Santa Fe Reporter, July 10, 2024

Page 1


OPINION 5

NEWS

7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6

NO MIDDLE GROUND 8

Santa Fe median bill heads for a vote BACK TO HEALTH 11

Union, management report on La Familia COVER STORY 13

2024 ILLUSTRATOR’S CUP

From pyography to pen & ink, this year’s winners drew it all ONLINE

THE ALEC BALDWIN TRIAL BEGINS MORNING WORD RETURNS

WE’RE HERE FOR YOU

The journalists at the Santa Fe Reporter strive to help our community stay connected. We publish this free print edition and daily web updates. Can you help support our journalism mission? Learn more at sfreporter.com/friends

CULTURE

SFR PICKS 19

Primate Picassos, music and more THE CALENDAR 20

3 QUESTIONS 24

Oñate activist Jacob Johns returns to NM with art FOOD 29

EMPTY NEST

We came to El Nido for sushi; we left dissapointed OPERA 30

MEN BEHAVING BADLY

Stephen Barlow’s Don Giovanni makes immorality a good time

MOVIES 31

MAXXXINE

The horror of Hollywood, plus more reel news in Bonus Features

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER

JULIA GOLDBERG

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR

ROBYN DESJARDINS

ART DIRECTOR

ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

CULTURE EDITOR

ALEX DE VORE

STAFF WRITERS

EVAN CHANDLER

MO CHARNOT

CALENDAR EDITOR

ADAM FERGUSON

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT

EXECUTIVE

JAYDE SWARTS

DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER

BRIANNA KIRKLAND

CIRCULATION MANAGER

ANDY BRAMBLE

EDITORIAL INTERN

LAUREN LIFKE

ART/PRODUCTION INTERN

CHARLIE McCARTY

OWNERSHIP

CITY OF ROSES NEWSPAPER CO.

PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN

EDITORIAL DEPT: editor@sfreporter.com

CULTURE EVENTS: calendar@sfreporter.com

DISPLAY ADVERTISING: advertising@sfreporter.com

CLASSIFIEDS: classy@sfreporter.com

Cover image by Sandy Winkelman

Mail letters to PO Box 4910, Santa Fe, NM 87502; or email them to editor@sfreporter.com. Letters (no more than 200 words) should refer to specific articles in the Reporter. Letters will be edited for space and clarity.

NEWS, JUNE 26: “TEACHABLE MOMENT”

ISO DIALOGUE

I am not a member of the Independent Women’s Forum, and had not even heard of it until the ad they ran. Yet I agree that there needs to be more discretion about transitioning minors.

European nations are adopting a more cautious approach. A series of systematic reviews of evidence for the benefits and risks of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones have shown a low certainty of benefits and that interventions are still in an “experimental” phase . Specifically, data collected and analyzed by public health authorities in Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands and England have concluded that the risk-benefit ratio of youth gender transition ranges from unknown to unfavorable.

As a result, across Europe there has been a shift. Until there is reliable long-term evidence that the benefits of youth gender transition outweigh the risks, European countries are limiting most medical interventions to rigorous clinical research settings.

In contrast, in the US there is no middle ground between states that guarantee access to youth gender-affirming care and those that ban or severely restrict gender-affirming care for minors. Talk of introducing guardrails is branded as “transphobic” or “denying science.”

People calling for caution are not hating anybody and are not calling for the eradication of trans people. Furthermore, the number of detransitioners is increasing rapidly, even though they are shunned and discredited by the LGBTQ world. This should give everyone pause. Let’s have some real dialogue instead of nasty accusations.

COVER STORY, JUNE 12: “THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS”

IT’S THE LAW(S)

The degradation of the livability of a city is related to its public safety. Law enforcement in Santa Fe obviously needs more support to do their jobs (yes, aggressive driving is a minute-to-minute danger in Santa Fe, as is texting and reading texts while driving (against the law in NMStatute 66-7-374.) How about instituting car inspections? More cameras? Pass a law that maximizes the size of a tailpipe. I joined SAD (Stop Aggressive Driving) and look forward to a public meeting with them. Mayor Webber, please take a note from what happened at Boeing—and keep the plane of the City of Santa Fe flying safely.

BARBARA CHRISTIANO SANTA FE

THE FORK, JUNE 27: “BRUNCH UNDER THE BALLOONS”

JUST EAT IT

French Toast batter has eggs in it. Always. Without eggs, it would just be mushy bread. You are free to put a fried or scrambled or poached egg on top of the French Toast, as well, for extra protein. Many cakes also have eggs.

You’re welcome.

STEPHANIE COOK

FABULOUS LAS VEGAS, NEVADA

SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake: editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.

Fiesta de Los Niños

July 20–21 10 am–4 pm

Hands-On History and Entertainment for Kids of All Ages

Free for Kids 12 and Under

tickets must be purchased online!

INVESTIGATION

FINDS 60% OF OIL AND GAS FACILITIES IN PERMIAN BASIN VIOLATED ENVIRON MENTAL STANDARDS

And our first thought was surprise it wasn’t higher

GOV. MICHELLE LUJAN GRISHAM REPORTEDLY CONCERNED ABOUT PRESIDENT BIDEN LOSING IN NEW MEXICO

But apparently not concerned about a future cabinet appointment

CITY OF SANTA FE CONSIDERING WATER AND WASTEWATER RATE HIKES

And should consider reading the room

LIQUOR LICENSES AT GERALD PETERS’ SANTA FE DINING SPOTS—INCLUDING MARIA’S AND RIO CHAMA—ALL EXPIRE

So keep an eye out for sober politicians

ALEC BALDWIN ARRIVES IN SANTA FE FOR HIS TRIAL

You can spot him easily by the parade of photographers following him

GAO: GAPS REMAIN IN FIRE PROGRAM

Find more on the Government Accounting Office’s report on the US Forest Service’s prescribed burn in the July 9 Morning Word.

ROBERT F. KENNEDY QUALIFIES FOR NEW MEXICO BALLOT

Expert Cancer Care, Close To Home

At CHRISTUS St. Vincent Regional Cancer Center, our team of experts provide patients with the most comprehensive cancer treatment. And, because of our membership in the Mayo Clinic Care Network, our providers can access the clinical trials and second opinions on your behalf—at no additional cost to you.

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•Radiation

•Infusion center

•Advanced technology

•Imaging •Nutritional guidance •Acupuncture

•Clinical trials

•Supportive care •Massage therapy

No Middle Ground NEWS

Despite amendments, critics say Santa Fe’s proposed median safety bill criminalizes homelessness

To help Santa Fe achieve “functional zero” for homelessness in various populations, city officials and partner providers will need to increase access to safe and affordable housing; streamline access to wraparound services; expand education around efforts; and establish a quality by-name list of the unhoused, experts told the City of Santa Fe’s Quality of Life Committee on July 3.

“In general, functional zero means we are housing people at a higher rate than the people that are incoming into our homelessness systems,” New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness Data Manager Vianney Campos said.

The Built for Zero team, an initiative from Community Solutions and the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, provided the latest figures and established two-year goals based on conversations with partner providers and stakeholders. The City of Santa Fe joined the Built for Zero efforts in March 2019.

While the city has unveiled several efforts geared at helping unhoused residents, advo-

cates say a proposed new law criminalizes homelessness.

A bill slated for a vote by the City of Santa Fe governing body on July 10 and sponsored by Mayor Alan Webber seeks to make it illegal to stand on medians less than 36 inches wide for time periods “longer than needed.” New amendments removed a former potential jail penalty and lowered the maximum fine from $500 to $25 for violations. The revised bill also carves out exceptions to the law, such as: people who are crossing the roadway; injured or disabled people who are “unexpectedly incapacitated” while crossing; law enforcement; and those with car trouble.

“I hope we’ll get a vote on it,” Webber tells SFR. “I think the ability to reassure people that the real intent of the bill is safety and only safety has been made clearer by these amendments.”

However, American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico Policing Policy Advocate Daniel Williams tells SFR none of the tweaks “have changed our legal director’s assessment of the constitutionality of the bill,” which advocates say violates the right to free speech activities, whether those include protesting, selling newspapers or soliciting donations.

Williams cites concerns regarding enforcement also come into play. Violation of the proposed median law now carries the same penalty as jaywalking, he notes.

“We know there are huge racial disparities in the way these kinds of things are enforced. Black and brown people are significantly

SOURCE: CITY OF SANTA FE

families and 10 veterans experiencing homelessness in Santa Fe—an increase from 244 to 279 between May and June. The group is working to get more inflow and outflow data to help establish a more accurate estimation, she added.

“This coding system acts almost as our point-in-time count in the community on a monthly basis,” she said, noting a more traditional approach is an annual count. “While we have made gains in community collaboration and goal setting, creating a solid data foundation will continue to be a priority for the team.”

A map prepared by the City of Santa Fe illustrates the narrow medians on which a proposed law would prohibit standing or sitting for long periods.

Narrow Medians Wide Medians

more likely to get ticketed for jaywalking, and enforcement can become a fig leaf for harassing unhoused people,” Williams says. “That heightens our concern that this will lead to unnecessary and dangerous contact with law enforcement for some of the most vulnerable people in Santa Fe.”

Rebecca Netta, a social worker for 10 years in Santa Fe, agrees with ACLU-NM’s assessment and tells SFR the proposed law is “unfair” and places more burden on law enforcement.

“These people aren’t just going to go away, and with all the problems that we have in our country and how expensive everything is and the increasing issues with drugs and lack of mental health resources that creates the issue of homelessness, these numbers will increase. So what is the end game?” Netta says. “If we’re going to take away a valid way to raise money for themselves, what’s going to happen once people become super desperate? That also puts them in a situation where they can be victims of violence from people, too.”

The latest count of unhoused individuals could be anywhere from 279 to 471 based on various data collecting systems. Campos said during last week’s presentation the organization relies most heavily on coordinated entry system data, which captures unhoused individuals accessing services—even informal ones like grabbing a lunch. That number, provided in partnership with various service providers, found 163 single adults; 23 youth; 27

City officials have already signed off on efforts to address homelessness, including approving contracts to establish and operate a “Safe Outdoor Space” in December 2023. Since April, Christ Lutheran Church has hosted 10 pallet shelters that include electricity, heating and cooling which The Life Link helps operate and connects individuals to case management services. Partner providers have also stepped up. In March, the Interfaith Community Shelter, which runs the Pete’s Place shelter off Cerrillos Road in a city-owned building, established a twice-weekly mobile hygiene unit where unhoused folks can go to get showers.

Santa Fe Police Chief Paul Joye tells SFR via text that the department supports the proposed median bill. Captain Thomas Grundler, who oversees the traffic unit, disputes concerns of increased unnecessary and dangerous contact with officers.

“If it’s an ordinance that we are charged with enforcing then for me it’s not necessarily unnecessary police contact,” Grundler tells SFR. “With body cameras, police nowadays are more accountable than they ever have been, so as long as they’re doing what they’re supposed to be doing then I don’t see an issue.”

He adds that any reason a person stands out there—not just panhandling—presents a traffic safety issue, and it won’t take long for officers to learn which medians the bill addresses.

Police noted 113 instances involving a median in 2023 and 55 so far in 2024. Those instances range from fights on medians to people throwing water bottles at passing cars. Only one, however, relates to a person standing on a median being hit by a vehicle. While the data may not be able to directly correlate, Grundler says he still believes the bill will bring increased safety.

“Anytime you’ve got somebody in the middle of the road, in my personal professional opinion, it’s just a matter of time before they step off at an inopportune time,” Grundler says. “Medians really are not meant for somebody to be camped out there.”

2024 Community Event Schedule at Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center

Presbyterian Community Health offers free in-person classes and programs at Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center to support healthy habits, and help improve your overall well-being.

COOKING MATTERS: EASY EATS

Thursdays: August 1, 8, 15, 22 | 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. | Teaching Kitchen

Join Registered Dietician Laura McCann to develop cooking confidence and learn how to plan and prepare healthy meals using new recipes, available foods and tools to save money.

SANTA FE FARMERS’ MARKET - DEL SUR

Tuesdays: July 2 through September 24 | 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Enjoy family-friendly activities, find locally grown fruits and vegetables, and meet area farmers.

The Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Del Sur is a partnership between Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center, Santa Fe Farmers’ Market and Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Institute.

4801 Beckner Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87507

Sign up at (505) 205-3667, at prescommhealthclasses.com or by scanning the QR code. phs.org/santafe

Back to Health

Following successful union negotiations last month, La Familia Medical Center reports ongoing improvements, according to physician and union member Sue Katz, as well as CEO Brandy Van Pelt-Ramirez.

Last year, staff balked over working conditions at the Santa Fe clinic, which serves approximately 15,000 mostly low-income and insured patients, alongside extreme financial struggles that initially hit after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Katz, a physician who has worked with La Familia for 33 years, tells SFR that while financial deficits at the clinic became clear after COVID-19, former CEO Julie Wright’s interactions with staff after she was hired in early 2023 eventually drove the staff to unionize. Katz described Wright as “disrespectful of staff, insulting and discriminatory.”

Wright tells SFR she has “no response” to these allegations, and adds that “there are two sides to every story.” During her time working at La Familia, she says, “I learned a lot, and that’s all I’m going to say.”

Katz cites constantly changing schedules and increased patient loads without discussion as some of the issues that led to unionization, along with inadequate nursing and security staff.

“We started unionizing to try to have more say in how La Familia was run and to try to keep the provider staff present because people were starting to leave or they were being fired,” Katz says.

Van Pelt-Ramirez, who became La Familia’s interim CEO after the employees unionized in September 2023 and dismissed Wright from her position, tells SFR the union has “defined the direction La Familia is going in.”

“It’s a good way to open up communication, and I think that’s one of the things that we struggled with, with the previous CEO,” Van Pelt-Ramirez, who became the official CEO in March, says. “We’ve been able to sit

at the table and agree on what the providers need. We look at it from a business perspective of what the patients need, what La Familia needs, and I think it’s going to result in greater collaboration in the future.”

Van Pelt-Ramirez says the collective bargaining agreement “really put things on paper” in terms of salary structure and staffto-patient ratios, using standards set by the Medical Group Management Association to determine how to safely have providers see their required number of patients. Additionally, they set up pay incentives for providers who choose to see extra patients.

Katz notes that the union’s primary goal “had nothing to do with gaining money,” and that instead of pay increases, providers asked to have a transparent salary structure for all staff and protections for employees from mistreatment and being fired.

“We’re doing what we should do, and we’re working with the administration and trying to meet their needs as well,” she says. “It feels like there’s more protection for us if there were to be a capricious administrator again…I think it was really empowering. It really gave me hope for La Familia.”

As a result, the clinic has made gains filling out its provider vacancies. According to Chief Development Officer Jasmin Milz, La Familia has recently hired four new doctors, a new nurse practitioner and a new psychiatrist, and has just three nurse practitioner vacancies remaining. Katz also notes that two providers who joined La Familia as part of a post-graduate residency program and “did not want to join last year because of all the problems,” recently decided to join the clinic full time.

