Santa Fean NOW August 28 2014 Digital Edition

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now The City of Santa Fe Event Calendar

santafeanNOW.com PRESENTED IN COOPERATION WITH ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL NORTH

this week’s

top nightlife

and entertainment

picks

week of August 28


The Only 3 Generation, Full-time, Female, Painting Dynasty Recorded in History

Margarete Bagshaw “Chakra Girl” 60” X 48” oil on Belgian linen

Helen Hardin (1943 - 1984)

Pablita Velarde (1918 - 2006)

201 Galisteo St. Santa Fe, NM 505-988-2024 www.goldendawngallery.com


Selections from a Santa Fe Collection

and a New Series by Danielle Frankenthal August 14 - September 9, 2014 Carol Anthony, Camille Bombois, John Fincher, Max Gunther, Jill Moser, Joseph Marioni, Carol Mothner, Tom Palmore, Florence Pierce, Paul Pletka, Ford Ruthling, Elias Rivera, Antoine Tzapoff, Dick Wray, Melissa Zink, Native American Aniquities 217 W. Water Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 ph: 505. 660. 4393 www.wadewilsonart.com

SANTA FE


now |

Large-scale projects and small-scale personal works in an impressive array of media by artist, author and educator Judy Chicago. This exhibition focuses on works produced in the last three decades while the artist has been living and working in New Mexico.

PUBLISHER’S NOTE

2014

|

AT THE END OF HIS CONCERT at the Santa Fe Opera on August 24, Tony Bennett sang a song without the use of a microphone, filling up the entire outdoor venue with nothing more than the sheer power of his voice. The sold-out audience was mesmerized and silent while witnessing this feat. It was an incredible, special moment that could only come from witnessing a live performance. YouTube or other electronic media can’t touch that kind of experience. Special moments come at art shows as well. While a painting can be viewed online, the nuances of the brushstrokes, the unique colors, and the dramatic lighting don’t make the same impact via a computer screen. The specialness of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa best translates when you’re standing in front of it in The Louvre. This weekend is filled with artistic offerings that can provide special moments. Whether it’s a gallery opening or a musical performance, get out there and experience it live. And above all, look for those special moments. They’re all around us and can come from unexpected places, like the vocal cords of an 88-year-old legend.

Bruce Adams

Publisher

DAVID ROBIN

Judy Chicago, The Return of the Butterfly, from A Retrospective in a Box, 2012. Lithograph. Collection of the New Mexico Museum of Art, museum purchase, 2013.

AUG 28 – SEP 3

j oin us for these rel ated pro gr a ms

s at u rday, au g u s t 3 0 Noon –4 p.m. Cat Adoption Event. Meet cats and kittens in need of loving homes. Sponsored by Santa Fe Animal Shelter & Humane Society. 1–3:30 p.m. Collage Workshop. “Homage to Your Pet or Favorite Animal.” Inspired by Judy Chicago’s Kitty City series, participants will create a mixed-media project. Free with regular museum admission. Pre-register at NMMOAworkshops2014@gmail.com.

Actor, director, Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, and Santa Fe resident Sam Shepard was spotted at Coyote Cafe. For more images of recent goings-on around town, check out Seen Around on page 18.

nmartmuseum.org

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LISA LAW

107 W. PALACE AVE | ON THE PLAZA IN SANTA FE | 505.476.5072


Matthew Higginbotham Touching Land

“Clouds over Wild Sunflowers” 22 x 22 oil

exHibiTioN daTeS ReCepTioN FoR THe

august 26 through September 8 aRTiST Friday, august 29 5 pm - 8 pm

Waxlander Gallery celebrating thirty years of excellence

622 Canyon Road • Santa Fe, NM 87501 waxlander.com • 505.984.2202 • 800.342.2202


now

Welcome to Santa Fe! As a creative, cultural hub, Santa Fe offers an abundance of the world’s best art, attractions, and entertainment opportunities. Santa Fean NOW is an excellent source of information for all that’s happening around town. Whether you’re a local or a tourist visiting for the first time or the 100th, NOW ’s complete listings of everything from gallery openings to live music events will help you make the most of the city. We look forward to seeing you around the City Different. Should you need any extra tips, please stop by our information centers at the Santa Fe Railyard or off the Plaza at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center.

bruce adams

PUBLISHER

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER

EDITOR CALENDAR EDITOR

amy hegarty samantha schwirck

GRAPHIC DESIGNER ADDITIONAL DESIGN

whitney stewart

michelle odom, sybil watson

OPERATIONS MANAGER

Wishing you a wonderful time,

b.y. cooper

ginny stewart-jaramillo

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER, SALES MANAGER

Javier M. Gonzales City of Santa Fe, Mayor

MARKETING CONSULTANT

Randy Randall TOURISM Santa Fe, Director

david wilkinson

andrea nagler

WRITERS

ashley m. biggers, cristina olds phil parker, zélie pollon, emily van cleve

A PUBLICATION OF BELLA MEDIA, LLC

JUXTAPROSE

FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION

215 W San Francisco St, Ste 300 Santa Fe, NM 87501 Telephone 505-983-1444 Fax 505-983-1555 info@santafean.com santafeanNOW.com

Forthcoming, AC/Panel, 48" x 54"

Copyright 2014. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

OPENING RECEPTION AUGUST 29, 5-8 pm (575) 642-4981 • DRCONTEMPORARY.COM • Corner of Lincoln & Marcy 4

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Santa Fean NOW Volume 1, Number 16, Week of August 28, 2014. Published by Bella Media, LLC at 215 W San Francisco St, Ste 300, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA, 505-983-1444 © Copyright 2014 by Bella Media, LLC. All rights reserved.

On the cover: Brad Wilson, Long Eared Owl #1, Española, NM, 2011, archival digital pigment print, 20 x 29". See page 25 for more.


SPeciAl exhibitioN by

S tA r l i A N A y o r k

Wisdom Keepers Friday, September 5th 5:00 - 7:30 p.m.

The Art Spirit (Maria Martinez)

125 W. Palace Ave.

W

Santa Fe, NM

W

505.501.6555

W

www.SorrelSky.com


the

oper

#HowToSantaFe’s Instameet at Ski Santa Fe

@josephhartphoto

@pyroman92

@wvanbeckum

@tristanmlove

Instameet is part of #HowToSanta Fe, a campaign to promote local culture and businesses via social media.

