If The Scene Is Dead You Are The Necromancer
"When the old structures are crumbling, they stop being walls and start being building blocks."
How to use radical innovation for transformation to revive struggling rural northern arts collectives.
Why are you letting a dusty spreadsheet dictate your creative fire? It is time to stop waiting for the board of directors to suddenly wake up.
Sometimes it will feel as if you are in a town where the main street has more plywood than glass, and the local council meetings feel like a funeral for a dream that died in 1998. It is draining to be the only one with a pulse when the "good old days" are the only thing people talk about. But here is the tea: organizational decline is actually the perfect fertilizer for something unhinged and brilliant. When the old structures are crumbling, they stop being walls and start being building blocks. We are not just "pivoting" anymore; we are leaning into innovation for transformation because the old way is literally cooked.
You do not need a six-figure grant to start moving. Think smaller, weirder, and more agile. If the community gallery is stuck in a loop of exhibiting the same three watercolours of a pine tree, start a pop-up in an old shipping container or a digital-first collective that bridges the gap between the Soo and Kenora. This is about taking the resources we actually have—like our weirdly resilient northern grit—and flipping the script. Innovation for transformation is not about buying a bunch of VR headsets; it is about changing how we relate to each other and our work. It is about being so undeniably fresh that the decline becomes irrelevant.
Mindset shift incoming. Stop asking for permission from people who are afraid of their own shadows. Use the "Acceptance and Commitment" vibe here: accept that the organization is a mess, but commit to the value of your own craft anyway. You are the main character of this revival. If the scene is dead, you are the necromancer. Start a Discord for the local creators who are tired of the gatekeeping. Organize a "bad art" night just to lower the stakes and get the blood pumping again. We are building a new arts sector from the ground up, and honestly? It is going to be way better than the original.
Let us talk about that northern resilience. Living up here means we know how to survive a -40 freeze, so why are we acting like a little bit of bureaucracy is going to stop us? We have the space, the silence, and a distinct lack of "cool kid" pressure that haunts the big cities. That is your edge. Use it to experiment without the fear of being "cringe." When you stop trying to fix a broken system and start building your own parallel world, the passion comes back instantly. You are not just an artist; you are the catalyst for the entire region's glow up.
Do not let the silence of a shrinking town trick you into thinking your voice does not matter. It matters more because it is one of the few things still making noise. Be loud, be kind to yourself when the burnout hits, and keep pushing that innovation for transformation narrative until it becomes the reality. You have the vision, and the North is waiting for you to set it off. Let us actually go.
Northwestern Ontario Arts, Culture and Recreation
Rooted in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario we're exploring arts, culture, and recreation programming that brings our communitiess together. From creative workshops and local exhibitions to youth activities and cultural events, we support rural artists, strengthen community connection, and celebrate the creative spirit of Northwestern Ontario.
Through community-based arts initiatives, recreation programming, and cultural gatherings, Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture fosters creative expression, collaboration, and long-term sustainability in the northern arts sector. Our work connects residents, empowers youth, and builds pride in local talent across rural Northwestern Ontario.
Learn more about our programs, events, and opportunities at Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture.