Santa Fe Reporter, November 1, 2023

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Chef Dakota Weiss kicks off her next chapter with multi-concept micro food hall Capital Coal Neighborhood Eatery By Alex De Vore, P.12 SFREPORTER.COM

NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

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Thank You Jesse Allen Stephen Apodaca Gini Barrett Gayla Bechtol Jonathan Blakey & Nanci Cartwright The Blogs The Bobs Curtis Borg M Yvonne Brown BSPOKE Brand Consultancy Kent Buckingham Anne Coller Barbara Conroy John & Bekki Cook Davis-Gibbon Family M DeAnda Hay Mark Davies The Deej Adrienne DeGuere Rothstein Donatelli, LLP Deborah Dorff W.H. & K.P. Dougharty Nate Downey

DeeDee Downs George Ducker Dona Durham Lauren Eaton Prescott Sara, Michael & Nordic Eckhardt Areena Estul & Shell Goldman Ever Joyful Yoga Jill & Terry Fernandez Gail B Flanagan Cheryl Fossum Q Gallaher Dr. Jan Gaynor Mark Glaser Helen Goldberg Goodwest Productions Katy Gross David Gunter Mary Hall The Harwood Family M DeAnda Hay HaydenFold Tom & Rose Himrod Samuel Hokin

RECURRING GIFTS

Nelson Hower Joanna Hurley Sheila Hyde Megan Kamerick Heather Karlson & Bill Leeson Diane Karp The Reverend Canon Ted Karpf Katie & Andrew Nicholas King Photography Laurie Knight Karen Ann Koestner Ruth & Paul Kovnat Joseph Lacayo Laurel Ladwig & Trina Altman Melanie Lamb Faithful Guido Lambelet David LaPlantz Catherine Leach Long View Asset Mgmt Douglas Lonngren Peter Lundberg & James Mowdy

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SUPPORTERS Erin Bond Gino Brazil David Breecker Markeeta Brown Alexis Bove Georgellen Burnett Anne & Jack Burton

Frances Adams & David Patterson Bill Adrian Elizabeth Alexander & Larry Metzger Jan & Jim Allen Helga Ancona Keith Anderson & Barbara Lenssen Lars Anderson Jarratt Applewhite Atlas Fitness Center Karen Aubrey Irene P. Ayala Joseph & Tamara Banar Cris & Marilyn Barnes Ben Baur Betty Baxter Joanie Puma Bennet Bill Bergner Neil H. & Kelley O. Berman Jason Berry Ruth Blaser Gay Block & Billie Parker

(IMO - Richard McCord)

Lee Caldwell & Marcus Randolph Mary Ellen Capek & Sue Hallgarth Susan & Appy Chandler Jill Christian & Kiera Ortiz Cisneros Design Tom Claffey Mary Costello Gene Covington & Patrick Murphy CC Culver Deep Roots Psychic Studio Tess DeGange Merrilee De Vore Elizabeth Dunham Meredith Dunning

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NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023 | Volume 50, Issue 44

NEWS OPINION 5 NEWS 7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 LOCAL ELECTION GUIDE 8 Santa Fe City Council, Santa Fe Public School and the Santa Fe Community College have open seats, plus the proposed high-end housing tax and other questions greet voters for the Nov. 7 election COVER STORY 12 YES, CHEF Chef Dakota Weiss kicks off her next chapter with multi-concept micro food hall Capital Coal Neighborhood Eatery, and we’d pretty much do whatever needed doing to get one of those French dips

A Symbol of LOCAL for More Than a Century Local businesses, like Laura’s restaurant Pig & Fig, give our communities flavor. That’s why

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

Century Bank is proud to support local — and we have been since 1887.

LAURA CRUCET Pig & Fig

Instagram: @sfreporter

CULTURE

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM

SFR PICKS 17 Mickey Mouse is racist, photos from here and there, kabuki hits Museum Hill and multitudinous images THE CALENDAR 18 Don’t even act like you aren’t looking for something to do while the world freezes around us, Santa Fe 3 QUESTIONS 24 With Santa Fe Poet Laureate Ambassador Janna Lopez

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR ROBYN DESJARDINS ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE SENIOR CORRESPONDENT JULIA GOLDBERG STAFF WRITER EVAN CHANDLER MO CHARNOT CALENDAR EDITOR KERRY AMANDA MYERS DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND

FOOD 26 A BETTER, HAPPIER BOXCAR The former Railyard bar/restaurant/venue makes downtown feel like downtown again, at least for the middle-agers among us MOVIES 28

CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE OWNERSHIP CITY OF ROSES NEWSPAPER CO. PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN

ANATOMY OF A FALL REVIEW Oh, dip, did that dude fall or did he have his head bashed in?!

www.SFReporter.com

EDITORIAL DEPT: editor@sfreporter.com

CULTURE EVENTS: calendar@sfreporter.com DISPLAY ADVERTISING: advertising@sfreporter.com CLASSIFIEDS: advertising@sfreporter.com

THOUGH THE SANTA FE REPORTER IS FREE, PLEASE TAKE JUST ONE COPY. ANYONE REMOVING PAPERS IN BULK FROM OUR DISTRIBUTION POINTS WILL BE PROSECUTED TO THE FULL EXTENT OF THE LAW. SANTA FE REPORTER, ISSN #0744-477X, IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, 52 WEEKS EACH YEAR. DIGITAL EDITIONS ARE FREE AT SFREPORTER.COM. CONTENTS © 2023 SANTA FE REPORTER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MATERIAL MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION.

FIRST FRIDAY at the

LOOKING AGAIN ONE LAST LOOK

See this inspiring exhibition! Come ‘look again’ at that one piece you really loved. Or find a new favorite! Join us for the closing during First Friday.

Friday, November 3rd 1:00-4:00 PM ABOUT US

Cover design by Anson Stevens-Bollen artdirector@sfreporter.com

Phone: (505) 988-5541 Mail: PO BOX 4910 SANTA FE, NM 87502

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• Indigenous Art from around the world • In midtown Santa Fe • Private tours available • No admission fees

Visit coeartscenter.org to Learn More! ®

@coeartscenter

info@coeartscenter.org | 505.983.6372 1590B Pacheco St, Santa Fe, NM 87505

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NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

SFREPORTER.COM / NEWS/LETTERSTOTHEEDITOR

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.

LETTERS

to take responsibility for their own safety. I support Patricia Vigil-Stockton, District 2 candidate, who has taken a strong stand for policies to protect students from those who are “known to be dangerous” and for a strongly managed presence of security guards.

JUDY ROSS SANTA FE

COVER, AUG. 11: “ATTACKED ON CAMPUS”

FAILING SCHOOL BOARD In multiple ways, the school board is failing its responsibility to ensure that learning is being done in a safe school environment: 1) Violent Crimes: Since 2016, there have been at least 20 assault/battery cases. 2) Drugs: Recent grads report that drugs are routinely sold on campus; the dealer is caught and returns to campus selling within a week. 3) Class attendance: The board is failing to enforce the regulation that attendance be taken for every class. 4) Known “supervision-free danger zones”: some students have reported that they are afraid to use the bathrooms because of the drugs and sex, so some students try to wait until they get home. In fact, poor emotional and physical safety in school results in diminished academic performance. The leadership of the Santa Fe School Board is missing in action when students are forced

NEWS, OCT. 25: “VIGILANCE FOR VACANCIES”

NOT A GOOD IDEA All the money it took to get a teaching certificate and a BFA and licensure, and now people are not needing one? New Mexico is one of the worst states as it is for education why would anyone in government think this is a good idea. Surely there are other ways to get qualified teachers.

KATHERINE FORREST VIA FACEBOOK

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

SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “This is so suspenseful.” —Overheard a few seconds before a City Council candidate forum began to livestream at Santa Fe Prep Tourist: “Are there any routes into Los Alamos that don’t require traveling steep roadways?” Ranger: “Well yes, but it’s 150 miles out of the way… south through Bernalillo, then north through Santa Fe.” —Overheard at the Valles Caldera Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM • • NOVEMBER NOVEMBER1-7, 1-7,2023 2023

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S FRE P ORTE R.COM / FU N

HOLY GHOST CAMPGROUND IN PECOS REPORTEDLY HAUNTED

This is New Mexico, though, so it might be quicker to name the places that aren’t haunted.

SANTA FE PUBLIC SCHOOLS CUTS BUS ROUTES DUE TO DRIVER SHORTAGE Childless Santa Feans to continue galavanting, sipping their drinks.

WINTER JUST KINDA POPPED UP THERE PRETTY SUDDENLY, HUH?

And our sweaters still smell like mothballs.

JAVELINAS DESTROY ARIZONA GOLF COURSE

It’s not very often that javelinas trend on social media, so we call that a win.

USE ECTION! T O R P

RISK ASSESSMENT SAYS SANTA FE FIRE DEPARTMENT NEEDS MORE AMBULANCES In the meantime, try not to get hurt.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN PUSHES FOR NEW STUDENT LOAN RELIEF PLAN

The new proposal takes into account whether you’ve been paying for 25 years and still can’t get the alumni association to stop calling you.

MAYOR ALAN WEBBER PUSHES FOR STATE TO AMEND CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISION THAT PREVENTS LOCAL GOVERNMENT FROM REGULATING GUNS

Y’know, since sweeping attempts to regulate guns went so well for the governor this year.

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NOVEMBER NOVEMBER1-7, 1-7,2023 2023 •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

READ IT ON SFREPORTER.COM ADVOCACY BUCKS

Solace Sexual Assault Services has a new legal fund for survivors.

W E A R E WAY M O R E TH A N W ED N ES DAY H ER E A R E A CO UPL E O F O N L I N E EXCLUS I V ES :

LEAVE THE MAIL OUT OF THIS

At this point in the game, officials say it’s wiser to drop your absentee ballots off at clerk’s office rather than mailing them.


Don’t Wait, Vaccinate!

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Santa Fe

Election Guide Voters weigh local political and education offices, plus decisions on taxes and more B Y E VA N C H A N D L E R , M O C H A R N O T, J U L I E A N N G R I M M e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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ith the Nov. 7 Election Day just around the corner, local voters face a packed ballot. Santa Fe city residents will fill half the seats on the City Council, elect a new municipal judge, weigh a 3% excise tax on highend home sales and decide on amendments to the city charter. Plus, one seat on the Santa Fe Public Schools Board of Education is up for grabs, along with a seat on the Santa

CITY COUNCIL

DISTRICT 1: ȫ Geno Zamora: Zamora has a long background in government, including as chief counsel under former Gov. Bill Richardson and as former Santa Fe city attorney. His campaign talking points include promises to expand alternative response units; recruit high-wage employers and address housing affordability, among other ideas. ȫ Katherine T Rivera: Rivera lives on the same street she grew up on near Rosario Hill. She spent 33 years in operations and product management before returning to Santa Fe and launching her bid for City Council. If elected, she plans to focus on new infrastructure ideas such as visible medians at night; to minimize encampments; and to introduce stronger anti-graffiti efforts. 8

Fe Community College Board. Voters will also weigh tax questions to benefit entities. As of press time, the Santa Fe County Clerk’s Office reports 8,832 people have cast ballots, including 6,414 in-person and 2,418 mailed ballots that have been returned. Voters may take advantage of early in-person voting on weekdays from 11 am to 7 pm through Friday, Nov. 3; and from 10 am to 6 pm, Saturday, Nov. 4. Polling places are open from 7am to 7 pm on Tuesday, Nov. 7. For locations, visit santafecountynm. gov/clerk/elections See all SFR’s election coverage at sfreporter.com/elections Read on for a summary of candidates’ backgrounds and platforms (appearing in the same order as their names appear on the ballot), as well as details about those long columns of questions.

ȫ Brian Patrick Gutierrez: This election is the second council bid for Gutierrez, owner of a scrap metal recycling buy back center and a former member of the city’s Planning Commission. He says some of the biggest issues Santa Fe faces are open drug use; water resources; infrastructure; and financial responsibility in government. He also wants to restore the obelisk on the Plaza. ȫ Alma Castro: Before taking over as Café Castro’s owner, the Santa Fe native worked as a labor organizer and mariachi instructor in Chicago. Castro recommends investing more heavily in alternative response units; developing housing-first models of wraparound services for those experiencing homelessness; working to create a new water treatment plant and expanding solar programs. Note: This is the only race in which voters may choose to rank candidates under a 2018 change to balloting. The voting system requires the winning candidate in fields of three or more to receive 50% plus one vote of the total number of ballots cast. If no candidate surpasses that threshold in the first round, the candidate who received the lowest number of first-place rankings is eliminated and voters who cast firstplace ballots for that candidate have

NOVEMBER NOVEMBER1-7, 1-7,2023 2023 • • SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

their votes counted instead for their second choices. The runoff rounds continue until a candidate reaches the 50%-plusone mark.

DISTRICT 4:

DISTRICT 2: ȫ Phillip Allen Lucero: Bike activist and Planning Commissioner Lucero works as a climate educator. In his first campaign for elected office, he says he will work to expand the city’s bikeability; create more services for substance abuse and mental health treatment; and support affordable housing. ȫ Michael J Garcia: Garcia was elected to the seat in 2019 and serves on the Quality of Life Committee and the Public Works and Utilities Committee. If elected for a second term, he says he will work to create more youth services and opportunities; promote transparency in government; and expand affordable housing in the city.

ȫ Joel M Nava: Nava currently works in security at the New Mexico State Capitol building and coaches youth sports. His campaign for his first attempt at public office includes proposals to create more youth services; ensure accountability in government; and curb crime. ȫ Jamie Alexandra Cassutt: Incumbent Cassutt is a single mom with a master’s degree in public health and an interest in land-use policy. She was one of two councilors to propose a 3% excise tax to support affordable housing also on the ballot. If reelected, Cassutt hopes to expand affordable housing opportunities; to invest in sustainability and educational programs for about the topic; and to improve parks and unsafe roadways.

CITYWIDE MUNICIPAL JUDGE:

DISTRICT 3: ȫ Louis A Carlos: A former city police officer who also briefly served as chief in Española and a current private investigator, Carlos ran for Santa Fe Public Schools Board of Education in 2013 but this is his first attempt for City Council. His platform includes what he calls an “aggressive approach to criminal activity”; fiscal responsibility and accountability in government; and a focus on finding solutions to the city’s growing unhoused population. ȫ Pilar F H Faulkner: Faulkner owns her own government relations consultant firm, where she has served clients including Rodeo de Santa Fe and advocates for public banking. She’s a member of the city Planning Commission. If elected, she wants to focus on increasing the amount of affordable housing in the city; equalizing access to resources for the Southside; and creating more youth services.

ȫ Chad Chittum: A familiar face in the courthouse since 2016, Chittum started out as the city prosecutor before he became the staff attorney for the court in 2019 and the pro tem judge in 2021. During his time as municipal judge, he plans to establish a targeted court for people between the ages of 18 and 25; certify the court’s DWI drug program and more.

HIGH-END HOME EXCISE TAX Sometimes dubbed “the mansion tax,” this proposed amendment to the city charter would impose a 3% fee on the portion of any home purchase within the city limits that exceeds $1 million. Revenue would support the city’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund. For example, a home priced at $1.2 million would require the buyer to pay $6,000, or 3% of the $200,000 that surpasses the million-dollar threshold. Political action committees have lined


S FR EPO RTER .CO M / EL ECTI O N S

up for and against the measure. Advocates predict the tax could generate $4.5 million per year based on housing sales data, while detractors have described the tax as “divisive” and questioned how money generated would be spent. The pro-tax PAC United for Affordable Housing has raised over $67,000, while anti-tax PAC the Santa Fe Housing Opportunity Partnership reports $50,000 as of Oct. 10 campaign finance reports filed with the city.

Review Commission to consider changes to the city’s charter, or local constitution. The most recent commission raised concerns about resources the city provided for the job. As a result, the commission recommended the city add language into the charter to ensure there was a budget and staff “adequate for its functions.”

