August 3, 2022:Santa Fe Reporter

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Native to the Game

Local players represent their tribe at Major League Baseball team’s Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase By Grant Crawford, P.12 SFREPORTER.COM

AUGUST 3-9, 2022

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AUGUST 3-9, 2022 | Volume 49, Issue 31

BANKING BUILT FOR ME.

NEWS OPINION 5 NEWS 7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 CHAMBER CHAMPIONS 9 Santa Fe Hispanic Chamber of Commerce looks to improve Southside community SLOWING THE FLOW 11 State, Santa Fe groups reimagine stormwater management as a positive as climate change marches on

WE’RE HERE FOR YOU

COVER STORY 12 NATIVE TO THE GAME Local players represent their tribe at Major League Baseball team’s Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase

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SFR PICKS 16 Tintypes and kid-free hangouts, hoop dances and Cuban prints

ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE NEWS EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR

THE CALENDAR 18

SENIOR CORRESPONDENT JULIA GOLDBERG

3 QUESTIONS 20

STAFF WRITERS GRANT CRAWFORD ANNABELLA FARMER

WITH ARTIST DREAD SCOTT A&C 27 BEAUTIFUL METAMORPHOSIS Santa Fe Opera’s transformational M.Butterfly soars

CULTURE WRITER RILEY GARDNER DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE

FOOD 25 PORK ROLL If you’re already fixing to eat some pork, you should think about Fiesta Oaxaxa and Los Amigos

OWNERSHIP CITY OF ROSES NEWSPAPER CO. PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN

MOVIES 28 I LOVE MY DAD REVIEW Probably better to not catfish your kid Cover photo by Grant Crawford

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LETTERS

“WITH MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART INTERIM DIRECTOR KATE MACUEN”

PERPLEXING TWIST

GREGG DAVIS VIA FACEBOOK

7 DAYS, JULY 27: ONLY SOMEWHAT COMICAL Regarding “4. POPE FRANCIS APOLOGIZES TO INDIGENOUS CANADIANS FOR RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL ABUSE” in 7 Days the Santa Fe Reporter wrote the following comment:“Then he [the Pope] wore a traditional headdress, because nothing says reconciliation like cultural appropriation.” There are many valid criticisms to be made of the Pope’s apology, principally

that the Church, as the “Body of Christ” is blameless in formulating the “Doctrine of Discovery.” That [doctrine] was and continues to be the theoretical basis for European genocidal abuses here and in Canada, indeed, throughout the world. Though somewhat comical, the Reporter’s comment betrays real ignorance of a tradition common to many nations of First Peoples. In that tradition, leaders or representatives of other peoples are honored by the gifting of Native regalia, including ceremonial headdresses. That the writer is not aware of this widespread practice should have limited the ability to make such a foolish comment, a comment that has no basis in reality, and which actually distracts any discussion from serious and profound issues. In sum, the Reporter covers up a real issue with its sad and ill-informed attempt at humor.

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3 QUESTIONS, JULY 20:

One question I might ask her; if you could find a way to provide visitors a better way to know what the permanent exhibition Girard Wing shows in each case, you’d be everyone’s hero. I know the donor insisted on no labels on each case, but maybe an audio that is invisible that each person could hear would satisfy everyone. I can’t tell you how many times people ask me in perplexed ways how to know what’s on display in each case. And when I point to those booklets, they shrug. The booklets are a museum goers sad replacement for a professionally presented collection. Please innovate something great. Thank you.

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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.

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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 “I’m gonna need your cleanest margarita—easy on the agave.” —Overheard at Tesuque Village Market “The world is my oyster and I’m not sure I like it.” —Overheard at The Brakeroom Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM • • AUGUST AUGUST3-9, 3-9,2022 2022

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S FREP ORTER.COM / FUN

NEW MEXICO RESIDENTS DISAGREE OVER BREAKING BAD STATUES DEDICATED IN ALBUQUERQUE Oh, so now this state has mixed feelings about monuments with nefarious backstories, huh?

INFLATION, SHRINKFLATION STILL HITTING HARD But at least gas went down, like, four cents.

FOX NEWS DOESN’T AIR TRUMP SPEECH, BUT IT DID AIR PENCE’S What world is this where we’re like, “Oh, good, they only aired a speech from Pence?”

RAIL RUNNER GETTING MORE TRAINS ON ITS SCHEDULE And people are still gonna be all loud in the quiet car, we bet.

HEAVY RAINS MEAN MORE RATTLESNAKES IN NORTHERN NM Bad news for the rabbits; good news for exactly no one.

ALL SANTA FE OPERA PRODUCTIONS FOR THE SEASON HAVE PREMIERED In your face, Sydney and New York and, like, Vienna or wherever!

BILL RUSSELL, NICHELLE NICHOLS BOTH DIE IN SPAN OF TWO DAYS Rest well, you complete and absolute champions.

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W E A R E WAY M O R E TH A N W E D N E S DAY H E R E A R E A CO UP LE O F O N LI N E E XC LUS I V E S :

WAITLISTED Author, scientist Robin Wall Kimmerer’s coming to IAIA and the Botanical Gardens, but you’ll have to be vigilant if you want to get in.

SHIRTS ’N’ SUCH You can still get a cool Best of Santa Fe 2022 tee at sfreporter.com/shop.


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Chamber Champions Santa Fe Hispanic Chamber of Commerce looks to improve Southside community B Y G R A N T C R AW F O R D g r a n t @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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he Santa Fe Hispanic Chamber of Commerce has an opportunity, its members say, to combine forces with the community and improve Southsiders’ quality of life. At a recent Thursday-night gathering inside the office of Jairo Gutierrez, a local State Farm insurance agent, chamber members, along with Mayor Alan Webber, reiterated their intent to empower business owners and support local residents. The group is coming off a few quiet years, as the pandemic forced its leadership to hit pause. Now, the organization is working to revive its membership and inject some new life into the chamber. “So I think it’s definitely a revamp, especially from COVID,” chamber President David Fresquez tells SFR. “During COVID, everyone was just trying to figure that out. Now that we’re out of COVID—knock on wood—one of our focuses is definitely on young professionals.” The group is using initiatives like a “40 Under 40” awards campaign to highlight young entrepreneurs and bring fresh faces on board. (Award nominations were this spring and an inaugural event to honor them is planned for the fall.) With more than 100 members now, the chamber’s leadership believes the economy along Airport Road is

set to boom, largely because it’s built of people who have already carved out success for themselves. “I think one thing everyone here has in common is we work our butts off and we take the risk,” Fresquez told the group during its Business After Hours event in July. “You may be in debt, you may be tired, you may have had a bad day, but the next day you claw your way back up.” Fresquez found his calling after his scholarship to play soccer for Colorado State University Pueblo ran out 13 years ago. In need of a job, he walked across the street from his apartment complex to a nursing home. He had no clue what he was doing at the time, but it was there that he fell in love with serving elderly people. After a quick stint working in sales and marketing for the San Antonio Spurs, he decided to pursue his passion and started his own business, which now has 30 employees, to ensure those in their golden years live comfortably. “One thing I had in common with them is they missed home, they missed family,” Fresquez said during the meeting. “So I started up my business back home here in Santa Fe, called Age Friendly. We do exactly that. We help people age in place at home, instead of into a nursing home or assisted living.” Stories like Fresquez’s are common around the newly revitalized Hispanic chamber. There are people like Perla Ramon and her husband, Pedro Lopez, who have seen their business, Fusion Tacos, expand across the city since moving their first truck from a location on Cerrillos Road to Airport Road in 2019. “Our customers kept on telling us, ‘We’re not going to go to that side,’” Ramon

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Danilo Hernandez, front, and Mauricio Gutierrez prepare meals at Fusion Tacos on Airport Road in Santa Fe.

says. “They said, ‘Southside is really dangerous.’ I said, ‘The more dangerous, the better the tacos.’” To Ramon’s surprise, the food truck thrived at the Airport Road location. Fusion Tacos has since opened locations at Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe Brewing Co. and Santa Fe Place Mall. The duo isn’t stopping there, though. The business is franchising, with one location now in Albuquerque and another on the way. Then there’s El Paisano Supermarkets, owned by Carlos and Maria Andre, with Moises Tarango serving as executive director. Tarango remembers the days when Carlos sold candy from his apartment in the early 1990s. Today, El Paisano has locations on Cerrillos Road in Santa Fe and on North Riverside Drive in Española, while a new storefront on Airport Road is in the works. “That land where we’re building the new store, there used to be a tree there on the sidewalk,” Tarango says. “[Carlos] would be there in the shade selling candy. Now, he’s building that store and he’s so very excited, because after 25 years, look how far we’ve come.” While Santa Fe’s downtown has long

served as a tourist destination, the Southside hasn’t enjoyed the same attention. But the area has grown over the years, and Mayor Webber says businesses on the Southside are still making progress. “I basically believe that any business does three things really well,” Webber told the chamber. “It creates a community, it makes connections, and it starts conversations about how to have a better place…Everybody here is doing those three things, at least, and the better you do them the more you grow your brand and the things you value—the reason you’re doing it in the first place.” The chamber wants to use its platform and experience to help the surrounding community flourish. Now is the time, members say, to build on what’s already been done to enhance the Southside. The chamber is inviting others to join the effort. “I think the thing I would like everyone to have is the goal of helping people,” says Gutierrez, the State Farm agent. “I think if we start with that and that’s always the foundation of what we’re doing, it’s going to come back. The more you give, the more will come back.”