don’t look back I wonder if this new Ninja Turtles movie closed a window into my childhood. Twenty-four years ago, I was a kid in big glasses and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were “the most important thing in my life,” according to an autobiography on construction paper in my mom’s hope chest. Now full-grown and bald, with a kid of my own, I walked out of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles lacking the most basic thing a movie can give a viewer: an opinion. It isn’t good and it isn’t bad. It’s like buying a ticket to breathe air. The original live-action TMNT famously featured actors in rubber costumes with robotic heads. I was 9 in 1990, and that movie made my head explode. Now Raphael, Michelangelo, et al are 6

santafeanNOW.com

This weekend, you can join local and national photographers snapping photos of anything and everything Santa Fe at the Southwest’s first-ever Instameet event, being held at Ski Santa Fe. Instameet is part of #HowToSantaFe, a social media campaign that boutique creative agency 12FPS launched on behalf of the City of Santa Fe Economic Development Division to promote local culture and support local businesses. #HowToSantaFe comprises seven photo contests (held between August 15 and November 7) and two Instameets. (The second one will take place at the Center for Contemporary Arts on September 12.) Instameets provide opportunities for amateur and professional photographers to congregate at a location or event—in this case, opening day of Ski Santa Fe’s fall chairlift rides—to take photos and share them on Instagram. “In the one day during the Instameet, we expect the reach to be close to a million unique followers [on Instagram],” says 12FPS director Adam Shaening-Pokrasso, who previously described the event as “a great opportunity to put a lot of fresh content about Santa Fe into the social media spheres.” Four professional photographers with influential Instagram presences “will demonstrate techniques, so the Instameet is a touch educational,” Shaening-Pokrasso adds, “but it’s also about cultivating community and a following for Santa Fe.” After riding the lift to the top of the mountain, participants can enjoy live music and beer at Ski Santa Fe’s lodge.—Cristina Olds #HowToSantaFe Instameet No. 1 at Ski Santa Fe, August 30, 10 am–2 pm, $8 one-way lift ride, $12 round- trip lift ride, 100 Artist Road, howtosantafe.com

rendered in cutting-edge 3-D CGI. They are what mutant turtles might actually look like if such creatures existed, and this doesn’t make a stitch of difference. Michelangelo’s still dumb. Raphael’s still angry. Leonardo’s still boring. They like pizza. They fight Shredder. A TMNT movie could be cool. The original comic, on which all this has been based, was dark. A true action director with a fondness for pulpy sci-fi—some geeky hybrid of Joss Whedon and Quentin Tarantino—could weave something great from a universe where four monster brothers train with kung fu weapons in the sewers under New York City. And as Guardians of the Galaxy just proved, CGI characters can be ridiculous yet still share brilliant chemistry with human actors. The great TMNT film won’t ever exist, and this is where the window closes on littlekid me. TMNT is generic, but it’s also a hit, knocking Guardians off its perch at the top of the box office. It’s accomplished exactly what was intended, and if I were 9 I would have been first in line, wearing a Ninja Turtles T-shirt, cracking together Ninja Turtles action figures. Young me would have loved the movie. Old me? Meh. By updating the look but keeping everything else defiantly juvenile, the filmmakers exposed Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles stars Megan Fox (right) an essential truth: and voice actors Alan Kids like dumb Ritchson, Noel Fisher, and Johnny Knoxville. stuff.—Phil Parker

PARAMOUNT PICTURES

buzz COURTESY OF 12FPS

nny


MELINDA HERRERA

The Burning of Zozobra takes place for the 90th time on Friday, August 29. For details, see page 9.

this week

August 28–September 3

August 28, 2014 NOW

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this week August 28 thursday Noonday Dialogue Pablita Velarde Museum of Indian Women in the Arts 213 Cathedral

A talk with Kathleen Wall (Jemez) to coincide with the exhibit Harvesting Traditions (see Ongoing). $10 (discounts for seniors, students, and military), 12–1 pm, 505-988-8900, PVMIWA.org.

Guesthouse Open for Dinner Santa Fe Culinary Academy 112 W San Francisco

The Guesthouse, run by the Santa Fe Culinary Academy, is open for dinner, implementing a menu, decor, and service style designed by a student in the academy’s Professional Culinary Program. Prices vary, 5:30–7:30 pm seating, 505-983-7445, ext. 9, santafeculinaryacademy.com.

Traditional New Mexican Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Hands-on class focused on traditional New Mexican cuisine. $80, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

David Frawley and Yogini Shambav 8

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Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa 1297 Bishop’s Lodge Rd

The Santa Fe Yoga Festival’s keynote lecture: Awakening Your Shakti: The Inner Power of Yoga. $25, 12 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org, santafeyogafestival.org.

Santa Fe Yoga Festival Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa 1297 Bishop’s Lodge Rd

Meditation, outdoor activities, music, and yoga with local and national presenters. See profile on page 16. Prices vary, through August 31, ticketssantafe.org, santafeyogafestival.org.

Public Reception for Three New Shows New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Thursday evening reception event for three new exhibitions: Alcove Shows 1917–1927, Delilah Montoya: Syncretism, and Cameraless. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Bob Finnie Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W Water

Great American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

ROBERT STURMAN

The four-day Santa Fe Yoga Festival kicks off on Thursday, August 28. For details, see below.

Dwight Yoakam Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Dr

A performance by American singer/songwriter Dwight Yoakam. From $52, 7:30 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Guitarras Con Sabor El Farol 808 Canyon

Live music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Paw Coal & the Clinkers Second Street Brewery at Second Street 1814 Second St “Old timey” music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Santa Fe Bandstand Closing Night Santa Fe Plaza 100 Old Santa Fe Trl

A performance by Joe West & Friends to conclude the Santa Fe Bandstand season. Free, 6–8:30 pm, santafebandstand.org.

Soulstatic La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco Country music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Summer Flamenco Series El Farol


Flamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Swing Soleil Gypsy Jazz Zia Diner 326 S Guadalupe

Jazz music. Free, 6:30–8:30 pm, 505-988-7008, ziadiner.com.

O’KEEFFE! Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta

A touring one-woman play about Georgia O’Keeffe starring acclaimed Dallas actress Carolyn Wickwire that chronicles the art, life, and loves of the iconic 20th century artist. $20, 7:30 pm, 972-922-3440, okeeffe-santafe.brownpapertickets.com.

The Santa Fe Fiesta Melodrama Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E DeVargas

A performance of works by anonymous writers poking good fun at Sante Fe. Directed by Andy Pimm. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

August 29 friday Drop in and Draw New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Pencils and drawing boards are available for visitors. $6–$9 (kids free), 12–1 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Friday Night Get Together Gallery 901 and Ronnie Layden Fine Art 901 Canyon

Music and refreshments in the courtyard. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-670-6793, ronnielaydenfineart.com.

Last Friday Art Walk Railyard Arts District Santa Fe Railyard

Ten galleries and SITE Santa Fe open their doors on the last Friday of each month. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-982-3373, railyardsantafe.com.

Santa Fe Fiestas Fine Art & Crafts Market Santa Fe Plaza 100 Old Santa Fe Trl

A juried show of jewelry, pottery, clothing, paintings, and more. Free, 9 am–5 pm, through September 1, 505-913-1517, santafefiesta.org.

The Burning of Zozobra Fort Marcy Park 490 Bishop’s Lodge Rd

For the 90th time, the towering Old Man Gloom marionette (aka Zozobra) will go down in a blaze of fireworks to the cheers of thousands of onlookers. $10 (kids 10 and under free), 4 pm until late, 855-ZOZOBRA, burnzozobra.com.

Free, reception 5–7:30 pm, 505-995-8513, tanseycontemporary.com.

BLUE LOGIC PHOTOGRAPHY

808 Canyon

Bob Finnie Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W Water August 28–31: O’KEEFFE! at Warehouse 21

Frozen Santa Fe Railyard Park Guadalupe and Paseo de Peralta

Outdoor screening of the record-setting animated film. Free, sunset, 505-983-5483, heathconcerts.org.

Cuisines of Mexico Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Hands-on class focused on Mexican cuisine. $82, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

A Walk in the Clouds EVOKE Contemporary 550 S Guadalupe

Works by the late New Mexico painter Louisa McElwain. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-995-9902, evokecontemporary.com.

Here and Now, Now and Then Wheelhouse Art 418 Montezuma

An exhibition of mixed-media works by Margaret Denney that addresses consumer culture, mass production, and the illusion of choice generated by these issues. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-919-9553, wheelhouseart.com.

