the fact that it was at a Real Farming Conference that you were reminded of imagination being a blueprint for everything. Because to nurture growth – of plants, of ideas, and of communities of all species – requires a balance of care and knowledge, but is also subject to many factors beyond anybody’s control:  the weather, climate, labour, health and, increasingly, politics. In the case of Yarmouth, where Josh and his project are literally feeding love to the local community through food, space and shelter, love meets and has to (try to) negotiate with [the largely unloving views of] the right-wing whose flag/ging erections repeatedly signpost their presence. Whilst Felixstowe is not currently suffering this degree of extremism, it would be remiss of us, and irresponsible, not to acknowledge that this is part of the wider context (and climate) our project is landing in. 

Your descriptions of Lora’s joy at the climbing over barbed wire to her beloved spring, (and the video of her dipping her child’s feet into it); Stan’s zines and Simon’s slow, ongoing encounters with life (and lives) of the estuary – and Courtney’s urgency, alongside the spirit of mutualism you highlight – are all fuelled by love. As I said in the workshop, I do think that love never gets enough acknowledgement or space when discussing art and nature, and the climate crisis. Love is about noticing – as you say, the brambles, the birds, others around you. It is about at/tending to what is around us. Love naturally inspires and invokes interest and curiosity, which is crucial to the desire and labour of building a better world. So perhaps if Love got more of a look in, if s/he could be part of our group with a name badge pinned to hir chest, we could ensure s/he was involved in all aspects of planning and dreaming, which could offer some important signposting when we need it…. 

And Lily, when delivering the final edits to her incredible artwork these past days, spoke passionately about how the work was created out of ‘so much love’ – which is evident and palpable. So love is in the work we are doing here. The mentor species are wearing it. The colours are showing it. The fox’s steady gaze holds it. The ruins of Felixstowe are receiving it. 

Lunch with Bryony Graham, Director of Hamilton MAS, with Ruth Catlow, Simon Read, Stan Willey, Josh Hall and Lora Aziz.

Ruth:  Wednesday 31 January 

Yes, Elly, yes!

And to close, I want to reflect on a familiar criticism: that directing our imaginative attention toward interspecies thriving somehow diminishes or distracts from the urgent political struggles of humans across the globe. As if care were a choice, and as if we must decide between loving other people and loving other beings on this planet.

After six or seven years of working with creative practices for interspecies justice, I have learned the opposite. When we come to understand our well-being as bound up with that of other species, we gain sharper insight into the many dimensions and mechanisms of oppression that operate within human societies as well. And we discover that love is not a zero-sum game – not a finite resource. Loving other beings opens new ways of loving, new imaginaries for care and new capacities for justice.

 

More about Adventures in Art, Community and Multispecies-connection on the Suffolk Coast for a Felixstowe that is cared for, celebrated, and thriving.

Imagining Change in This Coastal Town – Pilot

In September 2024, people of all ages—residents, workers, visitors, holidaymakers, and passionate fans of Felixstowe in East Suffolk—came together to time-travel into the future of this coastal town with their friends and neighbours.

This small-scale event to explore community needs and aspirations was a key step in shaping Furtherfield’s future in the town, as we plan our relocation from London to Felistowe. Film-maker Hydar Dwatchi created a film about the event.

https://player.vimeo.com/video/1036303680?portrait=0
Film by Hydar Dewachi

People had a lot to say about their experience!

It’s important to use our imaginations to create the futures we want

“It just reminds us that we have to bring our creative imaginations to the future that we want. – It’s playful, it’s going to make a lot of people think, it’s going to surprise a lot of people” – Adrian

This experience made it more fun and less worrying to exploring the future

“It brings up serious issues while you are allowed to have a bit of fun with them. But also in a way allowing you to disassociate so your prime self doesn’t have to worry about them, because it’s this future self” – Mark

It’s important to respect ideas and feelings of young people in this town

“It’s great to involve younger people who don’t always get involved in these conversations because we feel a bit disenfranchised, and we feel a little bit pushed out by the older generation sometimes. In Felixstowe, it seems to be an older population…we are trying to get a place for younger people to be collectively together and work with you guys so we can make something we are ALL proud of. It’s just great to have a platform to be able to share ideas and feelings about Felixstowe and have them listened to and respected by everybody.” – Courtney

More About This Event Exploring 200 Years of Change in Felixstowe!

🚢The port was founded in 1875. Looking back 150 years, we can see the changes it made in this town.

During this event we asked ourselves how, in 50 years, we will we look back on this time with all the changes we know are coming, including new developments and shifts in climate?

🌞Felixstowe is a place that radiates healthful living and wellbeing. The land and sea support livelihoods, leisure and blooming biodiversity. The port, the largest in England, provides crucial national infrastructure and contributes to a healthy local economy. In the summer holidaymakers flock here.