Outside of La Familia, provider shortages remain high: According to a July 2024 report from University of New Mexico’s School of Health & Sciences, by the end of 2022 the state had a shortage of 334 primary care physicians; 5,704 RNs or clinical nurse specialists; 1,796 EMTs; 119 and 114 psychiatrists and occupational therapists; 482 pharmacists and 88 dentists.

Similarly, Presbyterian Medical Services recently reported it has vacancies for 34 primary care providers; 23 medical assistants; 18 behavioral health positions; 12 customer access representative positions and six community support workers. The report states that PMS has an “insufficient supply of providers that is exceeded by ever-growing demand.”

We started unionizing to try to have more say in how La Familia was run , and to try to keep the provider staff present because people were starting to leave or they were being fired .
-Sue Katz, MD

During a July 3 presentation before the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee, union members working at the UNM’s Sandoval Regional Medical Center asked legislators to hold the hospital’s management accountable by “forcing them to meet us at the table and bargain for a good and fair contract that prioritizes patient safety and quality care.”

The providers described a litany of issues with their working conditions similar to what employees at La Familia alleged: inadequate staffing; high turnover; disrespect from management and low pay. Furthermore, the hospital has, since the union formed in 2021, “refused to meet at the bargaining table” with the staff, according to union members.

Physical therapist Regina McGinnis told the committee that the quality of patient care has been “a slow progression downhill for the past few years,” and registered nurse Gigi Regusis says providers

are “doing the absolute best we can for our situation,” but “we have so many patients and not enough nurses.”

Van Pelt-Ramirez says she believes taking a collaborative approach with La Familia’s providers has aided in improving administration and provider relationships.

“My approach from the beginning has been, ‘tell me what I can do to help you, and let me tell you what we need as an organization to keep us alive,’ and being able to do that has been huge,” Van Pelt-Ramirez says. “[La Familia] lost a good percentage of providers in the six months the previous CEO was here, there was a lot of damage control that needed to be done.”

Now, Van Pelt-Ramirez says, the clinic is working toward gaining financial sustainability after surviving a funding crisis in November last year that led to the clinic asking for donations to keep the clinic afloat. As of press time, its GoFundMe page reports $200,950 raised of its $1 million goal.

Van Pelt-Ramirez adds that clinic leadership is investigating whether they can potentially secure state funding through the Legislature, as Milz describes state funding for the past several years as “flat.” Both also note that La Familia has been looking at maximizing reimbursements from insurance companies and looking for ways to help providers gain more time to see patients.

“The biggest group of people that came forward the most was our patients, because they’ve been here for years,” Van PeltRamirez says. “Their parents, multiple generations have come here, so we have some patients who give $5 a month, or just as much as they can. Our patients really rallied around us.”

La Familia raised more than $200,000 through GoFundMe to keep its doors open.

From pyrography to comics, the 2024 Illustrator’s Cup winners drew it all. The timing is both fortuitous and heartening for first-place winner Sandy Winkelman—his home studio is part of the upcoming 32nd Eldorado Studio Tour on September 21 and 22, so he’s feeling quite chuffed.

A nomadic sort of artist who plies graphic design for clients like Nike by day and works in pyrography—wood burning—and watercolor by night, Winkelman has lived in California and Oregon, but now calls New Mexico home. Here, he tells SFR, he’s developed a borderline obsession with the animals of the Southwest, many of which wend their way into his pieces.

“I always liked to draw and I always liked crafting, so I thought it would be kind of interesting to combine painting and drawing and crafting,” he says. “I’ve gone through multiple iterations, and it’s still evolving. I don’t really know what it’s going to end up being, but it’s usually animals.”

For his winning piece “Lobo Mexicano,” Winkelman makes use of muted desert watercolors among the concave textures of the pyrographic burns.

Elsewhere in this issue, find painstakingly detailed line drawings, an intense block print from an up-and-comer and even a comic book page from a food-obsessed local creator. As always, it’s hard to select just a few to print, but we’re loving the variety of styles.

LOBO MEXICANO

“My Southwest-inspired pyrography art captures the rugged beauty and rich culture of the American Southwest. Using fire to etch intricate designs into wood, I bring to life the vibrant, natural patterns and deep history of the region. Each piece reflects my passion for the desert’s resilience and the life within it, inviting viewers to connect with the spirit of the Southwest and its enduring beauty.” Find more at: art.winkstink.com

MANNY SUEGRO

Lifelong Española resident Randy Perraglio describes himself as “completely self taught,” though he’s taken “many classes” over the years. He doesn’t exhibit or sell his work, he says, with the exception of an annual local art festival. “I’m not good at the business side of art,” he writes. “I do what interests me and I do different mediums. Mostly drawing and painting but I also do fun bicycle creations.” Perraglio also spent more than a decade in the local band Imperial Rooster. His winning pen-and-ink entry depicts his late father-in-law.

SALVATION

Artist Cora Thompson, 17, will start her senior of high school next semester. “I have been painting, drawing and creating my entire life, using art as both an outlet for my emotions and a source of joy.” Currently, she primarily works in oil paints and printmaking; “Salvation”is a block print she carved. Thompson has won regional awards from Scholastic, and received “best concept” in the Santa Fe Community College’s 2023 Santa Fe Regional Exhibition for high school artists. “The two primary themes that my artwork explores are self perception/reflection and horror; I deeply enjoy expressing my thoughts through images while incorporating surreal or creepy elements as well,” she writes.

MISS UNIVERSE

Born in Los Angeles, CA, Ralph Torres has been drawing since he was three years old. His artistic style is one that depicts landscapes and people through a montage perspective by assembling specific imagery to convey a multilayered story. His recent relocation to Santa Fe has inspired him to explore new topics, a refreshing break from the hotels he would draw from the Las Vegas strip. Based on real photographs, the montage of images from this series are inspired from his research at the local public libraries. Ralph uses mostly pencil, ink and acrylic to reach the detail you see in his artistic expressions.

APP HUNTER

Ryan T Cook is a cartoonist living in Santa Fe, which he describes as “a gold mine for material, especially my non-fiction ‘documentary’ comics about food and travel.” His comic “Gas Station Food” explores the unique foods of Northern New Mexico’s filling stations, and is now available at Kitchenality in Santa Fe, as well as Travel Bug, Garcia Street Books and Big Adventure Comics.

BLACK BIRD FLY

Bette Yozell attended the Tyler School of Art in Rome, Italy, the Boston Museum School and has a BS in art education from Tufts University. She exhibited extensively in Europe for seven years. Once back in the US, she came to Santa Fe and taught at the College of Santa Fe and Santa Fe Prep, where she chaired the Art Department and taught for 27 years. Since retiring in 2011, Yozell is now full time in her studio. Learn more at byozell.com

THE WILDWOOD

Sarah Surprise is an illustrator and textile designer based in Santa Fe. She graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design with a BFA in Textiles. She uses natural dye techniques and watercolors to create magical critters and landscapes. To see more of her illustrations, visit: sarahsurprisestudio.com

WOMAN WITH SCARF AND BOOK

John Tollett worked for more than 50 years as an illustrator/designer/art director at ad agencies, publishers and as a freelancer. For the past 12 years, he has served as an organizer of the Tuesday Night Drawing group, founded by Eli Levin in 1969.

DR AI N

Odessa Sawyer is an internationally published Illustrator and doll maker from Santa Fe, where she lives with her husband, mom and two sons.

Her artwork has been seen in and on the covers of middle-grade and young-adult books, ad campaigns, posters, film and television projects and album covers.

Her style is dreamy, colorful and haunting.

WHAT IS LYFE? TOWARDS a BIOLOGY of CONTEXT & COMPLEXITY

Tuesday, July 16th

Lecture 7:30 p.m.

The Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W. San Francisco Street

Lectures are free and open to the public. Seating is limited. Reserve your tickets using the QR code above.

Visit www.santafe.edu/community for this year’s complete schedule.

OGBUNU is Assistant Professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale, and External Professor at SFI. His research takes place at the intersection of evolutionary biology, genetics, and epidemiology.

SFI’s 2024 Community Lecture Series is sponsored by the McKinnon Family Foundation, with additional support from the Santa Fe Reporter and the Lensic Performing Arts Center.

The McKinnon Family Foundation

BRANDON
Background image: Detail: Emil James Bisttram, Penetration, 1938

MARKET VALUE

The International Folk Art Market’s move to Railyard Park last year could have been a disaster, but the venue shift from Museum Hill went off without a hitch, which bodes well for IFAM’s 20th anniversary this weekend. “Twenty years is big news, and we have a lot of people coming back to celebrate,” Executive Director Stacey Edgar tells SFR. “We’ll have a legacy tent featuring artists who’ve been with us since 2004 through 2008; we’re excited about our first-ever free community day on Sunday, July 14; and for kids, we’re bringing back our passport program for the first time since the pandemic. They’ll get a little passport and can go around collecting stamps from artists.” This year’s market encompasses 161 artists from 51 countries, and includes both a lecture series and nighttime events. (Alex De Vore)

International Folk Art Market: Various times Thursday, July 11-Sunday, July 14. $0-$300 Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Road, folkartmarket.org

THE JUICIEST DOUBLE FEATURE

You want to spend a hell of a day at the movies? Visit the Jean Cocteau Cinema on Sunday. Beginning in the afternoon, catch a screening of Richard Linklater’s über-romantic 1995 film Before Sunrise about a pair of impossibly attractive people (Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke) who spend one magical night on the streets of Vienna—then close out the day with 1974’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre about a gaggle of impossibly attractive Texan youths getting fully full-on chainsawed by horror icon Leatherface. Presumably, at least one couple out there just looked at each other and shouted “Finally!” about this cinematic pairing. Note: You are not required to attend both screenings. (ADV)

Before Sunrise and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: 3 pm and 5:30 pm respectively. Sunday, July 14. $5

Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 466-5528

COLLECTIVISM

Local Balkan-infused act Rumelia Collective started recording their recently released Beneath Roses in 2020, just before all that terrible COVID-19 stuff happened. Four years later, members Alysha Shaw, Willa Roberts, Sitara Schauer and Nicolle Roen finally dropped their full-length release, and it’s everything you want it to be. With intricately layered vocal melodies that err into almost drone-like moments of near-spiritualism, alongside percussion-filled jams that play like the soundtrack to some hot Turkish night, Roses might be the band’s best work yet. “I’d say it’s a huge accomplishment that we set out to do before COVID, and it was so disheartening to have to slow down and stop, but it feels so great we’ve done it,” Shaw says. “We’re so proud of it and it represents our unique identity as a band and our repertoire.” (ADV)

Santa Fe Bandstand: Rumelia Collective: 6 pm Monday, July 15. Free. Santa Fe Plaza 63 Lincoln Ave., lensic360.org

Primate Picassos

Celebrate World Chimpanzee Day with an exhibit featuring paintings by rescued apes

World Chimpanzee Day on July 14 carries particular significance in New Mexico, given that Alamogordo has been a hub for biomedical experiments on chimpanzees since the 1950s. Animal activism devoted to rescuing retired primates continues today.

Currently, for example, nonprofit Animal Protection of New Mexico is engaged in a legal battle to free 26 remaining chimps from the Alamogordo Primate Facility, and it will soon come together with Floridabased sanctuary Save the Chimps and Santa Fe’s Jen Tough Gallery for Interspecies, a new exhibit of 16 acrylic paintings opening Saturday, July 13. The twist? All the paintings were created by the Save the Chimps’ chimpanzees, most of whom are retired from New Mexico lab research.

“People hear how much we have in common with chimps,” long-time chimp advocate and Save the Chimps Director of Events and Special Projects Dan Mathews says, “and when you actually see their artwork and can see that our closest living relatives in the animal world also share our creative impulses, it deepens your well of respect for these incredibly intelligent beings.”

Painting, Mathews explains, is one of many therapeutic and social-enrichment activities the sanctuary offers to its roughly 220 resident apes. About 20 have taken

to the brush and canvas, Mathews adds. Tough, meanwhile, says that she’s thrilled to host the show.

“Because these chimps have been through hell and back in the laboratories here in New Mexico, it’s a way for them to heal from their experiences,” she says.

“New Mexico was really kind of the epicenter of a lot of this testing, and it’s a wonderful way to pay back what we gained from them.”

Also slated for the exhibit are a desert-toned “Santa Fe collection” of the primates’ works co-curated by Tough, and a photographic timeline of the history of chimpanzee experimentation in New Mexico. Additionally, photographer Karen Bystedt donated large format prints of Andy Warhol for the chimps to paint on, creating works that mimic how Warhol painted over photos of celebrities; and Animal Protection of New Mexico’s Program Officer Gene Grant is slated to speak. Proceeds benefit Save the Chimps. (Mo Charnot)

FILM SUN/14
MUSIC MON/15

THE CALENDAR

WED/10

ART

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Find more events online at sfreporter.com/cal.

ARTISTIC LICENSE GALLERY: RECYCLE ART SHOW

Artistic License Gallery

7 Ave Vista Grande d7, (505) 920-0997

Rob & Teresa Reese create art from recyclables. Pi Luna transforms recycling on all levels. 10 am - 6 pm

WEDNESDAY PAINTING CLASS

Mantecon Studio 123 A Camino Teresa, (503)-473-2786

A painting class to connect with artists and experience demos.  1:30-4:30 pm, $110

BOOKS/LECTURES

ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES TALK

The Center for New Mexico Archaeology

7 Old Cochiti Road, (505) 476-4448

Heather McClure gives a talk on archaeologist Edgar Lee Hewett’s written materials and photographs. Noon

EVENTS

KIDS SING ALONG: RAILYARD PARK

Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe St., (505) 982-3373

A variety of engaging music games and sing-alongs for toddlers and babies.  10:30-11:15 am

QUEER COFFEE GET TOGETHER

Ohori’s Coffee Roasters

505 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-9692

Drink some coffee and connect with fellow LGBTQ+ community followed by a brunch.

9:30-11 am

TOUR THE GOVERNOR’S MANSION

The New Mexico Governor’s Mansion

One Mansion Drive, (505) 476-2800

Explore the historic New Mexico governor’s mansion.

VAMONOS! SANTA FE WALKS

Various locations sfct.org/vamonos (505) 989-7019

Explore trails, get fresh air and meet your community at a free guided walk.  5:30 pm

WINE-UP

Jean Cocteau Cinema

418 Montezuma Ave., (505) 466-5528

A wine tasting and a vote for wines you’d like to see at the theater this summer. 5-7 pm, $20

MUSIC

BOXCAR PRESENTS: SINDUSTRY NIGHT WITH DJ D-MONIC

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

DJ D-Monic busts out the Latin beats.

9 pm-2 am

JOHN FRANCIS & THE POOR CLARES

El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-1931

They’re back with their alternative/indie sound with guest Danielle Durack.

8-10:30 pm

JUSTIN NUÑEZ

Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., (505) 954-1068

Classic folk/Americana.  6-9 pm

KARAOKE NIGHT

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Warm up those vocal chords and come with your go-to karaoke song. Crash Romeo hosts.

7 pm

KIPP BENTLEY Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Americana singer-songwriter.

