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The Arts Incubator

Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario

The Under $100 Art Show Winnipeg is coming to Winnipeg this August as a four-day celebration of affordable, original, and locally made art, featuring thousands of artworks priced under $100 and showcasing a dynamic mix of emerging and established Winnipeg artists. This highly anticipated Winnipeg art event offers a vibrant, family-friendly atmosphere with live music throughout the weekend, making it one of the most exciting cultural events in the city for summer 2026. With convenient timed-entry tickets designed to ensure a smooth and flexible visitor experience, guests can enter during their selected arrival window and explore the show at their own pace during opening night (5:00 PM–10:00 PM) and weekend hours (Friday–Sunday, 11:00 AM–7:00 PM). Perfect for collectors, art lovers, and casual visitors alike, the Under $100 Art Show Winnipeg is a must-visit destination for discovering affordable art in Winnipeg, supporting local artists, and enjoying a lively, accessible creative experience—plus kids 16 and under attend free.
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Your Studio Is A Cage

Creating in the wild builds a creative backbone that no climate-controlled studio session can ever replicate.
Jamie Bell 28 Jan 2026
Background for Your Studio Is A Cage

Why taking your art outdoors is the ultimate hack for Northwestern Ontario creatives today.

Your studio is actually killing your creativity and you need to get out immediately.

Everyone tells you that you need a pristine, white-walled sanctuary to be a “real” artist, but honestly, that is a total scam. If you are stuck in a basement in Thunder Bay or a cramped apartment in Kenora, you are just recycling the same stale air and the same tired ideas. Taking your art outdoors is not some granola-girl aesthetic choice; it is a tactical move to hijack your brain’s dopamine receptors and find a flow state that does not feel forced. The bush is not just for hikers and hunters; it is the largest, most vibrant gallery space you will ever own, and the rent is literally free.

Think about the sheer scale of the Boreal forest or the way the light hits the Shield at four in the afternoon. When you are lugging your sketchbook or your camera gear out onto a trail, you are practicing a form of “extreme mindfulness” without the cringey vibes. You stop obsessing over whether your line work is perfect because the wind is moving your paper and the blackflies are biting, and suddenly, you are just doing the thing. It is gritty, it is messy, and it is exactly the kind of friction your creative process needs to stop being so precious and start being real.

There is a specific kind of resilience that comes from creating in the wild. If you can manage to capture the vibe of a rushing river in the rainy season or sketch a rugged coastline while your fingers are a little numb, you are building a creative backbone that no studio session can replicate. This is ACT in the wild: accepting the weather sucks, committing to the sketch anyway, and finding value in the struggle. You are not just making “nature art”—you are becoming the kind of person who can handle the elements, which makes you a terrifyingly good artist in any environment.

We need to stop gatekeeping the “outdoorsy” label for people in expensive fleece vests. If you are a local creative, the park down the street or the random trail behind the gas station belongs to you just as much as anyone else. Start a tiny art collective, drag three friends to a lookout point, and just make stuff without the pressure of a “finished product.” We are building a northern arts scene that does not wait for permission from Toronto or Vancouver, and that starts with us taking up space in our own backyard.

So, pack the bag, ditch the ring light, and go get some actual dirt under your fingernails. The world does not need more polished, algorithm-friendly content created in a vacuum; it needs the raw, jagged energy of someone who actually looked at a real horizon today. You are not “going for a walk,” you are conducting a high-stakes investigation into your own potential. Go win your lane in the fresh air and see how much faster your brain starts firing when it is not staring at a drywall box.

Your Studio Is A Cage

Exploring the arts in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario

With activities rooted in our Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario hubs, we’re exploring arts, culture, and recreation programming that brings our communities 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.

Explore more mindset posts and random thoughts with Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture.

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Jamie Bell is a Winnipeg-based interdisciplinary artist and strategist working at the intersection of media arts, community engagement, and public affairs. Among others, his work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, with a focus on participatory media, strategic communications, and arts-based collaboration across northern and urban contexts.

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Tags: Manitoba Northwestern Ontario Arts Winnipeg

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The Under $100 Art Show is coming to Winnipeg August 13-16, 2026. Get your tickets now for this amazing event! The Art Spot Canada Under $100 Art Exhibition is coming to Winnipeg, Manitoba this August! ART SPOT was created in 2008 in Calgary to support local emerging artists.  ART SPOT has curated and facilitated over 100 successful art events, including solo exhibitions, group exhibitions, workshops, concerts, body painting competitions, markets, community events and more.

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MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
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