🌬️But things are always changing here and in the wider world. In May, Furtherfield invited local residents to chat about the futures we want. In July, we shared what we discovered with three creative practitioners from the region: Mimi Doncaster and Frazer Merrick, and Kirsty Tallent. Together we created an immersive future fiction that formed the basis of a public event to work on the future together! 

This Coastal Town Reimagined
This Coastal Town Reimagined

What Happened?

⏰We created a timeline of Felixstowe since the port was founded in 1875 and added events of historic or personal significance.

✨Then we chose our time-travelling characters. Starting as a young person, or an elder we decided what our character cares about? 

We travelled all the way to 2075, the year the Multispecies Port of Felixstowe opens.

The Creators of This Coastal Town Reimagined?

This event was co-devised by Ruth Catlow (Furtherfield), Mimi DoncasterAnn Light (University of Sussex), Frazer Merrick, and Kirsty Tallent. Thanks to Hamilton MAS for hosting the co-creation workshop and to Cuppa for hosting the community conversation that inspired and informed our work. Thanks to Courtney Hessey for guidance on youth empowerment

What Happens Next – Reimagine This Coastal Town?

In an 18 month project Reimagine This Coastal Town in Felixstowe over Summer 2025 and 2026 we are going to host a programme of events, workshops, and an exhibition, culminating in an eco-social Live Action Role Play (LARP), co-produced by 18+ young adults and eight creative practitioners from the region.

A proven way of generating visionary new worlds, we aim to inspire community-led environmental and social transformation in Felixstowe, enabling residents to collectively reimagine its future in the context of eco-social change, with a particular focus on youth empowerment and reaching marginalised communities in the town.

This project will be realised in partnership with The University of Sussex, Level Two Youth Projects, Hamilton MAS, and the Felixstowe Citizen Science Group and with support from Arts Council England and the Suffolk Cultural Fund.

This Coastal Town : 200 Years Of Change

Welcome to This Coastal Town Reimagined: 200 Years Of Change!

Who is this for?

For adults of all ages. If you are a resident, worker, regular visitor, or if you just love Felixstowe, this is for you! Join us for a fun morning or afternoon with your friends and neighbours, time-travelling into the future of this coastal town.

FREE – but booking is essential as places are limited

What is this?

A chance to explore 200 years of change in Felixstowe!

🚢The port was founded in 1875. Looking back 150 years, we can see the changes it made in this town. In 50 years, how will we look back on this time with all the changes we know are coming, including new developments and shifts in climate?

🌞Felixstowe is a place that radiates healthful living and wellbeing. The land and sea support livelihoods, leisure and blooming biodiversity. The port, the largest in England, provides crucial national infrastructure and contributes to a healthy local economy. In the summer holidaymakers flock here.

🌬️But things are always changing here and in the wider world. In May, we invited local residents to chat about the futures we want. In July, we shared what we discovered with three creative practitioners from the region: Mimi Doncaster and Frazer Merrick, and Kirsty Tallent. Together we created an immersive future fiction. That is the basis of the event we are inviting you to here. Come and work on the future together! ⏳

Felixstowe, by Sam Wingate, 2020

What to expect

⏰We start with a timeline of Felixstowe since the port was founded in 1875 and an invitation to add events of historic or personal significance.

Then we choose our time-travelling characters. Will you start as a young person, or an elder? What does your character care about? ✨

We will travel all the way to 2075, the year the Multispecies Port of Felixstowe opens.

This event is hosted by The Alex Brasserie, with views of the sea and a cafe bar where you can buy any refreshments around the event. Please tell us about any access needs you may have.

What else would you like to know?

Participants need no prior knowledge or experience to join this event. However, if you are unsure about sustainable futures and are someone who likes to come prepared, we think these links offer a good starting point: What is climate change? A really simple guide, from the BBC, and Sustainable Development Goals from the UN.

About the event hosts

Ruth Catlow is co-founder and director of Furtherfield and an artist and organiser interested in how different creative processes can unleash community imaginations to open up new more mutualistic futures in places.

Prof Ann Light is a researcher studying to what extent people can be transformed by encounters with the arts.

Please note that the event is being included in a research project on the effect of immersive experiences. A researcher will be there to observe the event. Although the researcher will not be observing individuals, there is an opportunity on the day for you to decide if you wish to be part of the research or not. If you would like to know more about the research project before the event, please email Professor Ann Light at the University of Sussex (ann.light@sussex.ac.uk) and she will send you an information sheet.

Who are the creators of This Coastal Town Reimagined?

This event has been co-devised by Ruth Catlow, Mimi DoncasterAnn LightFrazer Merrick, and Kirsty Tallent. Thanks to Hamilton MAS for hosting the co-creation workshop and to Cuppa for hosting the community conversation that inspired and informed our work.

🙋Please contact Ruth by email ruth.catlow@furtherfield.org if you have any questions, or come early to talk to us.