We are a grassroots organisation founded in the spirit of kinship and a shared belief that through the application of integral knowledge and the rediscovery of land-based traditions, practices, and ways of being, individuals and communities can reimagine regenerative cultures and environments that integrate the living wisdom of the body and the land.
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Sense Ability began with a question: what happens when a city is offered a genuine place to pause?
Three friends came together around a shared conviction that the work of slowing down deserved its own dedicated space, and that the practices of embodied wisdom, land connection, community making and learning belonged in the same room. Sense Ability’s first site was designed in response to the deeper needs of a fast-paced urban environment, creating a space that nurtures deep listening and supports intentional pausing.
It took place at The Crypt Gallery, St Pancras New Church, London, running daily from February to April 2026. In this time frame, we held over 70 events, including live music, storytelling, film screenings, somatic practice, workshops, walks, and lectures. The space was designed together with an apothecary style cafe composed of offerings from UK-based foragers, herbalists, and independent cultivators; a reading corner in collaboration with Resurgence & Ecologist and Permaculture Magazine; an exhibit of local material craft ranging across naturally dyed hand-made textiles to ceramics and bio-material sculptures; intentional furniture hand-made from reclaimed wood that helped shape intimate spaces in the maze-like passages beneath London’s ground; sound-scapes and scent-scape made from locally foraged botanicals.
It was conceived as a cultural venue, community cafe, apothecary and gallery; a deep-listening and resting space. Intimate quiet spaces, enveloping sound and scent-scapes of local plants, and diverse offerings from the land, shaped a sanctuary that was open during the day for anyone to ‘re-root’ into presence. In the evenings and on weekends, the space shifted into an active programme.
The project worked alongside local and international practitioners, artists, educators, and celebrated change-makers to forge deeper awareness and relationships with the living wisdom of the body and the land, engaging with foundational subjects that sustain life as we know it. The collaborators who gathered around it, musicians, designers, educators, brewers, herbalists, artisans and others, formed one of the most genuinely cross-disciplinary networks we've encountered.
It was a place to pause, soften, learn from, and create new forms of interbeing together.
Sense Ability is now a curatorial, design, and consultancy practice; we collaborate with organisations that share the intention of wanting to bring that quality of attention into their own work.
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SPACES:
We weave re-discovered and re-imagined land based traditions, practices and ways of being; a new life way that integrates the living wisdom of the body and the land into urban and rural environments.
We introduce spaces that integrate intentional pausing, recreation, communion, and embodied learning into the cityscape.
We design spaces with the above intentions behind.
PEOPLE:
We create opportunities for community and collaboration, cultivating kinship and reciprocal care.
We provide platforms for local and international practitioners, including artists, educators, storytellers, and celebrated change-makers whose practices engage with both local and global land knowledge, diving deep into foundational subjects such as culture, ecology, and well-being.
ECOLOGIES:
To invite deeper awareness of local ecosystems and our reciprocal relationship with them through experience design and placemaking
Promoting practices that nurture both the self and the environments we inhabit.
WAYS OF KNOWING:
We enquire through integral knowledge recognising the interconnections between systems thinking, sensory awareness and beyond.
WELLBEING:
We hold wellbeing as an ecosystem of which we, our communities, cultures and environments are a part, and this becomes the basis for our design thinking when creating spaces and experiences, and working as a collective under Sense Ability.
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Through deep, reciprocal connection to place, self, and one another, we envision a future in which community members experience themselves as living parts of the ecosystem; where reflection, learning, creativity, and connection are woven into the fabric of everyday life.
We see communities rooted in kinship and care, where cultural traditions, ecological knowledge, and diverse ways of knowing are celebrated, shared, and continuously reimagined for contemporary life, fostering collective well-being, resilience, and belonging across generations whilst honouring and paying reverence to the living wisdom of the land and the body.
Founders
Masha is a Latvian-born creative director, filmmaker, and placemaker. Her background spans documentary film, sound, and holistic design with a particular focus on land-based practices and the communities and traditions shaped by a close relationship with the natural environment.