4 pm

BOMBINO

Santa Fe Railyard Plaza 1612 Alcaldesa St., lensic360.org

Guitar luminary and Tuareg folk hero Omara “Bombino” Moctar hails from Niger and plays highly danceable North African desert blues.

6 pm

SUNSET CONCERT SERIES: ALMA

Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, (505) 471-9103

Experience the rhythms and soulful melodies of Alma’s music, a vibrant tribute to the rich musical heritage of Latin America. 5:30 pm

WARM UP WEDNESDAY

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Hip-hop night every Wednesday, featuring live performances, guest DJs, emcees and more. Hosted by DJ DMonic. 9 pm

WORKSHOP

BEYOND NORMAL POP-UP Beyond Normal 312 Montezuma Ave. Ste. E (505) 690-9829

A studio workshop and pop-up that features a galaxy of vintage and contemporary art objects, textiles, clothing, books and other random delights. Open by appointment.

7-8:30 pm, $29-$31 INTRODUCTION TO CHESS

Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., (505) 428-1000

Learn chess from square one and start with the basic rules, then progress to checkmates and tactics. 7-9 pm, $129

Alice Leora Briggs combines acrylic painting and sgraffito in her exhibit The Fate of Poetry on display through June 28 at Evoke Contemporary.

THU/11

ART OPENINGS

JACOB JOHNS: FORWARD MOVEMENT (OPENING)

El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, (505) 992-0591

This exhibition showcases Johns’ journey and resilience through art while addressing themes of activism, identity and healing. (See 3 Questions, Page 24) 5:30-9 pm

BOOKS/LECTURES

BOOK TALK WITH AUTHOR

SALLIE BINGHAM

Santa Fe Public Library (Southside) 6599 Jaguar Drive, (505) 955-2820

Bingham discusses her novel Taken by the Shawnee that touches on themes of survival, progress and healing.

5:30 pm

TRANSFORMATIONAL

TAROT

Cake’s Cafe

227 Galisteo St., (505) 303-4880

Visit with Haley Welsh to find guidance, connection, inspiration. $20/15 minutes.

10 am-4 pm

DANCE

INTRO TO PARTNER DANCE

Dance Station: Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda St., (505) 989-9788

Drop in this beginner’s dance class and learn different styles of partner dance, such as Latin, and swing.

6:45-7:30 pm, $10

EVENTS

LADIES NIGHT Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Ladies get free entry, $5 for everyone else. Weekly guest DJs perform.

10 pm

PRIDE AFTER 5

Social Kitchen & Bar

725 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-5952

A chance to engage in dynamic discussions, and become an active part of the Santa Fe LGBTQ+ community.  5-7 pm

PATIENT PAWS MOBILE VET

Iconik Coffee Roasters (Red) 1366 Cerrillos Road, (505) 428-0996

Low cost veterinary services. Noon-4 pm

SECOND THURSDAY SOCIAL RIDE

Railyard Water Tower 1608 Alcaldesa St.,

A social bike ride through the city to a different brewery every month.  7 pm

SEEDS AND SPROUTS

Santa Fe Children’s Museum 1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 989-8359

Educator Leona Hillary introduces kids to activities that include digging for worms, planting and harvsting in the community garden.

10:30-11:30 am

WINE-UP

Jean Cocteau Cinema

418 Montezuma Ave., (505) 466-5528

A wine tasting and a vote for the wines you’d like to see at the theater this summer. 5-7 pm, $20

IMEET, IMINGLE, IMATCH: 20S, 30S SINGLES FIND CONNECTIONS

The Mystic Santa Fe 2810 Cerrillos Road, (505) 471-7663

Tired of swiping on dating apps? Get back to meeting singles in person in this event with fun activities and new friends. 6-8:30 pm

MUSIC

FELIX Y LOS GATOS

Ahmyo Wine Garden & Patio 652 Canyon Road, (505) 428-0090

Guitarist and vocalist Felix Peralta and Los Gatos rock their extensive blues repertoire.

2-5 pm

BILL HEARNE

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Share happy hour with Santa Fe’s own country music legend.

4-6 pm

DJ OPTAMYSTIK

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

A high-energy hip-hop DJ gets the beats flowing and you’ll be up on the dance floor before you know it.

7 pm

JOHNNY LLOYD

Nuckolls Brewing Co. 1611 Alcaldesa St., nuckollsbrewing.com

Lloyd brings out the spirit of Americana with his impressive guitar skills and wide vocal range.

6 pm

JUANI DE LA ISLA QUARTET

San Miguel Chapel

401 Old Santa Fe Trail, (505) 983-3974

A cross-cultural musical ensemble led by flamenco guitarist Juani de la Isla. Their performances explore the fusion of flamenco, Latin music, and Latin jazz, featuring flamenco singing and dance as well. 7-8:30 pm, $40

PAT MALONE

TerraCotta Wine Bistro

304 Johnson St., (505) 989-1166

Malone plays his soul-soothing jazz guitar that pairs perfectly with drinks and dinner.  6-8 pm

THE CALENDAR

OS MUTANTES

Santa Fe Railyard Plaza 1612 Alcaldesa St., lensic360.org

A Brazilian psychedelic rock band.

6 pm

THEATER

ISC SANTA FE PRESENTS: ROMEO AND JULIET

The Actors Lab 1213 Parkway Dr., B, (505) 395-6576

A re-telling of a classic.

7:30-9:30 pm, $5-$30

SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE

Santa Fe Playhouse

142 E De Vargas St., (505) 988-4262

A 1984 musical inspired by French painter Georges Seurat.  7:30-10 pm, $5-$60

THE EXODUS ENSEMBLE PRESENTS: HAMLET

Center For Contemporary Arts

1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 982-1338

An immersive adaptation of Hamlet. Advanced reservation required.  7:30 pm

FRI/12

ART OPENINGS

ANNE BELETIC: FACES & PLACES (OPENING)

Gallery716

716 Canyon Road, (505) 644-4716

Beletic continues to be amazed at what the interplay of color, water, paper and wax create.  6-8 pm

RITUAL RELATIONSHIPS OF LIQUIDITY (OPENING)

Center For Contemporary Arts

1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 982-1338

Artists Abigail Smith and Emily Margarit present photomontages on large-scale canvas and small-scale collage. 5-8 pm

WEST: REAL, IMAGINED (OPENING)

Blue Rain Gallery

544 S Guadalupe St., (505) 954-9902

Painter Kathryn Stedham paints Southwestern landscapes in the alla prima (AKA “wet on wet”) painting style.  5-7 pm

BOOKS/LECTURES

JUSTIN NOBEL: PETROLEUM-238

Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse

202 Galisteo St., (505) 988-4226

Nobel investigates the US oil and gas industry’s evasion of environmental regulations leading to a radioactive public health crisis.

6 pm

EVENTS

CHESS INTRO AND PRACTICE

Iconik Coffee Roasters (Original) 1600 Lena St., (505) 428-0996

Get caffeinated, meet new people and practice chess at the happenin’ Iconik Coffee.

Noon-2 pm

FINE ART FRIDAY

Santa Fe Children’s Museum

1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 989-8359

A weekly exploration into a variety of diferent forms of art with special guests and a range of engaging hands-on activities for the kids to explore their creativity.

2-4 pm

INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART MARKET

Railyard Park 740 Cerrillos Road, (505) 316-3596

Experience the 20th annual International Folk Art Market.

167 international artists from 51 countries present world-class art and performances Check folkartmarket.org for tickets and updates (See SFR Picks, Page 19).

10 am-4 pm

TABLE TOP ROLE PLAYING NIGHT

Sorcery and Might

1966 Cerrillos Road Ste. C, (505) 629-5965

Drop in for stress-free, beginner-friendly and introductory TTRPG games.

5-10 pm

FILM

SELENA SWAN Park Jaguar Drive and Hwy. 599 lensic360.org

Watch the story of Selena Quintanilla Perez, a girl from South Texas who became the brightest star of the Latin music scene before her life was tragically cut short.

6:30 pm

MUSIC

CUBAN PIANIST: MARCOS CREGO Paradiso 903 Early St., (505) 577-5248

Havana, Cuba-born pianist plays a selection of romantic songs played in the Cuban Son style, alongside some of the finest musicians in New Mexico.

8-10 pm, $20

FAMOUS ON THE WEEKEND Cake’s Cafe

227 Galisteo St., (505) 303-4880

A mix of cumbia, salsa, Latin hip-hop and house tunes

9 pm-1 am

JJ AND THE HOOLIGANS

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

This classic high-energy dance band plays a mix of rock, blues and Americana tunes.

8-10 pm

JOHNNY LLOYD

Ahmyo Wine Garden & Patio 652 Canyon Road, (505) 428-0090

Drawing inspiration from artists such as Johnny Cash and Neil Young, Johnny Lloyd brings out the spirit of Americana.

2-5 pm

JULIAN DOSSETT DUO

The Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

This Shreveport, Louisianabased musician blends swing, blues, jazz and rockabilly.

5 pm

KARAOKE NIGHT

Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery

2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135

Get ready to belt out your favorite tunes.

7:30 pm

LA DAME BLANCHE

Santa Fe Railyard Plaza 1612 Alcaldesa St., lensic360.org

This Cuban singer, flutist, and percussionist brings an explosive mix of hip-hop, cumbia, dancehall and reggae

7 pm

MAGGIE VALLEY BAND

The Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

A North Carolina based group brings sister-sister harmonies to a mix of indie and folk rock.

8 pm

PAT MALONE

Rosewood Inn of the Anasazi 113 Washington Ave., (505) 988-3030

Malone plays solo jazz guitar.

6:30-8:30 pm

PATIO SERIES: HALF PINT AND THE GROWLERS

Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135

A tasty mash of jazz, Latin boleros, blues and western swing, which they like to refer to as, “swing gumbo.” 5-8 pm

THEATER

ISC SANTA FE PRESENTS: ROMEO AND JULIET

The Actors Lab 1213 Parkway Dr., B, (505) 395-6576

A retelling of the most tragically romantic love story ever told. Or maybe it’s just tragic, really? Like, Romeo, who has a girlfriend named Rosalyne, sees a new gal at a party and he’s ready to die for her? Yikes.

7:30-9:30 pm, $5-$30

PANDEMONIUM

PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS: GREASE

The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, (505) 992-5800

A classic musical from the 1950s about friendship, romance and the adventures of high school students. You know what we always say: “Chang, chang, changity-chang, shoo-bop. 7 pm, $8-$12

SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE

Santa Fe Playhouse

142 E De Vargas St., (505) 988-4262

A 1984 musical inspired by the painting “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” by Georges Seurat. 7:30-10 pm, $5-$60

SAT/13

ART OPENINGS

INTERSPECIES: HUMAN AND CHIMP ART COLLABORATION

Jen Tough Gallery/AIR Studios

4 N Chamisa Drive, (505) 466-2775

Paintings by human artists including Joaquin Phoenix & Rooney

Mara in collaboration with ape artists from Save the Chimps sanctuary. (See SFR Picks, Page 19).  5-7 pm

JOYFUL BY NATURE ART EXHIBITION (OPENING)

Sage Creek Gallery

421 Canyon Road, (505) 988-3444

Sculpture and paintings. 10 am-5 pm

SHAUN GILMORE: IN THE ROUGH (OPENING)

FOMA Gallery

333 Montezuma Ave., Ste. B, (505) 660-0121

Mixed-media artist Gilmore shows new work.

DANCE

ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET PRESENTS: GALA PERFORMANCE

Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., (505) 988-1234

A program of fine dancing from stellar performers set to Mahler’s Adagietto. 8 pm, $36-$114

CHESS INTRO AND PRACTICE

CHOMP Food Hall

505 Cerrillos Road, (505) 772-0946

Did you miss out on the earlier chess hang at BoulTawn’s? They’re doing it again at CHOMP, baby!

2-4 pm

DELBERT BUCK TRUNK SHOW

Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo, (505) 476-1204

Buck crafts carvings made from found objects and cottonwood limbs with repeated topics including airplanes, horses, cowboys and wagons. Noon-4 pm

DOG DAY OF SUMMER Vista Grande Public Library 14 Avenida Torreon, (505) 466-7323

Meet therapy and search and rescue dogs while Española Humane holds an adoption event.

1-3 pm

EL MERCADO DE EL MUSEO CULTURAL

El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, (505) 992-0591

A weekend market filled to the brim with more than 50 vendors bringing art, jewelry, books, herbal remedies, textiles and more from all over the world 10 am-4 pm

IPA CHALLENGE: ROUND 1 Nuckolls Brewing Co. 1611 Alcaldesa St., nuckollsbrewing.com

Sixteen of New Mexico’s greatest IPAs are going head-to-head for the 2024 New Mexico IPA Challenge.  2-5 pm, $30

MINDFULNESS MEDITATION TECHNIQUES TO HELP YOU HELP YOUR DOG

Santa Fe Public Library (La Farge) 1730 Llano St., (505) 820-0292

Learn meditation techniques to help cultivate awareness and listening for your dog.

10:30-11:30 am

TANGO NIGHT

Iconik Coffee Roasters (Red) 1366 Cerrillos Road, (505) 428-0996

Bring a partner or come solo for a tango lesson and social dance. 6-8:30 pm

EVENTS

BACA STREET POTTERY SUMMER SALE

Baca Street Pottery 730 Baca St., (505) 204-6346

Browse a variety of handcrafted, functional and sculptural pieces by local artists. 10 am-3 pm

CHESS INTRO AND PRACTICE

BoulTawn’s Bagelry, Cafe and Gallery

226 N. Guadalupe St., (505)983-9006

An open practice, with free coaching for all levels. 11 am-1 pm

24TH ANNUAL NORTHERN NM FINE ARTS & CRAFTS GUILD SUMMER SERIES Cathedral Park 131 Cathedral Place, (505) 955-2143

A collection of juried artwork that includes paintings, textiles, ceramics, jewelry and more. 10 am-5 pm

SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET West Casitas in the Santa Fe Railyard Market Street, (505) 414-8544

Local juried artists sell their fine art and crafts.

9 am-2 pm

SANTA FE FARMER’S MARKET

Santa Fe Farmer’s Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 983-4098

Over 150 local farmers offer fresh produce, educational initiatives and community engagement.

8 am-1 pm

A group exhibit brings together some of the most influential political and street artists, including Shepard Fairey, in The Weight We Carry on display through July 21 at CONTAINER.
ANGELA AND JONATHAN SCOTT

SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS ART FAIR

Santa Fe Society of Artists

122 W Palace Ave., (505) 926-1497

An outdoor art fair by local artists.

9 am-5:30 pm

SCIENCE SATURDAY

Santa Fe Children’s Museum

1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 989-8359

Fun educational experiments and projects every Saturday.  2-4 pm

SECOND SATURDAYS

Siler Yard: Arts and Creativity Center

1218 Siler Road, (505) 557-8449

Siler Yard Arts and Creativity Center has open studio days every second Saturday of every month.

4-7 pm

MUSIC

BOB MAUS BLUES & SOUL Inn & Spa at Loretto

211 Old Santa Fe Trail, (505) 988-5531

Maus plays classic tunes from Randy Newman to Elton John and Cat Stevens.