SANTA FE PUBLIC SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION DISTRICT 1

PERCENTAGE OF VOTERS FOR PETITIONS The city charter spells out how officials determine the required number of signatures for direct democracy petitions for referenda, initiative and recall using the number of voters who cast ballots for mayor in the last election. This ballot question asks whether, instead, the city should count any voter who cast a ballot in the last election that included the office of mayor—a change that would count, for example, voters who chose city councilors in their districts but didn’t pick a candidate for mayor.

ȫ Carmen Gonzales: Gonzales, a lifelong educator who has taught in elementary school classrooms in Albuquerque and college lectures at New Mexico State University, is running unopposed for re-election, with a campaign focusing on finding solutions to declining enrollment in the district and furthering career and technical education within the public schools.

“mentally, physically and emotionally” healthier learning space in the district since her 2019 election. This year, her focus is on boosting the district’s “reimagining process” created to address declining enrollment, and she hopes to work on keeping students engaged in the public school system from “pre-K to graduation,” chiefly through improving the district’s middle schools.

ȫ Roman “Tiger” Abeyta: Abeyta is unopposed for re-election after being appointed to the board in July of last year. The Capital High graduate and former Santa Fe city councilor who works as executive director of the Santa Fe Community Housing Trust says he wants to involve more community members in the schools, noting strides the district has made with other organizations, such as its recent partnership with Apple Creative to promote digital literacy; digital equity; and coding and creativity.

DISTRICT 2

REDUCING SIGNATURE REQUIREMENTS FOR VOTER INITIATIVE AND REFERENDA This topic will appear as two separate questions on this election season’s ballot. As recommended by the Charter Review Commission, both would reduce the number of signatures for voter initiatives, or the proposal of new laws, and referenda, or the removal of laws already in place, from 33.3% of voters who participated in the latest mayor’s race to 15%. Las Cruces and Albuquerque have similar requirements.

CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION RESOURCES Every 10 years, the city appoints a Charter

ȫ John T McKenna: McKenna spent 12 years teaching at Catholic high schools in his home state of Massachusetts before he moved to New Mexico in 1997. He taught at St. Pius X High School in Albuquerque for two years and spent another two years substitute teaching at SFPS. McKenna, now a Cerrillos saddlemaker, hopes to make improvements in the school district’s budget if elected. He cites his experience working with Catholic schools he says were run “on a shoestring budget” but boasted high graduation rates. ȫ Sarah Boses: Incumbent Boses is an oncology nurse who says she has applied her medical background to promote a

home and business properties—$2 per each $1,000 of net taxable value each year, the same rate they’re paying now.

SANTA FE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

DISTRICT 4

TAX QUESTIONS

ȫ Patricia Ann Vigil-Stockton: CFO of her family business and a former administrator for Calvary Chapel Christian Academy, Vigil-Stockton says if elected, she aims to improve student outcomes through a higher level of parental involvement in the district and an evaluation system to hold students back a grade if they are not academically proficient. She has been endorsed in the nonpartisan race by the Republican Party of Santa Fe County.

NEWS

TAX, LEVY AND LEASE The school district’s proposed tax, levy and lease purchase would continue to levy a property tax of $1.50 per each $1,000 of taxable property each year from 2024-2029 for the purpose of acquiring up to $55 million worth of technology equipment including network devices, data storage, and digital communications equipment; plus for training and technical support.

GOVERNING BOARD ȫ Lina S Germann: A science educator who founded STEM Santa Fe seven years ago, Germann tells SFR she wants to leverage her experience as a teacher into service on the board. Germann has hosted several math and science-oriented programs with STEM Santa Fe at the college, and she wants to focus on three major categories on the college board: expanding STEM education, postsecondary opportunities and making SFCC a “hub for the community.” ȫ Lorenzo Dominguez : A communications professional who moved to Cerrillos two years ago, Dominguez gained experience in local education by serving on the board at Turquoise Trail Charter School, where he says he had a part in reviving the school’s parent-teacher organization and increasing community engagement through “consistent communication with families.” He says he hopes to support the needs of students, staff and faculty by improving internal communications.

GENERAL OBLIGATION BOND

SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT ACT TAX Santa Fe Public Schools has imposed a property tax under this state law for a decade, and keeping it in place will allow the district to use tax revenue over the next six years to pay for repairs, maintenance, playgrounds, fields, landscaping and custodial contracts at all the district’s schools. The tax requires property owners to pay based on the value of their

A vote to allow the Santa Fe Community College to bond for $23 million will allow the school to embark on renovation and maintenance such as stucco repairs for some of its spaces, as well as technology upgrades for classrooms, workshops, laboratories and remote learning identified in its 2021 master plan. The amount of the college’s debt service won’t change from current levels if the bonds are issued, and property owners will see a slight decrease in property tax mill rates from 3.501 this year to 3.470. The school’s last bond issue in 2017 was for $17 million.

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Wheelwright Museum

OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe NM 87505

Photo by Razelle Benally (Oglala Lakota/Diné)

OUR LAST 2023 SHOW Thursdays - Saturdays 7:30 PM Sundays 2:00 PM

Previews first Wed. and Thurs. just $15 Individual Tickets $35 Students, Food Service & Theater workers $15

NOV. 15 - DEC. 3

JQA (John Quincy Adams) by Aaron Posner

Directed by Robert Benedetti A powerful play that will challenge your thinking about government and your relationship to it. It explores how the founding fathers agonized over many of the same issues and choices that we face in the coming election!

with Robert Benedetti, Scott Harrison, Kent Kirkpatrick, Alexander Lane, and Danielle Reddick

WWW.NMACTORSLAB.COM 10

NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

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Rummage & Bargain Book Sale Special Community Day + Benefit Event Sunday, November 5 • 12:00 Noon to 5:00 p.m. Wheelwright Library • Hundreds of items! • Native and some Non-Native art and jewelry priced to sell. • Mixed-bag “as-is” items (some in need of repair) with reduced prices. • Proceeds benefit the Wheelwright Museum.

Case Trading Post • In person: Nov 3–5, 2023 • Sale on most items. All sales final. • No lay-away or additional discounts.

• S AV E T H E DAT E •

4 TH ANNUAL CASE TRADING POST

SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 2023 • 9 AM - 4 PM


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Chef Dakota Weiss kicks off her next chapter with multi-concept micro food hall Capital Coal Neighborhood Eatery

ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

Yes, Chef BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

I

n recent weeks, scads of Santa Feans have been flocking to the old Zia Diner on Guadalupe Street for a series of soft pop-up lunches and dinners. The popups have attracted the likes of local food journalists, chefs such as The Kitchen Table’s Andrea Abedi—even George RR Martin has attended once or twice. Some locals remember the spot as the old Café Sonder (a short-lived restaurant from the folks behind the Plaza Café), but to longtimers, it will always be the Zia—or, perhaps, it would have been until chef Dakota Weiss had her way with the place. The aforementioned flocks have been drawn to the siren call of Weiss’s new multi-concept micro foodhall, Capital Coal Neighborhood Eatery, and the early anecdotal reviews all say the same: Santa Fe might just need the newest restaurant from Weiss and her life/business partner Rich Becker, the same duo behind Santa Fe’s Catch Poke and Albuquerque’s Notorious P.O.K.E., among others. In one fell swoop, Weiss and Becker are changing how the city thinks about concept restaurants, adding energy to the Guadalupe Street corridor and filling multiple holes in local dining experiences with numerous ideas, all deployed at once. They’re doling it all out in a bright and airy space in the heart of downtown 12

NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

Chef Dakota Weiss has steadily built something of a food empire in the area.

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that has sat dormant since the pandemic. Visitors will now find artworks featuring pop culture icons engaging with food culture, pithy neon signs celebrating pizza or demanding food and, in the back, a sports lounge-esque area with a big screen television. The first indication that things have changed happens just inside the door, where patrons are greeted by a portrait of the late Anthony Bourdain flipping them off. “But if they don’t get that,” Weiss tells SFR, “maybe they don’t get what we’re trying to do.” Capital Coal is set to include five main concepts developed in tandem by Weiss and Becker: The French dip-focused Frenchie’s Dips and Tots (of which an Albuquerque location already exists at the Sawmill Market); the spicy fried chicken-based Richie B’s Hot Chicken; the more health-conscious Santa Fe Salad Company; the Korean BBQ-inspired/ Mexican-American fusion of Kimchi’s Korean BBQ; and, for the sweet tooth set, Sweetjars, an enticing dessert entry that finds Weiss strutting her creative stuff for treats served in Mason jars—even if, as she says, she, “capital-H hates doing pastry.” In addition, Capital Coal will feature various popcorn medlies from Dakota’s Pop Parlor—including a phenomenal melange of peanut butter toffee, mini marshmallows, roasted peanuts and caramelized white chocolate—plus other sweet and savory combos. If all goes well, the restaurant will also offer a charcuterie and Champagne micro-concept, though Weiss says they’ll do the charcuterie with or without the bubbly. Visitors might also notice how mini-boutique The Artisan’s Bottega by local entrepreneur MaryBeth Bartlett takes up a chunk of the lobby, which is honestly kind of fun. The future remains wide open, however, Weiss says, and it looks promising. Boutiques and enticing foods aside, it doesn’t hurt that Weiss is a magnetic and impossibly charming presence. Perhaps you know her from her appearance on season 9 of The Food Network’s Top Chef? Or as a judge from the Roku exclusive competition show Morimoto’s Sushi Master? Maybe you know her as one of the founders behind California-based poke chain Sweetfin, which practically jumpstarted America’s still-burgeoning love of poke (a diced raw fish dish most often served in a bowl with rice and various veggies) when it opened in 2015? Maybe you know her more recently as the former executive chef of restaurateur Quinn Stephenson’s enduringly popular Coyote Café (where Weiss still serves in a consultancy role), or perhaps you’ve wandered into Catch Poke


ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

on Marcy Street to sample a bowl, only to find Weiss behind the counter with her electric blue hair, many tattoos and endlessly friendly answers to questions about sauces and fish and rice. Weiss has been a stalwart presence in food since the mid-’90s. She’s worked for some of the finest chefs on the planet, too—including Bruno Menard, who has three (!!!) Michelin stars—and in kitchens for eateries in Ritz Carlton restaurants in Georgia, Pennsylvania, California, Florida and Shanghai. On her own, she’s an accomplished powerhouse; with Becker in her corner, she’s downright unstoppable. “And the funny thing is that, as a kid, I was literally the pickiest eater ever,” Weiss tells SFR. “Like, I literally only ate chicken, pasta and hamburgers. That was it. Vegetables were, you know, kind of rough. And even though I ate hamburgers, I wouldn’t eat a steak. Because it was weird.” This isn’t a statement you’d expect from an influential chef, but then, Weiss’ path hasn’t been particularly traditional. Some are born with cooking and foodservice in their blood; Weiss had no clue she’d gravitate to kitchens when her family relocated from Southern California to Santa Fe in 1988, just as she was beginning middle school. That’s a terrible time to move since the kids are all cliqued up by that point in their educational careers, Weiss says. She faced violence regularly, too, which certainly didn’t help how little she liked school to begin with. “I hated sitting in the classrooms,” she says. “I hated quizzes, hated taking tests. The only thing I really liked about school was PE, recess. Oh, and my little elementary school in California had this student-run ice cream shop, and I went bananas running that. It was like having your own little truck, right? It was like hustling selling Fudgesicles. I think that’s maybe where my whole serving people thing comes from.” After middle school, Weiss attended both St. Michael’s and Santa Fe High Schools. She was booted from both, she says, “because they don’t like it when you don’t show up to class.” By 1992, she followed her older sister to college at Las Cruces’ New Mexico State University. That didn’t stick, either, however, and she dropped out by ‘94. “Eventually my mom was like, ‘Get your ass in gear and figure out what the fuck you want to do, because I’m tired of wasting my time and money,’” Weiss says. “And then…yeah, culinary school was it.” Weiss briefly considered a career in business for the “kick-ass lady suits,” but first followed a hunch and enrolled in a

I would get there hours before my shift just to see what was happening... if you had croutons on your station, you were baking the bread for those croutons. -Dakota Weiss

two-year program at the now-defunct Scottsdale Culinary Institute in 1995. Something clicked—she found her thing. For the first time ever, classrooms didn’t seem so bad. And homework? Well, it consisted of developing recipes and mastering the classics; eating; and bouncing ideas off her fellow fledgling chefs.

Capital Coal has some loungey seating areas, too. The idea is to keep it casual, even as the food retains the highest quality.

“You know the difference between regular and culinary school?” Weiss queries. “You’re not sitting there all day.” Culinary school also taught Weiss to expand her palate beyond boxed mac and cheese and burgers. Once she understood the science and the alchemy, the world of food opened up to her as it never had. She even tried a steak for the first time. Following culinary school, Weiss returned briefly to Santa Fe, where she took a kitchen job at Coyote Café. There she’d become friends with Stephenson, an upand-coming busser who today owns that restaurant and Santacafé and is co-owner of Geronimo, but she was ultimately destined for opportunities in distant places. She made her way to Atlanta’s Ritz Carlton circa 2003, where she worked under Menard. “I came on as a line cook, and slowly he saw my passion,” Weiss explains. “I would get there hours before my shift started just to see what was happening. And we did everything from scratch—like, if you had croutons on your station, you were baking the bread for those croutons.” Weiss worked her way up the lad-

der and was sent to work in Ritz Carlton kitchens in Sarasota and Philadelphia. She even spent time in Shanghai thanks to her Southwestern-style cooking chops. Eventually, the company called her back to the states to work at the Marina Del Rey Ritz Carlton in Santa Monica, California. “I first found out about poke there,” Weiss says. “One of the chefs was from Hawaii, and we didn’t put it on the menu, but he’d make it for family meal.” Then, in 2006, Weiss took over the executive chef job at the Sunset Tower Hotel in Hollywood. “That was a big move, and I don’t know if I was necessarily ready for it,” she says, “but I did it anyway.” Her first big league job, while stressful and demanding, prepared her for other executive positions at similar hotel eateries, like the Hotel Shangri-La and the W Hotel, both in Los Angeles. In 2010, she was a contestant on Bravos’ Top Chef. “When people ask me about that, I’m like…yeah, that’ll haunt you for the rest of your fucking life,” she says.

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Still, the show made Weiss a known commodity, which came in handy when she needed partners to start the Sweetfin operation in 2014. Things moved quickly, she says, and the first location opened in Santa Monica in 2015. The company expanded to numerous other locations over the next several years, which is how Weiss met Becker in 2018. He’s the type of studied hospitality guy you see on television shows like The Bear—a sort of stoic figure with training from the legendary Houston’s/Hillstone Restaurant Group, of which Weiss says, “if you see it on the resumé, you don’t need to ask any other questions—you just hire them.” Becker came to Sweetfin after a position on the team that opened the first Shake Shack restaurants in Los Angeles, and though he and Weiss would eventually become enmeshed in each other’s lives, the first meeting did not go well. “I had to go in and teach him to cut fish, and he swears I came in and slammed down my knife bag, but I don’t personally recall this situation,” Weiss says with a laugh. “She had to find something for me to do, so she gave me the kale,” Becker adds. “The worst job. The crap job.” Nevertheless, working in close proximity led to flirtation via text and an eventual date initiated by Weiss. “She was the boss,” Becker says with a sly smile, “so I wasn’t going to ask her.” They’ve been inseparable since, through Weiss leaving Sweetfin (she officially sold her stake just last year); the move back to New Mexico after her mother received a terminal cancer diagnosis and when Coyote Café owner Stephenson needed a new executive chef in 2021; when Weiss received a breast cancer diagnosis of her own on April 12 that same year, also Becker’s birthday. “I think that’s what really solidified

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that he’s my guy,” Weiss explains. “I got the phone call on his birthday and then I called him, like, ‘Hey, babe, happy birthday. I have cancer.’” At the time, Weiss had been dabbling in competitive bodybuilding; nothing major, she says, but she’d placed in a competition and had plans for more. “I got fifth place in my first competition, so I was pretty proud of myself,” she says. “And when [I was] first getting into heavy lifting, I had this really hard class, and afterward I take a shower, and I’m standing naked in the mirror kind of flexing, super sore. I’m feeling around my muscles, but when I get around my boob, I find this lump I don’t remember being there. It kind of just snowballed from there.” Weiss entered treatment soon after, including chemo, medication and a single mastectomy. Her mother died in early 2022. Today however, Weiss is officially in remission, though it’s something she’ll need to keep an eye on and medicate for years to come.

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I got the phone call on his birthday and then I called him like, ‘Hey, babe, happy birthday. I have cancer.’ -Dakota Weiss

ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

Yes, Chef

Rich Becker has been with Weiss every step of the way since they met in 2018—and his Richie B’s Hot Chicken concept at Capital Coal is no joke.

“But I feel like I’m at the point where I want to give back more, so I volunteer in cancer chemo rooms at Christus St. Vincent and Nexus Health,” she says. “I feel like because I’ve been through the journey, I can just sit there and talk to someone who wants to talk.” That she can make time at all seems miraculous. Weiss scaled back from her executive chef job at Coyote Café last year, but retains a consultacy position there. “I think she’s very talented and it was exciting to get her back at the restaurant,” owner Stephenson says of her return. “But she says she wants to start a new place, what can you do but support her? I love working with Dakota, and I know she’ll do well because she’s so talented. I have a huge amount of respect for her palate; I didn’t want to lose the relationship. We’re grateful

to still have her input.” Becker. meanwhile, tends to the dayto-day with their Albuquerque restaurants, and Catch Poke is now operated under the watchful eye of Weiss-vetted sous chef Giselle Cobos. Capital Coal takes up much of Weiss and Becker’s time these days, or at least it will until they can prove its multiple concepts, get the place running at peak efficiency and, hopefully, get their license to sell beer and wine. The building in which Capital Coal resides sits 297 feet away from New Mexico School for the Arts—a full 3 feet short of the permitted distance required by state law when it comes to serving booze near schools. Neither Weiss nor Becker believes it will be an issue getting that license, (after all, Café Sonder most definitely served up booze), but it ain’t over


Richie B’s Hot Chicken

until it’s over. Still, the building is rife with history: the restaurant name is a nod to the site of the former Capital Coal yard, which served the trains coming through town. That officially puts it on the National Register of Historic Places, which is interesting enough but makes for challenges, such as not being able to paint a logo on the side of the building. Becker’s looking into hologram and projection tech to work around that, and the space certainly has its quirks, but the bones are there. And no obstacle is too large. “Y’know, the whole reality is that I went through cancer and fought it, and it changes your outlook on on life,” Weiss says. “Life is short, everybody says that; do what you want, right? Do what you love. I love fancy food. I love fine dining, y’know, with the tweezers, placing everything perfectly. But there’s a time and a place, and the time is not as often as when you want something simple and fast and familiar. We didn’t know how or when or whatever, but we’re opening. It’s wild.”

“I first had [hot chicken] during my Shake Shack days at Howlin’ Ray’s in LA,” Becker says. “We all loved it, and I was blown away by the spices—twice a week, we’d get it.” Since kicking off the Capital Coal plan, Becker has been tinkering with his own blend of spices, though it’s way more of a Southern thing than a New Mexico spiciness. Straight up? It’s way spicier than you’d expect—WAY—but the subtle sweetness from the brown sugar in Becker’s blend adds such wonderful depth and, frankly, it’s kind of addictive despite the mouth-burnin’. Worth it. We did not try sides like braised collard greens ($3.50), Southern baked mac ’n’ cheese ($4.50) or sweet potato waffle fries ($4.50), but we did nearly pass out when Becker mentioned he’d like to add chicken and waffles to the menu.

Kimchi’s Korean BBQ

Getting Conceptual Weiss and Becker are set to unleash all of their core concepts at once for the first time this week, though without beer and wine and charcuterie just yet. Here’s the rundown of what’ll be available when Capital Coal hits full power. Do note that the particulars are subject to change, but we’ve yet to sample anything that wasn’t fantastic.

“We kind of based it off the Kogi truck in LA, which is this Korean/Mexican/ American fusion,” Weiss explains. “Roy Choi is an amazing chef, and as much as I’d love to have the table grills and do a traditional Korean BBQ thing, that’s obviously not doable here.” Even so, Weiss and Becker are culling from well-known and lesser-known Korean ingredients and methods for this one, and you’ll find the fusion-y tacodilla on the menu at just $7.

sort of tot-making apparatus, which sadly doesn’t exist. Still, the loaded tots with queso, bacon and green chile ($8.50) are so delicious, you won’t even care where they came from. “It’s about the cleanliness of the oil when you cook them,” Weiss advises. Oh, and those sawndwiches? A revelation. SFR sampled the classic, the hatch green chile and the turkey dips ($16, $16.50 and $16.60 respectively), and each was served on brilliantly soft bread that soaked up the house made aus jus without losing its shape. The turkey dip even comes with a vegetarian au jus bursting with shiitake mushrooms in case you skipped the beef on purpose. Best French dips of all time, full stop.

Santa Fe Salad Company

Weiss and Becker are not out to reinvent the salad wheel, but are instead trying to give people something familiar, done well. SFR sampled a simple mixed salad with cranberries, apples and candied pecans ($13), but Becker says one custom-

Frenchie’s Dips & Tots

“Everybody asks [if we make our own tater tots], and I wonder when have you ever had handmade tots?” Weiss notes, adding that such a time consuming endeavor would require some

er described the Caesar with anchovy tapenade and a parmesan black pepper vinaigrette as, “the best they ever had.” In the case of the mixed, the greens were fresh, the pecans were a delight and the cranberries offered a chewy little counterpoint to the crisp of the apple. That apple balsamic vinaigrette dressing was also quite flavorful and refreshing.

Sweetjars

Listen very carefully, because if the first item SFR sampled from Capital Coal’s Sweetjars is any indication, there’s basically nothing we wouldn’t do to get more. We tried one with a trio of mousses consisting of white chocolate, lemon and a borderline whipped and creamy orange-flavored layer; a s’mores variety with marshmallow fluff, creamy chocolate and graham cracker crumbles; and a key lime tres leches number that looked gorgeous and wowed with a flavorful and citrusy tartness. Though simple, these might be some of the most beautiful and delicious desserts we’ve ever tasted, and each was well worth the $6 price point—you also get to keep the jar!

Champagne & Charcuterie Bar

It’s just what it sounds like, and both Weiss and Becker say they’ll still pursue charcuterie in the unlikely event they don’t get that liquor license. They’re out to keep it upscale, too, though haven’t announced the particulars of what will comprise their boards.

Richie B’s Hot Chicken comes with a side of cayenne and lemon aioli, and even if it hurts you bad, you’re gonna keep eating.

CAPITAL COAL POP-UP 4 pm-8 pm Thursday, Nov. 2 11 am-8 pm Friday Nov. 3 and Saturday, Nov. 4. Capital Coal Neighborhood Eatery 326 S Guadalupe St. (505) 772-0192

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Opening reception with the artist Friday, November 3, 5 - 7 PM

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Photos from LeŌ: PierreƩe Gorman, Amy CroŌ, Eri Yost

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Fashion Tix @ 505-988-1234

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Sun 10am– 5pm Free Admission


HERE AND THERE Five or six years back, photographer Paul Shapiro and his wife decided to split time between Santa Fe and Whidbey Island north of Seattle, Washington. As climes go, the areas are as different as they come, which struck Shapiro, an accomplished photographer, with seemingly endless inspiration. Shapiro kicks off his first-ever local show of large-scale photo prints this week at Downtown Subscription. With something like 40 shots on display showcasing the disparate majesty of his two hometowns, Shapiro captures 180 degree views of forests, beaches, wildlife and even mankind. Often, the subjects occupy only the smallest section of Shapiro’s photos, leading the viewer to spend time surveying the contents of an image while searching for its focus. “I pay particular attention to scale, capturing the shared connection between people and the breadth and depth of our landscapes,” Shapiro writes. “I...strive to capture the powerful, expansive and multi-layered beauty of landscapes and juxtapose these images with the awe-inspiring—often solo—experience of being alone on the midst of something much larger.” (ADV) Photographs by Paul Shapiro: 7 am-4 pm Thursday, Nov. 2 through Thursday, Nov. 30. Free Downtown Subscription, 376 Garcia St., (505) 983-3085

COURTESY OF MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO FOUNDATION

PERFORMANCE SUN/5 THE MAIDEN/THE HERON The Museum of International Folk Art has really been dropping fire when it comes to its Japanese offerings. Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve certainly seen the Yokai exhibit on demon lore, for example. Or, if theater is a little more your thing, you’ll be delighted to learn kabuki master Nakamura Gankyō (AKA Kirk Kanesaka) will perform and demonstrate the art with the upcoming Gidayū Sagi Musume—or Gidayū “The Heron Maiden.” The tale of a heron jilted by its mate who transforms into a young bride, the piece projects a certain sadness, sure, but also one of endurance, changing seasons and hope. This particular piece—one of four from the collection known as The Popular Celebrations of the Four Seasons—dates back to 1809, too, so you know it has staying power. Aptly, it’s all about winter, but also a reminder that spring will undoubtedly arrive. (ADV) Gidayū Sagi Musume/Gidayū “The Heron Maiden” with Nakamura Gankyō: 1 pm-3 pm Sunday, Nov. 5. Free with admission ($0-$12). Museum of International Folk Art, 706 Camino Lejo (505) 476-1204

COURTESY MEHRDAD MIRZAIE

ART OPENING TUES/7-FRI/17 THINK AGAIN You’ll need to move quickly if you’d like to catch Strata Gallery’s first-ever Emerging Member solo exhibit from Phoenix, Arizona-based Iranian artist Mehrdad Mirzaie—the entire run is only 10 days. But it’s so worth it. The new program from Strata aims to create a cohort across a number of solo shows from emerging artists, and Mirzaie as the kicker-offer feels auspicious. A multimedia master, Mirzaie’s current works converge at the intersection of culture, history and politics and across a wide range of archival images. By reevaluating and re-contextualizing the content of images long past, Mirzaie considers new emotions given the passage of time in a quest to find “honest narration.” This comes with a healthy dash of scrutiny, of course, and also the gift of hindsight. Who knows what new ideas might arise? (ADV) Mehrdad Mirzaie: Imago: 11 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat beginning Nov. 7; closing reception 5 pm, Friday, Nov. 17. Free Strata Gallery, 125 Lincoln Ave., (505) 780-5403

S FR EPO RTER .CO M /A RTS / S FR PI CKS ANDRÉ RAMOS-WOODARD

PAUL SHAPIRO

ART OPENING THU/2-THU/30

ART OPENING FRI/3

This is America Artist André Ramos-Woodard re-appropriates pop culture iconography on the road to deconstruction and reconciliation Once Houston, Texas-based multimedia artist André Ramos-Woodard was accepted into a graduate program for photography at the University of New Mexico in late 2019, he realized he hadn’t quite worked out his thesis idea. “I’ve always been an artist who explores my identity in my work,” he tells SFR, “I like to draw, I’m a photographer, so I knew I wanted to combine those things into one and I knew I wanted to make work about Black history.” And though Ramos-Woodard set out to create something celebratory, his early forays into Black representation in mediums such as cartoons, films and comic books cemented a rather insidious truth—a deep vein of anti-Blackness and racism has run through art and popular culture for nearly as long as either has existed, and it’s something with which consumers will need to contend. “I didn’t really notice it growing up, but with the cartoons I was watching, for example, there are inevitably traces [of racism and anti-Blackness] ,” he continues. “Mickey Mouse has white gloves, which have connections to minstrelsy. It actually wasn’t difficult for me to Google ‘Black cartoon characters’ and find minstrelsy—these things are ingrained into contemporary pop culture and cartoons.” In Ramos-Woodard’s forthcoming exhibit BLACK SNAFU (Situation Niggas: All Fucked Up), the artist delves into the long-held notions of racism inherent in nearly every corner of the entertainment we consume, particularly mainstream media. A continuation of his college thesis (Ramos-Woodard wrapped up his master’s in studio art in 2021), the show comes to Foto Forum Santa Fe this week across a wide range of edited, built up, torn-down, de- and reconstructed and otherwise altered images, photos, illustrations and more. Throughout the dozen or so pieces, Ramos-Woodard crafts a juxtaposition between so-called heroes like

Walt Disney and the shockingly obtuse imagery he not only championed, but infused into the broader comic book and cartoon lexicons. “I think it’s really about recognizing the various symbols ingrained into our culture,” Ramos-Woodard explains. “White gloves, again, for example...are not just about ’40s, ’50s, ’60s cartoons, they’re a specific and direct connection to vaudeville minstrelsy in which blackface performers—white people— wore white gloves and became the interlocutors of culture. Everything I’ve uncovered...it hasn’t been borderline racist, it’s just racist; but it wasn’t even racist to [the creators]—it was just Black people to them.” Of course, facing these hard truths and working toward some form of reconciliation isn’t the type of thing that will happen overnight, but Ramos-Woodard says he’s noticed a bevy of popular cartoons and comics embracing better forms of representation. For his own part, he also injects imagery into his work from more positive representations of Black folks in pop culture, such as characters from shows like The Proud Family or The Boondocks. A show like BLACK SNAFU isn’t about finalizing the conversation, anyway, it’s a chance to continue talking, and a way to face the truth. “I’m all about power to the people, and I think there’s a path to reconciling—and part of it is recognizing the various styles of racism,” Ramos-Woodard explains. “There are a lot of artists out there, and they can do it without the white gloves and the exaggerated lips.” Ramos-Woodard will also host an artist talk at the show’s opening this Friday evening. (Alex De Vore) ANDRÉ RAMOS-WOODARD: BLACK SNAFU (SITUATION NIGGAS: FUCKED UP) 5-7 pm Friday, Nov. 3. Free. Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo de Peralta, fotoforumsantafe.com

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EVENTS

Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you. Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly. Submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion.

WED/1 BOOKS/LECTURES AN EVENING WITH DAVID SEDARIS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 Sedaris’ witty, clever, sardonic and observant books have sold over 16 million copies and been printed in 32 languages. Sedaris takes the stage following the release of his newest book, Happy Go Lucky, offering a selection of all-new readings and recollections, as well as a Q&A session and book signing. 7:30 pm, $65 SAR SCHOLAR COLLOQUIUM: PAN AMERICAN CITY WITH ALBERTO WILSON III School for Advanced Research 660 Garcia St. (505) 954-7200 The assistant professor of history at Texas Christian University explores the lives of Ciudad Juárez’s working residents during the late 20th century along the US-Mexico border. 1 pm, free

DANCE POMEGRANATE SEEDS YOUTH MENTORSHIP PROGRAM Pomegranate Studio 535 Cerrillos Road (505) 501-2142 An after-school program for young women 13 to 18 yrs old founded by dancer Myra Krien. 5 pm-7 pm, free

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ALL THINGS YARN La Farge Library 1730 Llano St. (505) 820-0292 If you picked up a fiber-based hobby during the pandemic, this is your chance to break out those knitting needles or crochet hooks and collectively count stitches to your heart's content. 5:30 pm-7:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta (505) 989-3278 A team of experts have written the hardest questions they could. Show 'em what you got. 8 pm-10 pm, free HISTORY CHAT 35 Degrees North 60 E San Francisco St. (505) 629-3538 Walking tour guide Christian Saiia invites locals to gather every Wednesday to discuss local history and the effects of world geo-politics on westward colonization. Noon-2 pm, free OPEN MIC COMEDY Chile Line Brewery 204 N Guadalupe St. (505) 982-8474 Test out those jokes you’ve been saving on a live crowd; then be judged. 8 pm, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View and possibly purchase unique glass works made by 16 local students. 1 pm-3 pm, free QUEER COFFEE GET TOGETHER Ohori’s Coffee Roasters 505 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-9692 Coffee with your local queer community every Wednesday. Such a cute way to get involved with the community and make new pals. 9:30 am, free WRITER'S DEN Beastly Books 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 395-2628 Brush up on your writing skills. A weekly quiet, communal space to write to the sound of others' clicking keyboards and see what your fellow authors are up to. 5 pm-6:30 pm, free

NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 1-7, 1-7, 2023 2023 •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

COURTESY GERALD PETERS CONTEMPORARY

THE CALENDAR

José Sierra takes his experiences growing up in Venezuela and living in current-day Albuquerque and transforms them into interpretations of landscapes as twisted ceramic vessels. Attend the opening reception of Cholla Galactica at Gerald Peters Gallery from 5 pm-7 pm on Friday, Nov. 3.

MUSIC INSTRUMENTAL JAZZ JAM Club Legato 125 E Palace Ave., (505) 988-9232 Be in a band without the commitment of being in a band. B.Y.O.B. (bring your own bassoon) or whatever instrument you think you play best. 6 pm, free JIM ALMAND Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 Local songwriter of many talents performs harmonica, vocals and guitar for hump day happy hour. 4 pm-6 pm, free JOE P Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. (505) 393-5135 Cinematic indie rock with dramatic climaxes and descriptive lyrics. 7:30 pm, $18

JOHN CRAIGIE St. Francis Auditorium at NM Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5072 Craigie, a self-proclaimed modern day troubador, performs comedic songwriting and storytelling that has been compared to the likes of Woody Guthrie. 7:30 pm, $26-42 JOHN FRANCIS AND THE POOR CLARES El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 Melodic storytelling and singer-songwriter tunes from our local faves. 8 pm, free KARAN CASEY San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 983-3974 Irish singer-songwriter Casey sings ballads and love songs. 7:30 pm, $35-$40

KARAOKE NIGHT Boxcar 133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222 We know you have some songs prepared, let’s hear it. This goes down every Wednesday night. Who doesn’t love a weekday hangover? 8 pm, free SANDBOX MUSIC SERIES: SONIC HORIZONS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 466-5528 A creative music series dedicated to bringing new tunes to town. This month, jam out to musicians Sam Negri, John lyell, Mike Root and Meridian Alpha. 7 pm, $15 TRACING THE ROOTS Hervé 139 W San Francisco St. (505) 795-7075 A conversation and performance with violinist Colin Jacobson. 5:30 pm, $75

WEDNESDAY NIGHT FOLKS: STANLIE KEE AND STEP IN Second Street Brewery (Rufina) 2920 Rufina St. (505) 954-1068 Local folk tunes every other Wednesday on Rufina. 6 pm, free

WORKSHOP POTTERY EXPERIENCES Paseo Pottery 1273 Calle de Comercio (505) 988-7687 A two-hour session geared toward travelers, newbies and anyone looking for a fun introduction to pottery. Let a professional show you the way. Cost includes 25 pounds of recycled clay, firing fees are seperate. Did we mention that they serve drinks? Could get messy. 2 pm-4 pm, $125


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REGENERATE 2023 Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St. (505) 955-6590 regenerateconference.com Roundtable discussions and workshops at this in-person and virtual conference on regenerative agriculture and land stewardship. Perfect for those interested in growing their own food. See site for full schedule and pricing of events. All Day, $75-$350 WEDNESDAY MORNING WHEEL AND HANDBUILDING Paseo Pottery 1273 Calle de Comercio (505) 988-7687 This class is designed to teach students of all skill levels handbuilding techniques including pinch, coil, and slab and throwing skills. $70 for one class, $430 for the full seven-week course. 10 am-noon, $70-$430

THU/2 ART OPENINGS PAUL SHAPIRO: PANORAMIC LANDSCAPES Downtown Subscription 376 Garcia St. (505) 983-3085 Panoramic photographs of Southwest landscapes. (See SFR picks, page 17) 7 pm-4 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES AN EVENING WITH DAVID SEDARIS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 Sedaris’ witty, clever, sardonic and observant books have sold over 16 million copies and been printed in 32 languages. Sedaris takes the stage following the release of his newest book, Happy Go Lucky as well as a Q&A session and book signing. This is night two of Sedaris in Santa Fe. 7:30 pm, $65 HISTORY OF DEATH IN NEW MEXICO Santa Fe Public Library 145 Washington Ave. (505) 955-6781 Local historian Ana Pacheco presents New Mexico death rituals that she has learned from generations of family members in honor of Día de Muertos. 5 pm, free

DANCE ECSTATIC DANCE Railyard Performance Center 1611 Paseo de Peralta (505) 982-8309 EmbodyDance hosts a weekly DJ'd free movement sesh. 6:30 pm, $15

THE CALENDAR

EVENTS

MUSIC

ADULTI-VERSE: INDIGENOUS EDITION Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 Kaleido and Nocturnal Planet performs for Indigenous People’s Month. Check out the traditional crafts and contemporary expressions of Native culture with stunning artwork and wares provided by IAIA student vendors. 6 pm, free DÍA DE MUERTOS El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 Flights of mezcal all evening long to honor your lost loved ones. 5 pm-11 pm, free BOARDGAMES AT ROOTS AND LEAVES Roots & Leaves Casa de Kava 301 N Guadalupe St. (720) 804-9379 Board game nerds, you now have a place to gather. Play video games, card trading, role playing and more. Challenge your inner competitor. 6:30 pm-11 pm, free CHESS & JAZZ No Name Cinema 2013 Pinon St. nonamecinema.org Chess, jazz and free herbal tea. 6 pm-8 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-5952 A team of experts have written the hardest questions they could come up with. 7 pm-9 pm, free PRIDE AFTER 5 Vanessie Piano Bar 427 W. Water St. (505) 984-1193 Whether you're a seasoned LGBTQ+ advocate or just starting your journey of support, PRIDE After 5 is your chance to network, engage in dynamic discussions and become an active part of the Santa Fe LGBTQ+ community. 5 pm-7 pm, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from 16 local students. 1 pm-3 pm, free YOGA AND MOVEMENT FOR KIDS La Farge Library 1730 Llano St. (505) 820-0292 A yoga class designed specifically with young children in mind. Teach the littles how to regulate their nervous system with kinesthetic creativity and possibly burn off some energy. 10:30 am-11:30 am, free

COUNTRY MUSIC AT LA FIESTA LOUNGE La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St. (505) 982-5511 Grab your boots and cowboy hat and listen to country music from Second Chances and Mark C. Johnson. 7 pm, free LIVE MUSIC THURSDAYS: BUMPIN' As Above So Below Distillery 545 Camino de la Familia (505) 916-8596 Get ready to boogie with this upbeat dance band. 8 pm, free BILL HEARNE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 Hearne has been at it since the ‘60s, with influences like Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson. 4 pm-6 pm, free HENRY SUTRO AND GUESTS Boxcar 133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222 Blues, rock and funk plus new special guests every week. 7 pm-10 pm, free OPEN DECKS NIGHT Chile Line Brewery 204 N Guadalupe St. (505) 982-8474 Become the DJ of your dreams. First come first served for nine 20-minute slots. 7 pm-10 pm, free TINGLEY BEACH BUCCANEERS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid (505) 473-0743 Dress like a scullywag and float down to Madrid to hear sea shanties and outlaw tunes from this pirate-themed band. 7 pm-9 pm, free TWO-STEPPIN’ AT TINY’S Tiny’s Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Dr. (505) 983-9817 Half-Broke Horses performs while you twirl your heart out on the dance floor. Join the fun or watch talented dancers do their thing. 7 pm-10 pm, free

THEATER ON CLOVER ROAD Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A psychological thriller about a distraught mother who waits to be reunited with her runaway daughter at an abandoned motel. 7:30 pm, $15-$75

WORKSHOP CLARIFYING MEDITATIVE WORK Online, (505) 281-0684 orders@cuttsreviews.com. An online meditation class from the comfort of your own home. 7 pm, $10 CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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MOSAIC ART WORKSHOP WEEKEND 1 Sun Mountain Mosaics 555 Camino del Monte Sol (443) 630-9209 Create your own 6 x 6 inch home décor mosaic piece. Cover design, tesserae glass and mixed materials, substrates, adhesives, grout and more as you make your artwork. This class is a three-part series. 9 am-12:30 pm, $240 REGENERATE 2023 Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St. (505) 955-6590 regenerateconference.com Roundtable discussions and workshops at this in-person and virtual conference on regenerative agriculture and land stewardship. Perfect for those interested in growing their own food. See site for full schedule and pricing of events. All Day, $75-$350 SPIRIT OF SANTA FE WITH MEDIUM MARCEL CAIRO Aurelia Gallery 414 Canyon Road (505) 501-2915 Experience over 3 hours of afterlife communication with Marcel Cairo, one of the most trusted and best reviewed mediums in America. 7 pm-10 pm, $37

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SILVER SKY BLUES BAND Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 303-4880 Dance the night away with this upbeat rockabilly/blues band. Who cares what they say, rockabilly never goes out of style. 7 pm-10 pm, free YOUTH CONCERT— SOURCE CODE: FOLK AND POP IN CLASSICAL MUSIC Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 banh@sfpromusica.org Each year the Santa Fe Pro Musica Orchestra presents a Youth Concert Series, reaching thousands of local students and introducing them to the power of live classical music. Imagine the possiblities. 10 am-11 am, free

PHOTO PROVIDED BY LISA LOEB

THE CALENDAR

THEATER ON CLOVER ROAD Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A psychological thriller about a distraught mother who waits to be reunited with her runaway daughter. Family bonds are pushed to their limits. 7:30 pm, $15-$75

WORKSHOP

FRI/3 ART OPENINGS ALBERTO GÁLVEZ: POMONA (OPENING) Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road (505) 988-3888 Monumental oil-painted portraits with floral motif backdrops. In this series, Galvez explores relationships between human connection and in earth’s creations. 5 pm-7 pm, free ANDRÉ RAMOS-WOODARD: BLACK SNAFU (OPENING) Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo de Peralta (505) 470-2582 In his use of photography and mixed-media, RamosWoodward depicts realities of his Black experience while exposing and subverting tropes of anti-blackness embedded in American pop culture. (See SFR picks, page 17) 5 pm-7 pm, free GROUP SHOW (OPENING) Gaia Contemporary 225 Canyon Road, Ste. 6 (505) 501-0415 See a collection of contemporary artwork ranging from sculpture, abstract paintings and even kimonos. Artists include Jim Vilona, Liz Barber, Andrea Wexler, Takefumi Hori, Zoe Zimmerman, McCreery Jordan, Tania Dibbs, Amy Donaldson, Rob Lorenson and Clea Carlsen. Now that’s quite the roster. 5 pm-7 pm, free

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‘90s and modern day folk-alt-rock goddess Lisa Loeb performs old songs and new at the Scottish Rite Temple on Nov. 4.

JOHN BRANDI: WIND, WATER AND TEMBLOR: GEOLOGIC RUMINATIONS (OPENING) El Zaguán 545 Canyon Road, (505) 982-0016 Mixed media works on paper that were initially made by an accidental spill. Oops. Handmade paper and graphite crayon make up these unique art pieces. 4 pm-6 pm, free JOSÉ SIERRA: CHOLLA GALÁCTICA (OPENING) Gerald Peters Contemporary 1011 Paseo de Peralta (505) 954-5700 Twisted vessels resembling dramatic landscapes by Albuquerque-based artist Sierra. 5 pm-7 pm, free ROBER BRUBAKER (OPENING) art is gallery santa fe 419 Canyon Road, (505) 629-2332 Working in stoneware, Brubaker creates ceramic sculpture while pieces are translated into bronze. 4 pm-6 pm, free VINCENTE TELLES: COBIJAS DE MIS MADRES (OPENING) Hecho Gallery 129 W Palace Ave., (505) 455-6882 Telles shows a series of different vintage pinto bean sacks covering his head, conveying the idea that the broader Latino is still represented as faceless. 5 pm-7 pm, free

NOVEMBER NOVEMBER1-7, 1-7,2023 2023 • • SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

EVENTS COLKEGAN BOTTLED-INBOND RELEASE PARTY Santa Fe Spirits Distillery 7505 Mallard Way, Ste. 1 (505) 467-8892 Santa Fe Spirits unviels it’s first ever bottled-in-bond (untainted, properly distilled) Colkegan single malt whiskey. Go get a sip. 4 pm-8 pm, free CRASH KARAOKE Chile Line Brewery 204 N Guadalupe St. (505) 982-8474 Belt out your favorite tunes with litte to no judgment. 9 pm-1 am, free MINIATURES PAINTING Beastly Books 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 395-2628 Gather weekly to paint table-top game figurines. 4 pm-6:30 pm, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from sixteen local students. 1 pm-3 pm, free TEEN CLIMBING NIGHT Santa Fe Climbing Center 3008 Cielo Court, (505) 986-8944 The perfect course to get your teen up on the rock wall. 6 pm-8 pm, $12

WALKING HISTORY TOUR School for Advanced Research 660 Garcia St., (505) 954-7213 Check out the interior of the 1920s estate turned artist residency center. 10 am-11:30 am, $15

MUSIC ALMA Second Street Brewery (Rufina) 2920 Rufina St. (505) 954-1068 An elegant and upbeat Latin four-piece with bongos, maracas — did someone say cowbell? 8 pm-10 pm, free BRIGHTSMITH The Mineshaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid (505) 473-0743 A touring act with folk banjo, violin and guitar. 8 pm, free CHARLES TICHENOR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley, (505) 992-0304 King Charles serenade diners with vocals and piano. 6 pm, free CHENXING HUANG First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave.(505) 982-8544 Award-winning Chinese pianist Huang performs a free concert that is open to all. 5:30 pm, free

DEAR DR The Mineshaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid (505) 473-0743 Rock out to this four-piece folk band performing covers and originals on the patio. 7 pm, free EL SHOW DÍA DE MUERTOS: NOSOTROS AND SEVERO Y GRUPO FUEGO Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. (505) 393-5135 An evening of dance with two Latin bands. Dress up in your best Día de Muertos attire and celebrate those who are no longer with us. 8 pm-11 pm, $15 FIRST FRIDAYS AT BOXCAR Boxcar 133 W Water St. (505) 988-7222 Every first Friday of the month DJ Monic and Dynamite Sol provide fresh tunes so that you can shake that thang. We love any opportunity to dance. 10 pm-11:45 pm, $5 RED VELVET FRIDAYS Cake’s Cafe 227 Galisteo St. (505) 303-4880 DJs and dancing all night long. Where else in Santa Fe can you dance until 1 am? We are into it. 8 pm-1 am, $5

REGENERATE 2023 Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St. (505) 955-6590 regenerateconference.com Roundtable discussions and workshops at this in-person and virtual conference on regenerative agriculture and land stewardship. Perfect for those interested in growing their own food. See site for full schedule and pricing of events. All Day, $75-$350

SAT/4 ART OPENINGS BEYOND FORM: ELIJAH KANE CHONG (OPENING) Prism Arts & Other Fine Things 1300 Luisa St., Ste. 3A (248) 763-9642 Chong explores color form, shape, dimension and abstraction through his drawings and paintings—some playing slight tricks on the eyes with depth and dimension. 5 pm-7 pm, free THE SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market and Alcaldesa streets (505) 982-3373 An outdoor juried art market featuring everything under the sun. Art, furniture, jewelry and more. Go be surprised. 9 am-2 pm, free


THE CALENDAR

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BOOKS/LECTURES RUSSELL JAMES RAY: CANYONS OF THE MIND Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave. (505) 955-6780 Canyons of the Mind dives into Ray's first canyoneering descents of the Barrancas, Sinforosa and Batopilas. Signing and Q&A to follow. 2 pm, free WOMEN IN TRANSITION: EXPLORING WHAT'S NEXT Montezuma Lodge 431 Paseo de Peralta (505) 982-0971 A workshop in which you interact with other women to help you clarify how you want to live your life now and in the future. Examine yourself, develop insight, explore new possibilities and navigate the changes in your life. 1 pm-5 pm, $40-$50