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S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS

Slowing the Flow and other structures before releasing it back into the river. For Hensley and others who worked on the garden, such projects indicate an inflection point in the way Santa Fe thinks about stormwater. “Our paradigm of dealing with stormwater has been that it’s a menace,” Hensley says, and Santa Fe, like most cities, is designed to get it off the landscape as quickly as possible before it floods buildings and damages infrastructure. But she says that needs to change. Stormwater can be a tool to improve Santa Fe’s resilience in the face of climate change, instead of becoming a greater threat as storms become more severe and unpredictable. That’s the idea behind rain gardens. Rather than water running off streets, parking lots and other impervious surfaces into storm drains, rain gardens guide stormwa-

State, Santa Fe groups reimagine stormwater management as a positive as climate change marches on B Y A N N A B E L L A FA R M E R a h f a r m e r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

MORI HENSLEY

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he arroyo near her house had flooded, so Mori Hensley knew it was time: She climbed in the car with her mom and dog and drove into town to see the new Brother’s Lane Rain Garden on East Alameda in action. The City of Santa Fe’s Public Works Department and the watershed association announced the completion of the Brother’s Lane Rain Garden and Camino Escondido Stilling Basins on July 6, and they’ve been tested during recent monsoon rains. Hensley saw stormwater running off from east of Paseo de Peralta and rushing down the side of the road. Usually, that water races through the gutters, occasionally diverting into storm drains and running into the Santa Fe River, carrying with it all the trash, cigarette butts, petrochemicals, tire residue and other contaminants it’s picked up along the way. “It’s like taking a fire hose to the soil,” says Hensley, who is the executive director of the Santa Fe Watershed Association. “It’s basically ripping the soil away along with any plant roots or microbes holding the soil together— so after the storm has passed, the landscape and the channel are left drier than before.” This day, though, it looked a little different: The big puddle that normally accumulates at the corner of East Alameda and Old Santa Fe Trail during a storm was smaller than usual. The scene might have gone unnoticed by most Santa Feans, but Hensley—project manager for the new rain garden—saw it as a win. Funded by a River Stewardship grant from the state Environment Department for about $160,000, the project is a collaboration between the Santa Fe Watershed Association, the City of Santa Fe, the RainCatcher Inc., and Watershed West. It’s the latest project in the Alameda Rain Garden Program, a city initiative designed to take stormwater from the streets, slow it down and improve its quality by passing it through “bioinfiltration basins”

ter into “stilling basins” where it can pool and infiltrate into the soil. In the Brother’s Lane Rain Garden, designed by Reese Baker, owner of sustainable landscaping company The RainCatcher, a special mixture of soil in the basins that helps water infiltrate more quickly—24 hours at most, Hensley says. There’s a series of basins, each of which serves a purifying function. Water flows from the street into the first stilling basin, which catches trash and debris and can be easily cleaned out. During a rainstorm, the water in the first basin is almost black. In the next basin, there are native grasses with extensive root systems that stabilize the soil, adding carbon and helping to trap chemicals and break them down. “A lot of petrochemicals are carbon-based, so they still have value to some of these species,” Hensley explains. Then, the stormwater encounters elm branches that have been inoculated with oyster mushroom spores. The mushrooms help to further break down chemicals. The rain garden serves another ecosystem benefit: aquifer recharge. By slowing

ABOVE: East Alameda has a problem with puddling during storms, says Melissa McDonald, Parks and Open Space Division director. BELOW: Rain gardens on East Alameda are designed to slow stormwater and allow it to infiltrate into the soil, purifying and replenishing water supplies.

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stormwater down, instead of stripping soil moisture, rain garden structures lend soil the ability to hold moisture, allowing water to infiltrate—“hopefully into our shallow aquifers where they can be kind of a savings account for our city water,” Hensley says. She notes that the city has a practice of “resting wells,” relying primarily on surface water to save groundwater for when other resources aren’t as available. “I look at stormwater management as not only a way to deal with a potential hazard, but also as a way to improve quality of life for our community and our ecosystems,” says Zoe Isaacson, acting river and watershed manager for the city. “Back in the day, we thought we were in the land of plenty, so we pumped our groundwater as much as we needed and we didn’t recognize that we were depleting our aquifers and not recognizing the surface water for its value.” The Camino Escondido Stilling Basins focus on curbing erosion, explains Melissa McDonald, Parks and Open Space Division director. They cleaned out a place that was “basically just an old dump site,” creating structures so that as water comes from the streets—Camino Escondido, Canyon Road and others—it flows through a pipe to a series of energy dissipators that slow water down like eddies in a stream, capturing sediment and debris in the basins and then releasing the water into the river. McDonald says the city is working with the watershed association to test the water quality at the entrance to the basin and then in the river to track any improvement. So far, they’ve only gotten a baseline, which McDonald says “told us what we’ve kind of known”—that the site has an issue with contamination from dog waste and car pollutants. “It’s not flagged as an area of concern,” she says, “but it’s something that we wanna watch because as our city grows and there’s more traffic and people walk more dogs, we need to keep our water quality up for our downstream users and for our wastewater treatment plant.” Finding ways to slow stormwater is also a safety concern. Flash floods happen when water can’t seep into the earth quickly enough, and they can be fatal. Just last week, the Santa Fe Police Department identified a man who’d been found dead in an arroyo after heavy rainfall on June 25 as 37-year-old Wilfredo Flores-Diaz. “Nothing is a silver bullet,” says Hensley, but she sees rain gardens and similar low-tech green infrastructure projects as an essential tool for Santa Fe to become “a more ecologically healthy and resilient place.”

SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM •• AUGUST AUGUST 3-9, 3-9, 2022 2022

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Native to the Game

Local players represent their tribe at Major League Baseball team’s Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase

COURTESY OF ATLANTA BRAVES

B Y G R A N T C R AW F O R D g r a n t @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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High school students invited to participate in the first-ever Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase stand at the foul line at the Atlanta Braves’ Truist Park.

