13 Cedars is a project space housed in a renovated barn located rurally in Rowley, New Brunswick, between the city of Saint John and the oceanside village of St. Martins.

Address: 933 Route 111, Rowley, NB E2S 2C9

Inquiries:
@thirteencedars
thirteencedars@gmail.com

Upcoming:
Andy Olsen, fall 2025

Past:

Labyrinth Keeper Emily Harrison, exhibition text by Emma Walter
August 9-10, 2025

Everyone’s a blob. David Poolman & Kathryn Mockler
July 19, 2025

Behind Moving Eyelids Jeneca Klausen & Caitlin Lapeña
May 10-11, 2025

The Shadow Room Joey Haley
April 12-13, 2025

  • 13 Cedars is located on Mi’kma’ki, the unceded and ancestral territory of the Mi’kmaq People, within the wider Wabanaki Confederacy. As descendants of immigrants and settlers on this land, it is our responsibility to be stewards of the natural space that we are living and working in.

  • As a self-funded, artist-run space, 13 Cedars strives to create a nurturing experience for all artists exhibiting. We are not focused on sales but rather providing an opportunity for exhibiting in a low-stress environment. When sales do occur, we take 25% to cover costs rather than the typical model of 50%. 

  • 13 Cedars is a pro-Palestinian space. We do not welcome any rhetoric that adheres to Zionist values. We do not support oppression in any form and support all resistance to oppression, whatever form that may be enacted. 

  • 13 Cedars is invitation only and welcomes artists who reflect our values, which are focused on artists who are: politically and socially aligned with anarchism, socialism, and anti-capitalism, living with mental health/addiction conditions, feminist, disabled, BIPOC, and 2SLGBTQIA+.

 

Land and Waters Acknowledgement for so-called “Rowley, New Brunswick”, Mi’kma’ki / Wabanaki

We recognize that the land and waters where we live, learn, and cultivate sanctuary are part of Mi’kma’ki, the unceded and ancestral territory of the Mi’kmaq People, within the wider Wabanaki Confederacy. Our commitment to this place grows through small, deliberate acts: tending soil without harm, walking the woods with gratitude, and standing as guardians against exploitation. We carry a responsibility to listen deeply—to the stories of this land’s first stewards, to the artists and knowledge-keepers who sustain these relationships, and to the more-than-human kin who call this place home.