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Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario

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About Resonance

The strongest teams are built through small, kind interactions rather than expensive corporate retreats.
Jamie Bell Apr 6, 2026
Background for About Resonance

Forget the corporate retreats and focus on the small, daily habits that build lasting trust.

The most effective team building happens in the quiet moments between the big deadlines.

For a small, grassroots arts organization, the idea of a traditional team building retreat often feels like a luxury you cannot afford or a corporate cliché you would rather avoid. When resources are tight and everyone is wearing five different hats, the thought of adding a social exercise to the calendar can feel like just another chore. But the principle of healthy creative leadership is simple: trust is not a one-time event; it is a recurring ritual. You do not need a budget for a ropes course to build a resilient team. You need a commitment to the small, human interactions that happen every single day.

In a small group, the lines between personal and professional are naturally thin. You are likely working with friends, peers, or fellow travelers who share your artistic convictions. This intimacy is a strength, but it requires intentionality. Without a clear approach to how you support one another, that intimacy can turn into friction. The easy approach to team building is to integrate it directly into the workflow. It is about moving away from eye-to-eye intensity, where every meeting feels like a high-stakes negotiation, and toward shoulder-to-shoulder collaboration. There is something transformative about doing the physical work of an organization together. Whether it is moving chairs for a rehearsal, prepping a mailing list, or painting a gallery wall, these moments of shared labor provide a low-pressure environment for conversation.

One of the most powerful tools for a small team is the micro-ritual. This is a consistent, low-barrier practice that honors the people behind the tasks. Perhaps it is a ten-minute check-in at the start of every meeting where the only rule is that you cannot talk about the project. You talk about your lives, your creative frustrations outside the organization, or even just how you are sleeping. This is not just small talk. It is a mechanism for visibility. When you know that a teammate is dealing with a personal struggle or a creative block, you can adjust your expectations and offer support before a conflict arises. Visibility is the best defense against the silent build-up of resentment.

As a leader, your role in team building is to model a radical transparency about your own limitations. In the corporate world, leaders are often taught to project an image of total competence. In the grassroots world, that approach is a recipe for isolation. When you are honest about what you do not know or when you admit that you are feeling the weight of the workload, you give your team permission to do the same. This creates a culture of psychological safety where asking for help is viewed as a strategic contribution rather than a failure. This shared vulnerability is the glue that holds a small group together when the funding is low and the stakes are high.

Finally, remember that the goal of a team is not just to produce work, but to sustain the people producing it. Small is beautiful because it allows for a level of care that institutions simply cannot scale. You have the opportunity to build a culture where everyone feels like a stakeholder in the mission. Encouraging ownership means letting go of the need to control every detail and trusting your peers to bring their own creative soul to the project.

When people feel trusted, they do not just show up; they contribute. Keep your rituals simple, keep your communication honest, and remember that the strongest teams are built one small, kind interaction at a time.

About Resonance

Northern Arts and Regional Innovation

This is a collaborative initiative by The Arts Incubator Winnipeg and the Art Borups Corners art collective, supporting artists and creative projects in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario. Our groups champion rural arts development, community programming, Indigenous arts partnerships, and cultural innovation—strengthening the local and regional arts sector through mentorship, exhibitions, digital media, and sustainable creative entrepreneurship. Our events and activities include artists from Melgund Township, Winnipeg, Ignace, Sioux Lookout, Dryden, and beyond. You read more innovation-focused posts here.

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Jamie Bell is a Winnipeg-based interdisciplinary artist and strategist working at the intersection of media arts, community engagement, and public affairs. Among others, his work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, with a focus on participatory media, strategic communications, and arts-based collaboration across northern and urban contexts.

Author's website Author's posts
Tags: Manitoba Northwestern Ontario Regional Innovation SDG 8 SDG 9 Sustainable Development Winnipeg

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ART BORUPS CORNERS

Art Borups Corners is a non-profit arts incubator based in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario. We bring artists, youth, and local residents together through hands-on creative projects, workshops, and storytelling rooted in everyday life in the North. Our focus is on making space for people to try things, share skills, and build confidence through art that grows out of where they live.


We’re also a place for testing ideas and working across different ways of making — from land-based practice to digital work and everything in between. Much of what we do happens through partnerships and shared projects, connecting local creative work with wider conversations while keeping things grounded, practical, and community-led.


BN: 790519573RC0001

ESTABLISHED WITH FUNDING FROM

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo
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