Skip to content

The Arts Incubator

Winnipeg, Manitoba

This year's spring arts exhibition will take place in Northwestern Ontario!
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Artists, Collaborators And Mentors
    • Winnipeg, Manitoba
    • Minneapolis, Minnesota
    • Funders and Supporters
      • Canada Council for the Arts
      • Global Dignity Canada
      • Labovitz School of Business and Economics
      • Manitoba Arts Council
      • Local Services Board of Melgund
      • Minneapolis College of Art and Design
      • Ontario Arts Council
    • Reports
      • 2023-2024 Report
      • 2021-2022 Report
    • Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Tracker
    • Resources
      • Adaptive Phased Management
      • Climate CO-STAR Builder (ECO_STAR)
      • Entrepreneurship Resources
      • Framework for Recreation in Canada
      • Funding Programs and Sources
      • Parks for All
      • The Common Vision
  • Projects
    • Books and Short Stories
      • Barnes and Noble
      • Ex Libris
      • Hugendubel
      • Lehmanns Media
      • Palace Marketplace
      • Orell Füssli
      • Standaard Boekhandel
      • Thalia
      • Unfinished Tales and Short Stories
      • BL Stories. Unbound.
    • EPUB Reader
    • Food Security
      • Manitoba: Come Eat With Me Cookbook
      • Melgund: Come Eat With Us Cookbook
      • Towards a Framework for Northern Food Systems Innovation
      • Food Preservation Training and Curriculum Development
      • Relationship Development and Engagement with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and University of Minnesota Duluth
      • Relationship Development and Engagement Activities with the University of the Arctic
      • The Art of Canning and Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Incubating Artificial Intelligence
      • Artist Bio Builder Writing Tool
      • Art Idea Generator
      • Asteroids
      • ECO-STAR North
      • Inuit Innovators
      • Proposal Library
      • Step Inside Your Content
      • The Creative Entrepreneurship CO-STAR Guide
      • Winter City Stories
    • Media Arts and Storytelling
    • 创新与灵感
    • Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project
    • Melgund 综合核影响 评估项目
    • Melgund Township Oral History Project
    • Stories & Publishing Skills
      • Unfinished Tales and Short Stories
      • BL Stories. Unbound.
      • Bookstore Links
      • Spring Short Stories
      • Winter Stories
    • Youth Engagement
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Arts & Creative Leadership
    • Borups Corners News
    • Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Motivation Matters!
    • Food Security and Innovation
    • Melgund Township News
    • Photos and Short Stories
    • Unfinished Tales: Methods in Generative Storywork
    • Winnipeg
  • Events
  • Recreation
    • Art Borups Corners
    • Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Thoughts
  • The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint
  • Thoughts

The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint

You don't need to exorcise the parts of you that feel cringe or outdated.
The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 16 Mar 2026
Background for The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint

Finding strength in the spectral echoes of your past creative failures and memories.

Why are you so haunted by the ghosts of the person you used to be?

You walk past the ghost signs on the sides of the brick warehouses in the Exchange District every morning, those fading advertisements for flour and tractor parts that haven’t existed for eighty years. They aren’t scars; they are just layers of a story that refuses to be completely painted over. Your own internal life is much the same, a collection of previous versions that didn’t quite make the cut but refuse to vacate the premises. You carry the faint outlines of every project you abandoned and every awkward conversation you had at a house party in Wolseley. Instead of trying to scrub the wall clean, maybe you should just lean into the transparency of it all.

In our local arts scene, there is a frantic pressure to be “new,” to be the latest signal cutting through the noise. But the most interesting work usually comes from the echoes. You are a repository of every failed attempt at a poem, every blurry photo, and every demo track that never left your hard drive. We often treat our memories like a storage unit that needs to be organized or emptied, but memory is actually more like dust motes dancing in a single beam of light in a dark room. It provides the texture for the air you’re currently breathing. You only notice it when the light hits a certain way, but it is always there, giving your present moment its weight and its grit.

There is a specific kind of dignity in acknowledging the “archive” of your own failures. Living in a city where the winter forces us into long periods of isolation, it is easy to get stuck in a loop of spectral “what ifs.” What if you had moved to a bigger city? What if you had taken that corporate gig instead of sticking with the studio? These questions are just shadows moving across the floor of your mind. They are as persistent as the sound of the trains shunting in the CP yards at 3 AM—a low, industrial haunting that tells you the world is still moving while you wait for a breakthrough.