Her path to placemaking grew from years of documentary work on material craft techniques and indigenous practices, which led her to explore how such ways of knowing could become lived, embodied experience that informs today’s ways of co-being and shaping a restorative future. That inquiry became the seed that led to the founding of Sense Ability.
Masha Segal
Garwyn is a cellist, somatic therapist, sound healer, and curator based in London. His work centres on bringing people into deeper connection with their bodies, the plant world, and the natural world through sound events, workshops, and one-to-one sessions.
He curates and directs projects that weave land connection and contemplation with the arts, drawing inspiration from the ancient Celtic and Daoist philosophies of his Welsh and Chinese heritage. His work brings together arts and wellness culture in a way that is integrative, grounded, and rooted in lived tradition.
Garwyn Linnell
David is an educator, artist, and wellbeing practitioner whose work weaves together three long-running threads: a career exploring new paradigms in education, a deeply personal journey into sound-based and nature-connected approaches to wellbeing, and a lifelong spiritual inquiry into what it means to be human.
He has worked in some of the world's most innovative educational environments, including Green School Bali, and his thinking draws on Ken Wilber's Integral Theory, spiritual ecology, and the wisdom of contemplative traditions from around the world.
At the heart of his practice is a commitment to living the questions and to creating spaces where others can do the same.
David Shyen Green
Our Trusted Partners
Our Collaborators
Aija Miranda: designer, maker specialising in set design and costume
Anna Soko Mudeka: multi-instrumentalist, singer, educator, and ambassador for the arts and culture of the sub-Saharan continent
Chris Salisbury: director of WildWise, writer storyteller,
Marian Boswall: landscape architect, land-healer
Wolfgang Buttress: artist
Jally Kebba Susso: kora player, composer, cultural ambassador for Gambia in UK
Imogen Taylor-Noble: ceramicist, maker
Silvija Šuliokaitė: Lithuanian sauna keeper
Indrė Jurgelevičiūtė: kanklés player, singer
Thom Blane: transdisciplinary artist, designer
Kyri Mouzouris: architectural designer, ceramicist
Eki Guillen aka Nopalera Sessions: multidisciplinary artist, activist, chef, cacti researcher, grower
Katye Coe: dancer, activist, Kinship Workshop facilitator
Susumu Mukai aka Zongamin: musician, producer
Sophie L Ferrier: maker who's practice is centered on biodegradable, restorative, and regenerative materiality
Chris Park: druid, beekeeper, author, musician, storyteller
Jo & Kathryn Harper: pioneers of British-grown tea, founders of Dartmoor Estate Tea
Kirk Barley: music artist
Lera Zujeva: tea ceremony facilitator
Shahzad Ismaily multi-instrumentalist
Chandra Shukla: avant-garde musician, founder of Xambuca record label
Konstantinos Glynos: kanun player
Tasha Elena: grower, founder of Land Food Medicine
Touch Records: record label
Leela Gal: dream researcher, founder of SupNap
Anna Hints: film director
Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee: filmmaker, a composer, an author, founder of Emergence Magazine
Eleanor Sara Darley: artist, art counselling with pants, founder of The School of Botanical Arts.
Dr. Rachel Sweeney: movement artist, professor at Schumacher College
Philip Avierinos: musician, certified Sound (BAST+COSH) and life alignment practitioner
Adam Loften: film director
Muji: pharmacist, medical herbalist, forest ecologist, founder of Forest Medicine
Iside Turchetti: brewer at Old Tree Brewery
Tom Daniell: founder of Old Tree Brewery
Rima Staines: artist
Francesca Ter-Berg: cellist, composer, producer
David Edward: musician, artist and multi-instrumentalist
Oliver Dover: clarinettist, saxophonist and kaval player
Sian O'Gorman aka NYX: experimental vocalist, composer
Laura: somatics, coaching, and shamanic healing
Emilio Mula, aka Children of Compost: videographer, animator, musician, vj and visual artist
Josephine Marchandise: head of kitchen & fermentation at OmVed Gardens, holistic food
Sergei Nozdrenkov: AI for ocean health, ex-Google engineer, founder of WildFlow.Ai
Api Ascaso: multi-instrumentalist