School of Music Researcher Curates Acadian Dance Exhibition
On June 19, 2016, Dr. Meghan Forsyth (Project Coordinator at the Research Centre for Music, Media and Place (MMaP) and Adjunct Professor in the School of Music) opened a new exhibition she curated on Acadian dance traditions at the Acadian Museum of Prince Edward Island. The interactive, bilingual exhibition, entitled 鈥Dansez! Acadian Dance Traditions on Prince Edward Island, Past and Present鈥 will be on display until December 2016. There is also an accompanying website () that features photos, videos and guest contributions by leading scholars and dance practitioners. The exhibition documents step dancing and 鈥渟et鈥 dancing traditions and their associated musical traditions through oral histories and archival photographs, audio recordings and videos. Visitors can contribute their own memories and even have the opportunity to learn a few step dance steps and perform danse assise (seated step dancing) at two iPad stations.
This project draws on Dr. Forsyth鈥檚 ethnographic, archival and collaborative field research in the Island Acadian community between 2006 and 2013. 鈥淭here has been a lot of interest from the community in recent years in older forms of Acadian step dancing and set dancing,鈥 said Dr. Forsyth. 鈥淲hat has been most exciting about this project is the opportunity to collaborate with such a diverse team of people鈥揷ulture-bearers, community members, regional scholars, internationally renowned dancers, musicians and choreographers, museum and arts sector colleagues, archivists, community groups, teachers, students and technical professionals鈥攁nd to see peoples鈥 reactions to the old photos and videos we unearthed and digitized.鈥 The project was received generous funding from the SSHRC Connection Grant program, the Helen Creighton Folklore Society and la F茅d茅ration culturelle de l鈥櫭巐e-du-Prince-脡douard.