Kindness to yourself looks like giving your past versions a place to sit at the table. You don’t need to exorcise the parts of you that feel “cringe” or outdated. Those fragments are the very things that give your current work its resonance and its depth. When you create from a place of spectral awareness, you aren’t just making something for the “now.” You are participating in a long, echoing conversation with every person who stood on this same patch of prairie mud before you were even a thought. You are building a bridge out of the very dust of your previous attempts, and that bridge is stronger for its complexity.

The creative soul in Winnipeg isn’t a polished stone; it is a porous surface. It is about letting the past bleed through the present until the layers become a rich, complicated accumulation of experience. You aren’t losing time; you are accumulating history. Every time you pick up a camera or a pen, you are summoning all those ghosts to help you hold the weight of the current moment. It is okay if the final result is a bit blurry or out of focus. The most honest things are often the ones that refuse to be pinned down by a single, sharp definition.

The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint

Thoughts on art and the state of the world!

This section presents reflections, observations, and commentary on issues affecting communities in Manitoba, Northwestern Ontario, and beyond. It focuses on local perspectives, community dynamics, and topics relevant to residents, offering insight into social, cultural, and civic matters.

Content is designed to inform, provide context, and highlight developments or considerations that impact everyday life and community well-being. Readers can engage with current discussions, explore diverse viewpoints, and stay connected to ongoing conversations shaping the region.

Explore more on our thoughts page.

About the Author

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg

Administrator

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg is a participatory arts collective and living lab, based in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. It's a space where innovation and creativity thrive. It's latest iteration was launched in 2021 with funding and support from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. Today, working with students and faculty from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, we fuse traditional and participatory media arts with artificial intelligence, music, storytelling and community-driven, land-based artist residencies to cultivate new voices and bold ideas. Whether through collaborative projects or immersive experiences, our small but vibrant community supports creators to explore, experiment, and connect. Join us at the intersection of artistry, technology, culture and community—where every moment is a new opportunity to create.

Visit Website View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: The Bench Where It Happens
Next: The Community Myth

Related News

This little Winnipeg resident is braving the last gasp of winter. Spring is on the way, and even the squirrels in Winnipeg can feel it! Photo: Tony Eetak
  • Thoughts

Circuit Bending the Burnout

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 12 Mar 2026
We learned how to use audio visualizers using GPT 4 Turbo (GPT 4.5) and Javascript. It was lots of fun!
  • Thoughts

The High-Speed Vertigo of Being Known

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 8 Mar 2026
A female wolf spider in Northwestern Ontario carries her large, round egg sac. This mother keeps her future spiderlings safe by attaching the sac directly to her body, a clear example of maternal care.
  • Thoughts

The Nutrient Density of the Dark

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 6 Mar 2026

Recent Posts

  • The Community Myth
  • The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint
  • The Bench Where It Happens
  • Vision & Voice
  • Winter’s Last Stand

Motivational Short Stories

Explore our collection of inspirational and motivational short stories, carefully curated to spark hope, resilience, and personal growth. Each uplifting story delivers gentle guidance, powerful life lessons, and meaningful reminders rooted in dignity, integrity, courage, and core values. Designed for daily encouragement and positive mindset shifts, these short inspirational reads help you stay grounded, build inner strength, and embrace every day with purpose, optimism, and possibility. Whether you’re seeking motivational stories for tough times or thoughtful reflections to inspire success and self-improvement, you’ll find words here that encourage growth, perseverance, and a life lived with intention.

You may have missed

direction-measured-in-poplar-bark.jpg
  • Arts & Creative Leadership

The Community Myth

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 16 Mar 2026
Take a moment to look up. The intricate beauty of the trees in our parks offers a wonderful escape and a refreshing dose of nature's artistry.
  • Thoughts

The Archive of Your Own Fading Paint

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 16 Mar 2026
Winter Benches - Winnipeg Photography
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Uncategorized
  • Winnipeg

The Bench Where It Happens

Jamie Bell 16 Mar 2026
The Melgund Township Spring 2026 Arts Exhibition is proud to showcase Inuk artist Tony Eetak at the Dyment Recreation Hall. A rising talent in the Canadian art scene, Eetak is a Winnipeg-based photographer and musician known for blending multimedia disciplines. His creative projects have earned prestigious backing from the Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council, Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program.
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

Vision & Voice

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg 15 Mar 2026

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
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.