6-9 pm

BOXCAR PRESENTS: BRUNCH WITH TERRY DIERS

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Funk music from Diers with Saturday brunch on the patio (or in the music room, depending on the weather).

Noon-3 pm

HILLARY SMITH AND THE CHILLHOUSE

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Powerhouse blues, soul and all things funky.

8 pm

HOGAN AND MOSS

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

A folk duo performs originals with inspirtations drawn from vintage country, blues and soul.

1 pm

JJ AND THE HOOLIGANS

The Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

Rock, blues and Americana tunes.

3 pm

JOHNNY LLOYD

Nuckolls Brewing Co. 1611 Alcaldesa St., nuckollsbrewing.com

Lloyd brings out the spirit of Americana.

1 pm

JON GAGAN AND PAT

MALONE

La Boca (Taberna Location)

125 Lincoln Ave., (505) 988-7102

Gagan and Malone perform world class music through their well balanced blend of jazz guitar and upright bass.

7-9 pm

JONO MANSON

CHOMP Food Hall

505 Cerrillos Road, (505) 393-1196

Manson performs an acoustic set with his roots steeped in rock ‘n’ roll.

7 pm

KIDS KARAOKE!

Cake’s Cafe

227 Galisteo St., (505) 303-4880

Let the kids sing some songs before the adults take over.

2-4 pm

KARAOKE!

Cake’s Cafe

227 Galisteo St., (505) 303-4880

It’s that time of the week again where you just need to belt out some songs.

7-11 pm

LOOSE CABOOSE: SECOND SATURDAYS

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

House music all night long with DJs and live music. 7 pm, $10

PATIO SERIES: DJ GARRONTEED

Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery

2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135

DJ Garronteed matches all the beats from folk to funk, rock to rap and dance to dancehall.

5-8 pm

RANDOLPH AND THE VARIANTS

The Mine Shaft Tavern

2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

Classic Americana.

8 pm

TEAM EVERYTHING: IN SEASON

Reunity Farms

1829 San Ysidro Crossing (505) 393-1196

A family-friendly dance party under the sun and stars.

5 pm

THE DUSTY MIC PRESENTS: TAINTED 80’S

The Bridge at Santa Fe Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, (505) 557-6182

A night of classic ‘80s tunes, costumes, big hair and more.   8 pm, $5-$10

TRASH DISCO

Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135

DJ Oona spins all of your favorite disco hits. 8 pm, $6-$10

THEATER

ISC SANTA FE PRESENTS: ROMEO AND JULIET

The Actors Lab 1213 Parkway Dr., B, (505) 395-6576

A retelling of the most tragically romantic love story ever told. Or maybe it’s just tragic, really? Like, Romeo, who has a girlfriend named Rosalyne, sees a new gal at a party and he’s ready to die for her? Yikes.

7:30-9:30 pm, $5-$30

THE CALENDAR

PANDEMONIUM

PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS: GREASE

The Lodge at Santa Fe

750 N St. Francis Drive, (505) 992-5800

A classic musical from the 1950s about friendship, romance and the adventures of high school students.  7 pm, $8-$12

SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE

Santa Fe Playhouse

142 E De Vargas St., (505) 988-4262

A 1984 musical inspired by Georges Seurat.  7:30-10 pm, $5-$60

TEATRO PARAGUAS

FUNDRAISER CELEBRATION

Teatro Paraguas

3205 Calle Marie, (505) 424-1601

An afternoon of live music, performances, and more. $15 suggested donation.  5-8 pm

WORKSHOP

A GUIDED PATH TO REUNION: COMMUNICATING WITH DEPARTED FAMILY AND FRIENDS

Prana Blessings

1925 Rosina St., (505) 772-0171

This journey delves into the realm of afterlife communication.

Noon-1:30 pm, $35

BLACKSMITHING

Make Santa Fe

2879 All Trades Road, (505) 819-3502

Learn the safety precautions, basic techniques, tools and nomenclature to get you started on blacksmithing.

10 am-2 pm, $95

CERAMICS & POTTERY

Make Santa Fe

2879 All Trades Road, (505) 819-3502

Learn ceramics and pottery and how to use a pottery wheel and other equipment.

10 am-2 pm, $90 FREE INTRO TO IMPROV WORKSHOPS

Santa Fe Improv 1202 Parkway Drive, Unit A santafeimprov.org

Anyone can improvise. Try a free comedy improv workshop. Go to santafeimprov.org to register.

4:30-6 pm

KEN BRESEE: WHAT IS THE AQUARIAN AGE?

Fruit Of The Earth Natural Health 909 Early Street, (505) 310-7917

A renowned astrologer for over 35 years discusses the equinoxes and the collective vison for our future.

1-2:30 pm

LEARN LASER CUTTING

Make Santa Fe 2879 All Trades Road, (505) 819-3502

Learn how to configure laser cutters and learn general safety guidelines.

10 am-2 pm, $90

When local activist organization Three Sisters Collective asked Spokane, Washington-based artist and activist Jacob Johns (Hopi and Akimel O’odham) to attend and speak during a protest and prayer vigil in Española last September, Johns tells SFR he was happy to oblige. While at that protest—held to oppose the reinstallation of a statue of the Spanish conquistador Juan de Oñate—Johns was shot, leading to a lengthy hospitalization. His accused shooter Ryan Martinez has been incarcerated since then and faces first-degree attempted murder and other charges in a trial scheduled to begin lin September. Now on the mend, Johns will return to New Mexico for a new multimedia exhibit that responds in part to his experience. Forward Movement opens at 5:30 pm, Thursday, July 11 at El Museo Cultural (555 Camino de la Familia), and will be open to the public from 2 pm to 7 pm through July 14. This interview has been edited for space and clarity.

(Alex De Vore)

How have you been since the incident?. I mean, I had these drains in my abdomen and my liver for six months, but I was slowly but surely able to remove some of them. I’m pretty much healed up—I just have a lot of scar tissue...and my abdominal wall isn’t as strong as it was before. So I guess it’s like a giant hernia on my stomach. People are like, ‘Yeah, but you’re still alive!’ And I’m kind of like, ‘Yeah, I guess I am.’

How did you initially get involved in that protest, and would you change anything if you could?

I was coming through town for the US Climate Action Network’s West Coast meeting, and I like to support local movement

spaces and network. I met Three Sisters’ Christina Castro, and she asked me to join the prayer ceremony in Española. The pueblos…they’re our cousins, so we stand together—it’s like your cousin asking you to go somewhere. And I’d watched some live streams of [the toppling of the obelisk] in 2020; I watched when [Scott Williams] was shot in Albuquerque [at a 2020 protest over an Oñate statue]. We’ve had some similar stuff where I live in Spokane, like, not monuments, but genocidal people who have streets named after them. Would I change anything? The feelings my family have gone through could have been avoided. I’ve made promises to my daughter, who just turned 12, that I’d never put myself in harm’s way. But I had no idea someone would bring a weapon to a prayer vigil, let alone a gun. Gun violence, too, is a symptom of the American mentality. They let dogs loose on us at Standing Rock, though, and that, too, was a turning point for me.

What can attendees expect at Forward Movement?

I use art as a way to convey messages for my own healing, and it has been important for me to paint images about the incident. I painted the shooter’s face, this giant picture of his face in court from when he was crying after they denied him bail. I did a very large painting of a photo that was taken of the shooter trying to run into the crowd—and it’s massive, like, 23 feet by 16 feet on loose canvas. This was very powerful for me. I also painted a photo that was taken of the people who had their hands on my chest as I was bleeding out. The show is a combination of new stuff and old stuff. I have some video projects; inflatable screens that create pop-up theaters; an immersive meditation piece; a generative piece that’ll be filmed…there are pieces that are specific to my way of healing. Violence is not new to these people, and they understand the pain. After what happened, so many people were jarred, so it’s about community care and expression and trying to find closure. Trying to convey everything that’s going on is not easy, so I guess it made me more focused. I had time to find clarity. They charged him with ‘attempted murder,’ but I did die. I blacked out when my lungs collapsed. Everything went on hold. When I came back into my body, it’s like I was a different person. Maybe not completely different, but on a new path. Whenever I see the footage, it reminds me of my past life. It makes me cry for this person who gave their life. It’s not me; it’s a different version of me. I look at him almost like an older brother. In order to come back, I had to agree to do more things that are going to be heavy. But this gives me clarity. It removes the fear.

JACOB JOHNS

NATURE SKETCHING

Santa Fe Botanical Garden

715 Camino Lejo, (505) 471-9103

Join the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum for a relaxing session of nature sketching at the Santa Fe Botanical Garden.

9 am-12 pm, $35-$45

SUN/14

DANCE

ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET PRESENTS: GALA PERFORMANCE

Lensic Performing Arts Center

211 W San Francisco St., (505) 988-1234

A thrilling program showcasing a brilliant cast of leading artists of time-honored classical works interlaced with neo-Classical works and music from Mahler’s Adagietto 8 pm, $36-$114

BELLYREENA BELLYDANCE CLASS

Move Studio

901 W San Mateo Road, (505) 660-8503

Learn to belly dance like a pro with choreographer Areena Estul.

1-2 pm, $18-$65

KIDS DANCE CLASS

Dance Station: Solana Center

947-B W Alameda St., (505) 989-9788

Kids from the ages 7-13 can learn Latin, ballroom and swing dance.

12:45-1:30 pm, $10

EVENTS

CHESS AT THE MALL DeVargas Center

564 N Guadalupe St., (505) 983-4671

Play timed or untimed, and make friends ranging from beginners up to tournament veterans.

10 am-1 pm

CHESS AT CHOMP CHOMP Food Hall 505 Cerrillos Road, (505) 772-0946

Casual chess, great food and music all under one roof. 6-8 pm

EL MERCADO DE EL MUSEO CULTURAL

El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, (505) 992-0591

A weekend market filled with more than 50 different vendors bringing art, jewelry, books, herbal remedies, textiles, beads, furniture and more from all over the world to Santa Fe.

10 am-4 pm

INTRO TO SILVERSMITHING

Santa Fe Brewing Company

35 Fire Place, (505) 424-3333

Join Kayla Ortiz, the founder of Mineralbound Silver, for a Fourhour beginner friendly session in the craft of silversmithing and leave with your very own ring. 1-5 pm, $165

JOE HAYES

Reunity Resources 1829 San Ysidro Crossing, (505) 393-1196

Join this legendary storyteller for summer tales.

7 pm

24TH ANNUAL NORTHERN

NM FINE ARTS & CRAFTS GUILD SUMMER SERIES

Cathedral Park 131 Cathedral Place, (505) 955-2143

A collection of juried artwork that includes paintings, textiles, ceramics, jewelry and more. 10 am-5 pm

SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS ART FAIR

Santa Fe Society of Artists

122 W Palace Ave., (505) 926-1497

An outdoor art fair by local artists.

9 am-5:30 pm

SCOTT LYON TRUNK SHOW

Museum of International Folk Art

706 Camino Lejo, (505) 476-1204

Lyon creates immersive art experiences through his collection of shadow boxes, drawings and treasures.

Noon-4 pm

SORCERY AND MIGHT GAME NIGHT

Sorcery and Might 1966 Cerrillos Road STE C, (505) 629-5965

Join a community of gamers and play from hundreds of games at dedicated tables.

5 pm-12 am

FOOD

SUNDAY BRUNCH & JAM

Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135

Brunch and a jam on the patio Brunch starts at noon and lasts all day, with live music from 3 to 6 pm.

Noon

MUSIC

BILL HEARNE

La Fonda on the Plaza 101 E San Francisco St., (505) 982-5511

Legendary cross-picker Hearne plays country classics.

6:30-9 pm

BLUEGRASS AND BAGELS

JAM

Railyard Park Community Room 701 Callejon St., (505) 316-3596

A monthly bluegrass jam led by Greg Neal. This jam is held in a traditional bluegrass format during which participants take turn calling and leading songs in a circle. Open to all levels and traditional acoustic instruments, but be prepared to learn tunes by ear.

10 am-12 pm

DOUG MONTGOMERY

Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail, (505) 955-0765

Montgomery performs classical and Broadway piano and vocals. 6-9 pm

THE CALENDAR

FELIX Y LOS GATOS

Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

A unique blend of latin, blues, New Orleans swing and rockin’ outlaw country.

Noon

GARY GORENCE

Ahmyo Wine Garden & Patio

652 Canyon Road, (505) 428-0090

Gorence’s Oklahoma and West Texas upbringing comes alive in his musical narratives, helped by his guitar, banjo, harmonica and vocals.

2-5 pm

GERRY CARTHY

Legal Tender Saloon & Eating House

151 Old Lamy Trail, Lamy, (505) 466-1650

Carthy plays Northern New Mexican folk with traditional Irish flavors.

Noon-4 pm

JIM ALMAND

The Mine Shaft Tavern

2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

Memphis born and a son of a sailor, this singer-songwriter plays classic blues originals.

1 pm

KARAOKE

Cake’s Cafe

227 Galisteo St., (505) 303-4880

Keep those classic songs fresh in your mind. Back to back karaoke on the weekends.  6-9 pm

KARAOKE NIGHT

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Warm up those vocal chords and show up with your go-to karaoke song. Crash Romeo hosts Karaoke Night every Sunday 7 pm

RYAN AND THE RESISTORS

The Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 NM-14, Madrid, (505) 473-0743

Some good ol’ classic country tunes and a drink or two are a great addition to a warm Sunday afternoon.

3 pm

SANTA FE DESERT CHORALE PRESENTS: SONGS OF THE AMERICAS

Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi

131 Cathedral Place, (505) 982-5619

Embark on a musical expedition as 16 professional Desert Chorale artists accompanied by chamber orchestra and percussion explore the rich heritage of 17th and 18th century music from North and South America.  4 pm, $12-$114

THE PAT MALONE TRIO

Bishop’s Lodge 1297 Bishops Lodge Road, (888) 741-0480

A delicious Sunday brunch and soothing jazz go so well together.  11:30 am

THE CALENDAR

THE ROBIN DAVIS DUO El Rey Court

1862 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-1931

The Pagosa Springs pair blends old-time bluegrass with unique and relatable originals. 8-10 pm

THEATER

ISC SANTA FE PRESENTS: ROMEO AND JULIET

The Actors Lab 1213 Parkway Drive, B, (505) 395-6576

A retelling of a classic love story where tragedy and romance meet.

2-4 pm, $5-$30

MOTHERHOOD: WHAT A BITCH!

Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, (505) 424-1601

Comedian, humorist and storyteller Carolyn Meyer performs her third solo show. All mothers will identify with the questions she ponders.

3 pm, $15-$25

PANDEMONIUM

PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS: GREASE

The Lodge at Santa Fe

750 N St. Francis Drive, (505) 992-5800

A classic musical from the 1950s about friendship, romance and the adventures of high school students.

2 pm, $8-$12

SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE

Santa Fe Playhouse

142 E De Vargas St., (505) 988-4262

A 1984 musical Inspired by the painting “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” by Georges Seurat with music by Stephen Sondheim and is considered to be one of the most acclaimed musicals of our time.

2-4:30 pm, $5-$60

THE EXODUS ENSEMBLE PRESENTS: ZERO

Center For Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 982-1338

Dive into a world where you are part of the narrative. Advanced reservation required.