Juxtaprose Series David Rothermel Contemporary 142 Lincoln, Ste 102

Paintings by David Rothermel. Free, reception 5–8 pm, 575-642-4981, drfa-sf.com.

Poems of Divine Colors Catenary Art Gallery 616 ½ Canyon

Watercolor paintings by Vassia Alaykova. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-982-2700, catenaryartgallery.com.

Touching Land Waxlander Gallery 622 Canyon

Paintings by Matthew Higginbotham. See profile on page 23. Free, reception 5–7:30 pm, 505-984-2202, waxlander.com.

Women in Cultural Context: A Multi-Media Group Exhibition Tansey Contemporary 652 Canyon

Gallery artists explore women’s responses to cultural roles and expectations. See preview on page 22.

Great American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Chango Junction 530 S Guadalupe

Live music from a hot new cover band. Free, 10 pm–1 am, 505-988-7222, junctionsantafe.com.

Doug Montgomery Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W Water

Popular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Jazz (Off the Plaza) Meyer East Gallery 225 Canyon

Live music by Robin Holloway. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-983-1434, meyereastgallery.com.

Matthew Andrae Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trl

Brazilian/flamenco/classical music. Free, 8–11 pm, 800-727-5531, innatloretto.com.

Mushi Trio Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta Funky jazz. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Pachanga The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St Francis

Salsa, cumbia, bachata, and merengue music and dancing. $5, 9:30 pm–1:30 am, 505-992-5800, lodgeatsantafe.com.

Ronald Roybal Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta

Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. Free, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1200, ronaldroybal.com.

Sabor La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco Salsa music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Sean Healen El Farol 808 Canyon

Live music. $5, 9–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

The Three Faces of Jazz El Mesón 213 Washington

Jazz piano trio. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, August 28, 2014 NOW

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505-983-6756, elmeson-santafe.com.

santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Classical Meets Flamenco Concert Series Garrett’s Desert Inn 311 Old Santa Fe Trl

Beckonings and Reckonings Pippin Contemporary 200 Canyon

Classical guitarist David Wescott Yard and flamenco/classical guitarist and vocalist Mito de Soto. Presented by Starlight Productions. $10–$15, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1851, davidwyard.com.

New work by abstract expressionist painter Stephanie Shank. Free, reception 4–6 pm, 505-795-7476, pippincontemporary.com.

R. C. Gorman Grand Opening Celebration R. C. Gorman Navajo Gallery 203 W San Francisco

O’KEEFFE! Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta

Reception celebrating the Santa Fe location of the Taos- and Scottsdale-based gallery, which honors the work of Navajo artist R. C. Gorman. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-982-2888, rcgormangallery.com.

A touring one-woman play about Georgia O’Keeffe starring acclaimed Dallas actress Carolyn Wickwire that chronicles the art, life, and loves of the iconic 20th century artist. $20, 8 pm, 972-922-3440, okeeffe-santafe.brownpapertickets.com.

Bob Finnie Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W Water

August 30 saturday Art-Making Workshop: Homage to Your Pet or Favorite Animal New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Create a mixed-media project to honor your favorite animal. Held in conjunction with artist Judy Chicago’s Kitty City project. $6–$9 (free with museum admission), 1–3:30 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Artist Demonstration Day with Linda Dobkin Jane Hamilton Fine Art 200 Canyon, Ste D

Meet (and watch in action) oil painter Linda Dobkin, whose classic still lifes stand out for their quality and fine details. Free, 11 am–4 pm, 505-465-2655, janehamiltonfineart.com.

Labor Day Arts and Crafts Market Santa Fe Plaza 80 E San Francisco

An annual juried fine arts and crafts market with more than 100 artists. Free, 9 am–5 pm, through August 31, 505-913-1312, santafefiesta.org.

Santa Fe Artists Market Railyard Park 1611 Paseo de Peralta

Painting, pottery, jewelry, photography, and more by local artists. Free, 8 am–1 pm, 505-310-1555, santafeartistsmarket.com.

Santa Fe Society of Artists Fine Art Show First National Bank of Santa Fe Parking Lot 107 W San Francisco

A diverse group of works by premier local artists are on view in an outdoor fine art show. Free, all day, 505-926-1497, santafesocietyofartists.com.

Ohori’s Coffee Roasters’ 30th Anniversary Party Luna Center 505 Cerrillos

Locally owned Ohori’s celebrates its 30th anniversary 10

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Great American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

August 30: Artist Demonstration Day with Linda Dobkin at Jane Hamilton Fine Art

with a community party featuring Hawaiian-themed music by Ainoa (a traditional Hawaiian ensemble) and new coffee offerings. Free, 4–6 pm, 505-982-9692, ohoriscoffee.com.

Santa Fe Farmers Market Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Fresh produce from local vendors. Free, 7 am–1 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.com.

Southwest Party Fare Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Hands-on class focused on Southwest party foods. $80, 10 am, 505-983-5411,

Send us your event information! To have your event listed in the calendar section of NOW, please either email your information and any related photos to calendar@santafean.com or self-post your event at santafeanNOW.com. All material must be emailed or self-posted two weeks prior to NOW’s Thursday publication date. All submissions are welcome, but events will be included in NOW as space allows.

Girls Night Out El Farol 808 Canyon

Live music. $5, 9–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar with John Serkin Sweetwater Harvest Kitchen 1512 Pacheco Slack key guitar music. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-795-7383, sweetwatersf.com.

Matthew Andrae Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trl

Brazilian/flamenco/classical music. Free, 8–11 pm, 800-727-5531, innatloretto.com.

Pollo Frito Second Street Brewery at Second Street 1814 Second St

New Orleans–style jazz and funk music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Ronald Roybal Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta

Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. Free, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1200, ronaldroybal.com.

Sabor La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco Salsa music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

The Acadian Drifters Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta Blues/bluegrass music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Fiesta de los Niños


August 31: Performance Santa Fe Orchestra’s opening concert of its 2014–2015 season

Encore! The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

An encore presentation of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet’s July program. See profile on page 15. $25–$72, 8 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Annual children’s celebration with games, crafts, and entertainment for the whole family. $8 (kids 12 and under free), 10 am–4 pm, 505-471-2261, golondrinas.org.

O’KEEFFE! Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta

O’KEEFFE! Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta

A touring one-woman play about Georgia O’Keeffe starring acclaimed Dallas actress Carolyn Wickwire that chronicles the art, life, and loves of the iconic 20th century artist. $20, 8 pm, 972-922-3440, okeeffesantafe.brownpapertickets.com.

The Santa Fe Fiesta Melodrama Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E DeVargas

A performance of works by anonymous writers poking good fun at Sante Fe. Directed by Andy Pimm. $10–$20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 7:30 pm and 10 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

Cat Adoption Event New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Cat adoption event sponsored by the Santa Fe Animal Shelter. Free, 12–2 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

August 31 sunday Life Drawing Series

Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Dr Draw from a live model while enjoying beer and waffles. $22, 11 am–1 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Plein Air Painting on the Patio New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

The patio is open for a “personal adventure in art.” Admission to patio: free, museum admission: $6–$9, 9 am–12 pm (museum opens at 10 am), 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Santa Fe Society of Artists Fine Art Show First National Bank of Santa Fe Parking Lot 107 W San Francisco

A diverse group of works by premier local artists are on view in an outdoor fine art show. Free, all day, 505-926-1497, santafesocietyofartists.com.

