Where the (he)art is: For this PEI artist, it took coming home to find her true calling

Megan Stewart had to get some distance to find out that she could create the art scene she was looking for

Image | Megan Stewart

Caption: (CBC Arts)

Megan Stewart(external link) is the co-creator behind several of P.E.I's local indie arts institutions of the past few years — namely the March of the Crows(external link), an annual procession; the Island Fringe Festival(external link), P.E.I's first and only festival for indie theatre; and the River Clyde Pageant(external link), an annual community performance about water issues.
But when Stewart was a teenager, she couldn't wait to move away from Charlottetown. As she'll tell you in this video, she didn't feel like she could be part of the kind of art scene she was looking for in P.E.I.

Watch the video:

Media Video | Exhibitionists : Megan Stewart and the P.E.I. art scene

Caption: Megan Stewart on why it took going away for a while for her to build an art scene in P.E.I.

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
It wasn't until she was invited back one summer by Art in the Open(external link) to create what would become the March of the Crows that she realized she could have a larger impact making art in a smaller town than a big city. And she also found a community waiting for her — including performers and her musical director, Marti Hopson(external link).
As Stewart reflects: "I thought I knew what the arts community was, but once I put out an invitation for others to join, so many different types of people came out of the woodworks to get involved. And the process has redefined what I think of as an arts community."
Follow Megan Stewart here(external link).

Image | River Clyde Pageant

Caption: (CBC Arts)

Image | River Clyde Pageant

Caption: (CBC Arts)

Image | River Clyde Pageant

Caption: (CBC Arts)

Music courtesy of Petunia(external link), the River Clyde Pageant and George Rahi(external link); travel support courtesy of Simon Fraser University(external link); camerawork by Millefiore Clarkes(external link) and sound by Steven Sych.
This short doc is the third part of a trilogy about community-created performances in P.E.I., including the River Clyde Pageant and the March of the Crows.
Stream CBC Arts: Exhibitionists(external link) or catch it on CBC Television Friday nights at 11:30pm (12am NT) and Sundays at 3:30pm (4pm NT). Watch more videos here(external link).