1 pm

THE EXODUS ENSEMBLE PRESENTS: HAMLET

Center For Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 982-1338

An immersive adaptation of Hamlet. Advanced reservation required.  7:30 pm

WORKSHOP

CONTROLLED DEMOLITION: ECO-MORDANÇAGE & THE MOVING IMAGE

No Name Cinema 2013 Pinon St., nonamecinema.org

A hands-on film workshop led by artist-in-residence Dominick Rivers. RSVP required.  2 pm, $15-$30

MON/15

BOOKS/LECTURES

JIMMY SANTIAGO BACA AND MELINA MARTINEZ Southwest Seminars 219 Ojo de la Vaca, Two local poets and authors will discuss their socially driven work.

6 pm, $20

DANCE

MONDAY NIGHT SWING

Odd Fellows Hall 1125 Cerrillos Road, (505) 690-4165

A swing dance class followed by a social dance. Why not get the week started with some dancing?

7 pm, $5-$10

EVENTS

CHESS AT THE MALL

DeVargas Center 564 N Guadalupe St., (505) 983-4671

Play timed or untimed, and make friends ranging from beginners up to tournament veterans.

10 am-1 pm

CHESS AT THE MOVIES

Violet Crown Cinema 1606 Alcaldesa St., (505) 216-5678

Casual chess, great food and movies.

6-9 pm

QUEER NIGHT

El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-1931

Every Monday to meet like-minded members of the LGBTQ community.

5-9 pm

THE WRITING CIRCLE

Santa Fe Public Library (La Farge) 1730 Llano St., (505) 955-4860

Develop a writing practice through sharing ideas, reading works, giving and receiving feedback with your writing peers.

3-5:30 pm

FILM

VIDEO LIBRARY CLUB

Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., (505) 466-5528

Free films every Monday with Lisa from Video Library—the country’s oldest continuously operating video rental store in the US.

6:30-8:30 pm

MUSIC

DOUG MONTGOMERY

Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail, (505) 955-0765

Montgomery performs standards, classical, Broadway and movie themes on piano and vocals.

6-9 pm

GERRY CARTHY

Upper Crust Pizza (Eldorado) 5 Colina Drive, (505) 471-1111

Carthy plays Northern New Mexican folk with traditional Irish flavors that will transport you to pub in rainy streets of Dublin.

6-8:30 pm

KARAOKE WITH CRASH! Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Get the first night of the week started with some karaoke. The week can only get better from after a night of singing.

7-10 pm

SANTA FE BANDSTAND:

RUMELIA COLLECTIVE

Santa Fe Plaza

63 Lincoln Ave., lensic360.org

A group of musicians who play traditional music of the Balkans, the Middle East and other styles from around the world weaving an intricate blend of contemporary and traditional folk elements. (See SFR Picks, Page 19) 6 pm

ZAY SANTOS Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Blues and rock.  4 pm

WORKSHOP

TEEN/TWEEN AERIAL CLASSES

Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road, (505) 992-2588

Kids from the ages 11 to 15 can learn trapeze, lyra, fabric and rope. Masks required. 5:15-6:15 pm, $29-$156

TUE/16

ART

ARTISTIC LICENSE GALLERY

JULY RECYCLE ART SHOW

Artistic License Gallery 7 Ave Vista Grande d7, (505) 920-0997

This Santa Fe artist cooperative display the imaginative work by Rob and Teresa Reese who create fascinating art pieces from salvaged recyclables and Pi Luna radically transform recycling on all levels. 10 am - 6 pm

BOOKS/LECTURES

WHAT IS LYFE? TOWARDS

A BIOLOGY OF CONTEXT & COMPLEXITY

Lensic Performing Arts Center

211 W San Francisco St., (505) 988-1234

Santa Fe Institute External Professor Brandon Ogbunu (Yale) offers a new framing of biology, described as “Lyfe,” embodying a multidimensional appreciation of biological systems.

7:30 pm

EVENTS

BOARD GAME NIGHT

CHOMP Food Hall

505 Cerrillos Road, (505) 772-0946

Play a variety of board games with Santa Fe’s largest table-top gaming community.

5-10 pm

CHESS AT THE MALL

DeVargas Center

564 N Guadalupe St., (505) 983-4671

Play timed or untimed, and make friends ranging from beginners up to tournament veterans.

10 am-1 pm

SANTA FE FARMER’S MARKET

Santa Fe Farmer’s Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 983-4098

Over 150 local farmers offer fresh, in season and nutrient dense produce, educational initiatives and community engagement.

8 am-1 pm

SANTA FE FARMER’S MARKET

- DEL SUR

Santa Fe Farmer’s Market Pavilion 4801 Beckner Road, (505) 983-4098

In parntership with Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center, local farmers offer their fresh, in season and healthy produce, along with a handful of community based organizations 3-6 pm

MUSIC

BOXCAR PRESENTS:

SINDUSTRY NIGHT WITH DJ D-MONIC

Boxcar

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222

Start practicing those dance moves to bust out all night long. DJ DMonic busts out the Latin beats.

9 pm-2 am

JOHN CAREY Cowgirl

319 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-2565

Carey plays classic Americana, blues and funk. He’s also known for being a harmonica master.

4 pm

MR. SAM & THE PEOPLE

PEOPLE

El Rey Court

1862 Cerrillos Road, (505) 982-1931

This alternative/indie artist draws influences from classic singer-songwriters and the New Orleans Americana 9-10:30 pm

SANTA FE BANDSTAND: THE DESLONDES

Santa Fe Railyard Plaza 1612 Alcaldesa St., lensic360.org

New Orleans quintet plays a blend of folk, rock ‘n’ roll, bluegrass, R&B, American roots music, blues, gospel, and country.

6 pm

WORKSHOP

EXPLORING REALITY: LEARNING TO LIVE LIGHTLY

Santa Fe Women’s Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, (505) 983-9455

In this immersive series, explore the extraordinary and insightful chapter on the philosophy of emptiness from Geshe Kelsang Gyatso’s book, The New Eight Steps to Happiness, through talks, guided meditations and discussions. The path to enlightenment starts here.

6-7:30 pm

ONGOING

LIVE AND LET FLY

Gerald Peters Gallery 1005 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 954-5700

In this exhibit, Chris Maynard carves feathers into intricate art, and Troy Abbot's pieces comcombine videos of birds, taken by the artist, sitting in cages, both antique and new, created or repurposed by the artist.

A LIFETIME OF LEARNING: TWO ARTISTIC JOURNEYS

Nedra Matteucci Galleries 1075 Paseo De Peralta, (505) 982-4631

An exhibit highlighting Ed Smida and Chris Morel’s bodies of work as they mastered sculpting and painting respectively.

A MODERNIST

Patina Gallery

131 W Palace Ave., (505) 986-3432

WALK

Heather Guidero communicates an opulent collage of modernist adornment and geometric glamour with her jewelry.

ACTIVATING OGA PO’OGEH LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Railyard Park Conservancy

805 Early St., (505) 316-3596

A multimedia installation by Kathleen Wall (Jemez Pueblo/ White Earth Chippewa) constructed with metal frames and concrete ears of corn is brought to life through video installations of community members walking across Oga Po’ogeh.

ALICE LEORA BRIGGS: THE FATE OF POETRY

Evoke Contemporary 550 S. Guadalupe St., (505) 995-9902

Leora Briggs uses a mix of acrylic painting and sgraffito to depict the narco-violence that plagues Ciudad Juárez. 10 am - 5pm

AN INNOCENT LOVE: ANIMAL SCULPTURE ARTISTS OF NEW MEXICO

Canyon Road Contemporary Art 622 Canyon Road, (505) 983-0433

The cutest little animal sculptures you ever did see by artists Kari Rives and Fran Nicholson. A tribute to those that love us.

10 am-5 pm

CAVE TEMPLES & COMPAÑEROS: ERIN CURRIER

Blue Rain Gallery 544 S Guadalupe St., (505) 954-9902

Currier intertwines Italian Modernist poetry, Argentine tango and Tibetan Buddhism through her mixed-media paintings.

CODY HOOPER: PATHWAYS TO THE SOUL Canyon Road Contemporary 409 Canyon Road, (505) 983-0433

Colorful and abstract oils and acrylics on wood panels. Music by Nosotros band member Gilbert Uribe and libations from As Above, So Below Distillery.

DANIEL D. STINE : TAKE ME TO THE RIVER: AROUND THE BEND

New Concept Gallery

610 Canyon Road, (505) 795-7570

Stine’s tribute to wanderlust depicts the bounty of New Mexico through the land, sky and sensations in between.

DOUGLAS ATWILL: RECENT PAINTINGS

New Concept Gallery

610 Canyon Road, (505) 795-7570

Acrylics on canvas of the New Mexico southwestern landscapes, mountain meadows and serene gardens.

ELEMENTS OF THE EARTH: CONTEMPORARY NATIVE SCULPTURE

Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, (505) 471-9103

An exhibit featuring seven Indigenous artists' thought provoking sculptures and ceramic works that tell stories of cultural traditions.

EMELIE RICHARDSON: SECOND NATURE

Folklore

370 Garcia St., (925) 408-2907

A journey through the intricate and coloroful tapestry of pattern-seeking, featuring new work by weaver Richardson.

GRANITE SCULPTURE BY KHANG PHAM-NEW

Glenn Green Galleries + Sculpture Garden

136 Tesuque Village Road, (505) 820-0008

Monumental and biomorphic abstract granite sculptures created by Pham-New who was born in the war-torn South Vietnam in 1968, the year of the Têt offensive.

FLUIDITY OF TIME: FIBER ART BY SARA MILLER

art is gallery santa fe 419 Canyon Road, (505) 629-2332

Millers is a mixed-media fiber artist showing her fiber art with the vibrant colors and stitched threads of nature’s palette. The connecting shapes are the fluidity of time.

GAY BLOCK: ABOUT LOVE

Pie Projects

924B Shoofly St., (505) 372-7681

Enduring photographer Block showcases shots pertaining to the concept of love from some 50 years of work—including elderly Miami residents, girls at summer camp, Holocaust-era humanitarians and more.

GLORIA GRAHAM: INDEX CARDS REDRESSED

5. Gallery

2351 Fox Road, Ste. 700, (505) 257-8417

Displayed on pigmented ink on archival paper this photo exhibit of discarded library index cards set on fire use the idea of temporality.

GORDON FLUKE MEMORIAL RETROSPECTIVE

Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., (505) 428-1000

An exhibit honoring artist, educator and activist Fluke's paintings, print works and book art and and honor his impact in the art world.

GROUP EXHIBIT: METAL MASH-UP

Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St., (505) 989-8688

Three artists whose metal works offer a wide variety of forms, formats, approaches, fabrications, and colors: Pard Morrison, Elliot Norquist and Jeremy Thomas.

HIGHER FREQUENCY: THE WORKS OF CHRISTINE ALEXANDER

Iconik Coffee Roasters (Lupe) 314 S Guadalupe St., (505) 428-0996

Alexander uses dream-like, etheric and color-drenched photography as a vehicle to reach the realms between heaven and earth and is an exploration of celestial color.

HOW TO HEAL A LINE

Sun & Dust

616 Canyon Road, (505) 316-3923

Sabrina Farrell’s work combines handmade paper and hand forged steel in unique and and sometimes functional sculpture.

THE CALENDAR

HUNT SLONEM: IL GIARDINO ZOOLOGICO

Turner Carroll Gallery 725 Canyon Road, (505) 986-9800

Slonem debuts new paintings that act as windows to unique and wonderful worlds of animals and patterns.

I WISH I HAD A RIVER: PAINTINGS BY NANCY FRIEDLAND

smoke the moon 616 1/2 Canyon Road smokethemoon.com

Brushy, spatially curious scenes that revolve around expressive figuration.

JAMES MCELHINNEY: AMERICAN NOCTURNES

Gerald Peters Gallery 1005 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 954-5700

Watercolors, monoprints and intaglio etchings that explore the more ethereal aspects of nature glimpsed only at night

JANNA AVNER: ATHABASCAN AURORA: DECOLONIZING SUBARCTIC LIGHT

Gerald Peters Contemporary 1011 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 954-5700

An immersive installation with painting, sculpture and video, utilizing projected light and optical effects.

JIVAN LEE: ARBOREAL LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 988-3250

Lee brings an introspective approach to his vibrantly-colored plein air paintings

JOSEPH LORUSSO: DAYS LIKE THIS

McLarry Fine Art 225 Canyon Road, (505) 988-1161

Italian-American oil painter Lorusso creates warm and dream-like pieces

JULIANNA KIRWIN: BABCIA Hecho a Mano 129 W. Palace Ave., (505) 916-1341

Kirwin's works recreate her Polish grandmother's kitchen through woodblock, linocut and monotype, as well as 3D pieces and relief prints wheat-pasted to the gallery wall.

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

THE CALENDAR

KEVIN TOLMAN: ALIGNMENTS

Nüart Gallery

670 Canyon Road, (505) 988-3888

Tolman creates abstract work in a variety of mediums.

MANUEL ALVEREZ: PHOTOGRAPHER

Allá

102 W San Francisco St., Ste. 20, (505) 988-5416

Iconic images by a master Mexican photographer.

MARIE ROMERO CASH: A NEW MEXICO SANTERA’S ABSTRACT WORKS

Peyton Wright Gallery

237 E Palace Ave., (505) 989-9888

A native New Mexican displays colorful acrylic paintings on canvas.

MARSHALL NOICE: WOODLAND REVERIES

Ventana Fine Art

400 Canyon Road, (505) 983-8815 Oil on canvas.

MIA, AVRIL, LOS SITIOS: A KALEIDOSCOPE OF DREAMS AND REALITY

Artes de Cuba

1700 A Lena St., (505) 303-3138

A photo exhibit depicting artist Leysis Quesada Vera's daughters in Havana, Cuba.

MONTY LITTLE : UNACCOMPANIED VOICES

Gerald Peters Contemporary 1011 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 954-5700

Little depicts partially obscured faces charged with bold colors and graphic features.

MY HAIR STORY: FROM BRUNETTE TO GRAY form & concept

435 S Guadalupe St., (505) 216-1256

Rosemary Meza-DesPlas reveals the scars women bear as a result of living in a society that idealizes the bodies of women of color.

NAGAKURA KENICHI

RETROSPECTIVE

TAI Modern 1601 Paseo De Peralta, (505) 984-1387

An exhibit honoring a bamboo artist who invented techniques that evoke the patina and texture of centuries-old bamboo, bronze, rock, wood and cloth.

PICTURESQUE SUMMER

Obscura Gallery

225 Delgado St., (505) 577-6708

This group exhibition radiates the vibrant palettes and warmth of summer through the photography of four female photographers.

RACHEL DAWSON: TALISMAN

ELECTR∆ Gallery

825 Early St. Suite D, (505) 231-0354

Paintings on canvas and linen of bright and uplifting colorful crystalline forms.

REID RICHARDSON: BREATHING COLOR

Globe Fine Art 727 Canyon Road, (505) 989-3888

Paintings that merge the beauty of trees and magnificent skies.

