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Winnipeg, Manitoba

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  • The Potluck Principle
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The Potluck Principle

True team building is the natural byproduct of doing meaningful work alongside people you actually respect.
The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 4 Mar 2026
Background for The Potluck Principle

How small rituals and shared labor build stronger creative teams than any retreat.

In the early stages of a grassroots project, the term ‘team building’ often feels like a threat. It conjures images of fluorescent-lit conference rooms, awkward trust falls, and the forced enthusiasm of corporate retreats.

For a small team of five or six people working out of a shared studio or a living room, these traditional methods don’t just feel unnecessary—they feel alien. When your organization is small, you don’t need to simulate connection; you need to cultivate the connection that is already there. The most effective team-building approach for a grassroots arts group isn’t a scheduled event, but a series of intentional rituals that integrate into the daily rhythm of the work.

This matters because in the world of limited resources, your team’s cohesion is your most valuable asset. In a large institution, people can hide behind job descriptions and departmental silos. In a small group, every friction point is magnified, and every misunderstanding can stall a project. Because you likely cannot offer the highest salaries or the most stable benefits, the primary reason people show up is the quality of the community you provide. If the environment feels transactional or cold, the creative energy will dry up. Therefore, team building becomes less about ‘having fun’ and more about establishing a foundation of psychological safety and shared ownership.

The approach starts with what we call the Potluck Principle. In its literal sense, this means sharing a meal where everyone contributes. There is a specific, ancient chemistry that happens when humans eat together without an agenda. For a small team, a recurring, non-negotiable mealtime serves as the heartbeat of the organization. It is a space where the ‘work’ isn’t the focus, allowing the people behind the work to emerge. When you know how someone takes their coffee or what they’re reading, you begin to understand their creative frequency. This creates a buffer of empathy that helps when the inevitable stress of a deadline arrives.

Beyond the meal, focus on shared labor as a form of bonding. In the arts, there are often tedious, manual tasks—painting a wall, stuffing envelopes, or setting up chairs. Instead of delegating these to one person to be ‘efficient,’ do them together. There is a profound sense of solidarity that comes from physical work. These moments provide a low-stakes environment for conversation. It is often during these ‘boring’ tasks that the best ideas are whispered and the deepest concerns are voiced. You aren’t just building a set; you are building a rapport that can withstand the high-pressure moments of a public launch.

Finally, implement a culture of the ‘human’ check-in. Before diving into the Trello board or the budget, take fifteen minutes to ask how people actually are. Not ‘how is your project,’ but ‘how is your spirit.’ This requires the leader to go first and be honest. If you are feeling overwhelmed or uncertain, say so. When a leader displays vulnerability, it gives the rest of the team permission to be human. In a small group, you cannot afford to have people masking their burnout until it’s too late.

Small is not a stepping stone to something better; it is a unique state of grace. It allows for an intimacy and a speed of trust that larger organizations can only dream of. By moving away from corporate icebreakers and toward shared rituals, you create a culture that feels like a home rather than a workplace. Your team isn’t just a collection of talent; it is a community of practice.

Keep your circles close, keep your rituals consistent, and remember that the work is better when the people doing it feel seen.

The Potluck Principle

Thoughts on Creative Leadership

Creative Leadership is about turning vision into action by empowering people, cultivating trust, and building momentum around shared purpose. It blends imagination with accountability, inviting diverse voices to shape solutions while navigating complexity with clarity and courage.

About the Author

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

Administrator

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg is a participatory arts collective and living lab, based in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. It's a space where innovation and creativity thrive. It's latest iteration was launched in 2021 with funding and support from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. Today, working with students and faculty from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, we fuse traditional and participatory media arts with artificial intelligence, music, storytelling and community-driven, land-based artist residencies to cultivate new voices and bold ideas. Whether through collaborative projects or immersive experiences, our small but vibrant community supports creators to explore, experiment, and connect. Join us at the intersection of artistry, technology, culture and community—where every moment is a new opportunity to create.

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MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
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