Supporting
Prince Edward Island’s
Creative Workers
Current Projects
Current Opportunities
Learning, training, networking, funding, and employment opportunities available on PEI and beyond.
Updated weekly.
ArtMobile
Creative Sector Opportunities
Learning, training, networking, funding, and employment opportunities available on Prince Edward Island and beyond.
Updated weekly.
Arts, Access & Well-Being Conference
The 2025 Creative Well-Being Conference will be held Friday, November 7th from 10:00am to 4:30pm at the Charlottetown Library Learning Centre.
The conference will feature a wide range of presentations, panels and discussions on topics like balancing the need to make art with the need to make a living, the results of our Accessibility and Barriers survey and extending the social safety net for self-employed arts workers.
Artmobile
Art Night
Art Night is when PEI’s creative community comes together to connect. It’s a time to meet and and learn from our peers from all disciplines while enjoying presentations and activities tailored for an audience of creative sector workers.
Art Night happens on the first Friday of the month from October through June, excluding January.
CultureBrew.Art is a digital platform that promotes and fosters intersectional interculturalism throughout the performing, literary, media and visual arts.
Its central tool is a national searchable database of Indigenous and racialized artists to which theatres, dance and opera companies, film/TV casting professionals, indie directors/producers, schools, community and social service non-profits, government agencies, media outlets, ad agencies, and more may access as subscribers.
Peer Support Group for Artists with a Disability or Neurodivergence
Are you a Neurodiverse and/or Disabled artist looking for a supportive, welcoming space to connect, create, and share with others who get it? Come join us for our bi-weekly Peer Support Group at the Creative PEI office space in downtown Charlottetown. This group is a casual, peer-led gathering where artists can bring their full selves — radically unmasked. Whether you’re a visual artist, writer, musician, performer, or just figuring out your creative identity, you’re welcome here.
PEI.art – Creator Directory
PEI.art is a beautiful and feature-rich online directory that aggregates relevant information on the amazing individuals, businesses, and organizations that make up our creative sector. Create your profile today.
Envisioning a Summerside Arts Hub
Artists, makers, entrepreneurs, community members, and anyone interested in creative spaces are invited to visit our new forum to contribute your ideas about the need for a shared creative space in Summerside, its potential purpose, and the kinds of activities and collaborations it could support. Let’s explore how this kind of project could take shape.
Arts, Access & Well-Being Conference
The 2025 Creative Well-Being Conference will be held Friday, November 7th from 10:00am to 4:30pm at the Charlottetown Library Learning Centre.
The conference will feature a wide range of presentations, panels and discussions on topics like balancing the need to make art with the need to make a living, the results of our Accessibility and Barriers survey and extending the social safety net for self-employed arts workers.
CreativePEI is funded in whole or in part by the Canada/Prince Edward Island Labour Market Agreements.
Acknowledgement
We acknowledge that the land on which we operate is the traditional unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq Peoples. This territory is covered by the “Treaties of Peace and Friendship” which Mi’kmaq Peoples first signed with the British Crown in 1725. The treaties did not deal with surrender of lands and resources but in fact recognized Mi’kmaq title and established the rules for what was to be an ongoing relationship between nations. We recognize that true reconciliation is an ongoing process. Acknowledging territory and First Peoples should take place within the larger context of genuine and ongoing work to forge real understanding, and to challenge the legacies of colonialism.