SACRED NATURE: WILD AFRICA

Edition ONE Gallery 728 Canyon Road, (505) 570-5385

Angela and Jonathan Scott document the beauty and diversity of African wildlife via photography.

SCULPTURE, WORKS ON PAPER AND JEWELRY

DESIGNS BY MELANIE A. YAZZIE

Glenn Green Galleries + Sculpture Garden 728 Canyon Road, Sculpture, works on paper and jewelry designs.

SHOWCASE: NATHAN BUDOFF AND WOOKJAE MAENG

Zane Bennett Contemporary 435 S Guadalupe St., (505) 982-8111

Large-scale paintings by a Puerto Rico-based painter and faux taxidermy ceramic sculptures by a South Koreabased artist.

SOPHIA HUANG: HAPPY’S HOUSE

Kouri + Corrao Gallery 3213 Calle Marie, (505) 820-1888

Huang's resin, clay and painted sculptures delve into the intricate tapestry of social and cultural identity.

STEVEN J YAZZIE: ELDERS

Gerald Peters Contemporary 1011 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 954-5700

Sculptural/sound installations created from the trunk and roots of a fallen tree and sections of wood found by Yazzie throughout Colorado forests and parks, including the Rio Grande National Forest.

SUMMER SALON PART 1: PATRICK MCGRATH MUÑIZ

Evoke Contemporary 550 S. Guadalupe St., (505) 995-9902

Roman Catholic inspired oil paintings by Puerto Rican born artist responding to capitalism and consumerism.

TAMARIND INSTITUTE

Pie Projects

924B Shoofly St., (505) 372-7681

A selection of fine art prints from the internationally acclaimed lithography

TEN GALLON HAT: A GROUP SHOW smoke the moon 616 1/2 Canyon Road, smokethemoon.com

Five New Mexico based artists present an invitation to descend into a surreal universe.

TERESITA FERNÁNDEZ / ROBERT SMITHSON

SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 989-1199

Contemporary and historic art collide with over 30 sculptures, installations, film, drawings and more by Fernández alongside works by Smithson from 1961 to 1973.

THE CLEMMER COLLECTION: A HISTORY OF NEW MEXICO PRINT ARTISTS

Peyton Wright Gallery

237 E Palace Ave., (505) 989-9888

An exhibit of graphic media from late 19th through the mid 20th century New Mexico, encompassing techniques from etching and lithography to woodblock, linocut, serigraphy and monotype.

THE DENSITY OF TIME REVISITED

Aurelia Gallery 414 Canyon Road, (505) 501-2915

Photographer Blaine Elis uses extended shutter speeds to create images of anonymous beings emerging from San Francisco Bay. The archival color pigment prints invite viewers to contemplate the fluidity of time

THE IRISH TRAVELERS: A FORGOTTEN PEOPLE

Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 470-2582

A series of photos by Rebecca Moseman documents the lives, culture and traditions of the Irish Travelers.

THE WEIGHT WE CARRY CONTAINER

1226 Flagman Way, (505) 995-0012

An exhibition highlighting an activism born in youth, bringing together some of today's most influential political and street artists.

WHY MAKE ART? NINE ARTISTS ANSWER

ViVO Contemporary 725A Canyon Raod, (505) 982-1320

Nine artists create paintings, sculpture, kiln glass and other mixed media.

WOMEN’S HISTORY BANNER EXHIBIT

New Mexico State Library 1209 Camino Carlos Rey, 476-9700

A new banner exhibit celebrates some of the many courageous women who helped shape the unique, multicultural history of New Mexico.

WOODY GWYN: POWER OF ART

LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 988-3250

Captivating paintings of crystalline light and vast expanses of the changing American terrain, Gywn’s work is described as dramatic angles, panoramic formats, luminous color.

ZAHRA MARWAN: A ROSE IS A ROSE IS A ROSE

Hecho a Mano 129 W. Palace Ave., (505) 916-1341

Watercolor paintings centering roses and Arab poetry.

EVENTS

BROOM ROOM: THIN AIR GOODS

El Zaguán 545 Canyon Road,(505) 982-0016

Handmade brooms and brushes made from discarded objects presented by Julia Tait Dickenson.

MUSEUMS

GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM

217 Johnson St., (505) 946-1000

Making a Life. Rooted in Place. 10 am-5 pm, Thurs-Mon, $20 (under 18 free)

IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS

108 Cathedral Place, (505) 983-8900

Womb of the Earth: Cosmovision of the Rainforest. Inuk Silis Høegh: Arctic Vertigo. The Stories We Carry. Our Stories. Origins. 2023-2024

IAIA BFA Exhibition: Indigenous Presence, Indigenous Futures.

10 am-4 pm, Wed-Sat, Mon, 11 am-4 pm, Sun, $5-$10 Free admission every Friday MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

710 Camino Lejo, (505) 476-1269

Down Home. Here, Now and Always. Horizons: Weaving Between the Lines with Diné Textiles.

10 am-5 pm, $7-$12, NM residents free first Sunday of the month

MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART

706 Camino Lejo, (505) 476-1204

La Cartonería Mexicana / The Mexican Art of Paper and Paste. Protection: Adaptation and Resistance. Amidst Cries from the Rubble: Art of Loss and Resilience from Ukraine 10 am-5 pm, $3-$12, NM residents free first Sunday of the month

NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM

113 Lincoln Ave., (505) 476-5200

The Santos of New Mexico. Silver and Stones: Collaborations in Southwest Jewelry.

10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs, 10 am7 pm, Fri; $7-$12, NM residents free 5-7 pm first Fri. of the month

FILM

SUMBIT YOUR FILM TO THE 7TH ANNUAL MADRID FILM FEST Online

Aspiring and established filmmakers are invited to submit a film (15 minutes or under) for consideration in the Madrid Film Festival, with cash prizes up to $500. Deadline is July 31. Visit madridfilmfest.org for submission details and rules. Submit your entry in an email to adw@madridfilmfest.org.

Want to see your event listed here?

We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com.

Submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion.

NUEVO MEXICANO HERITAGE MUSEUM

750 Camino Lejo, (505) 982-2226

Ugly History of Beautiful Things. What Lies Behind the Vision of Chimayo Weavers. 1 -4 pm, Wed-Fri, $10, children free

NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART

107 W Palace Ave., (505) 476-5063

Selections from the 20th Century Collection. Out West: Gay and Lesbian Artists in the Southwest 1900-1969. Art of the Bullfight.

10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs, 10 am-7 pm, Fri; $7-$12, NM residents free 5-7 pm every Fri. May-Oct.

SITE SANTA FE 1606 Paseo de Peralta, (505) 989-1199

Teresita Fernández / Rovert Smithson

Carmen Herrera: I Am Nobody! Who Are You?.

10 am-5 pm Sun-Mon, Thurs, Sat, 10 am- 7 pm, Fri.

POEH CULTURAL CENTER

78 Cities of Gold Road, (505) 455-5041

Di Wae Powa. Nah Poeh Meng.

10 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri, $7-$10 VLADEM CONTEMPORARY 404 Montezuma Ave., (505) 476-5602

Selections from the 20th Century Collection. 10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs, 10 am-7 pm, Fri; $7-$12, NM residents free 5-7 pm every Fri. May-Oct.

WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN

704 Camino Lejo, (505) 982-4636

Masterglass: The Collaborative Spirit of Tony Jojola. Pathfinder: 40 Years of Marcus Amerman. Journeying Through the Archives of the Wheelwright Museum.

10 am-4 pm, Tues-Sat, $10

James Bauer 1994 “BoBo bu Ko” Robotic Assemblage can be found in Favorites from the Collection at the Museum of International Folk Art.

Empty Nest

While I readily concede that I perhaps did not read El Nido’s website as carefully as I could have, some days later I still maintain that the revered Tesuque restaurant has an odd system in place for its dual concept menus.

I made reservations at El Nido (Spanish for The Nest) assuming I could order from both the regular dinner menu and its Su concept sushi menu. Was this the appropriate choice for someone who wanted sushi?

No, as it turns out. According to a very nice manager, diners seated in the restaurant’s Su section can order from both the sushi and the main restaurant’s menus; those in the main restaurant may only order from that menu. And though El Nido’s workers tried valiantly to slip my companion and I into a table at Su— and my lack of understanding was absolutely not their fault—alack, alas, it was not meant to be, thanks to the current boom of patrons stopping in for a bite before attending the Santa Fe Opera this season.

Now, I’d never begrudge a Santa Fe restaurant its popularity and busy summer, and I mainly mention this self-inflicted snafu as I assume a similar scenario has and/or will befall other diners. I’m the first to exclaim “Mea culpa” for this boneheaded move. As for the so-so meal at El Nido itself, however, that’s on them.

First note that El Nido’s building and dining areas are real lookers following a 2016 interior renovation. According to that aforementioned nice manager, El Nido’s space is roughly 100 years old and was once likely a brothel. At other times over the years, the

The

only-OK-ness

of Tesuque’s El Nido

space has also housed a dance hall, a flamenco venue for dancer María Benítez (it still hosts flamenco sometimes) and a steakhouse. Cut to 2021, and chef Jose Montalvo Alas (aka Chef Ziggy) took over the kitchen. That same year, El Nido began offering sushi specials from chef Masayuki Hattori, which evolved into what is today: a full-fledged operation under chef Alexander Gaytan (aka Chef Alex). I’ve heard nothing but positive chatter surrounding sushi at Su, so fingers crossed I get it right next time, particularly as I’ll be in no rush to dine at El Nido proper anytime soon.

The night started out well enough, thanks to a number of mocktail options. Neither I, nor my companion, are drinking currently, so it’s nice to have choices. She opted for the margarita-adjacent La Norm-ita with boozeless tequila, orange blossom, cucumber, jalapeño and a tajin-encrusted rim, while I sampled the Can’t Believe It’s a Spritz with fake prosecco and a zero proof aperitif alternative ($13 each). The Norm-ita was every bit as tasty as the real deal, though the spritz erred too far into bitter territory. My companion’s empty glass sat on the table through the rest of the meal after she drank it; I could not finish mine.

fire techniques, so I don’t question that part. As for the green chile butter? If it was in there, it proved mild to the point of imperceptibility. Even so, the oysters themselves hit that salty taste you want, so the disappointment was at least tempered.

For mains, we selected the roasted poblano ($26) and the wagyu burger with

Dining-wise, we began with stuffed artichoke hearts ($18), a pair of hearts crammed with spinach and mushrooms, plus pecorino and a creamy gorgonzola sauce. This would be the high point of the evening, in particular thanks to the richness and borderline sweetness of the sauce.

We moved on to a half-dozen oysters ostensibly baked in a wood fire oven with a green chile butter ($24). OK, to be fair, Chef Ziggy does pretty much everything with wood

boar bacon ($21, add $5 for the bacon), and in both cases, the descriptive conversation that followed hovered almost exclusively around “it’s only OK,” territory.

The poblano, for example, bore very little taste and certainly no bite. The barley, calabacitas, mushrooms and smoked gouda within were nothing to write home about, either, though the huitlacoche sauce derived from a fungus found primarily on corn—and

a common delicacy in Mexico that I’ve rarely seen on Santa Fe menus—did at least add a certain earthy flavor to the overall dish. So why the wagyu burger? For one thing, fine (or fine-er) dining can seem scary to folks, and I’d hoped to describe a more accessible entry point. For another, boar bacon is somewhat rare to come by around here, and boasts a semi-sweet flavor and chewy texture that are to die for. Wagyu is all well and good, too, though had it not been for the aforementioned bacon (and some excellently crispy fries), the price tag would have stung a lot worse. As far as flavor goes, I could rattle off a list of more enjoyable local burgers than El Nido’s, but suffice it to say that Santa Fe Bite is still going strong.

We closed the night with a honey lavender creme brulee ($13), partly because I’m a sucker for cracking a caramelized shell, but also because the neighboring table had ordered one and it both looked and sounded heavenly. Like the other dishes, our dessert came with the faint whisper of flavor, but it lingered ghost-like and out of reach. From someplace within the deepest part of the shallow custard dish, we caught the briefest note of honey. Perhaps they forgot the lavendar.

With a bill clocking in at just over $150 for two, one expects a poblano quite literally bursting with flavor or the type of burger about which you might call your friends to describe. Instead, we had an only OK meal in a very pretty building within a very pretty village.

TOP: Stuffed artichoke hearts. BOTTOM: Wagyu burger with boar bacon

Men Behaving Badly

Barlow once again leads a high-energy ensemble in Don Giovanni

In his lecture last weekend preceding Mozart’s Don Giovanni, educator Oliver Prezant alluded to the theory that to qualify as a comedy, a dramatic work must end with a marriage. That specific idea owes itself to Lord Byron, who famously pronounced:

“All tragedies are ended with a death; all comedies are ended with a marriage. The future states of both are left to faith.”

Under that prescription, Don Giovanni falls into the tragedy camp, but in Director Stephen Barlow’s production at the Santa Fe Opera this season, laughter abounds. I will admit, I’m among the throngs who loved Barlow’s 2022 production of Rossini’s The Barber of Seville—seeing it twice (three times if one counts the Opera in the Park screening)—and eagerly anticipating his return this season.

Back to Byron. His maxim appears in the long satirical poem Don Juan about the legendary Spanish lothario who serves as inspiration for Mozart and librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte’s Don Giovanni. Barlow pulls in one more man with dubious morals and matching initials: Dorian Gray, from Oscar Wilde’s novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, and sets the opera in Victorian London, an era with rising social tensions and an expanding middle class.

As James M. Keller notes in his essay on the opera for this season’s festival catalog, Don Giovanni critiques society in part through an ensemble cast that incorporates characters from all of its stations. In choosing to relocate the opera from 17th-century Seville to 19th-century England, Barlow and

scenic and costume designer Yannis Thavoris took cues from film adaptations of Wilde’s book, including a scene in which Dorian Gray holds a briefcase embossed with his initials.

In an interview also appearing in the season catalog, Barlow says he and Thavoris “took care to be highly specific” in the set design’s “atmospheric details” depicting the Victorian era. Like Don Giovanni, Wilde’s titular character’s moral absences (Gray preserves his youth, beauty and hedonistic tendencies while his portrait absorbs his aging and sinning; things end poorly) serve to highlight the author’s view of his society’s hypocrisies (for his efforts, Wilde’s sole novel sparked scandal for its homoerotic subtext and playeda role

in Wilde’s conviction several years later for “gross indecency,” aka sex with men).

Barlow’s choice to situate Mozart’s opera through Wilde’s lens thus makes for a fun visual experience and a stimulating one for viewers in the mindset to read some epic poetry, a novel and catch a few films in advance of seeing the opera. But those heading in cold will also enjoy the show, thanks to tremendous ensemble and individual performances. As was the case with Barlow’s Barber cast, Giovanni’s work together comfortably and with a great sense of humor.