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abriel Lomayestewa digs in, taps home plate, then smacks a hard-hit ball to the left side of the infield. Showing off his speed, he easily beats out the shortstop’s throw to reach first base and tries to soak in the moment. “It just felt like a dream,” he tells SFR days after recording a pair of infield singles, which are common for the 17-yearold Santa Fe High School senior. There’s a reason it felt so special. Lomayestewa got in the books twice for running down the base path at a $672 million stadium as part of a showcase recognizing some of the best high school ballplayers in the country. The Atlanta Braves hosted the first-ever Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase July 16-17, offering young ballplayers the chance to practice and play in front of pro and college scouts at the massive, modern Truist Park in Georgia. The top 50 high school players of Native descent, representing 35 tribal affiliations from 13 states, hit the diamond for a pro-style workout and showcase game, demonstrating their skills and learning a thing or two from big leaguers. Among them were Lomayestewa and Kyle Suina, 18, and a recent graduate from Santa Fe Indian School—both members of the Pueblo of Cochiti, located roughly 35 miles southwest of Santa Fe. With about 1,100 enrolled members, it’s a community where Gov. Phillip


GRANT CRAWFORD

Quintana says everybody knows everybody. If it weren’t for the invitation to compete in Atlanta, the pair would have been celebrating with the tribe for its annual feast day that weekend. However, if you’re an aspiring baseball prospect looking to learn, spread your name in the network of college scouts or just have a memorable time, you clear your schedule when a major league ball club offers you the spotlight. So Suina and Lomayestewa, both coming off good seasons with their high school teams, each made the nearly 1,400-mile car ride to play on the Braves’ field to impress coaches and potential college suitors. Their high school coaches praise their passion for the game, which underpins their dreams of some day making it to the big leagues themselves. If they were to come true today, the Cochiti ballplayers would join just two other active Native players in Major League Baseball: Ryan Helsley, all-star pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals and Cherokee Nation citizen; and Brandon Bailey, pitcher in the Cincinnati Reds organization and citizen of the Chickasaw Nation. According to the 2022 Racial and Gender Report Card, conducted yearly by the Institute of Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida, on opening day this year, 0.1% of MLB players were Native American. Despite the small number of Native Americans to make it to the league throughout its history (52, according to Baseball Almanac) the list includes notable figures such as Louis Sockalexis. A member of the Penobscot tribe of Maine, he’s recognized as the first minority to play in the National League, signing to play for the Cleveland Spiders in 1897, 50 years before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Olympic gold medalist and celebrated athlete Jim Thorpe—member of the Sac and Fox Nation—played for six years in the MLB. More recently, there was twotime World Series champion Jacoby Ellsbury, the first player of Navajo descent to play in the bigs. Other players with some Native American heritage include the likes of Johnny Bench and Willie Stargell. “The talent is there and baseball is in our culture,” Jude Torres, Santa Fe Indian School head baseball coach, tells SFR, adding that all Native ballplayers

Santa Fe Indian High School graduate Kyle Suina, top, and Santa Fe High School senior Gabriel Lomayestewa were recently invited to a Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase hosted by the Atlanta Braves.

need is the opportunity and a strong foundation. “There’s a lot of poverty, alcohol, drugs in the community. So it’s easy for a kid to fail at something and fall quickly into that atmosphere. So you’ve got to keep them positive.” Suina and Lomayestewa credit the support of their families, coaches and tribes for their success. The community came together when the pair hosted raffle fundraisers to pay for their trip to Atlanta. “I threw a party the other day and a lot of the tribal members came and supported me,” Suina says. “They said, ‘Just go do whatever makes you happy,’ and they said, ‘Home will always be here.’ So I have the support from my whole tribe.” He and Lomayestewa hope their fairytale experience will inspire more Native kids to strive for success that might seem unattainable. Suina says he’d like to help foster a greater representation of Indigenous people in baseball. “I think that Native Americans could get more out there through the press and media,” he tells SFR. “I think it’s great that we’re given this opportunity. This is [the Braves’] first time doing this, so we’re like the stepping stone for Native Americans to get out there into the world.” The local sluggers seized the moment. Both were skeptical when they first heard about the invitation and thought it was likely a scam. It sounded too good to be true, until they realized it was, actually, too good to pass up. “I hadn’t got an opportunity like this in my whole life,” Lomayestewa tells SFR. “After some research, we realized it was legit and this was a good opportunity for me to get my name out there.” The pair—seasoned summer ballers accustomed to traveling during the warm months—grabbed their gear and their families, and headed for Atlanta. On arrival, they folded in with the other high school players and met up with former MLB players Marquis Grissom, Johnny Estrada, Marvin Freeman and Lou Collier. After walking through the tunnel of the 41,000-seat stadium, they started off with some drills, getting work in at different positions to broaden their skill sets. They took notes from guys like Ron Jackson, a former player who served as the hitting coach for the CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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know! Stay in the

and led in slugging percentage with .694. It led to a scholarship offer from Ottawa University in Surprise, Arizona, where he signed a letter of intent to play for next year. The Braves have held similar events to allow people to experience the MLB dream, like the 44 Classic and Hank Aaron Invitational, the latter of which helped the organization find its starting center fielder, Michael Harris II. So Greg McMichael, director of alumni relations for the Braves and a former player, says events like the one this year can help the players raise their stock. “I talked to some of the college coaches and they liked what they saw,” he tells SFR. “Some of the kids were already committed to a school. I think the biggest takeaway this year was the experience; No. 2, finding out how we can continually make this better and provide opportunities to connect schools and players.” For Suina, who already has plans to play college ball, he had nothing to prove. The showcase was more of an opportunity to improve and give him some added motivation as he takes his game to the next level. “I learned that I just needed to stay focused and keep disciplined with my workouts and that hard work will take you a long way,” he says. Lomayestewa, meanwhile, wrapped up his juGabriel Lomayestewa, pictured at age 11, is set to start his senior year at Santa Fe High School. nior season at Santa Fe High with a .312 batting playing from [Kyle], so he really only had his senior year to prove himself and get his stats up,” Kasha Suina, Kyle’s mother, tells SFR. “He didn’t play for two years and that was hard for him to play catch-up, but he did it and he led the way on his team.” In his senior year at the Indian School, Suina flourished in the batter’s box. He finished with a .442 batting average in 30 games, recorded a team-best 17 doubles

COURTESY OF MARTINA VALDO

COUR TESY OF KASH A SUINA

Boston Red Sox during the team’s historic 2004 run when they won their first World Series in 86 seasons. Stepping in the same box the pros use, they took batting practice as players shagged fly balls. On the second day of the event—game day—the recruits got to hear their names called out over the stadium’s PA system as an announcer ran through the starting lineups. Lomayestewa and Suina each jogged out onto the field, standing along the foul lines for the National Anthem, just as the pros do before every game. “It was exhilarating and awesome,” Suina says. “I wasn’t expecting that at all, for them to announce our names. Overall, it was a very cool experience.” All with something in common—their Native heritage— the players got along well with the other students from A 6-year-old Kyle Suina poses for his little league photo. around the country, hearing He’s heading to Ottawa University next year. stories about where they grew up and what their baseball aspirations were. When it came time for quick read to get the out. In his second the showcase, though, the 50 all-star athplate appearance, he worked the count letes found their competitive spirit. to 2-and-2 before firing a hard-struck “It was pretty intense and I had to ball to the shortstop, who had to throw step up my game,” says Lomayestewa. from the deep left side of the infield to He followed up his first plate appearbeat the runner. ance with more of the same, hitting a The experience validated the duo afcomebacker that slapped off the pitchter adversity had reared its head in the er’s glove before bouncing to the shortform of a pandemic. Santa Fe Indian stop, whose throw was late. School shelved all athletics for two years, Make that 2-for-2 for the Santa Fe leaving Suina on the bench during cruHigh standout. cial years of his baseball development Suina came out swinging, too, knockand prompting Lomayestewa to start ing the first ball he saw over the pitcher’s over at a new school by transferring to outstretched glove, only to fall into the Santa Fe High so he could play ball. hands of the shortstop who had to make a “The pandemic took away two years of

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AUGUST 3-9, 2022

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The first-ever Native American All-Star Baseball Showcase, highlighting players across the country last month, was a “good thing for our Native youth,” says Charlene Teters, retired dean of Santa Fe’s Institute for American Indian Arts and member of the Spokane Tribe. “It doesn’t excuse the Atlanta Braves, though,” says Teters, who has been at the forefront of an ongoing national debate around high school, college and professional sports teams using Native American imagery—and often racist parodies thereof—as mascots. The reigning World Series champs hosted the event at Truist Park, inviting the top 50 Native youth players from around the country to participate in a pro-style practice and showcase game. Two local high school players, both members of the Pueblo of Cochiti, were part of the group representing 34 tribal affiliations from the US and one from Canada. Santa Fe Indian School graduate Kyle Suina and Santa Fe High School senior Gabriel Lomayestewa made the trip to Atlanta after receiving invitations to the event. The showcase comes less than a year since the Braves won the 2021 World Series, which reignited national discussion about the team’s use of Native American symbolism and an infamous fan ritual, the “tomahawk chop.” Greg McMichael, director of alumni relations for the Braves, says the organization doesn’t need to talk about its respect and admiration for Native American communities, because “actions speak louder than words.” “If they’re in Braves country, the right thing to do is to provide opportunity and access,” he tells SFR. “I think we’re doing that just not with them, but with a lot of different groups… It doesn’t matter what community you’re in. I’m looking for opportunities. We care deeply about our Native American community, because we’re so closely tied with them. So, sure, we want to help them and we’re looking at that in all groups.” Mascots, names and traditions shape a sports team’s image. Franchises funnel millions of dollars into their identity, which fans grow to cherish. So changes to an organization’s ways and culture often meet pushback from teams and their supporters. Monikers and rituals like the tomahawk chop, though, “put Native people in a situation where we’re entertainment,” says Teters. “One thing about Americans is they know very little about the people whose lands they occupy. So when these teams use these iden-

tities, it becomes a platform for people to act out their perceptions of Native people, their stereotypes of Native people. That’s why we’ve been challenging the use of our names as a sports team identity.” Teters says the Braves organization has some work to do “in terms of weaning their fans away from using Native people as entertainment,” and that the “best thing they could do is to move away from the name ‘Braves.’” Suina and Lomayestewa are fans of the Braves, though, and were excited at the chance to go play in a big league stadium. Suina says he understands the criticism the ball club has received, “but it doesn’t really affect me that much.” “I’m kind of biased about it, to be honest,” he tells SFR. “It’s kind of offensive, but not offensive. I’m a pretty big Braves fan, but that’s just my preference.” Lomayestewa tells SFR the Brave’s decision to host the all-Native event was “genuine,” and he doesn’t get bothered by the name or imagery. “I was at the field and they were talking to us about how Native Americans inspired them,” he says. “They want to contribute to the Native American community and showcase that Native Americans are still in America and participating in sports and everyday life.” Some players have been outspoken critics of the tomahawk chop, including 2022 all-star Ryan Helsley, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation. The National Congress of American Indians, a Native rights organization, has also long opposed the Braves’ fan ritual and team name. Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred has stood up for the team, meanwhile, saying before the World Series last year that the Native American community in the Atlanta area supports the organization, which has a close partnership with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians based in North Carolina. Braves fans have chanted along with the chop at games since the 1990s. Its use still “doesn’t sit well” with Pueblo of Cochiti Gov. Phillip Quintana, but he likes the team’s name. “They should try to make sure that when they do speak of Native Americans, they should try to do it in a respectful, honorable way,” he says. As the nation has recently seen major sports franchises buckle to public pressure and drop racist names for their teams, such identity overhauls are massive undertakings. So the chances of the Braves changing course anytime soon are slim, Teters tells SFR, but she adds that events like the recent showcase bolster dialogue for organizations and Native communities to find common ground. (Grant Crawford)

COURTESY OF ATLANTA BRAVES

The Tomahawk in the Room

Native to the Game

Justin Jose, left, shakes hands with Kyle Suina at the Atlanta Braves’ Native American AllStar Baseball Showcase.

I think the biggest takeaway this year was the experience; No. 2, finding out how we can continually make this better and provide opportunities to connect schools and players. -Greg McMichael, director of alumni relations for the Braves

average in 15 games for the Demons. Listed as 5-feet-4-inches tall, the lifelong athlete doesn’t let his stature affect his confidence, but it’s put a chip on his shoulder. “I’m not the biggest guy out there,” he tells SFR. “I just wanted to prove that with my size, it doesn’t matter. I

can be just as good as any of the guys out there, no matter how big they are.” Lomayestewa is also hoping to extend his playing career after high school. He’ll continue attending camps and hopes to garner some college offers over the next year, with the goal of hearing his name called on MLB draft day. Before that, though, Santa Fe High coach Ian Farris expects a strong showing from the team leader during his senior campaign. “I know for a fact that he’s going to bring that competitive fire,” Farris says. “Our team has 12 seniors coming back, so it’s going to be a good team and I think he’s going to be a big part of it, just making sure that we’re getting on base. That was a big thing for us last year. He got on base so much, not just because he’s small. He can hit the ball over people’s heads and is surprising people.” Wherever the future takes the allstars, they understand they always have a place at the Pueblo of Cochiti, and it’s the work ethic they’ve shown that has people close to them expecting great things in whatever they choose to do next. “Baseball ends at some point for everyone, but those kinds of traits are going to be what help carry you and be successful through life,” Farris says. Until then, Lomayestewa and Suina are going to keep playing for as long as they can. With the success they’ve seen thus far, they might just be rounding first.

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WILL WILSON

DITCH THE KIDS When friends visit from out of town, a similar refrain occurs: They would totally visit Meow Wolf, they say, if it weren’t for those meddling kids. Yeah, the Santa Fe-based arts corporation’s hometown perma-installation might be big on stuff for the kid in all of us, but perhaps you’d like to slide down a washing machine portal without some screaming toddler throwing a fit with their sticky hands a few yards away. Look, with all respect to kids (we believe the children are our future), sometimes you’ve gotta chug beers and catch the neon lights with a panel of your peers. That’s what Adulti-Verse is all about. Oh, and for those parents among you who are clutching your child-rearing pearls right now? You can still take them most other times. Plan accordingly. (Alex De Vore) Adulti-Verse: 8 pm-closing Thursday, Aug. 4. $32-$42 Meow Wolf, 1352 Rufina Circle, (505) 395-6369

COURTESY MEOW WOLF / PHOTO BY NATHAN SPARKS

EVENT THU/4

S FREP ORT ER.COM /ARTS / S FRP I CKS

DANCE, DANCE EVOLUTION

Tin Out of Ten An archaic art form brings new life to Native photography Nothing about the tintype photo process screams “easy.” You’ve got to be patient and cautious; you’ve got to use just the right amount of chemicals to ensure your image comes to life. It’s easy to make smudges, add cracks and even to set the tintypes on fire. But for photographer Will Wilson (Diné), working in tintypes has become a kind of ritual. “In the digital age, I think people are removed from process in photography,” Wilson tells SFR. “I’ve always done handmade photography. It’s alchemy. It’s beauty. It means something to slow down and take a portrait in the age of the selfie.” Wilson’s new exhibition at Foto Forum Santa Fe is part of a decade-long project entitled Critical Indigenous Photographic Exchange (CIPX). In these pieces, Wilson asks: What if Native people had invented photography? What, exactly, might that mean for modern art? Wilson’s work, which has been shown in Seattle, Portland, Switzerland and elsewhere around the globe, derives much of its inspiration from Wisconsinborn photog Edward S. Curtis, who famously photographed the Diné after the Long Walk (the deportation and attempted genocide) where they were, in 16

AUGUST 3-9, 2022

essence, POWs. Curtis’ work brought widespread imagery of Natives to the larger world, and is now seared into the public imagination. In addition to displaying tintypes, Wilson will offer a chance for patrons to take part in their own metallic memories through new photos, but do note that spots will surely fill up quickly. Foto Forum founder Sage Paisner hopes to organize more sessions in the future, but if you miss out you can still watch Wilson as he creates. Through his accompanying app, Talking Tintypes, viewers can even engage with augmented reality elements, which add a new sort of life to old-school photographs and practices. “In a way, I wanted to complicate history’s narrative, to unsettle it,” Wilson explains. “Taking the photo for the sitter is a process, and I love process.” (Riley Gardner)

CRITICAL INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHIC EXCHANGE OPENING

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5-7 pm Friday, Aug. 5. Free Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo De Peralta, (505) 470-2582

Though we’ll likely always feel the 2020 death of celebrated hoop dancer Nakotah LaRance, the Lightning Boy Foundation with which he worked has most certainly kept the dance dream going this whole time. Case in point? The upcoming Nakotah LaRance Youth Hoop Dance Championship on Museum Hill. In a nutshell, youths ages 5-24 will come together to show their stuff across a variety of age-based tiers, and it will be beautiful. Named for Valentino “Tzigiwhaeno” Rivera, aka Lightning Boy—another Indigenous dancer taken from us too soon—the foundation has inspired and fostered countless dancers since its 2017 inception. In summation: Incredible dancers taking part in a pair of incredible legacies might just be one of the cooler sentences we’ve ever gotten to write. (ADV) Nakotah LaRance Youth Hoop Dance Championship: 9 am-5 pm Saturday, Aug. 6 and Sunday, Aug. 7 Free. Museum Hill, 710 Camino Lejo lightningboyfoundation.com

EXHIBIT WED/3-SAT/6 CUBA LIBRE If you’ve been following the career of Santa Fe’s Stuart Ashman, you’ll know he worked as top brass for both the Center for Contemporary Arts and the International Folk Art Market. Today, however, Ashman presides over the Midtown gallery Artes de Cuba with co-director Peggy Gaustad. Together, they’ve built quite a mecca to contemporary Cuban artists, and it’s time for Santa Fe to really take notice with the upcoming exhibition, Havana Printmakers. A veritable cornucopia of printed pieces across mediums like woodblock, silkscreen, collagraphs and even collage, Artes de Cuba is out to showcase that Cuban style in a way with which many might not yet be familiar. Maybe you don’t know names like Marcel Molina, Santiago Olazabal or Asbel Barroso yet—but you will. (ADV) Havana Printmakers: 10 am-4 pm Wednesday Aug. 3-Saturday Aug. 6. Free Artes de Cuba, 1700 A Lena St., (505) 303-3138

COURTESY ARTESDECUBA.COM

ART OPENING FRI/5

COURTESY MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

DANCE SAT/6


End Gun Violence Now!

