Santa Fean NOW October 9 2014 Digital Edition

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now The City of Santa Fe Event Calendar

this week’s

top nightlife

and entertainment

picks santafeanNOW.com

PRESENTED IN COOPERATION WITH ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL NORTH

week of October 9


DAV ID AYL S W ORT H K RI S TEN CLI B URN LUCINDA CO B LEY PAT COL V ILLE B RAD ELLI S I B S EN E S PADA G ARLAND F IELDER LINNEA G LATT LARRY G RAE B ER S A M G U M M ELT RO B ERTA H ARRI S J ANE H EL S LANDER J ANE H ONO V IC H TERRELL J A M E S M IC H AEL K ENNAU G H W IN S TON LEE M A S CAREN H A S J E S Ú S M OROLE S S TE V E M URP H Y TO M ORR M C K AY OTTO AARON PARA Z ETTE J O H N PO M ARA S A M RE V ELE S M AR G O S AW YER G EOR G E S C H ROEDER H O WARD S H ER M AN C H ARLOTTE S M IT H LORRAINE TADY LI Z WARD M AC W H ITNEY LE S LIE W IL K E S J OAN W INTER S YDNEY P H ILEN YEA G ER

TEXAS ABSTRACT modern i contemporary by michael paglia, Jim edwards save the date: GALA EXHIBITION AND BOOK SIGNING OCTOBER 25, 5 - 8 PM Join the artists and authors for this special evening. An unprecedented attempt to reconcile the historic mid-twentieth century Abstraction in Texas with the vibrant contemporary abstract scene flourishing now in the early twenty-first century, this book documents the unexpected role Texas played in the history of Abstraction,and continues to play in the contemporary art world today.

2 1 7 W. Wat e r S t r e e t, S a n ta F e , N M 8 7 5 0 1 , 5 0 5 . 6 6 0 . 4 3 9 3 wa d e w i l s o n a r t. c o m , 1 1 a m - 5 p m T u e s d ay - S at u r d ay


Suzanne Donazetti Coming Home

“Somewhere on the Road” 24 x 24 woven copper painting

October 7 through October 20 ARTIST Friday, October 10 5 pm - 8 pm

EXHIBITION DATES RECEPTION FOR THE

Waxlander Gallery celebrating thirty years of excellence

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


now |

calle del ciello

big lots

taco bell cerrillos rd

ciello ct

located just off cerrillos road

15% off purchase limit one per customer per purchase. not to be combined with other offer. must present coupon at time of purchase. offer expires 12/31/14

20% off purchase of $200 or more limit one per customer per purchase. not to be combined with

publisher’s note

|

This is one of those great weekends to be in Santa Fe. There are artist studio tours all over Northern New Mexico, in the nearby communities of Abiquiú, Chimayó, Madrid, and Cerrillos. Checking out those studios will give you an intimate look at the creative environment in which an artist works. While I’m sure all the participating artists have at least somewhat straightened up their workspaces for public viewing, you’ll still get a sense of how their environment affects their work. In many ways, the place where someone makes their art is sacred, and usually it has its own unique energy. A studio’s location and views likely have an interesting influence on an artist, but I like looking for the little things inside the studio, like a pinned-up old photograph or curious little objects lying next to the palette of paints. If you do embark on this weekend’s tours, you’ll be able to take in the beautiful countryside and its stunning fall colors in addition to getting a glimpse of how and where some of our best local artists make their magic happen. Back in Santa Fe, the week is chock-full of gallery openings and music events. Something that jumps out at me is how musicians and museums are joining forces, as with the New Mexico Museum of Art’s Music at the Museum series. Also, on Friday, October 10, the café on Museum Hill is hosting a prixe-fixe dinner that includes music by an interesting Brazilian band. And finally, speaking to Santa Fe’s never-ending uniqueness, the G’Low-n-Slow Bike Cruise starts that same Friday night at the Railyard and makes its way to the Plaza. Bikes altered into lowriders will be decorated and illuminated for this truly Northern New Mexico event. It should be very easy to have fun here this weekend. Why would anyone want to be anywhere else?

other offer. must present coupon at time of purchase.

Bruce Adams

offer expires 12/31/14

2014

Publisher

DAVID ROBIN

tortilla flats

OCT 09 – OCT 15

framed with mat for $32

+tax

8x10 portraits choose from stock not to be combined with other offers.

It’s time to get outdoors! For info on hitting the trails and taking in Santa Fe’s fall scenery, see Last Look on page 28.

must present coupon. offer expires 12/31/14.

3022 cielo ct., ste. c santa fe, nm 87507

follow us on facebook facebook.com/fwframes tuesday through friday 9am - 5pm, saturday 10 am - 3 pm

B.Y. COOPER

fwframes@gmail.com 505.930.5929


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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.

now bruce adams

PUBLISHER

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER

EDITOR CALENDAR EDITOR

amy hegarty samantha schwirck

GRAPHIC DESIGNER ADDITIONAL DESIGN

b.y. cooper

whitney stewart

michelle odom, sybil watson

OPERATIONS MANAGER

ginny stewart

Wishing you a wonderful time, ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER, SALES MANAGER

Javier M. Gonzales City of Santa Fe, Mayor Randy Randall TOURISM Santa Fe, Director

MARKETING CONSULTANT

david wilkinson

andrea nagler

WRITERS

ashley m. biggers, amy gross, eric gustafson cristina olds, phil parker, emily van cleve

A PUBLICATION OF BELLA MEDIA, LLC 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 Copyright 2014. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Santa Fean NOW Volume 1, Number 22, Week of October 9, 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.

Covering Santa Fe in a unique way. aBqJournal.com/subscribe 4

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On the cover: Erin Cone, Immersed, acrylic on canvas, 56 x 76". For details on Cone’s show Modiste at Nüart Gallery, see page 23.



the

buzz

ShowHouse Santa Fe 2014 Attendees of this year’s Grand Preview Gala included Lisa Barker of Barker Realty/Christie’s International Real Estate (bottom left photo) and ShowHouse Santa Fe founders and cochairs Jennifer Ashton (top photo, right) and David Naylor (bottom right photo).

ShowHouse Santa Fe 2014 kicked off on October 3 with an off-the-chains Grand Preview Gala—attended by more than 500 guests—followed by tours of the ShowHouse itself on October 4 and 5. According to many who partied on opening night, the glittering fete, hosted by Lisa Barker of Barker Realty/Christie’s International Real Estate, immediately set a new bar for entertaining in the City Different. With one visitor-packed weekend under its belt, the ShowHouse is opening its doors again this Saturday and Sunday, October 11 and 12. Wear comfortable shoes and plan on staying for a couple of hours, as every inch of the home’s expansive 14,000 square feet—which comprises a space built in the 1920s as well as a newer section renovated in 2001—has been dressed to the nines by 20 of Santa Fe’s most talented designers in accordance with this year’s “Ancient-Future” theme. ShowHouse founders and cochairs David Naylor and Jennifer Ashton took on the challenge of designing the formal living room and the new master suite, respectively, and divvied up 18 other rooms, hallways, and spaces among their colleagues. Veteran interior designers like Annie O’Carroll and Lisa Samuel worked alongside relative newcomers like Erica Ortiz, Chandler Prewitt, and Heather and Matt French, as well as decorators and stagers like Mary Ann Salomone and Marty Wilkinson. The result, despite the diversity of each designer’s style and aesthetic, is a cohesive flow of exquisite design and a dazzling array of ideas for any home. The entire ShowHouse is almost too much to take in on one pass, so if you go on Saturday, hang onto your ticket and come back on Sunday. Proceeds from ShowHouse Santa Fe benefit Dollars4Schools and The Lensic Performing Arts Center’s Youth in Performing Arts Education Programs.—Amy Gross ShowHouse Santa Fe, 10 Altazano Dr, October 11 (11 am–6 pm) and October 12 (11 am–4 pm), $25, showhousesantafe.com

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santafeanNOW.com

Gustavo Castillo


this week

October 9–October 15

Boom Tic Boom takes to the stage at GiG Performance Space on October 10. For details, see page 8.

The Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet performs at The Lensic on October 12. For details, see page 12.

October 9 thursday Adding Color to Handmade Paper Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards

Students learn about natural vegetable dyes, synthetic dyes, and pigments. $119, 6–9 pm, 505-428-1270, sfcc.edu.

Alchemy of Mixed Media Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards

A workshop dedicated to creating mixed-media works. $159, 6–9 pm, 505-428-1270, sfcc.edu.

Gallery Nights Kick-Off Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trl

CCA kicks off new evening hours with hands-on workshops, partnering with food trucks and local bars to create a socially engaging gallery experience. $5, 5–9 pm, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

Hungry Artist Life Drawing Artisan 2601 Cerrillos

Drawing group hosted in an open, public space with clothed models. Free, 11 am–1 pm, facebook.com/muse.artproject.

Cooking Inspired by Georgia O’Keeffe Santa Fe School of Cooking

125 N Guadalupe

A cooking class that utilizes Georgia O’Keeffe’s recipes found in Margaret Wood’s book A Painter’s Kitchen: Recipes from the Kitchen of Georgia O’Keeffe. $85, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Fleas, Melons, Coffee Spoons, and Metros: Metaphysical Poetry from John Donne to the New Yorker St. John’s United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trl

A lecture by Karl Kregor, retired professor of English and humanities at Trinity University, San Antonio. $10, 1–3 pm, 505-982-9274, renesan.org.

Django Mex Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Three veterans of the Albuquerque music scene whose repertoire incorporates gypsy swing, polka ranchera instrumentals, and zydeco Cajun influences. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Guitarras Con Sabor El Farol 808 Canyon

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

Jaka Second Street Brewery at Second Street 1814 Second St

Afro-pop music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Kari Simmons & Todd Lowry Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma

Live music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-984-2645, pranzosantafe.com.

Limelight Karaoke The Palace Restaurant and Saloon 142 W Palace

Karaoke with Michele. Free, 10 pm–12 am, 505-428-0690, palacesantafe.com.

Mito & Wes Swiss Bakery Pastries & Bistro 401 S Guadalupe

“Jazzamenco” and mamba flamenco favorites. Free, 7:30–9:30 pm, 505-988-1111, swissbakerysantafe.com.

The Saltanah Dancers Cleopatra Café 3482 Zafarano

Belly-dancing performance. Free, 6:30–8:30 pm, 505-474-5644, saltanahstudios.com.

Zenobia La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

Live performance by Zenobia, a Grammy-nominated singer, Broadway actress, and former member of The Weather Girls. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com. October 9, 2014 NOW

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The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas

Paul Zindel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about family dysfunction. Directed by Quinn Mander. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

October 10 friday Chimayó Fall Gallery and Studio Tour Chimayó Association of Businesses Various Locations

Visit Chimayó galleries and studios and enjoy fall colors and harvest time. Free, 10 am–5 pm, 505-351-2280, chimayo.org.

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

Coming Home Waxlander Art Gallery 622 Canyon

Works by painter and weaver Suzanne Donazetti. Free, reception 5–8 pm, 505-984-2202, waxlander.com.

Modiste Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon

Works by Erin Cone. See profile on page 23. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-988-3888, nuartgallery.com.

Abstract works by painter Peter Burega. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-984-2111, hunterkirklandcontemporary.com.

New Paintings and New Sculpture Mark White Fine Art 414 Canyon

Music and refreshments in the courtyard. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-670-6793, ronnielaydenfineart.com.

A solo exhibition by artist and gallerist Mark White. See profile on page 24. Free, reception 5–8 pm, 505-982-2073, markwhitefineart.com.

Meet the Artists Tesuque Flea Market 15 Flea Market Rd

Painted Meditations on the Landscape Pippin Contemporary 200 Canyon

Local artists show and discuss their work. Free, all day, 505-670-2599, pueblooftesuquefleamarket.com.

Works by Michael Monroe Ethridge. See profile on page 22. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-795-7476, pippincontemporary.com.

Green Chile Workshop Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Reflecting the World Through the Mirror of Metaphor The Longworth Gallery 530 Canyon

Hands-on class focused on green chile. $75, 9 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Mastering the Art of Fresh Pasta Las Cosas Kitchen Shoppe & Cooking School 181 Paseo de Peralta Learn to make homemade pasta. 6–9 pm, 505-988-3394, lascosascooking.com.

Northern New Mexico Lunch Santa Fe Culinary Academy 112 W San Francisco

SFCA Executive Chef Rocky Durham prepares and demonstrates how to make a seasonal lunch of traditional Northern New Mexican foods. $65, 11 am–1 pm, 505-983-7445, santafeculinaryacademy.com.

20 Year Retrospective: Lisa Gordon The William&Joseph Gallery 727 Canyon

A retrospective of works by bronze sculpture artist Lisa Gordon. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-982-9404, thewilliamandjosephgallery.com.

Carrie’s West Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace

New paintings by Carrie Fell. See profile on page 26. Free, reception 5–7:30 pm, 505-501-6555, sorrelsky.com.

Works by Russian artist Vladimir Kush. See preview on page 21. Free, reception 5–8 pm, 505-989-4210, thelongworthgallery.com.

The Measure of a Man Winterowd Fine Art 701 Canyon

Works by Emilio Lobato. See profile on page 24. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-992-8878, fineartsantafe.com.

Wild Things Canyon Road Contemporary 403 Canyon

Animal-based work by watercolor painter Travis Bruce Black and polymer clay sculptor Adam Thomas Rees. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-983-0433, canyonroadcontemporary.com.

Lannan Foundation: In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

A conversation between Max Blumenthal (National Institute writing fellow and research fellow for Media Matters for America) and Amy Goodman (awardwinning investigative journalist and syndicated columnist, author, and host and executive producer of Democracy Now!). $5, 7 pm, 505-988-1234, ßticketssantafe.org.

Anatomy of a Symphony 8

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October 10: The Lannan Foundation presents In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom with Max Blumenthal (seen here) and Amy Goodman.

Imaginate Hunter Kirkland Contemporary 200-B Canyon

St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace

Oliver Prezant discusses Brahms’s Fourth Symphony with musical illustrations by the Santa Fe Community Orchestra. Free (donations accepted), 7–8 pm, 505466-4879, sfco.org.

Shared Authority in the Art Museum: Precedents, Process and Propositions SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta

A lecture led by Kim Kanatani, the first deputy director and Gail Engelberg director of education at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, that explores the shift toward more democratic processes in museological and artistic practices and other issues. $5–$10, 6–8 pm, 505-989-1199, sitesantafe.org.

Cameraless New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Works by Leigh Anne Langwell, in conjunction with Focus on Photography, a year-long cycle of photography exhibitions. Free, reception 5:30–6:30 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Alex Maryol Second Street Brewery at Second Street 1814 Second St Blues and rock music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Boom Tic Boom GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St

Live music with Allison Miller (drums), Myra Melford (piano), Todd Sickafoose (bass), Kirk Knuffke (cornet), and Jenny Scheinman (violin). $20, 7:30 pm, gigsantafe.com.