In the course of the opera’s two acts and 3 1/2 hour run time (counting intermission), Don Giovanni indulges his insatiable appetite

for conquest, but his real crime is the murder of the father of one of the woman he targets. In addition to possessing a commanding voice, Grammy Award-winning bass-baritone Ryan Speedo Green exudes charm as the seductive and dangerous Don Giovanni. He is ably partnered with former Santa Fe Opera apprentice Nicholas Newton—who debuted in Barlow’s 2022 Barber as Don Basilio—as Giovanni’s servant Leporello. Green and Newton’s rapport on stage and the witty execution of the characters’ identity swap in Act 2 both serve as highlights in the production.

Soprano Rachael Wilson’s performance as the betrayed Donna Elvira, who continues to pursue (and love) Don Giovanni, also stands out, both for Wilson’s hilarious and physical performance, as well as her vocal facility in this key—and large—role. Soprano and 2024 SFO Apprentice Rachel Fitzgerald makes her debut as grief-stricken Donna Anna, one of Don Giovanni’s prey, whose father the Commendatore (Solomon Howard) Don Giovanni murders. Fitzgerald came in as a replacement, and has a beautiful clear voice that conveys the anguish of her character well. She will play the role again on July 10, before soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen assumes it for the rest of the run (Sørensen also sings the role of the Marschallin in this season’s Der Rosenkavalier).

As noted, the large cast works well together, particularly during the party scene in Act 1, following working-class Zerlina’s wedding to Masetto (a terrific bass William Guanbo Su, making his SFO debut here). Soprano Liv Redpath was wonderful as Zerlina and I look forward to her Susanna in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro next season.

For all the laughter, Don Giovanni does not end lightheartedly but, rather, with the predator’s death (I’ll avoid spoilers, but suffice it to say the set’s DG portraits are not just for show).

Conductor Harry Bicket masterfully leads the orchestra through the range of emotions in Mozart’s score, which capture the comedy and joy of Don Giovanni’s tale, alongside its grief. Both, of course, are as natural as life and death. As for the opera’s moral, in which evildoers eventually receive just punishments— here’s hoping.

Don Giovanni

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte

8:30 pm, July 10; 8 pm, July 29, Aug. 3, 6, 16, 21, 23

Seated ticket prices range from $37 to $409. SRO is $15. First time buyers with New Mexico ID can receive 40% off a pair of tickets. Call or visit the Box Office for the most up to date information and pricing, or visit santafeopera.org.

L: Nicholas Newton as Leporello and Ryan Speedo Green as Don Giovanni are a dynamic duo in this year’s production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni.
Director Stephen Barlow returns to the Santa Fe Opera and directs a boisterous ensemble in Don Giovanni.

MaXXXine Review

It turns out Hollywood is the real monster

MaXXXine from filmmaker Ti West (X, Pearl) is a bit of a curious case. On the one hand, West is clearly a film buff who maintains a deep reverence for horror and exploitation cinema. He has proved this with the previous films in his X Trilogy, for which MaXXXine serves as a conclusion, though he blurs the line between artistic sincerity and over-the-top so often that one begins to question whether Maxxxine is subtly artful or overtly terrible.

In MaXXXine, we follow up-and-coming starlet Maxine Minx (Mia Goth) circa 1984 as she attempts to transcend adult film for the Wicker Man-esque horror of the fictional film The Puritan 2, a big budget studio affair with a snobby director who thinks herself the new Hitchcock (Elizabeth Debicki; who literally takes Maxine to the Psycho set during the film). Elsewhere, a killer loosely based on the real-life Night Stalker slayings roams the streets of LA ritualistically murdering Maxine’s friends while a private dick (an absurd and not-so-enjoyable Kevin Bacon) trails her, threatening to make public her sordid past.

Goth understands the assignment here and effortlessly phases between earnest emotional depth and ridiculous one-liner quippery. In West’s

9 + EXQUISITE ACTING - YOU MIGHT NEED MEDICATION TO GET THROUGH IT

In rural Western Massachusetts, in an early-1990s world where silence and boredom set a beautifully human pace, 11-year-old Lacy (Zoe Ziegler) calls her mother to pick her up from camp: “I’m going to kill myself,” she threatens, deadpan.

“This is a bad pattern,” single mom Janet (Julianne Nicholson, Dream Scenario) eventually responds.

The provocative thematic question is set: Does individuation equal death? In particular, what can—or even should—crack the unique dyad of the single mother with an only daughter relationship? It’s a unique connection rarely captured in art, and Janet Planet holds its magic like a precious egg for almost two hours.

Janet tries to entertain adult relationships, but tensions flare whenever those connections threaten the insular world she’s built with her child. Lacy, too, tries to push herself out of the twosome, but the familiar safety of her small family is the only home she knows. Within the bond, the expected hierarchies of parent and child roles bend and even vanish.

“Sometimes I feel like she’s watching me,” Janet confides in an adult friend—meaning even when her daughter isn’t actually there. The truth seems to be that they’re watching each other with an

Hollywood—one constructed from equal parts faux glamor and real filth—the 1980s explode incessantly from every corner, be it a fridge full of Tab, the requisite mohawk-bearing punk in the distance or the cavalcade of chintzy hairdos and pseudo new wave sounds.

Everything is exaggerated, in fact, be it the larger-than-life studio system looming at all times, or the purposefully ham-fisted delivery of actors like Giancarlo Esposito (Breaking Bad) and Halsey. Even the foley audio rings fakely across cacophonous footsteps, booming gunshots and squelching gore. West goes out of his way to shoot on unoccupied but familiar sets and in backstage areas, highlighting the non-reality of film while emphasizing that fame-

intensity and psychic attachment perhaps impossible in larger families.

This is Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Annie Baker’s cinematic debut, and her stage background at once shines and startles in the on-screen medium. The dialogue is quietly hilarious and often allowed to go on for longer than we’re used to on the big screen, but if you’re willing to sit back and remember a time when we could listen to ourselves think, the film becomes a perfect mediation on love and what it means to grow up. (Ariel Gore) Center for Contemporary Arts,Violet Crown, PG-13, 113 min.

HOW TO BUM OUT YOUR KIDS

While Violet Crown Cinema is slated to host Castaway screenwriter William Broyles Jr. at a screening of that film on July 25, everybody’s favorite semi-subterranean Railyard movie theater is pretty focused on sad flicks for kids right now. As we speak, the theater is playing the animated film The Land Before Time, wherein main dinosaur Little Foot finds himself Bambi’d (aka, with a dead mom) just before learning that having friends and walking long distances while singing is just as good as a living parent—although, didn’t all the dinos get meteor’d in the end? Later this summer, catch The Neverending Story and the resultant “Why was the villain of the movie literal nothingness and how can I possibly begin to cope with that concept?” questions from little ones who just watched a horse drown about an hour earlier.

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION

wanters and star-fuckers are often chasing fleeting ghosts and little else.

He even comes close to brilliance once or twice, but a pair of funny little cops played by Michelle Monaghan and Bobby Cannavale mostly muck up the pacing, and the not-so-dramatic conclusion is cause for laughs—and not particularly in the good way. If nothing else comes from the X Trilogy, however, Goth is quite the talent, and it’ll be exciting to see what she does next.

MAXXXINE

Directed by West

With Goth, Debicki, Bacon, Esposito, Halsey, Monaghan and Cannavale Violet Crown Cinema, R, 113 min.

Hats off to the New Mexico Film Office and local location managers for nominations from the Location Managers Guild International. First up with a nomination for Outstanding Locations in a Period Feature is Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, which we all know highlighted New Mexico vistas while telling some of the tale of the Trinity Test and the guy who made it happen. “Being nominated for an LMGI Award…is incredibly humbling,” Oppenheimer location manager Dennis Muscari says in a statement. “New Mexico’s diverse landscapes and historical buildings all played a vital role in bringing Oppenheimer’s story to life.” Also nominated in that category are Dune: Part Two, Killers of the Flower Moon and Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga. As none of those films were shot or took place in New Mexico, they probably look terrible by comparison. The New Mexico Film Office was also nominated for the Outstanding Film Commission Award for that Nolan joint.

FIRST WE BOMBED NEW MEXICO RE-RETURNS

In other Oppenheimer-adjacent news, after no shortage of festival buzz, numerous screenings at home and afar and a glowing review in SFR, filmmaker Lois Lipman’s documentary First We Bombed New Mexico is scheduled for 2 and 6 pm special screenings at the Albuquerque Museum on Tuesday, July 16. Part educational doc, part spirited rallying cry, Lipman’s film focuses on the downwinders—residents of the

areas near Oppenheimer’s test whose land and water were poisoned leading to ongoing generational health and emotional traumas. The fallout remains to this day, and with the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act expiring last month, the plight of the downwinders remains as important as it ever was.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

If you’ve ever wanted to dip a toe into the highoctane world of background acting, the Santa Fe Film Office has a pretty handy primer for would-be extras who live in and around Santa Fe. Not only does the local film office have a comprehensive info page online at santafenm.film, its industry directory is chock-full of information for folks who want to know more about getting into film.

MORE RUST DUSTUPS

With Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter trial underway for his role in the 2021 on-set death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins during the filming of Western Rust, First Judicial District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer ruled during preliminary motions earlier this week that Baldwin’s producer role for the film was not relevant to the trial. Outside the courtroom, the AP reports that the New Mexico Film Office last week denied an application for film and television tax incentives from Baldwin and other Rust producers to the tune of roughly $1.6 million. A reason for the denial was not provided.

JANET PLANET
BONUS FEATURES

Rob Brezsny Week of July 10th

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I trust that your intuition has been guiding you to slow down and disappear from the frenzied, agitated bustle that everyone seems addicted to. I hope you have afforded yourself the luxury and privilege of exulting in the thrill of doing absolutely nothing. Have you been taking long breaks to gaze lovingly up at the sky and listen to music that moves you to tears? Have you been studying the children and animals in your life to learn more about how to thrive on non-goal-oriented fun? Have you given your imagination permission to fantasize with abandon about wild possibilities? Homework: Name three more ways to fuel your self-renewal.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Actor Carrie Fisher put a strong priority on being both amusing and amused. For her, almost everything that happened was tolerable, even welcome, as long as it was entertaining. She said, “If my life wasn’t funny, it would just be true, and that’s unacceptable.” I recommend you experiment with those principles, Taurus. Be resourceful as you make your life as humorously interesting as possible. If you do, life will conspire to assist you in being extra amused and amusing.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): As you charge into the upcoming period of self-reinvention, don’t abandon and forget about your past completely. Some of your old emotional baggage might prove useful and soulful. A few of your challenging memories may serve as robust motivators. On the other hand, it will be healthy to leave behind as much oppressive baggage and as many burdensome memories as possible. You are launching the next chapter of your life story! Travel as lightly as you can.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Even though you and I were both born under the sign of Cancer the Crab, I have a taboo against advising you to be like me. I love my life, but I’m not so naïve or arrogant as to think that what has worked for me will also work for you. Now, however, I will make a temporary exception to my policy. Amazingly, the astrological omens suggest you will flourish in the coming weeks by being at least somewhat like me. Therefore, I invite you to experiment with being kind and sensitive, but also cheerfully irreverent and tenderly wild. Be on the lookout for marvels and miracles, but treasure critical thinking and rational analysis. Don’t take things too personally or too seriously, and regard the whole world as a holy gift. Be gratefully and humbly in awe as you tune into how beautiful and wonderful you are.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Over 3,700 years ago, a craftsperson living in what’s now Israel fashioned a comb from an elephant’s tusk. It was a luxury item with two sides, one used to smooth hair tangles and the other to remove lice. On the handle of the ivory tool is an inscription: “May this tusk root out the lice of the hair and the beard.” This is the oldest known sentence ever written in Canaanite, a language that created the world’s first alphabet. In some ways, then, this comb is a precious object. It is unspeakably ancient evidence of a major human innovation. In another way, it’s mundane and prosaic. I’m nominating the comb to be a symbol for your story in the coming weeks: a blend of monumental and ordinary. Drama may emerge from the routine. Breakthroughs may happen in the midst of everyday matters.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Some astrologers assert that Virgos are modest, humble, and reluctant to shine. But a Virgo New Yorker named Ashrita Furman provides contrary evidence. His main activity in life is to break records. He holds the Guinness world record for having broken the most Guinness world records. His first came in 1979, when he did 27,000 jumping jacks. Since then, he has set hundreds of records, including the fastest time running on stilts, the longest time juggling objects underwater, and the most times jumping rope on a pogo stick. I propose to make him your spirit creature for the coming weeks. What acts of bold self-expression are you ready to make, Virgo? What records are you primed to break?

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran author Diane Ackerman says, “We can’t enchant the world, which makes its own magic; but we can enchant ourselves by paying deep attention.” I’m telling you this, dear Libra, because you now have exceptional power to pay deep attention and behold far more than usual of the world’s magic. It’s the Season of Enchantment for you. I invite you to be daring and imaginative as you probe for the delightful amazements that are often hidden just below the surface of things. Imagine you have the superpower of X-ray vision.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): If I’m reading the astrological omens correctly, you are in the midst of major expansion. You are reaching further, opening wider, and dreaming bigger. You are exploring frontiers, entertaining novel possibilities, and daring to transcend your limitations and expectations. And I am cheering you on as you grow beyond your previous boundaries. One bit of advice: Some people in your life may find it challenging to follow you freely into your new territory. They may be afraid you’re leaving them behind, or they may not be able to adjust as fast as you wish. I suggest you give them some slack. Allow them to take the time they need to get accustomed to your growth.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian actor Jeff Bridges has wise words for you to heed: “If you wait to get all the information you think you need before you act, you’ll never act because there’s an infinite amount of information out there.” I think this advice is especially apropos for you right now. Why? Because you will thrive on making strong, crisp decisions and undertaking strong, crisp actions. The time for pondering possibilities must give way to implementing possibilities.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): People may be attracted to you in the coming weeks because they unconsciously or not-so-unconsciously want to be influenced, stirred up, and even changed by your presence. They hope you will be the catalyst or medicine they need. Or maybe they want you to provide them with help they haven’t been able to give themselves or get anywhere else. Please be aware that this may not always be a smooth and simple exchange. Some folks might be demanding. Others may absorb and integrate your effects in ways that are different from your intentions. But I still think it’s worthwhile for you to offer your best efforts. You could be a force for healing and benevolence.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sometimes when gifts arrive in our lives, they are not recognized as gifts. We may even mistake them for obstacles. In a worst-case scenario, we reject and refuse them. I am keen on helping you avoid this behavior in the coming weeks, Aquarius. In the oracle you’re now reading, I hope to convince you to expand your definition of what gifts look like. I will also ask you to widen the range of where you search for gifts and to enlarge your expectations of what blessings you deserve. Now please meditate on the following riddles: 1. a shadow that reveals the hidden light; 2. a twist that heals; 3. a secret that no longer wants to be secret; 4. a shy ally who will reward your encouragement; 5. a boon that’s barely buried and just needs you to scrape away the deceptive surface.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Lake Baikal in Russia is the world’s deepest, oldest, and largest lake by volume. It contains over 22 percent of the fresh surface water on the planet. I propose we make this natural marvel your prime symbol for the next 11 months. At your best, you, too, will be deep, fresh, and enduring. And like Lake Baikal, you will be exceptionally clear. (Its underwater visibility reaches 120 feet.) PS: Thousands of plant and animal species thrive in this vital hub. I expect you will also be a source of richly diverse life, dear Pisces.