EVENTS 40TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION: RANDALL DAVEY AUDUBON CENTER Randall Davey Audubon Center 1800 Upper Canyon Road (505) 983-4609 Tour of the historic house and studio, participate in silent auction and light refreshments. 1 pm-3:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Nuckolls Brewing Co. 1611 Alcaldesa St. nuckollsbrewing.com A team of experts with decades of experience delivers thought-provoking trivia with an impish twinkle. Oh, and there are prizes! 3 pm-5 pm, free LA TIENDA FLEA La Tienda at Eldorado 7 Caliente Road, (505) 930-4821 Imagine if you took all the individual yard sales happening on a given weekend and combined them into a single space. There are absolutely treasures to be found at this flea. 8 am, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from 16 local students. This is an awesome opportunity to snag some affordable local art. 1 pm-3 pm, free STRATEGY GAME NIGHT CHOMP Food Hall 505 Cerrillos Road (505) 772-0946 Put your mind to the test and bring out your inner competitor with challenging board games. 6 pm-11 pm, free THE STARGAZER Sky Railway 410 S Guadalupe St. (844) 743-3759 Cruise into the Galisteo Basin by way of train and view celestial wonders in the middle of the high desert. 8:45 pm, $139

TURKEY TIME CHESS TOURNAMENT Santa Fe Place Mall 4250 Cerrillos Road (505) 473-4253 Games will be timed, 15 minutes per side with a 10-second delay. The pressure is on. Winners get a trophy! 11 am-3 pm, free

FILM SATURDAY MORNING CARTOONS Beastly Books 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 395-2628 Nostalgic cartoons (think Ninja Turtles, Rocko's Modern Life, ThunderCats, etc.) and cereal all day at this fantasy bookstore. Pajamas highly encouraged. 11 am, free

FOOD EDIBLE INSTITUTE 2023: EAT. DRINK. THINK. La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St. (505) 982-5511 A celebration of the personal stories and collective experience of individuals who work each and every day to grow, distribute, cook and cultivate the food on our plates. 8:30 am-5:30 pm, $100-$125

OCIE ELLIOTT Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. (505) 393-5135 There's nothing cuter than an intimate show with a real-life singer-songwriter couple. 7:30 pm, $20 STANLIE KEE AND STEP IN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 Traditional blues music. 1 pm-3 pm, free THE DNA OF MUSIC Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail (505) 982-1338 In this hour-long exploration Colin Jacobsen and the Pro Musica Orchestra immerse the audience in the cultural heritages that influenced Santa Fe’s Pro Musica’s program Source Code. 3 pm-4 pm, $20 YUNG BAE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, (505) 395-6369 DJ jams with a wide range of genres from vaporwave to electropop. 8 pm, $25

THEATER

MUSIC BOB MAUS Inn & Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 988-5531 Piano and voice takes on blues and soul classics. 6 pm-9 pm, free CHARLES TICHENOR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley (505) 992-0304 King Charles and occasional guests serenade diners with vocals and piano. 6 pm, free DAY OF THE DEAD MUSICAL TRIBUTE Old Lamy Church Lamy, (575) 749-1249 chrisharrellmusic.org A fundraiser for Our Lady of Light mission church over 15 local musicians cover songs written by deceased musicians such as Jeff Beck, Tina Turner, Tom Petty and more. 1 pm-6 pm, $20 LISA LOEB Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta (505) 982-4414 Please, stay. The ‘90s alt-ballad goddess performs her 15th album A Simple Trick to Happiness. Do share, Lisa. 7:30 pm, $50 NIGHTSHADE As Above So Below Distillery 545 Camino de la Familia (505) 916-8596 Goth, the timeless aesthetic. AASB welcomes the goth community to NIGHTSHADE featuring local and regional DJs. 8 pm, free

ON CLOVER ROAD Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A psychological thriller about a distraught mother who waits to be reunited with her runaway daughter at an abandoned motel on a desolate road near a questionable community. 7 pm, $15-$75 QUIVER & TEMPT SOCIETY: IT CAME FROM WITHIN Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road, (505) 992-2588 A Halloween Queerlesque show serving M. Night Shyamalanlevel twists on your favorite horror movie monsters. Attend if you dare! 7:30 pm, $30

A Fall Tradition - The 42nd Annual

November 4th & 5th, 2023 9am-5pm

Group Show Preview 11/3 from 5-7pm at the new Community Center. Show continues all weekend. TAOS

DIXON

EMBUDO RINCONADA

518

PEÑASCO

75

OJO CALIENTE

285

68

76

ESPAÑOLA

SANTA FE

please check for updates at

www.dixonarts.org 505.579.9862

Funded in part by Rio Arriba lodger’s tax Sponsored by the Embudo Valley Arts Association

WORKSHOP STUDIO WORKSHOP: THREE CONTEMPORARY ARTIST’S BOOKS New Mexico Museum of Art (Vladem Contemporary) 404 Montezuma Ave. (505) 476-5063 Learn various painting and printing techniques from mixed-media artist Julie R. Filatoff. Participants will learn how to stitch their own books and and take home tools for future use. 10 am-3 pm, $55

SUN/5 ART OPENINGS RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers' Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta (505) 983-7726 Buy fine art and crafts directly from local creators. Holiday season is right around the corner. 10 am-3 pm, free

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THE CALENDAR

BOOKS/LECTURES

MUSIC

CROSSINGS: HOW ROAD ECOLOGY IS SHAPING THE FUTURE OF OUR PLANET Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St. (505) 467-8315 Author and environmental journalist Laura Paskus discusses ecological effects on roads with the author of Eager, Ben Goldfarb. 4 pm, free LAYLI LONG SOLDIER: WHEREAS POETRY READING Geronimo's Books 3018 Cielo Ct., Ste. D (505) 467-8315 The Whereas author reads excerpts from her book. This is a cool opportunity to check out this newly opened bookstore. 4 pm-5 pm, free HARRY WERKSMAN: WISHLESS BOOK LAUNCH Geronimo's Books 3018 Cielo Ct., Ste. D (505) 467-8315 TV and movie screenwriter Werksman launches the first book titled Wishless in his series of children’s books about mythologies around the world. 4 pm-5 pm, free

CONCORDIA SANTA FE WIND ORCHESTRA CONCERT: FROM DARKNESS TO LIGHT St. Francis Auditorium at NM Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave (505) 476-5072 Led by guest conductor Michael Mapp of New Mexico State University, the 40-member ensemble performs works by David Biedenbender, Carlos Chavez and more. 2 pm, by donation CORO DE CÁMARA’S TIME TO HEAL: SEASONS OF PROMISE AND LIGHT Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat and Conference Center 50 Mount Carmel Road (505) 988-1975 A unique program that offers light and comfort to audiences. Experience the transfomative power of music at this choral concert. 4 pm, $20-$25 DOUG MONTGOMERY Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 955-0765 Listen to the sweet sound of Montgomery tickling the ivories and treat yourself to a nice steak dinner. You deserve it. 6 pm-9 pm, free DR HALL’S SONGWRITERS IN THE ROUND Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 466-5528 A musical event in an intimate setting that features three of New Mexico’s best singer-songwriters and recording artists: Dr Hall, Bard Edrington V and Martha Reich. Each artist tells the story behind their music. 6 pm, $25-$50 HIGH DESERT RANGERS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 Traditional local bluegrass with revolving members every Sunday in November. Noon-3 pm, free HIPPOCRATS AND CROSSEYED POSSUM The Mineshaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid (505) 473-0743 Denver-based bluegrass, rock and folk. 7 pm, free SEASON OPENING CONCERT: SOURCE CODE Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 Attend the 90-minute season opener for the Santa Fe Pro Musica Orchestra. 3 pm, $22-$92 SUNDAY SWING Second Street Brewery (Rufina) 2920 Rufina St., (505) 954-1068 Jazz and swing brought to you by the Joe Hecker Jazz Quartet. Did you hear that Sundays are for dancing? 1 pm-5 pm, free

EVENTS

First Friday Friday, November 3, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM

Join artist Adrian Wall (Jemez Pueblo) at the Museum for a night of music from his guitar and flute. Also happening is a single-use plastics collection event with partners Axle Contemporary and Brian Fleetwood (Muscogee Creek). Bring single-use plastics and learn more about the initiative to transform plastics into wearable art. Admission is free for all guests.

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum | 217 Johnson St. | 505-946-1000 | gokm.org 22

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EN TER EV EN TS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

FALL CACTUS AND SUCCULENT SALE Santa Fe Women’s Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail (505) 983-9455 Beef up your plant collection with handcrafted pottery and rare specimens. Yes, you do have room for more plants, trust us. 10 am-4 pm, free NAKAMURA GANKYŌ: KABUKI DEMONSTRATION Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo (505) 476-1204 A kabuki demonstration where Nakamura Gankyō performs the classical form of Japanese theater. Should be pretty and dramatic. (See SFR picks, page 17) 1 pm-3 pm, free RUMMAGE AND BARGAIN BOOK SALE Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 704 Camino Lejo (505) 982-4636 Hundreds of Native and non-Native items priced to get out the door. Who knows what kind of amazing items you could find here? All proceeds benefit the Wheelwright Museum. Noon-5 pm, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from 16 local students. This is an awesome way to support our local academic art spaces and acquire some affordable art. 1 pm-3 pm, free

Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you. Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly. Submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion.

THE MILK CARTON KIDS Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 Popular folk-duo takes over the multi-verse. Guest act Andrew Combs. 8 pm, $30 WESTIN MCDOWELL El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 McDowell displays influences of New Orleans jazz, delta blues, classic country and old school rock'n'roll. 7 pm, free

THEATER QUIVER & TEMPT SOCIETY: IT CAME FROM WITHIN Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road, (505) 992-2588 A Halloween Queerlesque show serving M. Night Shyamalanlevel twists on your favorite horror movie monsters. 7:30 pm, $30

WORKSHOP FAMILY ART MAKING New Mexico Museum of Art (Vladem Contemporary) 404 Montezuma Ave. (505) 476-5063 Make art with your loved ones and explore the galleries to spark your creative mind. 11 am-noon, free INTRODUCTION TO ZEN MEDITATION Mountain Cloud Zen Center 7241 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 303-0036 A free weekly Introduction to Zen Meditation class offered in a zendo. Come for community tea at 9:30 am. 10 am-11:15 am, by donation SUNDAY MORNING WHEEL Paseo Pottery 1273 Calle de Comercio (505) 988-7687 A seven-week course to turn you into a pottery expert. A certified ceramicist will help you walk your pieces through the entire pottery process. 11 am-1:30 pm, $70-$430


MON/6 BOOKS/LECTURES STEPHEN I. VLADECK: JUDGE CASE LECTURE SERIES II Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., (505) 955-6590 Global Santa Fe presents Stephen I. Vladeck, author of The Shadow Docket: How the Supreme Court Uses Stealth Rulings to Amass Power and Undermine the Republic. Preregistration required. 5:30 pm, $25-$35

EVENTS BOARDGAMES AT BOXCAR Boxcar 133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222 Board games and beer as well tabletop role-playing, collectible card trading and video games. 7 pm-11 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK: Boxcar 133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222 Think fast! Speed trivia with seven rounds of quizzes lasting approximately two hours. 7:30 pm-9:30 pm, free I A N (INDUSTRY APPRECIATION NIGHT) As Above So Below Distillery 545 Camino de la Familia (505) 916-8596 Bring your server card and get deep drink discounts for putting up with all the B.S. that comes with being a server. 7 pm, free KIDS SING ALONG Queen Bee Music Association 1596 Pacheco St., (505) 278-0012 Teachers Sarah-Jane and B lead classes through engaging music games and sing-alongs for toddlers and babies. 10:30 am-11:15 am, by donation MONDAY EVENING ADVANCED WHEEL Paseo Pottery 1273 Calle de Comercio (505) 988-7687 A class to take potters to the next level on the wheel, learning new techniques including how to throw more advanced shapes and lidded vessels. 6 pm-8:30 pm, $70-$430

RECHARGE YOUR ACTIVISM FOR 2024 Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road (505) 467-8514 Activism batteries gone dead? Attend this workshop to get your oomph back return to the task of protecting our rights and work for a better future for New Mexico. Hosted by Indivisible Santa Fe with guest presenter Heather Thornton. 7 pm-8 pm, free SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from 16 local students. This is an awesome way to support our local academic art spaces and acquire some affordable art. 1 pm-3 pm, free

FILM VIDEO LIBRARY CLUB Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 466-5528 Every Monday evening Lisa from Video Library (with assistance from her devotees) picks a film from her shelves—ranging from obscure cult flicks to blockbuster classics—to share on the big screen. Follow their Instagram @ videolibrary_santafe to stay in the know. 6:30 pm, free

MUSIC DOUG MONTGOMERY Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 955-0765 Listen to the sweet sound of Montgomery tickling the ivories, and treat yourself to a nice steak dinner. You deserve it. 6 pm-9 pm, free DR HALL Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 Blues-inspired folk and Americana to brighten up your happy hour. Have you seen that sweet steel guitar? Wowzers . 4 pm-6 pm, free

TUE/7 BOOKS/LECTURES BETSY GAINES QUAMMAN, TRUE WEST: MYTH AND MENDING ON THE FAR SIDE OF AMERICA Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., (505) 988-4226 True West disentangles reality from myth. Listen to a lecture and discussion on how the West is steeped in fake news. Gains Quamman moderates a talk with local filmmmaker Gay Dillingham and writer/producer Kirk Ellis. 6 pm, free

EVENTS SFCC GLASS CLASS EXHIBITION AND SALE Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave. (505) 428-1000 View or purchase glass works from 16 local students. This is an awesome way to support our local academic art spaces and acquire some affordable art 1 pm-3 pm, free SANTA FE FARMERS’ MARKET INSTITUTE TOURS Santa Fe Railyard Market and Alcaldesa streets (505) 982-3373 farmersmarketinstitute.org Enjoy communal breakfast in the Market Pavilion, discussions of the institute's work and a guided tour of the market. Register in advance. 9 am, free

MUSIC 4SALE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St. (505) 982-2565 We have no idea the genre of this band, but should be a great time. 4 pm-6 pm, free CHRIS PUREKA Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., (505) 393-5135 Portland, Oregon-based singer-songwriter straddles folk, Americana and indie. 7:30 pm, free

ENTER EVEN TS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

THE CALENDAR

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 portraying true love for little furries by artists Kari Rives and Fran Nicholson. 10 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri 10 am-6 pm, Sat 10 am-4 pm, Sunday, free ANDREW ALBA: LIFTED LABOR form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St. (505) 216-1256 Alba creates abstract works with scrap construction pieces left over from his day job. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free AS ABOVE, SO BELOW: A POP-UP EXHIBITION FOMA 333 Montezuma Ave. (505) 660-0121 A collection of photographs featuring minerals, plants, animals and humans, connecting the macrocosm and microcosm. 11 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free AUTUMN GLOW: GROUP EXHIBITION Evoke Contemporary 550 S. Guadalupe St. (505) 995-9902 Celebrate fall with vivid landscape paintings and sculptures in warm tones. 10 am-5 pm, Mon-Sat, free BEVERLY TODD: ALLOWING GOODNESS ITS OWN SPEECH Strata Gallery 418 Cerrillos Road (505) 780-5403 Large-scale abstract expressionist paintings in earthtones, created by using broken sticks, rags and hands to move the paint around on canvas. 11 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free CHRISTINE SULLIVAN: FELT: UNRAVELING SOCIAL NORMS Aurelia Gallery 414 Canyon Road (505) 501-2915 Sullivan’s three-dimensional artworks employ fringe and tassles combined with felt, often in holy or royal colors, to embody symbols of religion and politics. 11 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri Noon-5 pm, Sat-Sun, free