The Gospel of Art

Live music. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com

Fiesta de los Niños El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos

Editor’s Pick

Annual children’s celebration with games, crafts and entertainment for the whole family. $8 (kids 12 and under free), 10 am–4 pm, 505-471-2261, golondrinas.org.

El Farol 808 Canyon

The William&Joseph Gallery 727 Canyon

The Broomdust Gospel Quartet performs in the gallery. Free, 12–2 pm, 505-982-9404, thewilliamandjosephgallery.com.

Victoria Price Reading Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma

Author Victoria Price reads from her book Vincent Price: A Daughter’s Biography. Following the reading, there will be a screening of The Abominable Dr. Phibes, starring Vincent Price. $10, 1:30–4:30 pm, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

Meditation Instruction Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo

Shinzan Palma, Upaya’s head priest, offers instruction on meditation and temple etiquette for those new to meditation. Free, 3–4 pm, 505-986-8518, upaya.org.

Doug Montgomery Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W Water

Popular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6:30–10:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Hot Honey Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta Live music. Free, 1–4 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Mariachi Extravaganza de Santa Fe Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy Mariachi performance presented by the Santa Fe Fiesta Council. $35, 7 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Nacha Mendez

A touring one-woman play about Georgia O’Keeffe starring acclaimed Dallas actress Carolyn Wickwire that chronicles the art, life, and loves of the iconic 20th century artist. $20, 2 pm, 972-922-3440, okeeffe-santafe.brownpapertickets.com.

Performance Santa Fe Opening Orchestral Concert The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

Editor’s Pick

El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos

The Performance Santa Fe Orchestra (formerly the Santa Fe Concert Association Orchestra) gives its opening concert of the 2014–2015 season. Joseph Illick conducts Musorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, selections from R. Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, and the world premiere of a work by Jack Waldenmaier. $27–$100, 4 pm, 505-988-1234, performancesantafe.org, ticketssantafe.org.

The Julesworks Follies Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma

Edition 29 of the monthly variety show The Julesworks Follies. $7, 7 pm, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

The Santa Fe Fiesta Melodrama Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E DeVargas

A performance of works by anonymous writers poking good fun at Sante Fe. Directed by Andy Pimm. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 4 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

September 1 monday Burritos

Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe Hands-on class focused on three versions of burritos. $98, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Doggie Happy Hour Junction 530 S Guadalupe

Bring your dog for happy hour on the patio. Free, August 28, 2014 NOW

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Paintings by Reg Loving, scuptures by Tim Prythero, and photographs by Steven A. Jackson. Free, through August 31, 505-795-7570, newconceptgallery.com.

4–6 pm, 505-988-7222, junctionsantafe.com.

Hillary Smith and Company El Farol 808 Canyon

Ben Nighthorse Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace

Live music. Free, 8–10 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Solo exhibition of contemporary jewelry by Ben Nighthorse. Free, through August 31, 505-501-6555, sorrelsky.com.

Tiho Dimitrov El Farol 808 Canyon

A combination of blues, rock, and pop music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Contemporary Native Group Show Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 702 ½ Canyon

September 2 tuesday

Group exhibition with works by gallery artists. Free, through August 31, 505-992-0711, chiaroscurosantafe.com.

Ditching the Cardigan Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe

Contemporary Southwest Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

New works by Jeremy Thomas. Free, through August 31, 505-989-8688, charlottejackson.com.

Hands-on class focused on contemporary Southwestern cuisine. $82, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Santa Fe Farmers Market Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Fresh produce from local vendors. Free, 8 am–1 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.com.

Canyon Road Blues Jam El Farol 808 Canyon

Live music. Free, 8:30 pm–12 am, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

September 3 wednesday Restaurant Walk Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Tour and sample dishes from some of Santa Fe’s best restaurants, including Restaurant Martín and Casa Chimayo. $115, 2 pm, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

City as Startup James A. Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos

Lecture and dialogue on the topic of urban renewal with Zappos founder and philanthropist Tony Hsieh and Santa Fe Institute Distinguished Professor Geoffrey West. Hosted by Creative Santa Fe, the Santa Fe Institute, and St. John’s College. $20, 6 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

John Kurzweg El Farol 808 Canyon

Live music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com. 12

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September 3: City as Startup lecture and dialogue with Tony Hsieh

Mariachi Matinee The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

Mariachi performance presented by the Santa Fe Fiesta Council. $7–$10, 10 am and 2 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Ongoing America’s First Nations Liquid Outpost Gallery at the Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trl

Work by American artist and photographer Angel Wynn. Free, through August 30, 505-983-6503, theliquidoutpost.com.

New Works by Chuck Sabatino McLarry Fine Art 225 Canyon

New still-life paintings by Chuck Sabatino. Free, through August 30, 505-988-1161, mclarryfineart.com.

New Works by Jeff Cochran Manitou Galleries 225 Canyon

New paintings by Jeff Cochran. Free, through August 30, 505-986-9833, manitougalleries.com.

100 Rings Patina Gallery 131 W Palace

Indian Market Group Show Manitou Galleries 123 W Palace

Works by painter Jennifer O’Cualain, sculptor Martha Pettigrew, and other gallery artists. Free, through August 31, 505-986-0440, manitougalleries.com.

Finding Center Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 702 ½ Canyon

Ceramic artist Rose B. Simpson’s latest work. Free, through August 31, 505-992-0711, chiaroscurosantafe.com.

Modern Illusions in Native American Art Winterowd Fine Art 710 Canyon

Group exhibition presented by Zuni artist Silvester Hustito and Winterowd Fine Art. Free, through August 31, 505-992-8878, fineartsantafe.com.

Myth Maker POP Gallery 142 Lincoln

Paintings by Joel Nakamura. Free, through August 31, 505-820-0788, popsantafe.com.

Sally Hall Bill Hester Fine Art 621 Canyon

Paintings by Sally Hall. Free, through August 31, 505-660-5966, billhesterfineart.com.

Shadows of Passion—Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art 820 Canyon

Artist Peter Schmid presents work from German jewelry studio Atelier. Free, through August 31, 505-986-3432, patina-gallery.com.

Victoria Taylor-Gore presents a new series of pastels inspired by love and loss in Fidelio, Carmen, and Romeo and Juliet. Free, through August 31, 505-988-1311, alexandrastevens.com.

Artifacts and Icons New Concept Gallery 610 Canyon

This Life GF Contemporary 707 Canyon


A solo exhibit of works by painter Gigi Mills. Free, through August 31, 505-983-3707, gfcontemporary.com.

John Nieto Ventana Fine Art 400 Canyon

Contemporary paintings by John Nieto. Free, through September 1, 800-746-8815, ventanafineart.com.

The Art of Nature and All That Is Natural Encaustic Art Institute Pyramid Gallery 18 County Rd, 55A, Cerrillos

Encaustic art show. Free, through September 1, 505-424-6487, eainm.com.

In the Mood ViVO Contemporary 725 Canyon

Local musicians and artists. Free, through September 2, 505-982-1320, vivocontemporary.com.

All About Bronze Manitou Galleries 225 Canyon

Works by wildlife sculptor Paul Rhymer. Free, through September 4, 505-986-9833, manitougalleries.com.

Ocean Treasures Photogenesis, A Gallery of Photography 100 E San Francisco

New work by photographer Nicholas Trofimuk. Free, through September 5, 505-989-9540, photogenesisgallery.com.