David Geist Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma

Live music by acclaimed pianist David Geist. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-984-2645, pranzosantafe.com.

DJ Luna Burro Alley Café 207 W San Francisco


WORKS BY CAROL BONDY

October 11–13: Abiquiú Studio Tour

Live DJ. Free, 9 pm–12 am, 505-982-0601, burroalleycafe.com.

Happy Hours with Jacob Furr Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

R&B music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Rio Quartet in Concert Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo

A performance by the Rio Quartet featuring intimate interpretations of bossa nova and jazz works. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-984-8900, museumhillcafe.net.

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.

Songs for the Waning Year San Miguel Mission 401 Old Santa Fe Trl

Folk/Americana music. Free, 5–8 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Live music by popular folk pop duo Round Mountain. $10–$20 (suggested donation), 8–9:30 pm, 505-673-7906, roundmountainmusic.com.

Jay Boy Adams & Zenobia with Mister Sister Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

The Kenny Skywolf Band Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

A mix of blues, soul, and Americana music. Free, 8:30–11:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

JJ & the Hooligans El Farol 808 Canyon

Rock music. $5, 9 pm–12 am, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Keith Kenny Duel Brewery 1228 Parkway Dr

Acoustic rock music. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

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

Blues music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-3278, secondstreetbrewery.com.

The Three Faces of Jazz El Mesón 213 Washington

Jazz piano trio with special guest. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-983-6756, elmeson-santafe.com.

G’Low-n-Slow Bike Cruise Railyard Plaza 740 Cerrillos

Illuminate your bike with lights, glow tape, or anything else you can find and join this first annual five-mile community bike cruise through the streets of downtown. $20, 7–11 pm, ridgelineracing.org.

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

Music at the Museum New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

Live classical violin and cello music. Free, 5:30–7:30 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Music on the Patio Caffe Greco 233 Canyon

Alternative/blues/rock music with Alex Maryol. Free, 12–3 pm, 505-820-7996.

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.

Pleasure Pilots La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas

Paul Zindel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about family dysfunction. Directed by Quinn Mander. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

October 11 saturday Abiquiú Studio Tour Various locations, Abiquiú

Experience the unique artistry of the region and explore the local color at this 21st annual event featuring more than 80 artists. Part of the Santa Fe Arts Festival. Free, 10 am–5 pm, 505-685-4770, abiquiustudiotour.org.

Chimayó Fall Gallery and Studio Tour Various locations, Chimayó

Visit Chimayó galleries and studios and enjoy fall colors and harvest time. Free, 10 am–5 pm, 505-351-2280, chimayo.org.

Meet the Artists Tesuque Flea Market 15 Flea Market Rd

Local artists show and discuss their work. Free, all day, 505-670-2599, pueblooftesuquefleamarket.com.

Native Treasures Collectors’ Sale Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 710 Camino Lejo

A unique sale of Native American jewelry and art from private collections. Extension of the annual Native Treasures art show. Proceeds benefit the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture. Free, 10 am–4 pm, 505-982-7799, nativetreasures.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.

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.

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.

Madrid and Cerrillos Studio Tour Various locations, Madrid and Cerrillos

During this ninth annual event, visitors can tour the studios of local painters, sculptors, photographers, glass artists, jewelry artists, mixed-media artists, and more. Free, through October 12, 10 am–5 pm, madridcerrillosstudiotour.com.

Fiesta Fela 2014 Santa Fe Railyard Park 1611 Paseo de Peralta

Named in honor of musical pioneer and human rights October 9, 2014 NOW

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activist Fela Anikulapo Kuti, this annual festival is a day-long celebration of African art and culture. $10 suggested donation, 11 am–7 pm, 505-919-9194, afreekasantafe.org.

October 11: Last Days in Vietnam at CCA

Beginning Waltz Workshop Odd Fellows Lodge 1125 Cerrillos

Instruction on how to dance a waltz. $5, 3:30–5:30 pm, 505-281-6095, folkmads.org.

Last Days in Vietnam Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trl

Bill Hearne Trio Second Street Brewery at Second Street 1814 Second St

A look at the events surrounding the withdrawal from Vietnam by Emmy Award–winning director Rory Kennedy. Contact CCA for time and price, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

Americana music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Santa Fe Farmers Market Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Festival. $25, 11 am–6 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Santa Fe Farmers Market Fall Fiesta Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

JoyceGroup Santa Fe Santa Fe Public Library Second Floor, Pick Room 145 Washington

An evening filled with food from the local harvest, music, auctions, and special honors for beloved farmers. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.com.

Tacos Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Hands-on class focused on making tacos. $98, 2:30 pm, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

The 2014 Mayor’s Ball Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy

An event to benefit Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northern New Mexico. $250, 7 pm, 505-983-8360, bbbsnorthernnm.org.

Fall Group Show Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 702 ½ Canyon

Abstract paintings by Lawrence Fodor, photographs by Bonnie Bishop, mixed-media paintings by Jay Tracy, and new work by contemporary abstract artist Rebecca Bluestone. Free, through November 22, 505-992-0711, chiaroscurosantafe.com.

Inside Out: The Art of Mental Illness James Kelly Contemporary 1611 Paseo de Peralta

Curated work by Santa Fe area artists being treated for mental illness. Proceeds benefit Southwestern College’s art therapy program. Free, 9 am–6 pm, insideoutsantafe.blogspot.com.

ShowHouse Santa Fe 2014 Home Tour Casa la Luna 10 Altazano Dr

Twenty interior designers transform a 1920s-era mansion to benefit Dollars4Schools and The Lensic Performing Arts Center’s Youth in Performing Arts Education Programs. Part of the Santa Fe Arts 10

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Rock/blues music. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

DJ Luna Burro Alley Café 207 W San Francisco

Lovers of Irish writer James Joyce’s work meet every Saturday to discuss Ulysses and Finnegans Wake. Led by Adam Harvey, creator of the acclaimed one-man show Don’t Panic: It’s Only Finnegans Wake. Enthusiasts with all levels of knowledge welcome. Free, 10 am–12:30 pm, joycegeek.com.

Leading by Being The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

The Academy for the Love of Learning and Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center present a conversation about leadership and individuality with Gloria Steinem, Alice Walker, Dr. Chung Hyun Kyung, and Aaron Stern. $35–$100, 7 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Editor’s Pick

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

Boulevard Lane Duel Brewery 1228 Parkway Dr

Lost and Found: Sex, Love, and Second Chances Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie

An evening of monologues by Dianne Deloren, Sunshine Muse, Randi Ya’el Chaikind, Argos MacCallum, and Patrick McGee-Russell. $12, 7:30 pm, 505-913-0953, teatroparaguas.org.

Pop-Up Poetry Reading Editor’s Pick Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta, under the water tower Organized by acclaimed poets Elizabeth Jacobson and Miriam Sagan (of Santa Fe’s Cut + Paste Society) and the local press Tres Chicas Books, this live poetry event features 19 poets reading up to three poems (for no longer than four minutes) by the likes of Carol Moldaw, Stella Reed, Arthur Sze, Joan Logghe, and Jacobson and Sagan. Audience members are encouraged to read up to one minute of poetry. Free, 10–11:30 am, facebook.com/CutnPasteSociety.