CONSTANCE DEJONG: SEQUENCE Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St. (505) 989-8688 Large and small metal minimalist wall sculptures. Think black, white and gray tones on metal. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free DANIEL D. STINE AND KATHLEEN M. JACKSON New Concept Gallery 610 Canyon Road (505) 795-7570 Stine’s highly stylized interpretations of New Mexico’s desert landscapes stimulate the senses, while Jackson’s watercolor ink sketches and larger pastels capture the nostalgia of the region’s history. Noon-5 pm, free DEBORAH ROBERTS: COME WALK IN MY SHOES SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta (505) 989-1199 Figurative collages and paintings exploring Black boyhood in the United States. While you’re at it, be sure to check out the large works on the west side of the building. 10 am-5 pm, Sat-Mon, Thurs 10 am-7 pm, free DOREEN WITTENBOLS: HAPPENING FOMA 333 Montezuma Ave. (505) 660-0121 Paintings, sculptures and photographs displayed in a kitchen vignette. 11 am-5 pm, free EILEEN DAVID: IN PLACE LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta (505) 988-3250 Paintings of cityscapes and house-scapes with vivid lines and deep blues and greens, capturing urban geometry. 10 am-5 pm, free EMMA BAGLEY: A WOMAN CRAWLS FORWARD smoke the moon 616 1/2 Canyon Road Find new paintings and a sprawling 45-piece mask installation collectively known as “Invasion.” Honestly, this is one of our favorite ongoing shows at the moment. 11 am-4 pm, Wed-Sun, free

JOY OLADOKUN: LIVING PROOF TOUR Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 The Nigerian singer-songwriter promotes her new album Proof of Life. Serious Tracy Chapman vibes here. Guest act NNAMDÏ. 7 pm, $24 MAX MUSCATO Vanessie Santa Fe 427 W. Water Street (505) 984-1193 An intimate evening of acoustic performance by Grammynominated musician and singer-songwriter Muscato. 4 pm-7 pm, $30 SANTA FE GUITAR ENSENBLE La Farge Library 1730 Llano St. (505) 820-0292 If you read music and play guitar, gather with like-minded musicians weekly to play and meet fellow players. 10 am-noon, free THE DOWNTOWN BLUES JAM Evangelo's 200 W San Francisco St. (505) 982-9014 Loveless Johnson III plays with his band Brotha Love & The Blueristocrats. Hit the dance floor with these guys. 8:30 pm-11:30 pm, free

ONGOING

JOSÉ MANUEL FORS, ABEL BARROSO AND DESBEL ALVAREZ Artes de Cuba 1700 A Lena St. (505) 303-3138 Participating artists from various parts of Cuba reflect their individuality and character through their works, highlighting the differences between these geographically close regions. 10 am-4 pm, Tues-Sat, free ALISON HIXON: AND THE WORLD IS MINE Susan Eddings Pérez Galley 717 Canyon Road (505) 477-4ART Cubism, surrealism and selfportaiture merge together and Hixon is cool as heck. 10 am-5 pm, Mon-Sat Noon-5 pm, Sun, free

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SFREPORTER.COM • NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023 SFREPORTER.COM • NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

23 23


COURTESY JANNA LOPEZ

With Poet Janna Lopez

Though she’s only called Santa Fe home for three years, poet and former magazine publisher Janna Lopez has already claimed the city’s Poet Laureate Ambassador position—a sort of liminal appointing that’ll tackle some of the big job’s duties until a new one is named in January. Lopez has also hit the ground running with various writing workshops and the Postal Poetry project, whereby anyone might email her a theme on which she’ll base a poem and then send it to the recipient of their choice—for free. Lopez also begins a new series of weekly creative writing workshops this month (6 pm-8 pm Tuesday, Nov. 7. Free. Iconik Red, 1366 Cerrillos Road, (505) 428-0996), all in the name of making poetry more accessible and palatable. You can learn more at janna-lopez.com, or you can simply read these-here Qs. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. (Alex De Vore) Before we go any further, what exactly is a poet laureate ambassador? What would you like to accomplish in the role? I would like to meet people where they are and open up poetry as something that is surprisingly inspirational and exceptional and inclusive. I’m working in four areas: community outreach; educational outreach; tourism and hospitality outreach; and organizational outreach. I’m working on all four silos at all times. Today, I did a sixth grade workshop on poetry at Acequia Madre Elementary, and it was wonderful. Tomorrow I’m doing a training with [nonprofit] Gerard’s House for grieving children to help their staff with welcoming people through poetry and helping them engage with grief…in a meaningful way. What can you tell us about your Postal Poetry project, and how do people get involved? Since my whole thing is about meeting people where they are, and I feel like writing letters in general is a lost art form, I’m using an art form as a way to transfer connection, and that feels very powerful to me. I think

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NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 1-7, 1-7, 2023 2023 •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

about the people who are shut in, sick, in grief or alone, and for them to get a piece of mail that has been custom crafted—to make a true connection? Meeting them where they are feels so wonderful and potent. All they have to do is email me their address, their name and a theme that they want [to janna@jannalopez.com]. The first one I got, I was given ‘Vesuvius and Pompeii,’ for a theme, and I wrote this really cool poem. The themes have been interesting. The idea, too, is that I want to compile all the poems I create for everyone in the community and make it a free downloadable PDF. It’s all free—I’m just here to serve. I want people to be open to poetry, I don’t want them to think it’s all just old, dead white men. Speaking of which, in our earliest correspondence, you said that ‘poetry has been on a pedestal too long.’ Can you expand on that thought? I think the ways poetry has been historically taught have been a very institutionalized, educationally related endeavor, and people don’t see themselves in a lot of poetry that has typically been offered in a classroom setting. So they get turned off. And I’m the same way! I didn’t get into poetry until my 50s. But again, you meet people where they are and offer interesting poets, different poets, so they can see themselves a little bit and put their arms around it. You can fit your arms around it if you kick it off the pedestal. Poetry is hard enough, it’s diversionary enough, it’s separatist enough, elitist enough. But really that’s only, like, maybe 10% of the poetry that actually exists. When you read that one poem that says all the words to the feelings you can’t name, all of a sudden it feels so alive. I think we want to express, we want to explore, we want to create, we want to be curious, and if we can get out of our own heads and judgements and creations about what it’s supposed to be, there’s a whole new realm. I worked with the kindergartners at Acequia Madre, and there was a kid in the class who said. ‘I’ve never been able to write well.’ That’s a seedling opportunity. She could probably carry that belief with her for the next 50 years, and trust me—I work with people like that all the time, with nightmares of red pens, teachers, opinions and people telling them how it’s supposed to be. When you poke your little tender head out of the sand, it doesn’t take but one footstep to shove you back for life. But I want to be elevating the nature of poetry as a cultural art form in Santa Fe. We’re known for visual art, contemporary art...my intention would be to raise and elevate the national recognition of Santa Fe’s capacity to inspire poetry. I want poetry in the conversation about art in Santa Fe straight up at the top.


ENTER EV EN TS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

MATT KING: BECOMING LIGHT CONTAINER 1226 Flagman Way (505) 995-0012 Works by the late Meow Wolf co-founder and artist King. Neon light and paint portray hyperabstract expressionism. Using black as a contrasting color, these works truly stand alone in the world of abstract art. 11 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, free MATTHEW ROWE AND HEIDI LOEWEN: THE GOLD THAT BINDS US Heidi Loewen Fine Art 315 Johnson St., (505) 988-2225 A collaborative art show of porcelain platters that focuses on clay marbleization, gold leafing, blowtorching and the Japanese art of kintsugi—the celebration of repairing broken pottery with laquer and gold. Noon-6 pm daily, free MEHRDAD MIRZAIE: IMAGO Strata Gallery 125 Lincoln Ave., (505) 780-5403 Image-based prints and multimedia works. Mirzaie’s artistic journey explores the past and a desire to understand how historical images influence us. (See SFR picks, page 17) 11 am-5 pm, free N. DASH: AND WATER SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta (505) 989-1199 Find yourself somewhere between painting and sculpture, water and land with these ecologically driven paintings. Hey, SITE? We see you killing it lately. 10 am-5 pm, Fri-Mon 10 am-5 pm, Thurs, free PAINTERLY EXPRESSIONISTS Pie Projects 924 Shoofly St., Ste. B (505) 372-7681 Large scale works from some of Santa Fe’s original contemporary artists such as Eugene Newmann, John Connell, Sam Scott, Richard Hogan and Zachariah Rieke. These five artists helped kickstart Santa Fe’s artistic renaissance of the ‘70s and ‘80s. We’ve been loving what’s happening on Shoofly Street these days. 11 am-5 pm, free PAPER TRAILS form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St. (505) 216-1256 A mixed media exhibition that draws compelling links between printmaking icons and contemporary sculptors. 10 am-5 pm,Tues-Sat, free PATRICK KIKUT: BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME 5. Gallery 2351 Fox Road, Ste. 700 (505) 257-8417 Landscape paintings with a strong focus on unprotected lands, particularly spaces between national parks. Kikut explores the zone between an enduring nature and reflects the encroachment of humans on these lands. Noon-5 pm, Thurs-Sat, free

PAUL BERLIN: TRANSFORMATION OF SPIRIT TO PIGMENT, HARMONY IN CHAOS Peyton Wright Gallery 237 E Palace Ave., (505) 989-9888 The late Berlin is often credited with bringing aspects of modern art to the US. His work grew into social-realism and early modernism. 9 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri, free PETER BUREGA: WEST OF THE MOON LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta (505) 988-3250 Meditative abstract acrylic paintings that portray nature in all its majesty through light, shadow, color and temperature. We love being able to feel abstract art. 10 am-5 pm, free PIÑON COUNTRY Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, (505) 471-9103 A photographic installation by Christina M. Selby documenting piñon-juniper habitats, and another great excuse to stroll through the gardens. 9 am-5 pm, free RAYMOND JOHNSON Addison Rowe Gallery 229 E Marcy St. (505) 982-1533 Acrylic on canvas paintings for fans of authentic mid-century modern art. 10:30 am-5:30 pm, free REID RICHARDSON: VIBRANT VISTAS The Signature Gallery 102 E Water St. (505) 983-1050 This show transports viewers into a world of vivid colors, breathtaking compositions, and artistic innovation—a brighter take on the desert landscapes that you’ve seen time and time again. 10 am-5 pm, daily, free RICHARD GUZMAN art is gallery santa fe 419 Canyon Road (505) 629-2332 Guzman presents a series of energetic and robust Plein Air paintings. 10 am-5 pm daily, free RICHARD OLSON SOLO EXHIBIT Eye on the Mountain Art Gallery 222 Delgado St. (928) 308-0319 Artist Richard Olson is doing remakes of some of his older works of art. He has re-painted the “Alice at the Bar hanging out with the White Rabbit” and re-titled the piece “Happy Hour at the Rabbit Hole (After Wonderland).” among more. 11 am-6 pm, Fri-Mon, free RICK PHELPS: THE LUNACY OF PUMPKIN SPICE Calliope 2876 Hwy. 14, Madrid (505) 660-9169 Santa Fe paper artist shows paper creations of pumpkin spice Barbies, nostalgic pumpkins, skeletons and more. The possibilites of paper are endless. 11 am-4 pm, Fri-Mon, free

ROBIN JONES: ARKTEIA Blue Rain Gallery 544 S Guadalupe St. (505) 954-9902 Jones’ primary subject are girls and women as they are the forefront of ecological and animal rights movements. 10 am-6 pm, Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm, Sat, free RON KINGSWOOD: ARRANGEMENTS LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta (505) 988-3250 Abstract expressionism meets wildlife art in these surprisingly realistic oil on canvas paintings. 10 am-5 pm, free TAMAR KANDER AND MARY SILVERWOOD Ventana Fine Art 400 Canyon Road, (505) 983-8815 Mixed media paintings with topographically rich designs by Kander and New Mexico landscape paintings by Silverwood. 9:30 am-5 pm, free

THEODORE WADDELL Gerald Peters Gallery 1005 Paseo de Peralta (505) 954-5700 Layers of brushstrokes creating paintings of the landscape of the contemporary West. 10 am-5 pm, free PAUL CAPONIGRO AND JOHN PAUL CAPONIGRO Obscura Gallery 1405 Paseo de Peralta (505) 577-6708 This duo highlights the similarities and differences of two generations of artists. We’re talking father and son artists in a show, but this is running smoothly. 11 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free WERNER DREWES: GEOMETRIC ABSTRACTION Addison Rowe Gallery 229 E Marcy St., (505) 982-1533 Paintings by German born artist Drewes (1899-1985) from his early career alongside stylistically similar artists. 10:30 am-5:30 am, free

WILLIAM LUMPKINS: 1909-2000 Addison Rowe Gallery 229 E Marcy St. (505) 982-1533 Abstract watercolors, pastels and graphite on paper from the late Lumpkins, who was popular in Santa Fe in the 1930s. Expect abstract landscapes of Abiquiú and Lumpkin’s studies of Mescalero dance. 10:30 am-5:30 pm, Tues-Fri Noon-4pm Sat, free

Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com.

MUSEUMS KERRY AMANDA MYERS

FOUND IN NATURE: THREE PERSON EXHIBITION Owen Contemporary 225 Canyon Road (505) 820-0807 A landscape show featuring the works of artists Martha Mans, Kurt Meer and Cynthia Young. 10 am-5 pm, Mon-Sat 11 am-4 pm, Sun, free GROUP SHOW Gaia Contemporary 225 Canyon Road, Ste. 6 (505) 501-0415 See a collection of contemporary artwork ranging from sculpture, abstract paintings and even kimonos. Artists include Jim Vilona, Liz Barber, Andrea Wexler, Takefumi Hori, Zoe Zimmerman, McCreery Jordan, Tania Dibbs, Amy Donaldson, Rob Lorenson and Clea Carlsen. 10 am-5 pm daily, free GUILLAUME SEFF AND WILLIAM T CARSON: MATTER IN MOTION Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road (505) 988-3888 Contemporary abstract works using geological elements and light to expand expressive possibility in abstract art. 10 am-5 pm daily, free ILEANA ALARCÓN’: CASA PAPEL Kouri + Corrao Gallery 3213 Calle Marie (505) 820-1888 The Colombian-American sculptor/designer presents an immersive dreamscape consisting of 21 pieces that push the boundaries of medium and sustainability. Noon-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free INSPIRED BY ART AND LAND Sage Creek Gallery 421 Canyon Road (505) 988-3444 A collection of representational and traditional fine art that encapsulates the enchantment and raw beauty of the West. Paintings and drawings of animals, adobes and other likenesses of the Southwest. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat 11 am-4 pm, Sun, free JERRY WELLMAN: UNEXPLAINED GIFTS Hecho a Mano 830 Canyon Road (505) 916-1341 Wellman’s new series of monographs reaveal diaphanous figures—but only with the lightest touch of color. 10 am-5 pm daily, free JOAN MAUREEN COLLINS: ENTANGLED BEAUTY ARTIST RESIDENCY Jen Tough Gallery / AIR Studios 4 N Chamisa Drive (505) 372-7650 Joan Maureen Collins’ observations of the natural world have been a driving force behind her creativity. Her powerful and soulful abstract interpretations of her impressions of the land remind us of the fragility of our natural world. 10 am-6 pm, Fri-Sun, free