Homework: Enjoy free articles and audios from my new book: https://bit.ly/lovelifegifts

MIND BODY SPIRIT

PSYCHICS

PSYCHIC/TAROT READINGS & SPIRITUAL COUNSELING

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SPIRITUAL COUNSELOR

TOWARDS THE ONE, the perfection of love, harmony, and beauty; The ONLY BEING, united with all the illuminated souls who form the embodiment of THE MASTER, THE SPIRIT OF GUIDANCE. -a Sufi prayer THE ABODE OF ANGELS SANTA FE is holding Sufi Circle study group of The Sufi Message of Hazrat Inayat Khan, The Sufi poets, and spiritual discussions led by Dr. Murshida Aumakua Ra, Ph.D. Director.

Aumakua also offers private sessions to individuals for the evolution of consciousness. She holds a Ph.D in Consciousness and Transpersonal Psychology. 505.603.1081 aumakuara9@gmail.com

LEGALS

CHIMNEY SWEEPS

CASEY’S TOP HAT

CHIMNEY SWEEP

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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01999

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. SAGE FORTEEN, LLC, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 31, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1206, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interests(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195 294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”). Unit No.: 1206 Vacation Week No.: 14 Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom Deluxe Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not

limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on May 31, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $10,493.63, plus interest of $1,097.09 from January 1, 2024 through July 31, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale. Witness my hand this 5th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01848

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF MICHAEL K. FOX AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF

MICHAEL K. FOX, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 31, 2024 at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the abovenamed Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1106, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interests(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1106

Vacation Week No.: 32

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom Deluxe

Initial Use Year: 1999

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on May 31, 2024, being an

action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $7,286.43, plus interest of $761.78 from January 1, 2024 through July 31, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the abovedescribed judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale. Witness my hand this 5th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-411

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-02004

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. SUSAN B. PEINADO; THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF SUSAN B. PEINADO; and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS of ARTHUR G. PEINADO,Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 31, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-

LEGALS

named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1210, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: An undivided 5000/289000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1210, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive rights to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Period as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, A Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2002

Timeshare Interest: UDI-Float Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A

Number of Rights: 5000 Fixed Assigned Unit (If applicable): N/A

Vacation Week No.: N/A Unit Type (If applicable): N/A including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 3, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $9,174.44, plus interest of $959.17 from January 1, 2024 through July 31, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the

foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 5th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01993 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff,

v. O & L ASSOCIATES, INC., Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 31, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1205, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: An undivided 1/104 interest in

fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1205, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive rights to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1205

Initial Use Year: 2003

Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A

Fixed Assigned Unit: 1205 Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom Deluxe Vacation Week No.: 2 including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on May 31, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $6,612.93, plus interest of $691.37 from January 1, 2024 through July 31, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special

Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale. Witness my hand this 10th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

NOTICE OF PENDENCY

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01604 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v.

UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JOHN CULBREATH and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JOHN CULBREATH, Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JOHN CULBREATH and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JOHN CULBREATH

You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed an action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof to foreclose a mortgage on real property located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit 2112, Santa Fe, NM 87501, said property being more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one hundred and fourth (1/104) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a

corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2000

Timeshare Interest: Floating Even Year

Fixed Assigned Unit: 2112

Vacation Week No.: 07

Unit Type: 1 Bedroom

Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the Complaint in said cause on or before thirty (30) days after the last publication date of this Notice of Pendency, judgment by default will be entered against you.

GREENSPOON MARDER LLP

By: /s/ S. J. Lucero

Mx. S. J. Lucero (they/them) 500 Marquette NW, 12th Floor Albuquerque, NM 87102

Telephone: (888) 491.1120

Email 1: S.J.Lucero@gmlaw.com

Email 2: gmforeclosure@gmlaw.com

Attorneys for Plaintiff

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01457

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. WILL BANSE and KAREN BANSE, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024 at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First

Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1209, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: One (1) Timeshare Interest consisting of ONE (1) undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1209

Initial Use Year: ____

Unit Type: 1 BEDROOM DELUXE Vacation Week No.: 16

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on March 25, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $7,124.31, plus interest of $794.02 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal

LEGALS

to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the abovedescribed judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 17th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network

P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01858

VILLAS DE SANTA FE

CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION

INC., Plaintiff, v. WARREN A. BROOKS and CAROL A. BROOKS,Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the abovenamed Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1209, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as:

1 Timeshare Interests(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1209

Vacation Week No.: 32 Unit Type: 1 Bedroom Deluxe Initial Use Year: 2000

Timeshare Interest: Float Both Odd and Even Years including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 7, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $10,568.85, plus interest of $1,177.92 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid

into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale. Witness my hand this 17th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01701

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v.

ELITE VACATIONS, A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1401, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as:

An undivided 1/104 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1401, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium ( the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and

Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive rights to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1401

Initial Use Year: 2011

Timeshare Interest: Odd Year Vacation Week No.: 51

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom Deluxe including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on March 25, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $6,524.58, plus interest of $727.18 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility

liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 17th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

NOTICE OF PENDENCY

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-02011

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. ROBERT S. LERMA and MARIE T. MURPHY, Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: MARIE T. MURPHY

You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed an action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof to foreclose a mortgage on real property located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit 2120, Santa Fe, NM 87501, said property being more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interests(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa

Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 2120

Initial Use Year: 2000

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year

Vacation Week No.: 51

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom

Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the Complaint in said cause on or before thirty (30) days after the last publication date of this Notice of Pendency, judgment by default will be entered against you.

GREENSPOON MARDER LLP

By: /s/ S. J. Lucero

Mx. S. J. Lucero (they/them)

500 Marquette NW, 12th Floor Albuquerque, NM 87102

Telephone: (888) 491.1120

Email 1: S.J.Lucero@gmlaw.com

Email 2: gmforeclosure@gmlaw.com

Attorneys for Plaintiff

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01998

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v.

RODNEY A. MASON AND UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF RODNEY A. MASON, Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: RODNEY A. MASON AND UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF RODNEY A. MASON

You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed an action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof to foreclose a mortgage on real property located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit 1211, Santa Fe, NM 87501, said property being more particularly described as: An undivided 2500/289000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1211, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant

LEGALS

to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1211

Initial Use Year:

Fixed Use Period (If applicable):

Number of Rights (If applicable): 2500

Fixed Assigned Unit (If applicable):

Vacation Week No.:

Unit Type (If applicable):

Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the Complaint in said cause on or before thirty (30) days after the last publication date of this Notice of Pendency, judgment by default will be entered against you. GREENSPOON MARDER LLP

By: /s/ S. J. Lucero

Mx. S. J. Lucero (they/them) 500 Marquette NW, 12th Floor Albuquerque, NM 87102

Telephone: (888) 491.1120

Email 1: S.J.Lucero@gmlaw.com Email 2: gmforeclosure@gmlaw.com Attorneys for Plaintiff

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01836

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. BRANNON HALL, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 31, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real

property to the highest bidder.

The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1203, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2011 Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Unit No.: 1203 Vacation Week No.: 03 Unit Type: 1 Bedroom Deluxe including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on May 31, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $10,318.63, plus interest of $1,078.79 from January 1, 2024 through July 31, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 21st day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE IN THE SANTA FE COUNTY PROBATE COURT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MARIA LOUISA LEYBA, Deceased.

No. 2024 0143

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, MARGARET LEYBA-SANCHEZ, has been appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of MARIA LOUISA LEYBA, Deceased.

DATED: June 25, 2024 /s/

MARGARET LEYBA-SANCHEZ, Personal Representative Of the Estate of MARIA LOUISA LEYBA, Deceased.

c/o Daniel A. Sanchez, Esq. THE SANCHEZ LAW GROUP, LLC 2304 Middle Court Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 (505) 946-8394

Dansanchez911@gmail.com

NOTICE OF PENDENCY

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01400 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JAMES DOSCHER and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JAMES DOSCHER, Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

STATE OF NEW MEXICO

TO: THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JAMES DOSCHER and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JAMES DOSCHER

All persons having claims against this Estate of the Decedent are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or sixty (60) days after the date of mailing or other delivery of this notice, whichever is later, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to MARGARET LEYBA-SANCHEZ, Personal Representative, c/o Daniel Sanchez, Esq., 2304 Middle Court, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 or filed with the Santa Fe County Probate Court at the Santa Fe County Courthouse, Santa Fe, New Mexico.

promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 2120

Initial Use Year: 1999

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year

Vacation Week No.: 19

Unit Type: 1 Bedroom

Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the Complaint in said cause on or before thirty (30) days after the last publication date of this Notice of Pendency, judgment by default will be entered against you.

GREENSPOON MARDER LLP

By: ____/s/ S. J. Lucero________

Mx. S.J. Lucero (they/them)

500 Marquette NW, 12th Floor Albuquerque, NM 87102

Telephone: (954) 491-1120, ext. 3149

Email: S.J.Lucero@gmlaw.com

Email: gmforeclosure@gmlaw.com

Attorneys for Plaintiff

You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed an action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof to foreclose a mortgage on real property located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit 2120, Santa Fe, NM 87501, said property being more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations

within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive rights to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2003 Timeshare Interest: UDI-Float Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01693

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF BRUCE A. FLEMING, JR. AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BRUCE A. FLEMING, JR. AKA CINDY DARREN, Defendants. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF BRUCE A. FLEMING, JR.

You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed an action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof to foreclose a mortgage on real property located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit 2210, Santa Fe, NM 87501, said property being more particularly described as: An undivided 1500/263000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 2210, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit

Number of Rights (If applicable): 1500 Fixed Assigned Unit (If applicable):

Vacation Week No.: N/A Unit Type (If applicable): Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the Complaint in said cause on or before thirty (30) days after the last publication date of this Notice of Pendency, judgment by default will be entered against you. GREENSPOON MARDER LLP By: /s/ S. J. Lucero

Mx. S. J. Lucero (they/them) 500 Marquette NW, 12th Floor Albuquerque, NM 87102 Telephone: (888) 491.1120 Email 1: S.J.Lucero@gmlaw.com Email 2: gmforeclosure@gmlaw.com Attorneys for Plaintiff

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01398

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF CLYDE W. NEU and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CLYDE W. NEU, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m.,

LEGALS

the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 2117, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below with Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings Located Within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 2117

Initial Use Year: 2010 Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year

Vacation Week No.: 51

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 20, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $6,890.25, plus interest of $767.93 from January 1, 2024 through August

14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 21st day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01893 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, v. ESTATE OF PELCYIDA SARNO, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendants, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 2211,

Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as:

An undivided 5000/263000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 2211, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive rights to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc.; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, A Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2003

Timeshare Interest: UDI-Float Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A

Number of Rights (If applicable): 5000

Fixed Assigned Unit (if applicable):

Vacation Week No.: N/A Unit Type (if applicable): including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on January 25, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $9,763.73, plus interest of $1,762.29 from August 14, 2023 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part

of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court. The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 21st day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01393

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF CORDELIA V. CAROLUS and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CORDELIA V. CAROLUS, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1106, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as:

1 Timeshare interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 1106

Vacation Week No.: 14

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 BEDROOM DELUXE

Initial Use Year: 1998

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 24, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $7,199.56, plus interest of $802.41 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy

the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 26th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-CV-2023-01584 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. BRADLEY N. ECKERT and GISELA ECKERT, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1212, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: An undivided 500/289000 Interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1212, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to

LEGALS

reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2004 Timeshare Interest:

Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A Number of Rights (If applicable): 500 Fixed Assigned Unit (If applicable):

Vacation Week No.: N/A Unit Type (If applicable): including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 25, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $6,743.35, plus interest of $751.56 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master

will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 26th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-01459

VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v.

ALEX F. GARCIA and UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF ALEX F. GARCIA, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024, at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 2117, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: 1 Timeshare Interest(s) consisting of 1 undivided one fifty-second (1/52) interest(s) in fee simple as tenant in common in and to the below-described Condominium Unit, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common furnishings which are appurtenant to such Condominium Unit, as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right every calendar year to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit of the same Unit Type described below

within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of the Project, for their intended purposes, during a Vacation Week, as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then-current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc., all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195-294, as thereafter amended (the “Declaration”).

Unit No.: 2117

Initial Use Year: 2000

Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year

Vacation Week No.: 21

Unit Type (If applicable): 1 Bedroom including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 24, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $7,998.56, plus interest of $891.46 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for

the foregoing sale, and reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 25th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-101-CV-2023-02042 VILLAS DE SANTA FE CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION INC., Plaintiff, v. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JEAN C. HUNTINGTON and THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JEAN C. HUNTINGTON, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on August 14, 2024 at 12:15 p.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the front entrance of the First Judicial District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, sell all of the rights, title, and interests of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real property to the highest bidder. The property to be sold is located at 400 Griffin Street, Unit(s) 1103, Santa Fe, NM 87501, in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as: An undivided 1000/289000 interest in fee simple as tenant in common in and to Unit Number(s) 1103, together with a corresponding undivided interest in the Common Furnishings which are appurtenant to such Unit(s), as well as the recurring (i) exclusive right to reserve, use, and occupy an Assigned Unit within Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive right to use and enjoy the Limited Common Elements and Common Furnishings located within or otherwise appurtenant to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) non-exclusive right to use and enjoy the Common Elements of

the Project, for their intended purposes, during (A) in the case of “floating” Timeshare Interests, such Use Periods as shall properly have been reserved in accordance with the provisions of the then current Rules and Regulations promulgated by Villas de Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc; and (B) in the case of “fixed” Timeshare Interests, such Fixed Vacation Week as is specifically set forth below, all pursuant to the Declaration of Condominium for Villas de Santa Fe, a Condominium, duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, in Book 1462, at Page 195, as amended from time to time (the “Declaration”).

Initial Use Year: 2003

Timeshare Interest: UDI-Float Fixed Use Period (If applicable): N/A

Number of Rights (If applicable): 1000

Fixed Assigned Unit (If applicable):

Vacation Week No.: Unit Type (If applicable): including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes (the “Property”). If there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control.

The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 24, 2024, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the Property. Plaintiff’s judgment is in the amount of $6,730.09, plus interest of $750.08 from January 1, 2024 through August 14, 2024. Plaintiff has the right to bid at the foregoing sale in an amount equal to its judgment, and to submit its bid either verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.

In accordance with the Court’s decree, the proceeds of sale are to be applied first to the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fees, and then to satisfy the above-described judgment with any remaining balance to be paid into the registry of the Court.

NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will, as set forth above, offer for sale and sell the Property to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment and decree of foreclosure described herein, including the costs of advertisement and publication for the foregoing sale, and

reasonable Special Master’s fees in an amount to be fixed by the Court.

The foregoing sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master, and is subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the Defendants’ one (1) month right of redemption and entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of sale.

Witness my hand this 25th day of’ June, 2024.

By: /S/ Robert Doyle

Robert Doyle, Special Master Legal Process Network P.O. Box 279 Sandia Park, NM 87047 (505) 417-4113

PUBLIC NOTICE

Public Notice:

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