W

e, the undersigned members and friends of the United Church of Santa Fe, call for an immediate and complete ban of all assault weapons and all modifications of weapons that transform them into assault-style weapons. We call upon our neighbors and businesspeople who are financially benefiting from the sale of assault-style weapons to take the moral high ground and to immediately cease and desist from all sales of assault weapons and modifications that transform weapons into tools for murder. We also ask that our law enforcement: the Santa Fe Police; Santa Fe County Sheriff’s department; and the NM State Police work together with the full force of their departments, to create a massive ongoing buyback program for assault weapons and all guns that people are willing to relinquish as they recognize a moral call to respond to the death and destruction that we have seeded in our American society. ur children are being murdered in schools staring down the barrels of assault weapons. Our youth are dying by suicide with the guns in our homes. Our siblings of color are being targeted and murdered in our streets, in shopping malls and in movie theaters. Our neighbors are being targeted as well as murdered in their houses of worship. We must recognize that what we once called “safe spaces” are now sites of horrific and unspeakable violence, murder and destruction, and sites of lingering and lasting devastation to the communities that surround them and the loved ones, survivors, and support teams left behind. We can change this! No more hiding behind rhetoric. We call on our politicians, government officials, and business leaders to take responsibility and take action. Our communities expect and demand that you do what is right and necessary to stop these atrocities from continuing to happen. ur faith teaches us to “Love God, Neighbor, and Creation.” We believe that aside from those serving in the military no American needs to be armed with a weapon of war. We want our children to have a future, we want our neighbors to feel safe in their communities, and we want our law enforcement to be able to do their jobs. Our loved ones’ lives depend on your having the courage to enact immediate measures to change the trajectory that we are on. We pray that you and we will have that courage— and we will hold you and ourselves accountable for doing what we must to end this scourge of gun violence.

O

O

Elizabeth Alexander Lynn Bower Andrews Bob Ansheles Gail Ansheles Janice Arlen Rev. Talitha Arnold Marge Austin Ann Barker Ed Barker Clifford S. Beck, M.D. Blaire Bennett Diane Bethune Kay Burdette Caroline Burnett Alice E. Casey, M.D. Jane Carson Bruce Cebell Charlene Cebell Michael Chamberlain Donna Clark Shirley Clark Judy Corbin Joan Doolittle David Doolittle Donald D. Duncan George Duncan Avril Ekstrand Jim Ekstrand Molly Elkind Sam Elkind Bradley Ellingboe Karen Ellingboe David Feldt Peggy Feldt Ferol Fell Janyth Fell Katherine Freeman Marilyn Gardner Robert Glick Andrea Hamilton Steve Hamilton Jeffrey Harvey Mary Harvey Cheryl Haskin Chris Hatfield Jacquelyn Helin

Kay Hillard Dana Hollifield Nancy Holtzman Pamela E. Homer Bonnie Freeman Hughes Hank Hughes Pam Hyde Carol Ingells Sharon Ireland Kenneth Jacks Sam Jackson Catharine Jansen, MA, MSL Jan Jansen, MD, PhD Rev. Kathleen Jimenez Donna J. Johnson John Johnson Laura Johnson Dori Jones Ella Natonabah Jones Richard Jones Sheryl F. Kelsey Steven Kerchoff Karen M. Kleeman Linda Knapp Rev. Dr. Roger Knapp Joan Knecht Cindy Knox Rev. Gary Kowalski Jack Lain José Lain-Straus Rev. Ben Larzelere III Beverly Larzelere Ann H. Lindsay Barbara MacPhee Debbie Maloney Jim Maloney Lucinda Marker Dorothy Mendelson Nancy Merchat Claudia Monteiro Candy Norris Frank Norris Lib O’Brien Marjorie Popp Rev. Dusty Pruitt Larry L. Rasmussen Nyla Rasmussen

Lin Raymond Joanne Rhodes Andrew Ritch Pat Roach Katie Rountree Russ Rountree Janis Rutschman Sarah Sawtell Tony Sawtell John Schaub Vickie L. Sewing John Shaffer Susan Shaffer Joan Sickler Ann H. Smith Charles M. Smith, M.D. Lauren Smith Peter Smith Jessica Smucker Phil Smucker, M.D. Sherri Spaar Jody Spalding Peter Spalding Robert Spitz Carolyn Stewart Royce Stewart Sally J. Stewart Thomas M. Stewart Kim Straus Sally Strong Trudy Swint James Taylor Byron Treaster Bruce Turnquist Joseph W. Ubben Rev. Victoria S. Ubben Rev. Dr. Christine Vogel Paul Vogel Eleanore Voutselas Karen A. Watson Frank Wilbanks Karen Wilbanks Fred Yoder June Yoder Kimberly Zeilik

Santa Fe Santa Fe Beer & Food Festival

August 6 & 7, 12–6 pm It’s back! Join us for the 4th Annual Santa Fe Beer and Food Festival (aka Panza Llena) on Saturday and Sunday, August 6 & 7, 12–6pm. Enjoy tasty beers from 8 New Mexico breweries 10 local food/drink vendors  Live music and entertainment ADVANCE TICKETS REQUIRED—PURCHASE/RESERVE AT GOLONDRINAS.ORG ALL OVER 21 MUST SHOW ID  NO PETS ALLOWED

The UniTed ChUrCh of SanTa fe

A United Church of Christ We are an Open and Affirming Church The Rev. Talitha Arnold, Senior Minister 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michaels Drive, near the hospital) 505-988-3295 | www.UnitedChurchofSantaFe.org | Find us on Facebook

505-471-2261  golondrinas.org  334 Los Pinos Road  Santa Fe, NM PARTIALLY FUNDED BY THE CITY OF SANTA FE ARTS COMMISSION AND THE 1% LODGERS’ TAX, COUNTY OF SANTA FE LODGERS’ TAX, AND NEW MEXICO ARTS

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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.

ONGOING ART ABOUT TIME LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta (505) 988-3250 Taos-based artist Jivan Lee's works convey the landscape surrounding his studio by the Sangre de Cristos, balancing light, weather and humanity. 10 am-6 pm, Mon-Fri 10 am-5 pm, Sat, free BRANCHING OUT Wild Hearts Gallery 221 B Highway 165, Placitas (505) 867-2450 New work from artist Bunny Bowen, featuring mixed media work and wax-resistant paintings on silk. 10 am-4 pm, Tues-Fri 10 am-2 pm, Sat & Sun, free BRICK X BRICK: ARTWORKS INSPIRED BY EARTHEN ARCHITECTURE Santa Fe Community Gallery 201 W. Marcy St. (505) 955-6707 This exhibit provides a second look at the legacy of earthen architecture and land art in New Mexico. 10 am-3 pm, Wed-Fri, free CANVAS Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St. (505) 989-8688 Joyful and thoughtful, Canvas brings us a whole new world to explore, challenging notions of what canvas can do and be. We encourage canvas here. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free