THE CALENDAR

Pursuit of Native Voting Rights. EnchantOrama! New Mexico Magazine Celebrates 100. 10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs, 10 am-7 pm, Fri; $7-$12, NM residents free 5-7 pm first Fri of the month MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, (505) 982-2226 What Lies Behind the Vision of Chimayo Weavers. 1 pm-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. The Nature of Glass. Manuel Carrillo: Mexican Modernist. To Make, Unmake, and Make Again. Cochiti Pueblo artist Virgil Ortiz shows large scale works 10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs, 10 am-7 from his exhibit 1680-2180 at Vladem Contemporary’s inaupm, Fri; $7-$12, NM residents free gural exhibit Shadow and Light. 5-7 pm every Fri May-October POEH CULTURAL CENTER 78 Cities of Gold Road GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM OF INDIAN (505) 455-5041 MUSEUM ARTS AND CULTURE Di Wae Powa. Seeing Red: an 217 Johnson St. 710 Camino Lejo, (505) 476-1269 Indigenous Film Exhibit. (505) 946-1000 Down Home. Here, Now and 10 am-5 pm, Mon-Fri, $7-$10 Making a Life. Radical Always. Horizons: Weaving Between VLADEM CONTEMPORARY Abstraction. Selections from the the Lines with Diné Textiles. 404 Montezuma Ave. Collection. 10 am-5 pm, $7-$12, NM residents (505) 476-5602 10 am-5 pm, Thurs-Mon, $20 free first Sun of the month Shadow and Light (under 18 free) MUSEUM OF 10 am-5 pm, Sat-Thurs IAIA MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 10 am-7 pm, Fri; $7-$12, NM CONTEMPORARY 706 Camino Lejo residents free 5-7 pm every Fri NATIVE ARTS (505) 476-1204 May-October 108 Cathedral Place Between the Lines. Yokai: WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF (505) 983-8900 Ghosts & Demons of Japan. The Stories We Carry. The Art of Ghhúunayúkata / To Keep Them THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, (505) 982-4636 Jean LaMarr. Warm: The Alaska Native Parka. Always in Relation. California 10 am-4 pm, Wed-Sat, Mon La Cartonería Mexicana / The Stars. From Converse to Native 11 am-4 pm, Sun, $5-$10 Mexican Art of Paper and Paste Canvas. Medicinal Healer, an 10 am-5 pm, $3-$12, NM resiMUSEUM OF Artist to Remember. Native dents free first Sun of the month ENCAUSTIC ART Artists Make Toys. ‘All Together. 18 County Road 55A NEW MEXICO Making our Way. Every Day. (505) 424-6487 HISTORY MUSEUM Medicine.’ by Eliza Naranjo Permanent collection. Global 113 Lincoln Ave., (505) 476-5200 Morse. Rooted: Samples of Warming is REAL. The Santos of New Mexico. Southwest baskets. 11 am-5 pm, Fri-Sun, $10 Solidarity Now! 1968 Poor People’s 10 am-4 pm, Tues-Sat, $10, free to (18 and under free) Campaign. Miguel Trujillo and the all first Sun of the month

SFREPORTER.COM •• NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 1-7, 1-7, 2023 2023 SFREPORTER.COM

25


A Better, Happier Boxcar The former Railyard bar/ restaurant/venue makes downtown feel like downtown again BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

S

anta Fe was once a place where 20-somethings could hit downtown and have one hell of a night of carousing and entertainment. Sure, stalwart watering holes like the Cowgirl, The Matador, Evangelo’s and other places I’m probably forgetting are keeping it 100, but there’s no denying an older clientele now frequents many of these locales and fewer non-blues rock/cover acts are appearing. Losses including Skylight, Corazón, Swig (or was it Stats?) and The Paramount/Bar B (yes, I’m dating myself here!) still kind of sting, not least of which because some of those places hosted amazing touring bands. Hear ye, hear ye: This is a celebratory piece. I totally feel like spending time downtown again for the first time in a long time, and it has a lot to do with Boxcar. With its move from the Railyard to the second-story Water Street location that once housed Blue Corn Café, Boxcar is bringing back a little bit of the old latenight razzle-dazzle to the streets near the Plaza, and owners Tate Mruz and Sylwia Handzel had the opportunity to build it the way they wanted from the ground up. How’d that pan out, you ask? Quite well. The new space is a real beaut. Its hub-like bar wraps around much of the central interior and numerous rooms (or spokes, as Mruz refers to them) jut out from there into the massive business, creating disparate experiences. Want to catch a show or sing some karaoke? Boxcar has a lineup including DJs and performers several nights a week (shoutout to DJs Dmonic and Sol), plus regular karaoke nights on Wednesdays and Sundays. Want to watch the big game? There’s a room for that, too. Want to sit on

SFREPORTER.COM / FOOD

the patio when the weather allows? Also doable. Personally, the experience I desired when I entered the other night was strictly food-based. People have been surprised when I tell them I’ve found killer meals at Boxcar, but I’ve always rather liked it. Any disparaging remarks probably have something to do with its sports bar status or the expectations that it’s all jalapeño poppers and wings. Yes, Boxcar does wings and fried things while sports enthusiasts shout at televisions, but it has always been a restaurant, too, with a more expansive menu than most bars of its ilk can muster. This is no Buffalo Wild Wings, even if it contains the bones of one. Diners can order a dry-aged steak; a pot de creme; a shrimp Alfredo. Tempura avocado and tacos are on the menu (and, yes, they do specials for Taco Tuesday), too. In other words, it’s better than you thought, so maybe stop being a snob? My companion required no convincing to tag along, as we both recall decent meals at the old location. We found the food at the new spot was of similar quality to Boxcar’s previous incarnation. The service, however, has improved greatly. I loved our server— she never hovered, but we never languished in obscurity, either. I tend to make dumb jokes at servers, and she handled that with grace as she dropped our starter of chips and guac. In Santa Fe, serving a good guac is practically a must. If you don’t do it well, I’ll find someone who will. At Boxcar, they’ve got the goods, both in terms of the whisper of spicy green chile hidden inside to the warm and wafer-thin crisp of the chips— and it was only $6. The portion was also just right. Guac and chips is an amuse, dammit, and I don’t want to be stuffed with corn by

Chicken and waffles, we love you!

# MONTH 26 NOVEMBER NOVEMBER #-#,1-7, 1-7, 2023 2023 2023 • SFREPORTER.COM •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

ALEX DE VORE

FOOD

Boxcar—you know they have food because of that big old sign that says “Food!”

the time my main dish arrives. Amused we were when the entrees appeared. My companion selected the green chile cheeseburger ($16), a classic and ever-reliable comfort food. Seeking similar succor, I immediately chose the chicken and waffles ($18), for long have I bemoaned this town’s lack of a Waffle House—and imagine my dismay when Loyal Hound closed earlier this year and removed my go-to option for this dish. The burger received an excellent report, especially the bun, which remained intact throughout the meal and added a bit of sweetness in contrast to the chile. Plus, the sweet potato fries on the side deftly sidestepped sogginess. The chicken and waffles, meanwhile, were also a delight, especially with the included real maple syrup. The clincher, however, was the red chile butter that I crammed into every last indentation of the waffles. I wondered aloud where this spicy

little bit of dairy heaven has been all my life, and why I’ve not seen it on any other menu in town. It was no matter, though, and I carpe’d that diem. And there’s still plenty left we didn’t see. One room contained a case for grabbing quick bites and drinks to-go, and another housed a meeting between board game nerds. If Boxcar’s new spot signifies downtown’s return to form with locals in mind, consider me onboard. If nothing else, I’ll be composing poetry to that red chile butter until I can get the chicken and waffles again.

BOXCAR

133 W Water St., (505) 988-7222 + BETTER FOOD FROM A BAR THAN YOU’D EXPECT

- PARKING DOWNTOWN SUCKS, THOUGH THAT’S HARDLY THE BAR’S FAULT

AFFORDABLE

MEDIUM

PRICEY EXTRAVAGANT


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SFR’s Morning Word Senior Correspondent JULIA GOLDBERG brings you the most important stories from all over New Mexico in her weekday news roundup.

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NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

27


RATINGS BEST MOVIE EVER

Anatomy of a Fall Review Justine Triet revitalizes the courtroom drama

10

BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

9

French filmmaker Justine Triet (Sybil) surely had a hell of a time packing so much dialogue into her new film Anatomy of a Fall, but audiences patient enough to make their way through its innumerably subtle deconstructions of family life, marriage, parenthood and creative commerce will find more than enough reasons to stay glued to that screen. In Triet’s newest, Sandra Hüller (I’m Your Man) plays accomplished writer Sandra, who winds up on trial for the murder of her husband Samuel (Samuel Theis). Perhaps he fell from the tallest level of their in-progress chalet-style home. Perhaps Sandra bashed his head in and shoved him over the railing. The evidence is compelling either way, but the more personal information that comes to light during the trial, the less viewers can be sure about. Hüller dominates the film across a variety of existential archetypal modalities, from the creator to the mother to the woman who can and should exist outside the confines of her relationships with her husband and child. If she’s warm, she’s mourning wrong; if she’s even-keeled, she’s a cold bitch; if she cries, she’s too emotional. All the while, luminous performances from Swann Arlaud as a defense attorney; Antoine Reinartz as a prosecutor; and, in flashbacks, Thiel as

8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER

KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON

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+ GLADSTONE; LONG BUT NEVER BORING - STILL PRETTY FOCUSED ON WHITE DUDES

Earlier this year, lauded director Martin Scorsese revealed to Time that he’d chosen to rewrite an earlier draft of a screenplay he’d begun for Killers of the Flower Moon, which is based on the 2017 nonfiction book of the same name by David Grann. “After a certain point, I realized I was making a movie about all the white guys,” Scorsese told the magazine, doubling down on the idea that he’d listened to feedback from the Osage people on whose land the film was made and around whom much of the story revolves. If that’s the case, however, one wonders how much whiter his original script was, as Scorsese’s newest film with longtime collaborators Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro still feels pretty dang white. From a bird’s eye view, Killers tells the tale of the 1920s Oklahoma oil boom on Native land that led to a series of heinous murders and, in turn, the formation of the FBI. Here, DiCaprio plays World War I vet Ernest Burkhart, a sort of dimwitted would-be proto-gangster who heads to Oklahoma to live and work with his uncle William (De Niro), a rancher kingpin who tips the scales of commerce in his favor through any means necessary. DiCaprio turns in one of the more nuanced performances of his career as the unscrupulous Ernest, and De Niro’s inwardly cold, outwardly loving demeanor feels terrifying. As was the order of the day, Ernest weds a local Osage woman named Mollie Kyle (a brilliant 28

MOVIES

8 + HÜLLER IS

CAPTIVATING; HARD TRUTHS LAID BARE - A FINAL ACT “TWIST” THAT FEELS OVER-COMPLICATED

the put-upon husband further illustrate the challenging nature of any sort of relationship. Anatomy cuts to the bone repeatedly, especially when exchanges thought private or personal explode into the public domain of a courtroom. Even then, gasp-worthy revelations pale in comparison to ways the mundanity of continued existence seem to mute our joys and passions: a marital argument that might have been instigated for the sake of plumbing book-worthy content; a harsh word about stolen time; how we can wind up in traps we built ourselves, even if we didn’t realize we were building them. Of particular note is young Milo Machado Graner’s performance as Sandra and Samuel’s son Daniel. As emotive as any of his more studied onscreen peers, Graner grounds the absurdity of adult interpersonal strife through the perspective of a child—kids always seem to know what’s fair or not, which is a tough row

yet underused Lily Gladstone, Siksikaitsitapi and NiMíiPuu) as part of his uncle’s bid to access the oil money heading to her and her people. Whether Ernest truly loves Mollie or not becomes irrelevant, however, the longer he remains accessory to the murders befalling her family and people. But when Mollie heads to Washington, DC, to beg the president for aid, so begins the earliest days of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which comes knocking at Ernest’s door in the form of Breaking Bad alum Jesse Plemons. The rest is pretty typical Scorsese fare, from the anachronistic music that flares in the background of some scenes to the authentic yet not gratuitous violence. Mollie Kyle’s attempts to get answers for her peoples’ murders are central to the Killers’ plot. Pity, then, that Gladstone’s role is so relegated to reactionary or plot device beats. She’s a natural, from her mournful wail in the face of tragedy to her sly expressions that say so much. She more than keeps up with the titanic De Niro and DiCaprio, even if they have about a zillion more lines than her. It’s still nice to see a legend like Tantoo Cardinal playing even a small role; the Indigenous actors who permeate the film are all fine actors across the board—particularly Yancey Red Corn, whose gravitas is palpable. Killers sort of fizzles out toward the end. Some sturdy but anemic performances from the likes of John Lithgow and Brendan Fraser work out OK, but not a one rates as much attention as the core cast. Leo will likely win an Oscar for this one, and Gladstone will surely at least be nominated. If nothing else, though, this is another one of those “representation matters” moments in recent film and TV

NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 1-7, 1-7, 2023 2023 •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

to hoe for the powerless. Arlaud wows as well, though his character can’t seem to bring himself to ask his client outright what might have really happened with her husband’s death. Against Reinartz’ chilly but capable prosecutor, sparks fly. When all is said and done, Anatomy is actually a film about how we process our failures, or even our fear of success. Sadly, we tend to aim that shit outward. Whether or not Samuel’s death was a murder becomes immaterial when weighed against the myriad little blows the characters bestow upon each other. Knowing people is perhaps as hard a thing as there is.

history that proves Native folks more than deserve their place at the table, just...maybe they should be the ones doing the storytelling if only the old guard would get out of their way long enough to let them soar. (Alex De Vore)

Violet Crown, Regal, R, 206 min.

DUMB MONEY

8

+ FUN AND FUNNY; FASCINATING, BOTH

SOCIALLY AND FINANCIALLY SPEAKING

- PETE DAVIDSON IS TEDIOUS

Orange is the New Black writers Laura Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo team with The Social Network co-scribe Ben Mezrich and I, Tonya director Craig Gillespie for Dumb Money, an almost spiritual successor to Adam McKay’s 2015 finance flick The Big Short, only with more recent touchstones and a far more satisfying conclusion. Viewers should probably brush up on concepts like short selling and short squeezes to fully appreciate what this one’s laying down—or at least know that billionaires, at one point in time, referred to amateur traders as “dumb money,”—but even those not well-versed in market politics will find an enjoyable small-beats-big parable. Dumb Money tells the real-life story of Keith Gill, aka Roaring Kitty, a one-time financial analyst and social media personality who, in 2021, single-handedly drove up furor surrounding stocks for video game retailer GameStop, which resulted in a massive uptick that ruined at least one hedge fund, exposed investment app Robinhood for scummy business

ANATOMY OF A FALL Directed by Triet With Hüller, Theis, Arlaud, Reinartz and Graner Center for Contemporary Arts Violet Crown, R, 151 min.; w/subtitles

practices and terrified the rest of Wall Street. And though some might balk at the idea of a film dedicated to GameStop and money, it’s honestly fascinating to better understand how things shook out. The illustriously weird Paul Dano plays Gill with a kind face and gentle delivery that bely his character’s internet persona, but weirdly sell his performance as trustworthy and true. Dano makes Gill lovable, even as his onscreen brother (Pete Davidson) sucks all the air out of the room with ball-busting pseudo humor. Shailene Woodley appears as Gill’s wife, though, sadly, she has little to do outside of a brief moment of spousal tension. Elsewhere, a series of interconnected vignettes focused on real-world billionaires like Gabe Plotkin (Seth Rogen), Ken Griffin (Nick Offerman) and Steve Cohen (Vincent D’Onofrio) intermesh with those of new GameStop investors—including an RN (America Ferrera), a collegiate couple (Myha’la Herrold and Talia Ryder) and a GameStop employee (Anthony Ramos of Hamilton fame)—plus the founder-CEOs of Robinhood (Sebastian Stan and Rushi Kota). These sections might be the most fun, particularly when we see the folks from Robinhood stumble in interviews or hem and haw their way through what happened the day they wouldn’t let anyone buy GameStop stocks (not super legal; nothing came of it, sadly). The whole GameStop debacle went before a Congressional committee in the end. And though nobody went to jail and the billionaires mainly just re-structured, the film tells us in a text scroll that the big bad finance bros and babes on Wall Street finally had to take amateur traders seriously. Violet Crown, R, 105 min.


SFR CLASSIFIEDS

JONESIN’ CROSSWORD

“A Mild-Mannered Introduction”—sounds like I’ve heard this before.