Alex Culbreth Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Alternative country music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-3278, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Live DJ. Free, 9 pm–12 am, 505-982-0601, burroalleycafe.com.

DJ Spaghetti El Paseo Bar & Grill 208 Galisteo

Live DJ. $5, 9 am–12 am, 505-992-2848.

Flamenco Dinner Show El Farol 808 Canyon

Flamenco dancers and musicians perform during dinner. $25, 6:30–9 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Sweetwater Harvest Kitchen 1512 Pacheco

Slack key guitar music by acclaimed musician John Serkin. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-795-7383, sweetwatersf.com.

Jesus Bas Anasazi Restaurant 113 Washington

Live guitar music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-988-3030, rosewoodhotels.com.

John Carey El Farol 808 Canyon

Blues music. $5, 9 pm–12 am, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

John Kurzweg Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Rock music and classic covers. Free, 8:30–11:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Julie Trujillo and David Geist Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma

Singer Julie Trujillo performs with acclaimed pianist David Geist. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-984-2645, pranzosantafe.com.


October 11 & 12: SHED: A Site-Specific Performance

SHED: A Site-Specific Performance Water History Park and Museum 1209 Upper Canyon

A dance piece choreographed and performed by dancers from the New Mexico School for the Arts as part of NMSA’s annual Inside/Out series. Free (by reservation only), 4 and 5 pm, 505-310-4194, nmschoolforthearts.org.

The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas Paolo T. Photography

Paul Zindel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about family dysfunction. Directed by Quinn Mander. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

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.

Music on the Patio Caffe Greco 233 Canyon

Live music by Lizette. Free, 12–3 pm, 505-820-7996.

Pleasure Pilots La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

R&B music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.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.

The Scones Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Americana music. Free, 2–5 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Harness the Night Sky Tent Rocks Cochiti Pueblo

Simone Seagle, assistant director of Space Science at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science, leads a workshop on celestial navigation and mythology. $7 suggested donation, 7 pm, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

Macbeth The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

A screening of Verdi’s Macbeth starring soprano Anna Netrebko kicks off the eighth season of The Metropolitan Opera’s The Met: Live in HD series. Presented by The Lensic and Santa Fe Opera. $22–$28, 11 am, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

October 12 sunday Abiquiú Studio Tour Various locations, Abiquiú

Experience the unique artistry of the region and explore the local color at this 21st annual event featuring more than 80 artists. Part of the Santa Fe Arts Festival. Free, 10 am–5 pm, 505-685-4770, abiquiustudiotour.org.

Meet the Artists Tesuque Flea Market 15 Flea Market Rd

Local artists show and discuss their work. Free, all day, 505-670-2599, pueblooftesuquefleamarket.com.

Native Treasures Collectors’ Sale Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 710 Camino Lejo

A unique sale of Native American jewelry and art from private collections. Extension of the annual Native Treasures art show. Proceeds benefit the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture. Free, 10 am–4 pm, 505-982-7799, nativetreasures.org.

Railyard Artisan Market Santa Fe Railyard Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta Meet local painters, fiber artists, potters, and others; watch demonstrations; and buy quality works. Free, 10 am–4 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.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.

Cuisine of Mexico III Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

A Mexican cooking class. $82, 11 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

ShowHouse Santa Fe 2014 Home Tour Casa la Luna 10 Altazano Dr

Twenty interior designers transform a 1920s-era mansion to benefit Dollars4Schools and The Lensic Performing Arts Center’s Youth in Performing Arts Education Programs. Part of the Santa Fe Arts Festival. $25, 11 am–4 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Artist Talk Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo

Chris Pruitt and Pat Pruitt, Laguna Pueblo artists, discuss their unique and award–winning jewelry. $6–$9 (free for New Mexico residents), 1–3 pm, 505-467-1200, indianartsandculture.org.

From Pinholes to Black Holes New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln

In conjunction with the exhibit Poetics of Light: Pinhole Photography, Los Alamos National Laboratory astrophysicist Ed Fenimore discusses his work on a pinhole-based camera that was part of a 1991 Space Shuttle experiment. $6–$9, 2 pm, 505-476-5200, nmhistorymuseum.org.

Sarah Stark Reading Ohori’s Coffee Roasters 505 Cerrillos

Sarah Stark reads from and signs her new novel, Out There. Free, 2–3 pm, 505-982-9692, ohoriscoffee.com.

Cactus Tractor Duel Brewery 1228 Parkway Dr

Bohemian pop/folk-disco music. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Cowgirl Brunch with Anthony Leon & His Grievous Angels Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Alternative country music. Free, 12–3 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Less Is More Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Alternative folk duo. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Music on the Patio Caffe Greco 233 Canyon

Live music by Bill Hearne. Free, 12–3 pm, 505-820-7996.

Nacha Mendez and Co. El Farol 808 Canyon

Latin world music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com October 9, 2014 NOW

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Franceschini, and Saint-Saëns. Free, 2:30–4:30 pm, 505-466-4879, sfco.org.

SHED: A Site-Specific Performance Water History Park and Museum 1209 Upper Canyon

A dance piece choreographed and performed by dancers from the New Mexico School for the Arts as part of NMSA’s annual Inside/Out series. Free (by reservation only), 4 and 5 pm, 505-310-4194, nmschoolforthearts.org.

The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas

Paul Zindel’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play about family dysfunction. Directed by Quinn Mander. $20 (discounts for seniors, students, educators, and military), 2–4 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

October 13 monday October 13: Lev Grossman at the Jean Cocteau Cinema

The Shiners Club Jazz Band Second Street Brewery at the Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Ragtime music. Free, 1–4 pm, 505-989-3278, secondstreetbrewery.com.

View and Brew Indie Film Series Duel Brewery 1228 Parkway Dr

Screening of Omar Mullick and Bassam Tariq’s 2013 documentary These Birds Walk. Includes the presentation of a multimedia piece by local artist Adria Malcom. Free, 8–10 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Survival Skills in the Wilderness Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards

Learn skills that will help you feel confident hiking and traversing the New Mexico wilderness. $49, 8 am–4 pm, 505-428-1270, sfcc.edu.

Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

Abiquiú Studio Tour Various locations, Abiquiú

Wisdom Sharing—A Deepening Retreat Ghost Ranch 1708 U.S. 84

A workshop with Gloria Steinem, Alice Walker, and Dr. Chung Hyun Kyung explores ways to support the growth and development of the feminine voice and balanced leadership. Day passes or camping options available. Preceded by a talk with Steinem, Walker, and Kyung at The Lensic (see October 11). $455–$680 (all-inclusive packages include tuition, lodging, and meals for four nights) or $125 (day pass), through October 17, registrar@ghostranch.org, ghostranch.org.

Bill Hearne Trio La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

Red Chile Workshop Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Karaoke hosted by Michele Leidig. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Hands-on class focused on the red chile. $75, 2 pm, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Sam Atakra Haozous and Melissa Dominguez Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma

Humorous images of masked models by Sam Atakra Haozous and an exploration of darker human experieces in various mediums by Melissa Dominguez. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

Lev Grossman Reading Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma

Santa Fe Community Orchestra Fall Concert St. Francis Auditorium/New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace

The Evolution of Medicine to Integrative Medicine The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco

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Readings from 2012 OBIE Award–winning playwright Caridad Svich’s new play. Free, 5 pm, 505-913-0953, teatroparaguas.org.

Country music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

The Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet makes their first appearance in Santa Fe performing works by Mozart, Hindemith, and Thuille. Pianist Jon Nakamatsu also performs. See profile on page 16. $27–$100, 4 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssanfe.org.