Through Our Eyes Nedra Matteucci Galleries 1075 Paseo de Peralta

Realist oil paintings by Santa Fe–based couple John and Terri Kelly Moyers. Free, through September 6, 505-982-4631, matteucci.com.

Rewind Replay: 1950–2014 David Richard Gallery 544 S Guadalupe Ongoing: Works by Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro Surroca at LewAllen Galleries

Paintings by Lilly Fenichel. Free, through September 6, 505-983-9555, davidrichardgallery.com.

William Albert Allard, Kevin Bubriski, and Greg MacGregor VERVE Gallery of Photography 219 E Marcy

Three separate but concurrent shows featuring works by documentary photographers. Free, through September 6, 505-982-5009, vervegallery.com.

The Power of a Woman Giacobbe-Fritz Fine Art 702 Canyon

Comanche painter Nocona Burgess brings attention to the culture, identity, and influence of Native American women. Free, through September 7, 505-986-1156, giacobbefritz.com.

Visual Poetry Hunter Kirkland Contemporary 200-B Canyon

An exhibit of works by abstract painter Charlotte Foust and sculptor Eric Boyer. Free, through September 7, 505-984-2111, hunterkirklandcontemporary.com.

African Art Masquerade Intrigue Gallery 238 Delgado

Vintage African masquerade masks, art from Robert Fiedler’s collection, and gallery tribal art.

Free, through September 8, 505-820-9265, intriguegallery.com.

Apocalypse Reversed Tansey Contemporary 652 Canyon

Work by Emma Varga. Free, through September 9, 505-995-8513, tanseycontemporary.com.

Selections from a Santa Fe Collection and A New Series by Danielle Frankenthal Wade Wilson Art 217 W Water

A group exhibition plus new works by painter Danielle Frankenthal. Free, through September 9, 505-660-4393, wadewilsonart.com.

Jun Kaneko Gerald Peters Gallery, 1101 Paseo de Peralta An exhibition of more than 20 past and present works by ceramist Jun Kaneko. Free, through September 14, 505-984-5700, gpgallery.com.

Jodi & Dean Balsamo Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma

Works by photographer and collage artist Jodi Balsamo and mixed-media artist Dean Balsamo. Free, through September 15, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

The Tradition of the Martinez Family of San Ildefonso Pueblo Adobe Gallery August 28, 2014 NOW

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221 Canyon

Ongoing: Mario Martinez: The Desert Never Left “The City” at MoCNA

An exhibit of pottery and paintings by Maria Martinez and her family members. Free, through September 15, 505-629-4051, adobegallery.com.

Ceramics by David Crane and porcelain stoneware by José Sierra. Free, through September 20, 505-984-1122, santafeclay.com.

Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: The Hawaii Pictures Georgia O’Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson

Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro Surroca LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta

Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro Surroca present meditative interpretations of tree branches. Free, through September 21, 505-988-3250, lewallencontemporary.com.

Smoke-fired and golf-leafed sculptures and platters by Heidi Loewen. Free, through September 30, 505-988-2225, heidiloewen.com.

Editor’s Pick

Works by photographer Steve Schapiro. Free, through September 21, 505-992-0810, monroegallery.com.

Dave Lambard: New Works Sculpture 619 619 Canyon

Dave Lambard’s newest series of paintings. Free, through September 22, 505-660-6166, sculpture619.com.

IMPACTS! Zane Bennett Contemporary Art 435 S Guadalupe

Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, in collaboration with Mizuma Art Gallery (Tokyo), presents an exhibition of artworks by artists primarily from Japan. Free, through September 22, 505-982-8111, zanebennettgallery.com.

Indian Market Show Pablo Milan Gallery 209 Galisteo

Work by fifth-generation New Mexican Pablo Milan, wildlife sculptor Jess Davila, and artist Don Brewer Wakpa. Free, through September 22, 505-820-1285, pablomilangallery.com.

Yazzie Johnson and Gail Bird Zane Bennett Contemporary Art 435 S Guadalupe

Native American contemporary jewelry. Free, through September 26, 505-982-8111, zanebennettgallery.com.

Indian Summer, 1835–1935 William R. Talbot Fine Art, Antique Maps & Prints 129 W San Francisco (Second Floor)

Group exhibition of paintings and prints, as well as early maps of the Southwest and Indian Territory. Free, through September 30, 505-982-1559, williamtalbot.com.

Smoke on the Mirror Heidi Loewen Porcelain Gallery & School 315 Johnson 14

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Pablita Velarde, Helen Hardin, and Margarete Bagshaw Golden Dawn Gallery 201 Galisteo

Paintings by acclaimed Native American artists (and family members) Pablita Velarde, Helen Hardin, and Margarete Bagshaw. Free, ongoing, 505-988-2024, goldendawngallery.com.

David Crane and José Sierra Santa Fe Clay 545 Camino de la Familia

Once Upon a Time In America Monroe Gallery of Photography 112 Don Gaspar

gallery. Free, ongoing, 505-780-8390, gallery901.org.

Avian: Selected Works from the Affinity Series photo-eye Bookstore + Project Space 376-A Garcia An exhibition of photographs by Brad Wilson. See profile on page 25. Free, through October 11, 800-227-6941, photoeye.com.

Ben Wright Art Gone Wild Galleries 130-D Lincoln

Paintings by Ben Wright. Free, through October 15, 505-820-1004, artgonewildgalleries.com.

The first exhibition to feature artwork created in Hawaii by American modernists and friends Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams. $6–$12 (kids free), through September 14, 505-946-1000, okeeffemuseum.org.

Mario Martinez: The Desert Never Left “The City” Museum of Contemporary Native Arts 108 Cathedral

Mario Martinez’s artwork pays reverence to nature through the influences derived from his deeply rooted Yaqui cultural background and commitment to Western modernism. $10 (discounts for students, members, and New Mexico residents), through December 31, 888-922-IAIA, iaia.edu.

Historic San Ildefonso Polychrome Pottery Steve Elmore Indian Art 839 Paseo de Peralta

Harvesting Traditions Pablita Velarde Museum of Indian Women in the Arts 213 Cathedral

Messages from the Wounded Healers Center for Contemporary Arts/Spector Ripps Project Space 1050 Old Pecos Trl

City Tours

Pottery from San Ildefonso Pueblo, ca. 1875–1925. Free, through October 16, 505-995-9677, elmoreindianart.com.

An exhibit of Sam Scott’s series of large paintings, The Wounded Healers. Free, through November 2, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

New Perspectives Center for Contemporary Arts/Munoz Waxman Front Gallery 1050 Old Pecos Trl

An exhibit of work by Chuck Ginnever. Free, through November 2, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

Annual Indian Market Group Show Gallery 822 822 Canyon

An exhibition showcasing new work by all represented artists. Free, ongoing, 505-989-1700, gallery822.com.

Group Exhibition Gallery 901 901 Canyon

Exhibition of works by artists including John Barker, Jody Le Cher, Sherry Ikeda, John Schaeffer, and Christine Norton at Canyon Road’s newest fine art

A solo exhibition of work by Kathleen Wall. $10 (discounts for seniors, students, and military), through January 4, 2015, 505-988-8900, pvmiwa.org.

Walking tours of Santa Fe with various companies including Historic Walks of Santa Fe (historicwalksofsantafe.com), Get Acquainted Walking Tour (505-983-7774), A Well-Born Guide (swguides.com), and New Mexico Museum of Art (nmartmuseum.org).

