Skip to main content

Up where she belongs

Handmade instruments are part of the Cradleboard Teaching Project Buffy Sainte-Marie founded in 1997. Photo by ROBERT SNOWBIRD

Amid the works in Buffy Sainte-Marie: Pathfinder are the archeological relics the folk-music legend used to create them.

Under glass at Urban Shaman Contemporary Aboriginal Art in Winnipeg is an Apple Macintosh computer, circa 1984, its motherboard and the 3.5-inch floppy disks that stored MacPaint files the 80-year-old artist made that became vivid prints that adorn Urban Shaman’s walls.

The ground-breaking computer, which was built with only 128 kilobytes of memory, is as much of an Information Age antiquity as the hammers, chisels, brushes and paint artists have used for millennia that are part of museum exhibitions around the world.

To read more of this story first reported by the Winnipeg Free Press, click here.

This content is made available to Canada's National Observer readers as part of an agreement with the Winnipeg Free Press that sees our two trusted news brands collaborate to better cover Canada. Questions about Winnipeg Free Press content can be directed to [email protected].

Comments