CONVERGENCE, RECENT PAINTINGS AND PHOTOGRAPHS Gerbert Contemporary 558 Canyon Road (505) 992-1100 A solo exhibition by Robert Stivers, who is known for his haunting photographs which explore color, depth and movement. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free GILDED HUMANISM Turner Carroll Gallery 725 Canyon Road (505) 986-9800 Turner Carroll Gallery celebrates Hung Liu’s legacy as a great humanist painter. 10 am-6 pm, free HIGHWAY OF DIAMONDS Smoke the Moon 616 1/2 Canyon Road smokethemoon.com Paintings by Nancy Friedland. Friedland paints the fleeting, ordinary moments that seed a lifetime of nostalgia. Noon-4 pm, Thurs-Sat, free PACIFIC Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 558 Canyon Road (505) 992-0711 A combination of largescale works on canvas and smaller-scale works on paper, inspired by the vast horizons and water flow of the Pacific Ocean. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free SHADES OF RED Placitas Community Library 453 Hwy. 165, Placitas (505) 867-3355 A dozen artists from the Placitas region show off works inspired by the color red, in styles outside their usual portfolios. 10 am-5 pm, Wed, Thurs, Sat 10 am-7 pm, Tues 1-4 pm, Sun, free STILL LIVES Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta (505) 954-5700 Penelope Gottlieb appropriates and alters existing digital prints, thus depicting the ravages of non-native species overtaking the balance of delicate ecosystems. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sat, free THE PICTURE POSTCARD No Name Cinema 2013 Pinon St. nonamecinema.org An exhibition of 20th Century photo postcards curated by Justin Rhody. On view during events or by appointment, free

THE QUALITY OF BEING FLEETING Currents 826 826 Canyon Road (505) 772-0953 Hauntingly beautiful multimedia installations, projections and video work from artists Gillian Brown and Cherie Sampson. Noon-6pm, Thu-Sun, free THE SHAPE OF COLOR Victory Contemporary 124 West Palace Ave. (505) 983-8589 Work by sculptor Rick Brunner and by painter Jerry Nabors, both of whom create fantastical imagery. 10 am-5 pm, free

COURTESY PIE PROJECTS

THE CALENDAR

DANCE EL FLAMENCO: SPANISH CABARET El Flamenco Cabaret 135 W Palace Ave. (505) 209-1302 Classic flamenco. 7:30 pm, Wed-Sun, $25-$43 LA EMI: SUMMER FLAMENCO The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive (505) 992-5800 La Emi and company have an updated show for the season. 8 pm, Wed-Sat 2 pm, Sun, $25-$55

WED/3 BOOKS/LECTURES COFFEE AND CONVERSATION 35 Degree North 60 E San Francisco St. afternoonswithchristian.com Historian Christian Saiia leads lively talks on many historical and cultural topics over coffee. Noon-2 pm, free

EVENTS HOTLINE B(L)INGO Desert Dogs Brewery and Cidery 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 307 (505) 983-0134 Fill up squares. Win prizes. It’s fun, isn’t it? Plus, there’s drinks at the bar. Jeez, just go. 7 pm, $2 YOUTH CHESS CLUB Main Library 145 Washington Ave. (505) 955-6780 We know chess is difficult, but don’t be too intimidated. Learn square-by-square and get empowered in your war games. 5:30-8 pm, free

“Salish Dancers (State I)” by Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, part of Tamarind Institute at Pie Projects.

MUSIC BEACH AND BEETHOVEN New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5072 The rhapsodic Piano Quintet of a late-Romantic American master. 6 pm, $10-$80 FLEUR BARRON AND JULIUS DRAKE RECITAL New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5072 Brahms’s atmospheric Nachtwandler and Ives’s arrangement of At the River. Noon, $10-$40

THE SOUNDING SEA Cathedral Basilica 131 Cathedral Place (505) 982-5619 The Santa Fe Desert Chorale reflects on our relationship with the glorious liquid of water. 7:30 pm, $20-$100 HIGH DESERT TRIO Second Street Rufina 2920 Rufina St. (505) 954-1068 High Desert Trio has a jamoriented bluegrass sound, which opens the doors to an improv style without limits. That’s right, feel-good tunes. 6-9 pm, free

CIARRA FRAGALE El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 Motown-inspired heartbreak pop to cerebral indie-rock. 8-10 pm, free

OPERA M. BUTTERFLY Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 René falls in love with a Chinese opera singer named Song Liling. But Song holds shocking secrets. (see Opera, page 27) 8 pm, $54-$346

New Mexico’s Premier Cannabis Dispensary 403 W. CORDOVA ROAD | (505) 962-2161 | RGREENLEAF.COM Please consume responsibly. For use by adults 21 and older. Keep out of reach of children. This product is not approved by the FDA to treat, cure, or prevent any disease. FDA has not evaluated this product for safety, effectiveness, and quality. Do not drive or operate machinery while under the influence of cannabis. There may be long term adverse health effects from consumption of cannabis, including additional risks for women who are pregnant or breastfeeding.

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EN T ER EV ENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

THE CALENDAR

THEATER

EVENTS

SKELETAL SERIES: DRIVING AROUND Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A provocative brew of physical comedy, absurdism and American naivety by Amrita Dhaliwal. 7:30 pm, $30-$75

ADULTI-VERSE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 Grown-ups only time at le ol' Meow Wolf. (see SFR picks, pages 16-17) 8 pm, $32-$42 SALAAM~SHALOM: A CELEBRATION OF PEACE Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta (505) 983-7726 Meet courageous young women peacemakers from Israel and Palestine who have chosen hope over fear. 6-8 pm, $10-$25 YARDMASTERS Railyard Park Community Room 701 Callejon St. (505) 316-3596 Help beautify the Railyard Park with your hard-earned gardening skills. Flowers, bushes, trees and more. 10 am-noon, free

WORKSHOP 8TH ANNUAL DISRUPTECH Online lanldisruptech.com Selected scientists present their ideas to entrepreneurs, investors, regional leaders, policy makers and industrial partners. Be the first to experience new technologies and what they might offer the world. 9:30 am-12:30 pm, free FALL PLANTING PREPARATIONS CLASS Reunity Farms 1829 San Ysidro Crossing reunityresources.com Enjoy an adult farm camp class and learn the best techniques for fall planting. We assume this will help make your life a little more wholesome. 9 am-noon, free

THU/4 BOOKS/LECTURES SALLY DENTON: THE COLONY: FAITH AND BLOOD IN A PROMISED LAND Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St. (505) 988-4226 Part of an investigation into the 2019 killings of nine women and children in Northern Mexico, The Colony examines the little-understood world of a polygamist Mormon outpost. 6 pm, free SANTA FE DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES: RICHARD KOGAN United Church of Santa Fe 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (505) 988-3295 A discussion on the creative genius of George Gershwin. Don’t know Gershwin? You better sign up, we don’t have time to wait around. 7 pm, $20-$25

DANCE NEW VOICES National Dance Institute of New Mexico 1140 Alto St. (505) 983-7646 Presented by Santa Fe's newest dance company, Zeitgeist Dance Theatre, New Voices brings together a number of new showcases making their public debut. 7 pm, $20

FOOD DISTILLERY TOUR AND TASTING Santa Fe Spirits Distillery 7505 Mallard Way, Ste. 1 (505) 467-8892 Spirits: We love to sip 'em, we love to mix 'em. But how does one make ‘em? Find out how here. 3 pm, $25

MUSIC CLOACAS AND JUDE BROTHERS Reunity Farms 1829 San Ysidro Crossing reunityresources.com Hear the sweet, haunting sounds of Cloacas and Jude Brothers. 7-9 pm, free ROBERT WILSON Dragon Room Bar at Pink Adobe 406 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 983-7712 A popular local folk singer brings lovely tunes to this popular bar. 5:30 pm, free FIRST THURSDAYS AT EL REY El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 Music, cocktails from La Reina, wood-fired pizza from Tender Fire Kitchen and local goods. 6-8 pm, free KALEIDESCOPE KID Santa Fe Plaza 63 Lincoln Ave. ampconcerts.org Counter-culture street music. 6 pm, free MENDELSSOHN AND RAN New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5072 Flutist Tara Helen O’Connor, violist Max Mandel and harpist June Han give the world premiere of Festivalcommissioned work. Noon, $10-$40

PILGRIMAGE: SONGS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN BASIN Cristo Rey Parish 1120 Canyon Road (505) 983-8528 Explore the cultures calling the Mediterranean Basin home through their sacred and secular music. Via the Santa Desert Chorale. 7:30 pm, $20-$100

First Fridays

SEcond SaturDaYs!