For more events happening around town, visit the Santa Fean’s online calendar at SantaFean.com.


Aspen Santa Fe Ballet the contemporary ballet troupe brings its 2014 summer season to a powerful close

“Encore! performances have been very successful for us,” says ASFB Executive Director Jean-Philippe Malaty. “We change the dancers’ roles all the time, so every performance is unique.”

by Emi ly Va n C le ve

SHAREN BRADFORD SHAREN BRADFORD

Samantha Campanile (here) and Paul Busch (below) perform in Nicolo Fonte’s The Heart(s)pace, which Aspen Santa Fe Ballet performs on August 30.

ON AUGUST 30, Aspen Santa Fe Ballet brings the final performance of its 2014 Santa Fe summer season to the Lensic Performing Arts Center in a program featuring Square None by Norbert De La Cruz III, Return to a Strange Land by Jirří Kylián, and The Heart(s)pace by Nicolo Fonte. The performance, part of ASFB’s Encore! series, is a repeat presentation of one of the company’s popular July programs. “Encore! performances have been very successful for us,” says ASFB Executive Director JeanPhilippe Malaty. “We change the dancers’ roles all the time, so every performance is unique.” Fonte, who’s been collaborating with ASFB since 2000, composed The Heart(s)pace earlier this year. “I choreographed the piece for the [company’s] newer dancers,” he says, describing the work as “very bright, upbeat, and joyful. In contemporary ballet you don’t often hear the words ‘joyful’ and ‘upbeat’ together,” he adds, “so it’s a cool accomplishment for me.” De La Cruz created his 2012, ASFB-commissioned work Square None to convey the mixed feelings of disappointment, loneliness, hope, and excitement he experienced within the first few years of graduating from college. “Looking back at the ballet now, I’ve come to realize a profound metaphor for the concept of square—in this case, the simple idea of the four walls I’ve enclosed myself in or the body I live inside,” he says. “Square None has stories of love and how you perceive the four walls—the environment—around you. [It’s] taken me back and forth through nostalgia in my journey as a young artist.” The remaining work on the program is master choreographer Jirří Kylián’s Return to a Strange Land, which the ASFB added to its

repertoire in 2013. Set to four works for solo piano by Czech composer Leos Janácček (1854–1928), who wrote the pieces to mourn the death of his daughter, Kylián created Return to a Strange Land in 1975 in honor of his mentor John Cranko, the former director of the Stuttgart Ballet who had died two years earlier at age 45. Founded in Aspen in 1996, ASFB divides its time between its two namesake cities and also enjoys an active touring schedule. Earlier this year it merged with Juan Siddi Flamenco Santa Fe and now helps to market and promote the latter company around the world. ASFB’s August 30 performance takes place on the heels of the troupe’s fifth appearance at the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in Becket, Massachusetts, and in October the group heads to New York City for its seventh appearance at the legendary Joyce Theater. “Some people think if we’re not in Santa Fe, we’re in Aspen, but that’s not true,” Malaty says. “We’re often on the road, presenting performances at universities and dance venues throughout the country.” For information about Aspen Santa Fe Ballet’s August 30 performance and about future programs, visit aspensantafeballet.com. August 28, 2014 NOW

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Santa Fe Yoga Festival the multifaceted event celebrates the wide-reaching benefits of an ancient practice by Ash le y M. Big ge rs

The first annual Santa Fe Yoga Festival will include 108 classes taught by 40 instructors on the mesa of Bishop’s Lodge.

THIS LABOR DAY WEEKEND, Santa Fe will hold its first-ever yoga festival. All things considered, it’s a wonder the City Different is just now launching such an event. “It feels natural that [this festival] would be here,” says Kurt Young, one of the event’s founders. “We have wonderful teachers for yoga [and wonderful] artists and musicians. Santa Fe is the ideal town for this event and [for being] a wellspring of beauty for people to draw from.” David Frawley, a prolific author of books on yoga and Ayurveda, will kick off the four-day festival, held August 28–August 31, with his keynote talk on the mesa at Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa. That scenic locale will be the setting for some 108 classes taught by 40 instructors. The expected 1,000 attendees can choose between yoga classes that focus on specific topics like inversions or moving between poses, and they can also participate in expeditions that blend yoga with mountain biking and hiking. Other highlights include a farm-to-table dinner, a multimedia Beatles music concert focused on the Fab Four’s spiritual journey, and a yoga dance-trance with DJ Mental Physix. Teacher Micheline Berry of Santa Monica, California, began her meditation and spiritual practice in New Mexico and is eager to return to Santa Fe as both a practitioner and an instructor. Berry will lead three sessions, accompanied by the music of her husband Joey Lugassy, to activate creativity, integrate and embody intention through a yoga practice, and teach backbends. From these workshops, Berry hopes participants will understand that “a yoga practice can be a way to activate and get momentum for their life art.” Young’s vision for the festival also extends beyond the mat. It’s at once simple and profound: “We want people to come, do yoga, and love each other so the world can slowly become a better place.”

“It feels natural that [this festival] would be in Santa Fe,” says Kurt Young, one of the event’s founders. “We have wonderful teachers for yoga [and wonderful] artists and musicians. It’s the ideal town for this event and [for being] a wellspring of beauty for people to draw from.” 16

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KAREN SCHULD

Santa Fe Yoga Festival, August 28–August 31, Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa, santafeyogafestival.org, Adventurer Pass ( full festival) $299, Fiesta Pass (one-day) $149, individual event tickets $10–$25


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Indian Market Weekend

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KAREN SCHULD

Seen Around photographs by Stephen Lang

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Every week, Santa Fean NOW hits the street to take in the latest concerts, art shows, film premieres, and more. Here’s just a sampling of what we got to see.

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KAREN SCHULD

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Covering Santa Fe in a unique way. aBqJournal.com/subscribe August 28, 2014 NOW

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STEPHEN LANG, KAREN SCHULD, DANIEL QUAT, LISA LAW, CHARLES ENGELBERT/ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET

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It’s Santa Fe’s high summer season, which means lots of openings at galleries and museums around town. Santa Fean NOW was at a number of those shows’ recent receptions, and here’s just a sampling of the fun people we celebrated with.

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Loyal Hound

DOUGLAS MERRIAM

The menu at husband-and-wife team Dave Readyhough and Renee Fox’s new pub the Loyal Hound is all about “cool things we love—comforting foods at reasonable local prices,” Readyhough says. One of those “cool things” is an herbed Belgian waffle topped with braised Heritage pork in house-made BBQ sauce and green chile coleslaw (seen here). The locally raised pork—“loved and petted,” Readyhough notes—is tossed with a unique-to-New-Mexico tomato-based sauce with red chile, ancho chile powder, and cayenne, plus honey to temper that peppery bite. “We contrast the warm waffle and BBQ sauce with the cool slaw and then drizzle it with maple syrup to add some sweet to the savory,” Readyhough explains. The waffle is made from Navajo flour and includes fresh herbs like thyme and sage, while the traditional mayonnaise-based cole slaw recipe is tweaked with the addition of Hatch green chile.—Cristina Olds Loyal Hound, 730 St. Michael’s, loyalhoundpub.com

eating+ drinking

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art

openings | reviews | artists

Patrick McGrath Muñiz, The Gathering, oil on canvas, 36 x 60"

