Richard Forsdyke – Chair
Richard Forsdyke is a partner in the real estate group at international law firm Herbert Smith Freehills, where he has 20 years’ experience in advising on major property developers, landlords and local authorities. He holds an M.A. in Philosophy & Law from Cambridge (Robinson College) and an M.Sc. in Politics from the LSE. His politics Master’s thesis was published as “After The Landslide” by the Centre for Policy Studies, where he served as a research fellow. He is a former trustee of The Pavement Poetry Trust and has undertaken courses at Poetry School. He plays rock drums to a low standard and also cures & smokes his own bacon.
Jon Sharples – Trustee
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Jon Sharples practises as a qualified solicitor specialising in intellectual property and art law, and is on the board of Block 336 in Brixton.
Chris Brown OBE DL – Trustee
Chris Brown worked in engineering companies for most of his career and was Chief Executive of David Brown Group plc from 1990 to 1999. He has degrees in Law, Philosophy, History and Business Administration, and holds an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Huddersfield.
He was Chair of the governing body of the University of Huddersfield from 2004 to 2019, and was awarded an OBE in 2019 for services to higher education. He was also High Sheriff of West Yorkshire in 2016/17 and is a Deputy Lieutenant of the county.
Helen Taylor – Trustee
Helen Taylor (BA Hons Cantab) was Literature Officer for Cambridgeshire County Council for 9 years and is now a Literature Consultant and works for Carol Ann Duffy the Poet Laureate as PA and Laureate Project Coordinator. Helen taught in secondary schools for five years before becoming Head of Education at The Poetry Society. She has taught on the University of Cambridge’s MA in Children’s Literature and the PGCE course at the University of Cambridge. She has been a director of two Poetry Festivals and is now on the programming committee of the Cambridge Literary Festival. She has also worked for Cambridge City Council as Community Arts Liaison Officer and founded her own company The Voices Project, which developed and delivered creative projects in the community for local authorities and museums. Helen initiated and project managed the year long Poetry and Museums Project ‘Thresholds’ curated by the Poet Laureate which involved 10 poets in residence in 10 University of Cambridge museums and collections working with young people and writing new poems.
Denise Saul – Trustee
Denise Saul is a writer and poet. She holds a doctorate in creative writing (poetry) from University of Roehampton. Her White Narcissi (Flipped Eye Publishing) was Poetry Book Society Pamphlet Choice and House of Blue (Rack Press) was PBS Pamphlet Recommendation. She is a Geoffrey Dearmer Prize winner. Denise was one of the ten selected poets for The Complete Works, a nationwide mentoring scheme that aims to increase cultural diversity in publishing. She is the founder of Silent Room: A Journey of Language, a collaborative video poem project, funded by Arts Council England.
Jonathan Teyssandier – Trustee
Jonathan Teyssandier holds degrees in Nuclear Engineering and Theoretical Mathematics, and is currently working in the financial sector in a risk management capacity. He takes a keen interest in poetry, both in the English and the French language – the latter his native tongue. He has a weakness for the craftsmanship of the Parnassian school on either side of the Channel, and for the poetic/mathematical works of the Oulipo movement.
Hannah Etim-Gorst – Trustee
Hannah Etim-Gorst studied history at Warwick University and the University of Connecticut, during which time she was a UNESCO youth ambassador. Hannah has also studied art history at The Courtauld. She is a practising solicitor.
In Hannah’s spare time, she loves theatre and dance having trained in both for over 10 years. Hannah will give 10 points to anyone who can spot her ‘starring’ in Harry Potter or Casualty!
Katie Colombus – Trustee
Katie Colombus is the author of How to Listen and Pathways (Hachette) and is a published poet with a distinction from the MA in Writing Poetry at The Poetry School, London. She creates interdisciplinary work with dancers and musicians and has written libretto for contemporary opera. Katie has an extensive background in arts and wellbeing journalism having written for The Telegraph, The i, Good Housekeeping, The Stage Newspaper, The Dancing Times and Dance Theatre Journals amongst others. She was the recipient of the Chris De Marigny Dance Writers Award and Lisa Ullman Travelling Scholarship for arts writing and was a Gary Parks Scholar for the Critics Association. She was also chosen to take part in a British Council young arts writers international exchange with young writers from the Palestinian Territories, Lebanon and Pakistan.
Helen Mort – Trustee
Helen Mort is an author from Sheffield. Her collections Division Street,, No Map Could Show Them and The Illustrated Woman are published by Chatto & Windus. Her work has been shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize and the Forward Prize. She has also published a novel called Black Car Burning (2019) set in South Yorkshire and her memoir A Line Above The Sky (Ebury, 2022) examines the relationship between mountains and motherhood. Her non-fiction work was awarded the Boardman Tasker Prize for mountain literature and the Banff Grand Prize in Canada. Her biography of the environmental campaigner Ethel Haythornthwaite was published in 2024. She’s a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Professor of Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University.
Image Credit: Emma Ledwith
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