the First Friday of each month

& Second Saturday of each month in June, July, & August

OPERA

1-4 pm

FALSTAFF Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 Sir John Falstaff is a troublemaker, and four women are gonna teach him a lesson. Opera is a perfect medium for revenge, isn’t it? 8:30 pm, $49-$356

FREE

Masks required.

or call to schedule a private tour •check • us out at coeartscenter.org

THEATER SKELETAL SERIES: DRIVING AROUND Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A provocative brew of physical comedy and absurdism. 7:30 pm, $30-$75 SHAKESPEARE IN THE GARDEN: THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo (505) 471-9103 Watch Shakespeare’s comic antics involving two sets of twins in magical Ephesus. 6:45-9:45 pm, $35-$50

and

Coe Center 1590 B Pacheco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505 info@coeartscenter.org • (505) 983-6372

WORKSHOP YOGA FOR KIDS La Farge Library 1730 Llano St (505) 820-0292 Call it kinesthetic creativity. Children of all ages are invited to learn yoga’s joys. 10:30 am, free

FRI/5 ART CIPX: CRITICAL INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHIC EXCHANGE (OPENING) Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo de Peralta (505) 470-2582 A solo show by Will Wilson, who displays original tintypes (yet with a modern bend) then develops on-site, chemicals and all. (see SFR picks, pages 16-17) 5-7 pm, free CREATURELY KINDNESS Globe Fine Art 727 Canyon Road (505) 989-3888 These paintings are done in defense of animal rights and the rights of nature. All proceeds or donations will go to the National Research Development Council. 10 am-5 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 21

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THE DANCE BARNS | 1140 Alto Street | Santa Fe | 505.795.7088 THE HILAND THEATER | 4800 Central Avenue SE | Albuquerque | 505.340.0200 SFREPORTER.COM

AUGUST 3-9, 2022

19


COURTESY DREAD SCOTT

With Artist Dread Scott

M U S I C

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Brooklyn-based Dread Scott begins his artist statement by saying, “I make revolutionary art to propel history forward,” and, across his storied career, that’s precisely what he’s done. Scott has become what some describe as a provocateur: He’s spoken at TED Talks; he’s been shown in the Whitney Museum, MoMA and the Brooklyn Museum. Scott’s 2019 community-engagement piece, “Slave Rebellion Reenactmen,t” has even been called one of the most important artworks of the decade. And now, he’s coming to Santa Fe to talk as part of the Santa Fe Art Institute’s Art of Change 2022 fundraising series (5:30 pm Saturday, Aug. 6. $250-$1,400. 1600 St. Michael’s Drive Bldg. 31, sfai.org) We caught up with Scott to learn more. (Alex De Vore) Would you say you feel a responsibility in any form as an artist to tackle big things, to help us filter emotions? I guess I feel as a person it’s important to fight for the world you want to bring into existence. Some people have a disproportionate influence, and artists are some of those people. What artists do matters. This is a world that is brutally divided, principally between the tiny handful of people who control the great wealth and knowledge humanity as a whole has produced—and the people who produce that. Billions of people are functionally locked out of full participation in society. They can’t have a conversation like we’re having right now because they’re busy working out how to eat. Those of us who have the relative luxury to work with ideas—do we reinforce the status-quo, or do we try to upend that in some ways large or small? I think it’s really important to talk about the big questions. As far as emotions, there are tons of ways artists have addressed this, and some of them are very emotional. And I mostly don’t make work safe from my own personal feelings, per se. I’m just trying to look at what would it mean for people to understand that

enslaved people were self-determined and trying to get free in the 1800s; that their descendants can try to make rebellions in the present, whatever that means. What does it mean to look at what the US flag and patriotism, and to give all sort of ordinary people the opportunity to participate in that conversation? You’ve had your work banned. Do you feel a sense of accomplishment from that, almost like it’s working as intended on some level? I tend to focus on the people who were inspired by it—people in housing projects who don’t, let’s be honest, much think about contemporary art works by undergraduate art students or standing in line to see the work. [In 1989] America was becoming more militaristic, and it wasn’t quite the War on Terror, but they were starting to invade more countries and bomb more countries. People were starting to have more questions about that, so I think those are the people I’m mostly focused on, and the fact that the rulers of the country didn’t like this work and went to the extraordinary length of banning it says a lot about the power of art and the frugalness of this system. People questioning the flag and US patriotism...to ban an artwork that does flies right in the face of the First Amendment. It was about much more than my artwork, but yeah, the work is working as intended. I read somewhere in an interview that you’ve considered the last few years inspiring. Are you still feeling that? The protests around George Floyd were very inspiring—that people all over this country and the world and in big cities and small towns, including towns that don’t have a lot of Black people—were saying Black lives matter. The initial opening salvos of #MeToo were very good; the youth fighting for climate justice. Some of the far-too-small but courageous response to the overturning of Roe v Wade, the young activists—mostly women, but people of all genders—that’s mostly good, but the other part of the dynamic is that fascism is on the rise all over the world and is particularly manifesting in the US. I wouldn’t say I’m hopeful, but I also don’t think it’s bleak. The fact that there were all these people standing up around George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, that was important for its own right, but there were also people who learned something. There are a lot of people looking at what’s going on with the Supreme Court ruling of Roe, and they don’t believe in this minority rule, which is very open that the Republicans in general are completely about that and disenfranchising people. I think art helps people see questions differently. An extended version of this interview is available at sfreporter.com/art/3questions


THE CALENDAR

EN T ER EV ENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

DEEP IN THE HEART OF SUMMER (OPENING) Main Library 145 Washington Ave. (505) 955-6780 Mechanized and illuminated sculptures inspired by literature. 4-6 pm, free LEON BERKOWITZ: THE CATHEDRAL PAINTINGS Peyton Wright Gallery 237 E Palace Ave. (505) 989-9888 An exhibition of works showcasing Berkowitz’s use of color, line and depth. 9 am-5 pm, free LUCID LANDSCAPES FOR THE SOUTHWESTERN DREAMER (OPENING) Hecho Gallery 129 W Palace Ave. (505) 455-6882 Daniel McCoy (Muskogee Creek/Citizen Band Potawatomi) displays his stylized hodgepodge of punk, pop culture, landscape and cartoon ideologies. 5-7 pm, free MARX: THE EILEE SERIES (OPENING) Gaia Contemporary 225 Canyon Road #6 (505) 501-0415 Historically, feathers were associated with ancient cultures who believed they possessed the sacred powers of the heavenly realms. Nicki Marx’s feather work relates to contemporary cultural ideas. 5-7 pm, free OUT OF FIRE (OPENING) Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road (505) 988-3888 Works of powerful materiality in which the artists use steel, coal and rubber. 5-7 pm, free THE BOSQUE DEL APACHE (OPENING) Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace Ave. (505) 501-6555 Sculptures inspired by visits to the Bosque del Apache, all created by Star Liana York. 5-7:30 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES SANTA FE ORIGINS AND ANCIENT TRAVELERS (OPENING) Historic Santa Fe Foundation 545 Canyon Road, Ste. #2 (505) 983-2567 Check out the handmade, interactive art book which features the history of Santa Fe. 5-7 pm, free

DANCE AMPLIFIED National Dance Institute of New Mexico 1140 Alto St. (505) 983-7646 Original and new works from professional and emerging choreographers. 7 pm, $20

DANCE AS PRAYER BODY Santa Fe 333 West Cordova Road (415) 265-0299 An evening of conscious dance led by DJ Chelsee. Think of it as a refreshing way to start the weekend via the magic of movement and nice stretches. 7-8 pm, $20 STARS OF AMERICAN BALLET: PROGRAM 1 Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 Stars of American Ballet brings together remarkable principals and soloists from the nation’s most renowned and acclaimed ballet companies. 7:30-9:30 pm, $40-$125

EVENTS END OF SUMMER READING DANCE PARTY Main Library 145 Washington Ave. (505) 955-6780 Did you participate in the library’s summer reading program? Then you’re invited to enjoy music, dancing, crafts and a raffle to celebrate all the little hardworking readers. 4-6 pm, free GAIA'S GATHERING Un'U 34503 US Hwy 285, Velarde gaiasoasisnewmexico.org This transformational New Mexico-based festival is a celebration of culture and creativity. Experience yoga, workshops, ceremony and music. Noon-10 pm, $55-$444 PUBLIC GARDEN TOUR Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo (505) 471-9103 Bring out the fam and learn all about the rich botanical heritage and biodiversity from a trained docent. 10-11 am, $7-$10