Gallery artists working in glass, ceramics, fiber, beading, basketry, and more explore women’s responses to cultural roles and expectations in Tansey Contemporary’s multimedia group show Women in Cultural Context (August 29–September 23, reception August 29, 5–7:30 pm , 652 Canyon, tanseycontemporary.com). Painter Patrick McGrath Muñiz’s elaborate tableaux, for example, incorporate iconography ranging from Christian to pop and offer sly commentary on history, while glass artist Susan Taylor Glasgow explores conflicting messages about femininity in a medium she terms “seductive but unforgiving.” —Eve Tolpa

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art

PROFILE

Bosque Stand, oil on canvas, 48 x 48"

Touching Land landscape painter Matthew Higginbotham holds his ninth annual summer exhibition at Waxlander Art Gallery

High Mesa Clouds, oil on canvas, 30 x 36"

by Em ily Va n C le ve

OIL PAINTER Matthew Higginbotham has lived in various places—from Colorado Springs, where he grew up, and Seattle, where he worked as a potter, to his current home of Santa Fe—and has found inspiration in every kind of landscape he’s encountered. “Land is spirit to me, and all of it is sacred,” he says. Touching Land, Higginbotham’s ninth annual summer show at Waxlander Art Gallery & Sculpture Garden, showcases two-dozen recent landscape and cloudscape scenes from New Mexico and beyond. The Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge south of Socorro has been a favorite haunt for years. “I discovered the Bosque in 2004 while I was driving to Arizona,” says Higginbotham, who sold his pottery equipment to focus on painting when he moved to New Mexico in 1995. “I saw an amazing flock of birds landing there. What I love about the Bosque is that it reveals an intimate, softer side of New Mexico. I could do a whole show about it.” Indeed, a half dozen paintings in Touching Land center on the Bosque, including the largest painting in the show—a 48 x 120" triptych called Anthem of the Bosque, which warmly depicts trees, brush, and their reflections in a pond at dusk. Several of the show’s works were inspired by Oklahoma’s Tallgrass Prairie Reserve, a 70-square-mile stretch of land managed by The Nature Conservancy

Pond Reflections, oil on canvas, 36 x 48"

where grass can grow 10 feet high. “I love the colors and movements of grass,” Higginbotham says. “I could sit for hours watching grass in a field.” While Higginbotham renders landscapes that look very much like the places that provide inspiration, his goal is to communicate his deepest feelings about the healing nature of land. “There is an energy and vitality in the land that I want to tap into and express through my work,” he says. Matthew Higginbotham, Touching Land, through September 8, reception August 29, 5–7:30 pm, Waxlander Art Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 622 Canyon, waxlander.com August 28, 2014 NOW

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art

PREVIEWS

Indian Market Show Pablo Milan Gallery, 209 Galisteo pablomilangallery.com, through August 30 Three artists share the spotlight in this show held in honor of Santa Fe Indian Market. Fifth-generation New Mexican Pablo Milan’s expressionistic acrylic paintings use loose brushstrokes and dynamic colors to convey Southwestern scenes; self-taught wildlife sculptor Jess Davila brings a contemporary sensibility to his marble, alabaster, sandstone, and limestone pieces; and Don Brewer Wakpa calls on his Cheyenne River Sioux heritage to represent what he terms the “pride and spirituality of my people.”—ET

Don Brewer Wakpa, Burn for the Buffalo, acrylic on canvas, 24 x 48"

Robert Taylor, Sufficiently Breathless, acrylic on canvas, 30 x 24"

Annual Indian Market Group Show Gallery 822, 822 Canyon, gallery822.com Ongoing In celebration of Santa Fe Indian Market, Gallery 822 offers an exhibition showcasing new work by all represented artists, living locally and throughout the West and working in a wide range of mediums: sculpture, jewelry, horsehair baskets, watercolors, and more. Highlights include Joshua Tobey’s wildlife bronzes, Carol Swinney’s plein air landscapes, and Robert Taylor’s acrylic paintings that integrate Native American imagery and storytelling and reflect his Crow, Blackfeet, Osage, and Cherokee heritage.—ET

100 Rings Patina Gallery, 131 W Palace patina-gallery.com Through August 31 Artist Peter Schmid presents work from German jewelry studio Atelier Zobel—100 rings in oxidized silver, high-karat gold, and platinum—in celebration of Patina’s 15th anniversary. The museum-quality adornments, first shown at the gallery in 2000, have redefined the medium with its sculptural forms, carved gems, and unusual finishes. “My jewelry is so beautiful in [Patina’s] space, [which is] so luxurious,” Schmid says.—ET

Peter Schmid, Agate Ring, silver, gold, agate, diamonds

Nocona Burgess, Hopi with Coral Adobe, acrylic on canvas, 24 x 30"

Nocona Burgess: The Power of a Woman Giacobbe-Fritz Fine Art, 702 Canyon, giacobbefritz.com Through September 7 Santa Fe–based Comanche painter Nocona Burgess (who is also a flute player) employs a contemporary sensibility, featuring graphic compositions and a bold color palette, as he brings attention to the culture, identity, and influence of a historically overlooked group: Native American women.—ET 24

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ongoing

Victoria Taylor-Gore: Shadows of Passion—Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art, 820 Canyon alexandrastevens.com, through August 31 Victoria Taylor-Gore presents a new series of stylized and dramatically lit pastels taking inspiration from love and loss in Fidelio, Carmen, and Romeo and Juliet. Although the Amarillobased artist brings theatrical perspectives to her pieces, she wants them to be open to interpretation. “Viewers aren’t watching an ‘event’ but looking for clues that invite them to make up a story in their own minds,” she says.—ET

art

PREVIEWS

Victoria Taylor-Gore, Romeo and Juliet I, pastel on paper, 9 x 19"

Nanami Ishihara, Yama Onna, Japanese pigment and acrylic gouache on cotton mounted on panel, 76 x 154"

IMPACTS! Japanese Contemporary Art in Collaboration with Mizuma Art Gallery, Tokyo Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, 435 S Guadalupe zanebennettgallery.com Though September 22 Discover the work of 17 established and emerging Japanese artists. Zane Bennett hosts a series of special events: artist talks, film screenings, a painting demonstration, a Japanese tea ceremony, and forums examining the relationship between art and cultural and political issues.—ET

ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: BRAD WILSON No, this image isn’t Photoshopped—Brad Wilson really does photograph all his wild subjects inside a studio. In celebration of his new photo book Wild Life, Wilson is holding a show called Avian: Selected Works from the Affinity Series at photo-eye Bookstore + Project Space (through October 11, 376 Garcia, Ste A, photoeye.com). Eerily human and intensely intimate in their expressions, a crocodile, a cougar, and even a kangaroo posed for Wilson’s book. “It’s impossible to stand a few feet away from a tiger or a chimpanzee or an elephant and remain unmoved,” Wilson says. “There’s something primal about the experience that resonates with you long after the animal has left.”—Cristina Olds Brad Wilson, Mountain Lion #1, Los Angeles, CA, 2011, archival digital pigment print, dimensions variable

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Supporting Our Local Teens Dreams to Careers Program

indoor/outdoor living

Supporting Our Local Teens Dreams to Careers Program FLAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION Saturday, September 20th • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm TICKETS & INFORMATION: Alphagraphics & The Spanish Table TICKETS $50 or purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org FLAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION

