Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp: Ecotones

Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp: Ecotones

Ecotones 'Pests and Weeds' (2025). Photo by Ed Holland

Where the Urban and Rural Embrace

Ecotones: Where the Urban and Rural Embrace is a year-long programme of events and activities by Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp, recipient of the Spike Island and Hauser & Wirth Engagement Fellowship for South West-based Curators 2025–26.

In ecology, an ecotone is where two different environments meet, embrace, and transform one another. This year-long programme explores the ecotones between urban and rural environments from an intersectional and inclusive perspective. Questioning pervasive assumptions about urban and rural spaces as divided and disconnected, the project aims to unearth the layers of relationality and connectedness between them.

Working alongside interdisciplinary artists, this programme invites young people and local communities to explore notions of belonging, untold histories, and relationships with the more-than-human world, producing alternative modes of connection with their localities.

This programme is one of three Engagement Fellowships for South West-based curators taking place between 2025 and 2028, kindly supported by Hauser & Wirth. The three-year initiative will connect Spike Island and Hauser & Wirth’s Learning and Engagement programmes, aiming to support the professional development of artists, young people and independent art workers based in the region.

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EVENTS

  • Ecotones Programme Launch with Andrew Sanger and Room 13 Hareclive

    Thursday 5 June 2025: Ecotones Programme Launch

    To mark the launch of Ecotones: Where the Urban and Rural Embrace, in partnership with Hauser & Wirth, we explored connections between urban and rural environments, with particular attention to Spike Island as an ecotone – where the river and the city meet, embrace, and transform one another.

    With contributions from Engagement Fellow Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp, artist Andrew Sanger, and community organisation Room 13 Hareclive.

  • Pests & Weeds: Animal Tracking & Plant Foraging with Hermione Spriggs and Tamara Colchester

    Thursday 14 – Friday 15 August 2025: Pests & Weeds

    Artists and nature enthusiasts Hermione Spriggs and Tamara Colchester led a two-day workshop for young people that explored the vibrant lives of urban animals and plants in Bristol.

    Through the sharing of creative animal tracking techniques and foraging skills, this workshop invited participants to explore the city from the perspective of creatures and plants thriving/surviving on the margins.

  • What Do Plants Want? With Pear_ed and Kayle Brandon

    Monday 1 – Thursday 4 September 2025: What do Plants Want?

    International artist duo Pear_ed undertook an artist-led research visit to Hauser & Wirth Somerset, responding to their Oudolf Field. Together, they examined how the garden meets its rural surroundings, finding contrast and connection between controlled and wild spaces, and considering how the materiality of plants invites modes of artistic engagement.

    As part of the visit, Pear_ed led a workshop for Spike Island Associates members and held a public conversation with socially-engaged artist Kayle Brandon, chaired by Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp.

  • The Queer Rural with James Aldridge and Joe Jukes

    Thursday 18 September 2025: The Queer Rural

    How does queerness and rurality intersect? What assumptions are made? How do queer communities foster a sense of belonging in rural spaces? How does queerness manifest beyond the human?

    This participatory walk around Bruton, Somerset, led by artist James Aldridge and queer geographer Joe Jukes, invited creative exploration of these questions with the local LGBTQ+ community through the acts of walking, bundling, and storytelling.

    Read more about James Aldridge’s bundling method here.

  • Niki de Saint Phalle & Animal Empowerment

    January 2026: Niki de Saint Phalle & Animal Empowerment

    As part of Children’s Mental Health Week 2026, this artist-led workshop for local children at Hauser & Wirth Somerset will playfully explore how Niki de Saint Phalle used animals and fantastical creatures in her artwork to face her fears and celebrate the power of the natural world.

  • Food Ecotones with Kayle Brandon and Rooted in Bristol

    February 2026: Food Ecotones

    This event will explore how urban food cultures are shaped by migration. It will include an artist-led recipe sharing workshop by Kayle Brandon for refugee and migrant communities, as well as a film screening of Rooted in Bristol by Manu Maunganidze and Annie Menter. The film celebrates Black and Afro-Caribbean food growers in Bristol, and addresses issues of land access for these communities.

Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp

Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp (PhD) is a Bristol-based writer, curator, and producer. Her recent Techne-funded doctoral research considered the ethics of interspecies relations in contemporary art and performance from an intersectional perspective. Fitzgerald-Allsopp has curated and produced projects across visual arts and performance for cultural organisations including Cove Park, Scotland; DAS, Amsterdam; CCA, Glasgow; Ellen de Bruijne Projects, Amsterdam; and In Between Time, Bristol. She is the recipient of the 2025-2026 Spike Island and Hauser and Wirth Engagement Fellowship for South West-based Curators.

Fitzgerald-Allsopp’s book Interspecies Performance, co-edited with Laura Cull Ó Maoilearca, was published in 2024 by Performance Research Books. Her writing has been commissioned by artists and galleries internationally, including SLQS Gallery, London; Co-Prosperity, Chicago; Handmark, Australia; and K-Gold Temporary Gallery, Greece.

Visit Florence Fitzgerald-Allsopp’s website

 

Hauser & Wirth

Hauser & Wirth is committed to inclusive learning programs that create a dialogue between art, artists and diverse audiences. Ongoing global projects are centered on three core pillars: to engage with communities; enrich academic courses; and foster better access to art careers through a series of meaningful partnerships. Operating beyond the physical spaces of Hauser & Wirth locations, the longstanding learning program recognises art as a vehicle for personal and collective discovery, driven by the work of the gallery’s artists. The learning team collaborates with a range of cultural organisations and non-profit partners, facilitating an exchange of ideas and new perspectives to bring an expanded learning experience.

Visit Hauser & Wirth’s website

Partners and Supporters

In partnership with Hauser & Wirth