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Upon the Fragile Shore Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie

Experience the unique artistry of the region and explore the local color at this 21st annual event featuring more than 80 artists. Part of the Santa Fe Arts Festival. Free, 10 am–5 pm, 505-685-4770, abiquiustudiotour.org.

Author Lev Grossman appears at the Jean Cocteau Cinema to read from the final installment in his Magicians trilogy, The Magician’s Land. A book signing and an interview/Q&A facilitated by George R. R. Martin follows. $5–$10, 7 pm, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

A performance of works by Brahms, Mozart,

integrative medicine and how it’s relevant to the country’s current health care debate. $20, 6 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

UNM Center for Life presents a discussion with Dr. Andrew Weil that explains the philosophy behind

Cowgirl Karaoke Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Hillary Smith and Company El Farol 808 Canyon

Jazzy blues, gospel-inflected R&B, and soul. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Santa Fe Swing Old Fellows Lodge 1125 Cerrillos

A dance lesson followed by a group dance. $8 lesson and dance, $3 dance only, 7 pm lesson, 8 pm dance, santafeswing.com.

October 14 tuesday Basic Crochet Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards

Explore crocheting basics. $115, 10 am–12 pm, 505-428-1270, sfcc.edu.

Classic French Soups and Stews Las Cosas Kitchen Shoppe & Cooking School 181 Paseo de Peralta

Cooking class. 6–8 pm, 505-988-3394, lascosascooking.com.


Santa Fe Farmers Market Santa Fe Railyard 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Open Jam Night Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta

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

Members of the public are invited to jam onstage. Mikes, a drum kit, and amps are provided. Free, 7 pm, thestorydancerproject.org.

Traditional New Mexican III Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Santa Fe Scrabble Flying Star Café 500 Market

Traditional New Mexican cooking class. $80, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Tournament-style one-on-one game-playing presented by the Official North American Scrabble Players Association. $1, 5:30–9:30 pm, 505-426-1753, scrabbleplayers.org.

A New Twist on Open Mic The Copper Lounge at Bishop’s Lodge 1297 Bishop’s Lodge Rd

Sean Ashby Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

The Copper Lounge is a new open mic location for up-and-coming local artists as well as seasoned professional musicians and songwriters. Free, 6–11 pm, 505-983-6377, bishopslodge.com.

Argentine Tango Milonga El Mesón 213 Washington

Tango dancing. $5, 7:30–11 pm, 505-983-6756, elmeson-santafe.com.

Bill Hearne Trio La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

Country music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Canyon Road Blues Jam El Farol 808 Canyon

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

Les Gens Bruyants Evangelo’s 200 W San Francisco

Free jambalaya and live Cajun music from Les Gens Bruyants. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-982-9014.

Mary Scholz Cowgirl BBQ 319 S Guadalupe

Singer-songwriter. Free, 2–5 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

October 15 wednesday Botanical Drawing and Painting Autumn Specimens Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards

A class focused on botanical drawing and painting autumn specimens. $149, 9:30 am–12:30 pm, 505-428-1270, sfcc.edu.

Let’s Take a Look Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 710 Camino Lejo

Curators from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and the Laboratory of Anthropology are in the MIAC lobby to evaluate your treasures. Free, 12–2 pm, 505-467-1200, indianartsandculture.org.

Live guitar music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com. Ongoing: Into the Wild at Sage Creek Gallery

Santa Fe Independent Film Festival Various locations

Kick off of the the five-day event featuring cuttingedge programming; discussions with top directors, writers, and actors; and more. Part of the Santa Fe Arts Festival. See profile on page 15. Ticket prices vary according to event, through October 19, 505349-1414, santafeindependentfilmfestival.com.

Burritos Santa Fe School of Cooking 125 N Guadalupe

Hands-on class focused on burritos. $98, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Steaks & Reds Santa Fe Culinary Academy 112 W San Francisco

Learn techniques to make steak shine as you sample three big, perfectly paired red wines. $85, 5:30–8:30 pm, 505-983-7445, santafeculinaryacademy.com.

Chaco Astronomy Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 704 Camino Lejo

G. B. Cornucopia, a ranger at Chaco Culture National Historical Park for 28 years, leads a discussion of Chaco Astronomy: An Ancient American Cosmology, written by Anna Sofaer, who discovered the Sun Dagger petroglyph site. Free, 1:30 pm, 505983-2097, wheelwright.org.

John Kurzweg El Farol 808 Canyon

Rock music and classic covers. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Sierra La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco

Country music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

The Fam Fiction Tour El Paseo Bar & Grill 208 Galisteo

Live music by Fresh Kils, Coolzey, and Mega Ran. $10, 9 am–12 am, 505-992-2848.

Ongoing Grand Cru Color Karan Ruhlen Gallery 225 Canyon

New mixed-media acrylic paintings by Daniel Phill. Free, through October 9, 505-820-0807, karanruhlen.com.

Into the Wild Sage Creek Gallery 421 Canyon

Solo exhibition featuring Colorado wildlife painter Edward Aldrich. Free, through October 10, 505-988-3444, sagecreekgallery.com.

The Sky’s the Limit Manitou Galleries 225 Canyon

New works by Dale Terbush. Free, through October 10, 505-986-9833, manitougalleries.com.

New Paintings Blue Rain Gallery 130 Lincoln, Ste C

New works by Deladier Almeida. Free, through October 11, 505-954-9902, blueraingallery.com.

Before Baatan: New Mexico’s 200th Coast Artillery Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma

Rare photos of the New Mexico 200th Coast Artillery pre-Bataan, taken by unnamed photographers, October 9, 2014 NOW

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are exhibited in this Palace of the Governors photo archive show. Free, through October 12, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

lewallencontemporary.com

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

Ben Wright Art Gone Wild Galleries 130-D Lincoln

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

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

Inheritance by Osmosis David Rothermel Contemporary Fine Art 142 Lincoln, Ste 102

A Walk in the Woods The William&Joseph Gallery 727 Canyon

Paintings by Tim Althauser. Free, through November 10, 505-982-9404, thewilliamandjosephgallery.com.

Smaller works by David Rothermel. Free, through October 15, 575-642-4981, drfa-sf.com.

Native Beauty Ventana Fine Art 400 Canyon

Landscape show featuring new works by Doug Dawson, Barry McCuan, Mary Silverwood, and Lynne E. Windsor. Free, through October 15, 800-746-8815, ventanafineart.com.

Nature’s Way InArt Gallery 219 Delgado

Solo show featuring encaustic paintings, multimedia works, and photographs by Andrea Bonfils. Free, through October 15, 505-983-6537, inartsantafe.com.

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

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

Transparency: Color and Light David Richard Gallery 544 S Guadalupe

Solo exhibition of works by Salvatore Emblema (1929–2006). Free, through October 18, 855-983-9555, davidrichardgallery.com.

Bit’ Hahodiishtaa Zane Bennett Contemporary Art 435 S. Guadalupe

Ongoing: Investigations of the Environment at LewAllen Galleries

ings by Alice Leora Briggs. Free, through October 26, 505-995-9902, evokecontemporary.com.

Measure of Days: Drawn to the Wall III Patina Gallery 131 W Palace

Abstract paintings by Daniel Kosharek. Free, through October 26, 505-986-3432, patina-gallery.com.

Kimono Gallery 901 901 Canyon

Works by Gina Marie Erlichman. Free, through October 28, 908-757-9211, gallery901.com.