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48 Romantic poet Rainer Maria ___ 51 Silent G? 55 Show with a libretto 58 Yemeni port 59 “Coldest drink in town” brand 60 Stand-up kind of person? 61 “The Legend of Zelda” hero 62 Calls, in poker 63 Tree part 64 Calls at Wimbledon 65 Prefix with while

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1 1970s Lincoln Continental 2 Sultanate inhabitant 3 White wine grape that’s usually harvested early 4 Dove’s stance 5 Avoid 6 Sunset direction 7 Pt. of MPAA 8 “Our Flag Means Death” craft 9 Like Michelin-starred restaurants 10 Additive in some moisturizers 11 Ballpoint pen maker 12 Actress Mendes 13 Sales position 21 Best of the best 22 Conjunction with neither

25 Bakery device 26 “It’s deja vu all over again” sayer 27 Spiteful 29 It might be unsweetened 30 Game using a rope 31 Spy’s collection 32 ___-weekly (newspaper category) 33 Annoying pest 34 Burning desire 36 To the back of the boat 38 K-___ (big name in record compilations) 39 Subj. for new citizens’ night classes 44 Actress Stephanie of “Everything Everywhere All at Once” 45 “Forrest Gump” actor Gary 47 Food on a short plane ride, maybe 49 “Head, Shoulders, ___ and Toes” (___ and toes) 50 Get rid of, metabolically 51 Joker’s permanent look 52 Actress Falco 53 Well-mannered bloke 54 Squid sprays 55 Pumpkin-carving mo. 56 ___ favor (please, in Spanish) 57 Flightless ratite

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SFR CLASSIFIEDS

MIND BODY SPIRIT PSYCHICS

Rob Brezsny

Week of November 1st

ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Our bodies sometimes serve as the symbolic ground where order and disorder fight for supremacy,” writes storyteller Caroline Kettlewell. Here’s good news, Aries: For you, order will triumph over disorder in the coming weeks. In part through your willpower and in part through life’s grace, you will tame the forces of chaos and enjoy a phase when most everything makes sense. I don’t mean you will have zero problems, but I suspect you will have an enhanced power to solve problems. Your mind and heart will coordinate their efforts with exceptional flair.

literature. On the other hand, I’m barely interested in Milton’s story, which includes boring conversations between God and Satan and the dreary tale of how God cruelly exiled humans from paradise because the first man, Adam, was mildly rebellious. So what should I do? I’ve decided to read the Cliffs Notes study guide about Paradise Lost, a brief summary of the story. In accordance with astrological omens, I suggest you call on similar shortcuts, Libra. Here’s your motto: if you can’t do the completely right thing, try the partially right thing.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I recently endured a threehour root canal. Terrible and unfortunate, right? No! Because it brought profound joy. The endodontist gave me nitrous oxide, and the resulting euphoria unleashed a wild epiphany. For the duration of the surgery, I had vivid visions of all the people in my life who love me. I felt their care. I was overwhelmed with the kindness they felt for me. Never before had I been blessed with such a blissful gift. Now, in accordance with your astrological omens, I invite you to induce a similar experience—no nitrous oxide needed. It’s a perfect time to meditate on how well you are appreciated and needed and cherished.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Who would have guessed that elephants can play the drums really well? On a trip to Thailand, Scorpio musician Dave Soldier discovered that if given sticks and drums, some elephants kept a steadier beat than humans. A few were so talented that Soldier recorded their rhythms and played them for a music critic who couldn’t tell they were created by animals. In accordance with astrological omens, I propose that you Scorpios seek out comparable amazements. You now have the potential to make unprecedented discoveries. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian novelist Shirley Jackson wrote, “No live organism can continue for long to exist under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids dream.” Since she wrote that, scientists have gathered evidence that almost all animals dream and that dreaming originated at least 300 million years ago. With that as our inspiration and in accordance with astrological omens, I urge you to enjoy an intense period of tapping into your dreams. To do so will help you escape from absolute reality. It will also improve your physical and mental health and give you unexpected clues about how to solve problems.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Unless you are very unusual, you don’t sew your clothes or grow your food. You didn’t build your house, make your furniture, or forge your cooking utensils. Like most of us, you know little about how water and electricity arrive for your use. Do you have any notion of what your grandparents were doing when they were your age? Have you said a prayer of gratitude recently for the people who have given you so much? I don’t mean to put you on the spot with my questions, Gemini. I’m merely hoping to inspire you to get into closer connection with everything that nourishes and sustains you. Honor the CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn writer Kahlil sources of your energy. Pay homage to your foundations. Gibran believed an essential human longing is to be CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian singer-songwriter revealed. We all want the light in us to be taken out of its Suzanne Vega has had a modest but sustained career. With hiding place and shown. If his idea is true about you, you nine albums, she has sold over three million records, but is will experience major cascades of gratification in the not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She has said, “I always coming months. I believe you will be extra expressive. And thought that if I were popular, I must be doing something you will encounter more people than ever before who are wrong.” I interpret that to mean she has sought to remain interested in knowing what you have to express. To prepare faithful to her idiosyncratic creativity and not pay homage to for the probable breakthroughs, investigate whether you formulaic success. But here’s the good news for you in the harbor any fears or inhibitions about being revealed—and coming months, fellow Cancerian: You can be more dissolve them. appreciated than ever before simply by being true to your AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): November is Build Up Your soul’s inclinations and urges. Confidence Month. In the coming weeks, you are authorized LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Everything in the world has a to snag easy victories as you steadily bolster your courage hidden meaning,” wrote Greek author Nikos Kazantzakis. to seek bigger, bolder triumphs. As much as possible, put Did he really mean everything? Your dream last night, your yourself in the vicinity of people who respect you and like taste in shoes, your favorite TV show, the way you laugh? you. If you suspect you have secret admirers, encourage As a fun experiment, let’s say that yes, everything has a them to be less secretive. Do you have plaques, medals, or hidden meaning. Let’s also hypothesize that the current trophies? Display them prominently. Or visit a trophy store astrological omens suggest you now have a special talent and have new awards made for you to commemorate your for discerning veiled and camouflaged truths. We will unique skills—like thinking wild thoughts, pulling off onefurther propose that you have an extraordinary power to of-a-kind adventures, and inspiring your friends to rebel penetrate beyond surface appearances and home in on against their habits. previously unknown and invisible realities. Do you have the PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I’m glad we have an abundance courage and determination to go deeper than you have ever of teachers helping us learn how to be here now—to focus dared? I believe you do. on the present moment with gratitude and grace. I love the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): How many glowworms would fact that books on the art of mindfulness are now almost as have to gather in one location to make a light as bright as the common as books about cats and cooking. Yay! But I also sun? Probably over a trillion. And how many ants would be want to advocate for the importance of letting our minds required to carry away a 15-pound basket of food? I’m wander freely. We need to celebrate the value and power of guessing over 90,000. Luckily for you, the cumulative small NOT always being narrowly zeroed in on the here and now. efforts you need to perform so as to accomplish big We can’t make intelligent decisions unless we ruminate breakthroughs won’t be nearly that high a number. For about what has happened in the past and what might occur instance, you may be able to take a quantum leap after just in the future. Meandering around in fantasyland is key to discovering new insights. Imaginative ruminating is central six baby steps. to the creative process. Now please give your mind the LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the 17th century, John Milton privilege of wandering far and wide in the coming weeks, wrote a long narrative poem titled Paradise Lost. I’ve never Pisces. read it and am conflicted about the prospect of doing so. On one hand, I feel I should engage with a work that has Homework: What is the kindest act you ever did? Care to had such a potent influence on Western philosophy and do it again? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 2 3 R O B B R E Z S N Y 30

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Fabio Massimo Macchioni, passed away August 1st, 2023. He was 80 years old and still living comfortably. Fabio was often seen on the plaza or railyard dancing to live music. He loved the atmosphere, the people, the music, but mostly: he loved to dance. Fabio was a man of many talents. Often referred to as a renaissance man, he was well known for his photography, his food, his woodwork, his astrology, and most importantly, his dreams. Born in 1942, in Florence, Italy, Fabio studied engineering before dropping out and studying photography. He worked as an apprentice to some of the best photographers Italy had to offer before moving to New York city in 1969 to continue his work. In addition to photography, he also began exploring carpentry in the form of making unique lofts. In 1972, Fabio moved home to “his love” Santa Fe, New Mexico. Here, Fabio would open several restaurants, Fabios pizza and Fabios seafood and grill. He was well known around town for his delicious seafood, pizza, and gnocchi. Later on, Fabio even decided to make his own frozen gnocchi company, selling the packaged delicacies at local grocery stores. Throughout these years he raised two children, Sebastian and Isabella Macchioni, and tried many things. He went porcini hunting in the Santa Fe mountains. He studied astrology and did some research on the science behind astrological charts. He made beautiful Southwestern mirrors and wood fire pizza ovens. He continued his passion for photography and even had a showing in an art gallery on Canyon Road. Finally, in 2005, he began research on the language of dreams, his true, deepest passion. Although he had been fascinated by dreams and astrology all his life, it wasn’t until 2005 that he was able to devote all his time to this work. His research started with the

premise that, “The language of dreams is based on logic, and therefore it can be studied, learned, understood, and most importantly; taught.” He was very adamant about expressing his love for dreams and the need for dreams exclaiming, “[they] are messages from our inner divine”. Fabio believed he had found a way to not only translate dreams but to understand them. He devoted the last twenty years to his research and studies where he eventually compiled enough dreams to create a book. He titled this, “Dreammaunal”. His hope was that one day his book would be in every household, on every bedside table, translated in every language and published worldwide. Fabio is survived by his two beautiful children Isabella and Sebastian Macchioni, as well as his brother Marco. His children are working adamantly to publish his book online for all to see. The book will likely be under the web domain “www.dreammanual. com” and is expected to be up and running sometime next year. Sebastian and Isabella would like to formally apologize to the people of Santa Fe for the delay in writing and publishing his obituary. It has been a very difficult time dealing with his passing. Furthermore, his family has already held private events and service’s to celebrate and commemorate his life and legacy. Although there are currently no plans for a public service, you may reach out via email at Thedreammanual@gmail.com.

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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-101-PB-2023-00223 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF STEVEN EARL BERNHARD, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Virgina K. Awad has been appointed personal representative of the estate of the decedent, Steven Earl Bernhard. All persons having claims against the estate of the decedent are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of any published notice to creditors or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned counsel of record for the personal representative at the address listed below and filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico. Respectfully submitted: LAW OFFICE OF DORENE A. KUFFER, P.C. /s/ Dorene A. Kuffer Dorene A. Kuffer Attorney for the Personal Representative Virgina K. Awad 500 4th Street NW, Suite 250 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Office: (505) 924-1000 Fax: (505) 672-7768 Email: dorene@kufferlaw.com

SFR CLASSIFIEDS ALL OTHER LEGALS New Mexico Auction Ad Notice of Public Sale Pursuant to NEW MEXICO STATUTES – 48-11-1-48-11-9: Notice is hereby given that on the 16th day of November, 2023 At that time open Bids will be accepted, and the Entirety of the Following Storage Units will be sold to satisfy storage liens claimed by A-1 Self Storage. The terms at the time of the sales will be Cash only, and all goods must be removed from the facility within 48 hours. A-1 Self Storage reserves the right to refuse any and all bids or cancel sale without notice. Owners of the units may pay lien amounts by 5:00 pm November 15, 2023 to avoid sale. The following units are scheduled for auction. Sale will be begin at 09:00 am November 16, 2023 at A-1 Self Storage 3902 Rodeo Road Unit#A129 Thomas Esquibel PO Box 15944, Santa Fe, NM 87592; Furniture, bags, boxes, tv. Unit#D054 James Yeager 10 Camino Real, Glorieta, NM 87535; Rifle case, fence posts, totes, signs. Followed by A-1 Self Storage 1591 San Mateo Ln Unit#3006 Hannah Gonzales 2 Seton Castle Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87508; Furniture, mirrors, bench, grill, bike, stroller. Unit#4021 John H Hylton 2059 Galisteo Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505; Boxes, kitchen stand, dresser, bags, stereo. Auction Sale Date, 11/16/23 Santa Fe Reporter 11/1/23 & 11/8/23

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE COUNTY OF SANTA FE Jacqueline Munoz FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Petitioner/Plaintiff, IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE vs. OF Jesus Munoz EVA A. ALANIZ, DECEASED. Respondent/Defendant Case No. D-101-PB-2023-00149 NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF SUIT NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO PUBLICATION Jesus Munoz, GREETINGS: You NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that are hereby notified that Jacqueline Samantha L. Monnet has been Munoz, the above-named appointed Personal Representative Petitioner/Plaintiff, has filed a of the Estate of the decedent. All civil action against you in the persons having claims against the above-entitled Court and cause, estate of the decedent are required The general object thereof being: to present their claims within four to dissolve the marriage between months after the date of the first the Petitioner and yourself, to publication of any published Notice establish parentage, determine to Creditors or 60 days after the custody and timesharing and date of mailing or other delivery of this notice, whichever is later, or the assess child support. claims will be forever barred. Claims Unless you enter your appearance in this cause within thirty must be presented either to the undersigned counsel for the personal (30) days of the date of the last publication of this Notice, representative at the address listed judgment by default may be below or filed with the First Judicial entered against you. District Court, County of Santa Fe, Jacqueline Munoz New Mexico. 199 Valle Duran Respectfully submitted by: Santa Fe, NM 87506 JAY GOODMAN & ASSOCIATES 505-819-9191 LAW FIRM, P.C. WITNESS this Honorable Judge Thomas E. Dow, Esq. Shannon Broderick Bulman, Jay Goodman & Associates Law District Judge of the First Judicial Firm, P.C. Court of New Mexico, and the Attorney for Personal Representative Seal of the District Court of Santa 2019 Galisteo St. #C3 Fe, this 16th day of March, 2023. Santa Fe, NM 87505 KATHLEEN VIGIL T: (505) 989-8117 CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT E: tdow@jaygoodman.com By: Bernadette Hernandez A-1 Self Storage Deputy Clerk SFREPORTER.COM

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DIAMONDS AND GOLD WE BUY AND SELL SILVER • COINS JEWELRY • GEMS TOP PRICES • CASH 3 GEMOLOGISTS ON STAFF Earthfire Gems 121 Galisteo • 982-8750

New/Used Vinyl & Tapes Buy • Sell • Trade 131 W. Water Street

WANT A HYBRID? NEED AN SUV?

MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Try HONDA-SUBARU of Santa Fe!! => Best of Santa Fe 5 Years Running<=

Kitchen Angels needs you. VOLUNTEER NOW!

volunteerservices kitchenangels.org

or 505-471-7780 x202

Sabrina 505.604.1177

MASSAGE BY JULIE Swedish • Deep Tissue Same Day Appts Welcome

$65 60MIN - $95 90 MIN 20+ YEARS EXPERIENCE LIC. 3384 • 670-8789

XCELLENT MACINTOSH SUPPORT

30+ yrs professional Apple and Network certified xcellentmacsupport.com Randy • 670-0585

PHYSICAL THERAPY DONE DIFFERENTLY.

Specialized hands on treatments. Tailored exercise prescription. Done w/ care & compassion. www.hopetherapeutics.net CERRILLOS HILLS STATE PARK Ethan Hope, PT, FAAOMPT Find Hikes, Events and Volunteer 505-479-0266 opportunities at No referral needed. CerrillosHills.org

COME HIKE THE

UNCLE DT’S BBQ

Santa Fe’s best BBQ. 3134 Rufina Street Tue - Sat 11:30 am to 2 pm & 5 pm to 7:30 pm Come on in! Online Ordering available: www.uncledt.com

TREE SERVICE

Abundant Energy, LLC Dead Tree Removal LIC. 235374 Insured Free Estimates 505.946.8183

1925 Rosina St • Suite A Santa Fe, New Mexico soapsantafe.com 32

NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023

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