Includes Tapas, wine and beverages FLAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT20th AUCTION Saturday, September • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm LAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION Saturday, 20th • Governor’s 5:30pm AUCTION -Mansion TAPAS -•SILENT Call 505.216.6049 for• Information y, September 20thSeptember • Governor’s Mansion 5:30pm TICKETS &FLAMENCO INFORMATION: Alphagraphics & The Spanish Table NCO - TAPAS -& SILENT AUCTION FLAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION Saturday, September • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm purchase online:20th www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org FLAMENCO -or TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION TICKETS INFORMATION: & The Spanish Table INFORMATION: Alphagraphics &Alphagraphics The Spanish Table Saturday, September 20th • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm mber 20th • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm orPLEASE purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY SALES IS SEPTEMBER urchase Saturday, online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org TICKETS & Alphagraphics &FOR Spanish Table September 20th •INFORMATION: Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm TICKETS &The INFORMATION: Alphagraphics17TH & The Spanish Table or purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org RMATION: Alphagraphics The Spanish Table orATDAY purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org SE KNOW NOT BE & SOLD THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH WILL NOT TICKETS BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH TICKETS &WILL INFORMATION: Alphagraphics & The Spanish Table Call 505.216.6049 for Information PLEASE KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH or PLEASE purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org Call 505.216.6049 for Information Call 505.216.6049 for Information Call 505.216.6049 for Information BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH E KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE Call DOOR. LAST DAY FOR for SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH 505.216.6049 Information 505.216.6049 for Information Call 505.216.6049 for Information

soaring space

SE KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH

LOU NOVICK

LEASE KNOW TICKETS WILL NOT BE SOLD AT THE DOOR. LAST DAY FOR SALES IS SEPTEMBER 17TH

FLAMENCO - TAPAS - SILENT AUCTION [on the market] Saturday, September 20th • Governor’s Mansion • 5:30pm TICKETS & INFORMATION: Alphagraphics & The Spanish Table or purchase online: www.RisingStarsSouthwest.org

[on the market]

Panoramic mountain views can be seen from this four-bedroom home, situated on 1.85 acres on a sheltered hillside just five minutes from downtown Santa Fe. Featuring living rooms, kitchens, and fireplaces inside and outside the home, this unique property is complete with high ceilings, marble floors, hand-carved doors, custom wood cabinets, and a walkin pantry. The master bedroom has a corner fireplace lined with bancos, while the master bathroom has an elevated whirlpool tub. Art collectors will appreciate the oversized lit nichos strategically designed for displaying artwork. Portals around the home cover a dining area and various cozy spots for relaxing. An outdoor kiva fireplace is close to the front door. List price: $1.695 million Contact: Efrain Prieto, Santa Fe Properties, 505-470-6909, santafeproperties.com

Located in the Campo Conejos community just a few minutes’ drive southwest of the Plaza, this four-bedroom, 3,420-square-foot custom home is located on 1.45 acres. It features a great room with a soaring cathedral ceiling as well as a large kitchen with granite countertops, knotty alder custom cabinetry, two ovens, and a walk-in pantry. The master suite is downstairs, as is a guest bedroom with a loft. An upstairs bedroom has a roof deck with a kiva fireplace. Custom tin light fixtures by artist Roberto Gallegos are found throughout the home. A three-car garage has a workshop and additional storage space in the attic. Apple, peach, and other fruit trees are set up on a drip system. List price: $879,000, Contact: Melissa Pippin-Carson, Keller Williams, 505-699-3112, kw.com 26

santafeanNOW.com

JAMES BLACK

Call 505.216.6049 for Information


DANIEL NADELBACH

style Ooh La La! Consignment

[on the market]

The entry courtyard of this Southwest Pueblo–style home on more than nine acres features a rock fountain and a kiva fireplace near the front door. The 3,000-square-foot residence has a light and open-concept floor plan where the living room, dining room, and kitchen lead to a large outdoor portal with another fireplace. The master suite has a fireplace, a luxurious bath with tile artwork inset in a nicho in the shower, and a private deck with a hot tub. Outside the home are apple and plum trees, raspberry bushes, grape vines, and raised vegetable gardens. Horse owners will appreciate the two-stall cinder block horse barn with a pipe-fence corral. List price: $895,000 Contact: Alan Vorenberg, Sotheby’s International Realty, 505-470-3118; sothebyshomes.com

GABRIELLA MARKS, OOH LA LA! CONSIGNMENT

Southwest style

A clothing store that takes Audrey Hepburn as its muse promises exciting things when it comes to fashion. No one better exemplified girlish flair while also embodying elegance, poise, and even sex appeal. That alluring combination is exactly what Ooh La La! Consignment’s owner, Arabella D’Lucca, consistently aims for with the offerings in her shop. “Our style is feminine, timeless, romantic, chic, and beautiful,” she says. Since opening Ooh La La! in 2011, D’Lucca has sought to provide her clients with an experience, not just a destination. “My vision was to create a place where women can come and, no matter how bad your day may be going, feel uplifted—a place that makes you feel welcome and a place that invites you to play and let the princess within you twirl and giggle.” D’Lucca, a San Francisco native, says she’d dreamed about opening her own shop since she was a small girl playing dress-up with her Barbie dolls. After five years of living in Santa Fe and never finding “the fun stuff—those amazing pieces of extraordinary specialty that you rarely find in a small town”—she decided the time was right for her to take matters into her own hands. Ooh La La!, which dubs itself “the most fashionable resale store in Santa Fe,” offers pieces by European designers and quality-made garments that range from trendy contemporary items to haute couture. But don’t bother offering fur of any kind to the shop unless you’re prepared to donate it to Coats for Cubs, an organization that, according to its website, “aids in the rehabilitation of injured and orphaned animals” across the country and “ships furs to animal rehabilitation centers, where they are disassembled and used as bedding to provide a more natural and nurturing environment.” D’Lucca is as committed to protecting animals as she is to allowing her clients to experience the joys of high fashion. Ooh La La! Consignment offers pieces by Hepburn would surely approve. European designers and quality-made garments that range from trendy —Zélie Pollon contemporary items to haute couture. Ooh La La! Consignment, 518 Old Santa Fe Trl, 505-820-6433, oohlala-consignment.com August 28, 2014 NOW 27


| L A S T LO O K |

Nearing the end of their two-month-long joint U.S. tour, Tennessee bands Those Darlins and Diarrhea Planet recently hit the stage at the new downtown Santa Fe venue Skylight. The six-piece rock-and-roll group Diarrhea Planet takes power-guitar riffing to another level with its arsenal of six-string guns, while the more countrified rock of Those Darlins is driven by two female lead singers/guitarists who formed their band after meeting as kids at the Southern Girls Rock ‘n Roll Camp. Fans of the Darlins and their intimate, starkly honest lyrics can see the group again when they return to Santa Fe in October. —Cristina Olds 28

santafeanNOW.com

GABRIELLA MARKS

Meow Wolf presents two bands at Skylight


Live Music

FroM the Best oF santa Fe Jazz • PoP • alternative • originals • covers • standards 2nd tuesday every Month First Performance: tues sept 9, 6-10 PM open Jam 10-11 PM $3 cover, Full Bar and special Menu available

A

Musicians wanted. For consideration, Please send recording or sound bite to: abbeycorp@zoho.com


621 C anyon R oad 830 C anyon R oad billhester@billhesterfineart.com

BillHesterFineArt.com (505) 660-5966

Sean Wimberly Meadow View acrylic on canvas 72" x 60"

Sean Wimberly Early Morning Snow acrylic on canvas 30" x 40"


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