New Handwoven Rugs Marigold Arts 424 Canyon

Handwoven rugs by Connie Enzmann-Forneris. Free, through October 29, 505-982-4142, marigoldarts.com.

POP Femme Sugar Coated Strange 2014 Pop Gallery 142 Lincoln, Ste 102

Abstract paintings by David Johns. Free, through October 24, 505-982-8111, zanebennettgallery.com.

Seventh annual benefit for the Southwest CARE Center featuring contemporary work by female artists. Free, through October 31, 505-820-0788, popsantafe.com.

Recent Paintings and Sculpture James Kelly Contemporary 1611 Paseo de Peralta

The Uncanny S. R. Brennen Galleries 124 W Palace

Urban Wilderness: Chaos Transformed and Gracia VERVE Gallery of Photography 218 E Marcy

Investigations of the Environment LewAllen Galleries at the Railyard 1613 Paseo de Peralta

James Kelly Contemporary’s first exhibition of work by Arizona-based artist Matt Magee. Free, through October 25, 505-989-1601, jameskelly.com.

Works by Irving Greines and Ysabel LeMay, respectively. Free, through October 25, 505-982-5009, vervegallery.com.

Asylum EVOKE Contemporary 550 S Guadalupe

New woodcuts, sgraffito drawings, and burn draw14

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Paintings by Teresa Oaxaca, David Gluck, and Katherine Stone. Free, through October 31, 505-428-0274, srbrennengalleries.com.

Photographs by Diane Burko. Free, through November 2, 505-988-3250, lewallencontemporary.com

Logos LewAllen Galleries at the Railyard 1613 Paseo de Peralta

New works by Dirk de Bruycker. Free, through November 2, 505-988-3250,

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.

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

A solo exhibition of work by Kathleen Wall. $10 (discounts for seniors, students, and military), $5 for New Mexico residents, through January 4, 2015, 505-988-8900, pvmiwa.org.

Drawing a Composition Line Georgia O’Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson

An exhibition of artwork by Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias (1904–1957), who’s best known for his caricatures of famous figures published in magazines in the 1920s and 1930s. This show reveals Covarrubias’s influential role within a global network of modernists that included Georgia O’Keeffe, as well as his contribution to the history of modern art. $6–$12 (kids free), 10 am–5 pm, through January 18, 2015, 505-946-1000, okeeffemuseum.org.

City Tours

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). Season extends through October 11.

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


the much buzzed-about event welcomes its sixth season by Ash le y M. Big g e r s

The Santa Fe Independent Film Festival is cuing up its sixth year of screenings, workshops, and discussions with no small goal in mind: to have this City Different gathering drafted into the major leagues alongside the Sundance, Telluride, and Toronto International film festivals. “Santa Fe is such a prominent city in the arts; it should be in film, too,” says Liesette Paisner, the festival’s director. “We’re looking at putting Santa Fe on the map [for film] on the national level. We have a schedule that’s comparable to and competes with [those of the] longstanding festivals.” The state’s most-attended festival—10,000 people are expected this year— opens with a top film on the international scene. The Tribe, a Ukrainian film that won three awards during the 2014 Cannes Film Festival’s International Critics’ Week, kicks things off on October 15. “It’s one of the best art films of the year and is told all in sign language. It shows that human emotion and story can be told entirely through visuals,” says Paisner. Ticket holders will be the first audience outside of New York and Los Angeles to preview HBO’s new miniseries Olive Kitteridge, starring Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, and Richard Jenkins. The lineup also includes a master-level discussion with Ted Hope, the CEO of Fandor (Netflix for cinephiles) and the producer of critically acclaimed films such as American Splendor and 21 Grams. The festival will grant lifetime achievement awards to George R. R. Martin, a screenwriter as well as the author of the book series that’s been adapted into the HBO show Game of Thrones, and actress Shirley MacLaine. MacLaine will also introduce a screening of her latest independent project, Elsa & Fred. For a complete list of screenings and events, visit santafeindependentfilmfestival.com. Santa Fe Independent Film Festival, October 15–19, passes $250, individual film tickets $10–$25, panels and discussions $6; events will be held at The Lensic Performing Arts Center, CCA, The Screen, and the Jean Cocteau Cinema; santafeindependentfilmfestival.com

MARIA COSTA NOVA

courtesy santa fe independent film festival

MARIA COSTA NOVA

Santa Fe Independent Film Festival

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Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet by Er ic G u s t af s on

On October 12, the astounding virtuosi of the Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet make their first Santa Fe appearance with a concert at The Lensic that features works by Mozart, Hindemith, and Thuille. Pianist Jon Nakamatsu, the Gold Medal winner at the 1997 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, performs with the quintet, offering Santa Fe what the world’s most important stages have already experienced. Performance Santa Fe is excited to present this rare musical opportunity. “These exceptional soloists playing together bring music to another level,” says Artistic Director Joseph Illick. “It’s great music-making that demands superstar virtuosity. 16

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The little-known and neglected Thuille piece [his Sextet for Piano and Winds] requires this expertise and is not to be missed.” The ensemble—which comprises Walter Seyforth (clarinet), Michael Hasel (flute), Marion Reinhard (bassoon), Fergus McWilliam (horn), and Andreas Wittman (oboe)—is the Berlin Philharmonic’s first permanently established wind quintet. It was founded in 1988, during principal conductor Herbert von Karajan’s tenure with the orchestra. In 1991, the group partnered with the Swedish recording company BIS Records, and many of the recordings they’ve made are considered definitive performances of works within the wind quintet repertoire. More recently, the quintet has increased its mentoring activities with young musicians by offering lessons and holding chamber music workshops around the world. In addition to the Thuille piece, the quintet’s Santa Fe program includes Hindemith’s Kleine Kammermusik (Little Chamber Music) and Mozart’s Quintet for Piano and Winds in E-flat Major as well as his Fantasy for Mechanical Organ, arranged by Michael Hasel. Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet, October 12, 4 pm, $27–$100, The Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W San Francisco, performancesantafe.org, ticketssantafe.org

Peter Adamik

the acclaimed chamber music ensemble makes its first appearance in Santa Fe


Casa Chimayó Celebrating four years in business this October, Casa Chimayó prides itself on preserving the authentic New Mexican culinary traditions that owner Roberto Timoteo Cordova was taught by his mother while growing up in Chimayó. Chef Guisela de la Cruz has been instrumental in the restaurant’s success by mastering Cordova family recipes.—Cristina Olds Casa Chimayó, 409 W Water, casachimayosantafe.com

eating+ drinking

Owner Don Timoteo, as he’s affectionately known, loves to talk with guests about New Mexico’s history, culture, and, of course, food.

Blue corn chicken enchiladas are made with tender shredded chicken and grated Jack cheese that’s layered on blue corn tortillas and covered with velvety Casa Chimayó red chile sauce.

KAREN SCHULD

Above: The vegetarian Rio Chiquito goat cheese tamale is filled with squash, beans, and corn—ingredients that Native Americans refer to as the “three sisters” and that have become an integral part of New Mexican cuisine. Left: Dried chile pods, pinto beans, and blue corn are a few of the popular items found in Casa Chimayó’s kitchen. October 9, 2014 NOW

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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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STEPHEN LANG, KERRI COTTLE, KAREN SCHULD

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As one of the largest art markets in the country, Santa Fe is always hosting openings at galleries and museums around town. Santa Fean NOW was recently out and about at a number of receptions, and here’s just a sampling of the fun people we hung out with.

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Opening Night


art

openings | reviews | artists

Vladimir Kush, Diary of Discoveries, giclée on canvas, 24 x 42"

Versatile Russian-born artist Vladimir Kush first attended art school at the age of seven. Today he paints in oil and watercolor, creates limited-edition giclées, and sculpts in bronze. Through the juxtaposition of previously unrelated objects, he makes reference to deeper meanings and metaphors while maintaining a realistic approach to representation in a style he refers to as “metaphorical realism.”—Emily Van Cleve Vladimir Kush: Reflect the World Through the Mirror of Metaphor, October 10–December 31, reception October 10, 5–8 pm, The Longworth Gallery, 530 Canyon, thelongworthgallery.com

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art

PROFILE

Painted Meditations on the Landscape

Mich ael Mon r oe Et hr id ge’s n e w s how ope ns at Pippin Cont e mpora r y

Allegro, acrylic on canvas, 48 x 36"

Michael Monroe Ethridge’s paintings have a rhythmic push-pull of muscular sweeps and subtle nuances. 22

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by Barbara Tyner

Music and art have been central to Michael Monroe Ethridge’s life since childhood. The Arkansas native fronted a rock band for 10 years, played piano on cruise ships, and today keeps a piano in his atelier for those moments when music feeds his muse. “If you look at the beauty of color, at the intricacy of what’s going on within a painting, it can take you away,” Ethridge says. “It can give you encouraging thoughts, just like music can.” Ethridge works in an abstract expressionistic mode, creating thick, sculptural acrylics graced with surprising luminosity. His work has a rhythmic push-pull of muscular sweeps and subtle nuances, but then there’s a jolt of jewel-like color, or a slice of turquoise sky slips through clouds dreamt up by Turner. Watch the surfaces shift and pulse and you won’t have to be synesthetic to “hear” tones and cadences and maybe a little saxophone. (Ethridge describes himself as a Billy Joel, Beatles, Big Band kind of guy.) The artist is as likeable and inviting as his paintings, and he’s quick to point out that he’s “a pretty average guy from Arkansas who wanders out into the world of abstraction.” Now based in Naples, Florida, Ethridge shows his work at Pippin Contemporary in Santa Fe. His art offers the kind of spiritual or psychological uplift many of us experience in the City Different—and that’s the artist’s intention. Music is a big part of this. “When I’m working, if the music is good, if it’s well-produced, the painting is going to be good,” he says. Once Ethridge settles into his music-aided groove, he relaxes, engages, and taps into more unconscious places. “My mind opens up,” he adds. “Painting becomes almost a meditation, and I get this sensation. I can almost feel it overtaking me, this openness. It’s a euphoric feeling. Now I’m in ‘the zone,’ painting and painting, and something happens on the canvas. Suddenly there’s a beautiful nuance right before my eyes, like it fell out of the sky.” Ethridge translates these deep, bright feelings of joy into his work, hoping that viewers will feel and absorb the positivity and elation, too, because art, he says, should make us feel better. Most professional artists have had their share of day jobs. Ethridge’s background includes working as an anesthetist. Anesthesiology and music—fitting for an artist whose mission is to soothe and transform through the senses. Michael Monroe Ethridge, Painted Meditations on the Landscape, October 8–October 27, reception October 10, 5–7 pm, Pippin Contemporary, 200 Canyon, pippincontemporary.com


art

PROFILE

Modiste

Erin Cone ’s ne w show ope ns at Nüa r t Gal le r y by Emily Va n Cle ve

Bloom, acrylic on canvas, 84 x 48"

The dresses in the paintings featured in Erin Cone’s show Modiste are out of the artist’s imagination. “They’re improbable dresses,” says the University of Texas graduate, who briefly worked as an illustrator for a book publisher before beginning her fine art career in 2000. “People will wonder if they’re strange haute couture dresses.” Opening at Nüart Gallery on October 10, Modiste includes approximately 17 acrylic on canvas paintings of women in long, elegant, flowing dresses rendered in a style that fuses traditional portraiture with realism. Cone took the name of her show from the historical term for a dressmaker, since dressmaking is the inspiration for this particular body of work. “In life, the dress reinvents the wearer,” Cone has said. “In art, the dress does the same, functioning as an automatic abstract—a shape put on the figure that immediately changes its impact.” Cone used herself as the model for her paintings, but the dresses are either abstractions of ones she has in her closet or ones she saw in photographs or magazines. A bright red dress she purchased years ago at a flea market in France inspired a group of paintings in Modiste. “I’ve been playing with red dresses for about five years,” Cone says. “Although most people consider red to be a strong color, I consider it to be neutral.” Textures and shapes are also important in Modiste. Some of the show’s images appear to be more layered and multidimensional than others, and the structure and composition of the dresses are key to conveying the emotion of each piece. “These paintings,” Cone says, “continue my exploration of using the dress to create a specifically feminine aesthetic with a timeless allure.” Erin Cone: Modiste, October 10–26, reception, October 10, 5–7 pm, Nüart Gallery, 670 Canyon, nuartgallery.com October 9, 2014 NOW

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ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: Emilio lobato Colorado-based artist Emilio Lobato spent the last two years thinking about selfworth and what makes life worth living. The catalyst for his intense introspection was the terminal illness of his wife of 32 years, Darlene Cisneros, who died in August 2012. Lobato was her caretaker for more than a year. The solo exhibition The Measure of a Man, which opens at Winterowd Fine Art October 10, explores Lobato’s emotional journey during this life-changing experience. “I started questioning everything,” he says. “Was I an adequate husband, caretaker, and father? I was completely devoted to taking care of [my wife] and wasn’t able to do my art, which had been an important part of my life for 20 years. My wife always encouraged my work; it’s my connection with the world. After she died, I delved back into it.” Antique rulers purchased at flea markets and garage sales near Lobato’s home in Denver are integrated into the show’s 12 assemblage wall sculptures. “Life can’t be measured by rulers,” Lobato explains. “The ruler represents precise structure, and I render them useless from their original intention in my new works. How we judge life needs to come from a deeper source.” Lobato grew up in Colorado’s San Luis Valley with Spanish as his first language. Most of the titles of the pieces in this show are in Spanish, including Rutina Diario (Daily Reflections), Reflejos Personales (Private Reflections), and Ponte el Pantalon (Put Your Pants On, or Man-Up). The artist’s work, which comprises oil and mixed-media paintings on panel as well as assemblage wall sculptures, is part of many public and corporate collections, including ones at the Hyatt Regency in Denver, General Motors in

ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: Mark White

Crystal Heat, oil on panel, 48 x 32" 24

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Rutina Diario, assemblage wall sculpture, 12 x 12 x 2” Detroit, and the National Hispanic Cultural Center in Albuquerque.—EVC Emilio Lobato: The Measure of a Man, October 10–October 23, reception October 10, 5–7 pm, Winterowd Fine Art, 701 Canyon, fineartsantafe.com

In his new show opening October 10 at his eponymous Canyon Road gallery, Mark White furthers his ongoing Reflective series of paintings with roughly 20 new abstract oil works, all of which he created over the course of the last five months. Instead of conveying the reflective qualities of water through the use of horizontal and vertical planes, which were integral to earlier works in the series, White has taken a different approach with these latest creations. “Diagonal and repetitive shapes have been helping me think in more complex and sculptural ways,” White says. Another noticeable difference in these latest works is White’s palette. Rather than using primarily cool colors, the artist has warmed up the panels by infusing them with yellows, reds, and browns. “I was thinking about the fall and how much I appreciate the leaves changing colors,” says the Illinois native, who studied with painter Albert Handell and sculptors Lincoln Fox and Valentin Okorokov.

A handful of oil on aluminum paintings are also in the show. Abstract images are painted on cutout shapes that look like silhouettes of people. “I’ve been painting on metal—bronze, brass, aluminum, and stainless steel—for 25 years, so this process is quite familiar to me,” White notes. Five sculptures in the show (some of which are new) are from White’s We series, which celebrates the common man. Gone are the stainless steel sculptures’ gray/black patina; instead, White has bulked up these slender humanlike forms with molding paste and painted them with bright reds, yellows, and purples. “In some ways, the older pieces [in the We series] with the gray and black patina remind me of nudes, while this new work reminds me of people with their clothes on,” White says. “I like the simplicity of the message in black, but this colorful work adds personality and a sense of playfulness.”—EVC Mark White: New Paintings and New Sculptures, October 10–31, reception October 10, 5–8 pm, Mark White Fine Art, 414 Canyon, markwhitefineart.com


1 House | 20 Designers | 2 Weekends The proceeds from ShowHouse Santa Fe benefit our local children’s program non -profits: Dollars4schools.org and The Lensic Performing Arts Center, Youth in Performing Arts Education Programs.

N Foothills Rd

Old Santa Fe Trail

Foothils Trail

10 Altazano Dr. Old Santa Fe Trail

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Altazano Dr.

Old Santa Fe Trail

Tickets also available at the door

www.ShowHouseSantaFe.com

Directions:

From the intersection of Old Santa Fe Trail and Zia Rd, go south .2 miles to the first left, Foothills Trail. Proceed east for another .2 miles to the first right, Foothills Road. Take Foothills Road south for .2 miles to your first left, Altazano Drive. Proceed due east for .1 mile to the driveway of #10, directly in front of you.


art

PROFILE

Carrie’s West a ne w show by Ca r rie Fell ope ns at Sor rel Sky Galle r y by Ashle y M. Big g e r s

Big, hand-embellished giclée canvas, 48 x 72"

Painter Carrie Fell’s subjects may be hard-charging, salt-of-theearth cowboys and cowgirls, horses, and the infinite sky, but Fell is hardly a traditional Western artist. (That label harkens back to the lifestyle paintings of Charlie Russell and Frederic Remington.) Instead, Fell captures the Western spirit with gestural, colorful works—15 of which will be on display in the solo exhibition Carrie’s West, opening October 10 at Sorrel Sky Gallery. Often, Fell’s subjects are faceless. “I’m looking for viewers to be artists themselves,” she says. “I want them to see something uniquely personal to them or to see themselves in the painting. I don’t give them much information, and a lot of that information is done through color.” Such is the case in Retulled, a portrait of a blonde woman with her prized concho belt tucked against her swirling turquoise skirt, and Honest Bucker, which features the arch of a bronco’s back against a cerulean background.

The self-taught artist manipulates her medium in such a way that it becomes an extension of her body, her self. She pours acrylic paint mixed with water from a plastic cup, spreads the paint with her fingertips to define the curve in a horse’s neck, and defines the line of a cowgirl’s shoulder with the flick of a crisp edge of a manicured fingernail. “Experimentation is part of my work,” Fell says. “I tend to equate it with life, which is also always changing and you never know what you’re going to get. You use the expertise you’ve developed and the time you’ve dedicated to your craft to help that learning curve.” A native of Denver, where she now operates a showroom in addition to a gallery in Vail, Fell’s work is among the collections of the Booth Western Art Museum and the Desert Caballeros Western Museum as well as in galleries in Beaver Creek, Colorado; Park City, Utah; and Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Sorrel Sky shows Fell’s work in both its Durango, Colorado, and Santa Fe locations. Carrie Fell: Carrie’s West, October 10–24, reception October 10, 5–7:30 pm, Sorrel Sky Gallery, 125 W Palace, sorrelsky.com

Lawrence Fodor, Without Gravity VII, oil, linseed oil, and alkyd resin on canvas, 60 x 60"

Fall Group Show, Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 702 ½ Canyon, chiaroscurosantafe.com October 11–November 22 Abstract paintings by Lawrence Fodor, whose work delves into the highly personal to find the universal, are part of Chiaroscuro’s fall group show, which includes photographs by Bonnie Bishop and mixed-media paintings by Jay Tracy. Also on view is new work by Rebecca Bluestone, a traditional tapestry artist who uses hand-dyed silks of varied textures and metallic threads woven on a cotton warp as her medium.—EVC 26

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michelle odom

Eating Around El Farol

[on the market]

Tesuque treasure

Omira Brazilian Steakhouse

Friday, September 26, 9 pm. Triple chocolate mousse cake. $5.95, omiragrill.com Send Santa Fean NOW pictures of your meal (with the info we’ve included here) and we might run them in the magazine! Email info@santafean.com.

michelle odom

Architect Peter Wurzburger designed this 3,809-squarefoot Tesuque-area home with contemporary lines. The residence, which you enter through a garden walkway, has two extended arms. The right arm leads to private areas of the house, and the left arm leads downstairs to the garage, a private entry, and guest or children’s quarters. The middle of the house features common areas like the living room, which has a fireplace, high ceilings, beams, and clerestory windows; a dining room; a kitchen; and a den, which features built-in shelves, a private deck, and a powder room. The master bedroom has Vermont cherry wood floors, a kiva fireplace, and a secluded outdoor lounge space. A private office/studio with a kiva fireplace occupies the entire second floor.

COMPANIONS GR OOMI N G AND

DOWNTOWN DOGGIE DAYCARE

239 Johnson Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501

(505) 982–7882 Photo: Frances Ehrenberg-Hyman

List price: $1.597 million Contact: Clara Dougherty, Dougherty Real Estate, 505-690-0471, dresf.com JOHN BAKER

michelle odom

Saturday, September 27, 8 pm. Tapas: Chorizo y Morcilla (smoky paprika sausage and Spanish blood sausage with aioli) and alcachofas (Reggiano-crusted artichokes with a lemon-caper butter). Any three tapas, $25. Dessert: Tres Angelitos (tastings of chocolate mousse, crème brûlée, and torta de limón). $9, elfarolsf.com

(505) 954–1049 October 9, 2014 NOW

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| L A ST LOO K |

Be sure to gaze northward this week, as the mountains above Santa Fe are wildly ablaze with the dazzling foliage of the season. Contrasting with the deep forest greens of the ponderosa pines and the white bark of their own trunks, Santa Fe’s aspen are peaking with lemony-gold goodness right now. The cooler temperatures and shorter days of late have caused the green chlorophyll in the aspen leaves to degrade, allowing the yellow and orange carotenoid pigments to dominate. If the climate stays cool and moist, the fall colors should remain through October, so now is a great time to take a winding drive up Hyde Park Road or hop on a bike for a breathtaking ride along the Aspen Vista Trail. Get outside and drink in this brilliant natural display before the trees are blown clean of their glorious leaves.—Cristina Olds

LISA LAW

Stephen Lang

Mark Kane

Santa Fe’s glorious aspen trees

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505.795.0054 | www.NeuBleu.com 418 Cerillos Road, Suite 22 , Santa Fe NM 87501


Jane Filer, Albion, acrylic on canvas, 59" x 53" This is the finished painting, whose creative process was documented in stages on the back cover of the October/November issue of the Santa Fean.

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

BillHesterFineArt.com (505) 660-5966


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