FOOD DISTILLERY TOUR AND TASTING Santa Fe Spirits Distillery 7505 Mallard Way, Ste. 1 (505) 467-8892 Taste test fresh spirits. 3 pm, $25 PANCAKE SUNDAYS Reunity Farms 1829 San Ysidro Crossing reunityresources.com Owl Peak will be providing pancakes and other treats, from one farm to another. 9 am-11 am, free

MUSIC FLUX QUARTET New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5072 The FLUX Quartet premieres festival-commissioned works by the acclaimed German composer Detlev Glanert. 6 pm, $10

FREDDIE SCHWARTZ Ahmyo Wine Garden & Patio 652 Canyon Road (505) 428-0090 Classic rock and acoustic guitar. 3-6 pm, free GREG ABATE Club Legato 125 E Palace Ave. lacasasena.com/clublegato One of the most exciting alto saxophone players around, Greg Abate is a hard bop master. 6 pm, $25-$30 MYSTICS AND MAVERICKS Cathedral Basilica 131 Cathedral Place (505) 982-5619 In this program, the Desert Chorale showcases works of medieval feminists. 7:30 pm, $20-$100 MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD Fort Marcy Park 490 Bishops Lodge Road ampconcerts.org Bright, wellness-pop tunes. 6-9 pm, free SHIBA SAN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 French hip-hop blended with the Chicago House scene. 10 pm, $28 TGIF CONCERT First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave. (505) 982-8544 Organ music FTW. 5:30 pm, free (but donate)

La Emi

AT THE BENITEZ CABARET AT THE LODGE AT SANTA FE

Now to Sept 4

OPERA TRISTAN UND ISOLDE Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 Potions, star-crossed lovers and the betrayal of friends. 8 pm, $49-$356

WED–SAT 8PM

THEATER A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Unitarian Universalist Santa Fe 107 N. Barcelona Road upstartcrowsofsantafe.org The faerie world collides with four young lovers in the wood outside ancient Athens. Via Upstart Crows of Santa Fe. 6:30 pm, $15 SKELETAL SERIES: DRIVING AROUND Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 A provocative brew of physical comedy, absurdism and American naivety. 7:30 pm, $30-$75 SHAKESPEARE IN THE GARDEN: THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo (505) 471-9103 Expect characters making errors, but they’ll be doing it in a garden, which is neat. 6:45-9:45 pm, $35-$50

Doors 7:15pm

SUN MATINEE 2PM

Doors 1:15pm

Special guest appearances by VICENTE GRIEGO with Gabriel Lautaro Osuna Eloy Cito Gonzales Javier Saume Mazzei

TICKETS FROM $25 $55 HHandR.com/entertainment

505-660-9122

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

SFREPORTER.COM

AUGUST 3-9, 2022

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THE CALENDAR

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OPERA THE BARBER OF SEVILLE Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 The barber of Seville helps lovers get together. We cannot speak for his results. 8 pm, $54-$376

THEATER A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Unitarian Universalist Santa Fe 107 N. Barcelona Road upstartcrowsofsantafe.org Ya’ll know Shakespeare loves his Athenian tales. Marriages shall go awry. 6:30 pm, $15 SKELETAL SERIES: DRIVING AROUND Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 Driving Around, by Amrita Dhaliwal, is a brew of physical comedy and absurdism. 2 pm, 7:30 pm, $30-$75

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MUSIC ELIZABETH ANGLIN The Hollar 2849 NM Hwy 14, Madrid (505) 471-2841 Slow and easy soul for our soulful and easy-listening readers. 11 am-2:30 pm, free VANILLA POP Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. (505) 303-3808 A tongue-in-cheek humor, swanky attire and “almost” state of the art bubble machine. 8 pm, $10 BLAIR & PHIL G NIM M B GatNLamy U Nuckolls Brewing IMMStation RI IBTrail U 152 Old Lamy R (505) 372-0006 Blair Williams and Phil Rader perform live Americana music in the historic Lamy Train Station. 4-6 pm, free

“Spring Break“ by Maggie Taylor, from the show Internal Logic, opening at photo-eye Gallery Sautrday, August 6.

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ART OF CHANGE The Santa Fe Art Institute 1600 St. Michaels Drive (505) 424-5050 SFAI is excited to bring back Art of Change, a dynamic evening celebrating catalytic artists. 5:30-8:30 pm, $250 END SUMMER TLA READING H HTOF •LA •DANCE PARTY E E H Fe Public Library Santa Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive (505) 955-2820 A Southside invitation for those in the summer reading program: Music, dancing and crafts. 4-6 pm, free

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EVENTS

FILM RAILYARD SUMMER MOVIE SERIES: DOG Railyard Park 740 Cerrillos Road (505) 316-3596 Bring your dog to Dog so you can both drool over Channing Tatum. The movie is called Dog, get it? Dog. 8 pm, free

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BRUTALLY SENSITIVE (OPENING) NO LAND 54 1/2 E. San Francisco St., Ste. 7 (216) 973-3367 From handmade objects to computer-based encryption systems, Ranran Fan’s invented devices are a matter of necessity, designed to address challenges that she has faced as a woman, as a Chinese citizen and as a foreigner in the US. 6 pm, free INTERNAL LOGIC (OPENING AND BOOK SIGNING) photo-eye Gallery 1300 Rufina Circle, Ste. A3 (505) 988-5152 x202 Artist Maggie Taylor works in photomontage. Her new show is just that—plus she’ll be signing copies of her new book, naturally titled Internal Logic. 3-5 pm, free LIFE IN FLUX: ART AND ADVENTURE IN NORTHERN NEW MEXICO (OPENING) Eye on the Mountain Art Gallery 614 Agua Fría St. (928) 308-0319 LadyInFlux, a.k.a Laura Walker, is a dynamic artist, gallerist and entrepreneur bringing her style, intuition and sass to the canvas. 5-9 pm, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET In the West Casitas HTL 1612 Alcaldesa AE St. (505) 310-8766 H This is a weekly outdoor art market. Enjoy fine art and crafts by local artists, just north of the Railyard water tower. 9 am-2 pm, free

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NAKOTAH LARANCE YOUTH HOOP DANCE CHAMPIONSHIP 2022 Museum Hill 710 Camino Lejo lightningboyfoundation.com Hoop dance championship. (see SFR picks, pages 16-17) 9 am-5 pm, free NEW VOICES National Dance Institute of New Mexico 1140 Alto St. (505) 983-7646 Features world premieres from choreographers Lauren Edson, Francisco Gella and Yusha-Marie Sorzano. 7 pm, $20 STARS OF AMERICAN BALLET: PROGRAM 2 Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St. (505) 988-1234 See remarkable principals and soloists from the nation’s most renowned ballet companies. This show is led by acclaimed dancer and choreographer Daniel Ulbricht. 7:30 pm, $40-$125

SAND PLAY SATURDAY Railyard Park 740 Cerrillos Road (505) 316-3596 Have the kids explore, discover and think creatively in the park’s sand pit. Get those design skills up and running at an early age. 10 am-noon, free SANTA FE PICKLEBALL DAY FUNDRAISER Fort Marcy Park 490 Bishops Lodge Road tinyurl.com/78uys43j A friendly and fun-filled round robin tournament, welcome to anyone in the community at any level. This is a fundraiser to help support our local Habitat for Humanity. 9:30 am-4 pm, $35-$75

COURTESY PHOTO-EYE GALLERY

TAMARIND INSTITUTE AT PIE PROJECTS Pie Projects 924B Shoofly St. (505) 372-7681 One week only! See this pop-up exhibition showcasing a selection of fine art lithographs. 11 am-5 pm, free

YOGA AT THE FARM Reunity Farms 1829 San Ysidro Crossing reunityresources.com Join certified yoga instructor Mariela Rodriguez for a yoga sesh under the trees. 10 am-11 am, $15

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LADY SHUG PRESENTS: A CELEBRATION OF QUEER INDIGENOUS KINSHIP SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta (505) 989-1199 An evening of drag, curated by Diné drag queen Lady ShugFree. 6-9 pm, free SHAKESPEARE IN THE GARDEN: THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo (505) 471-9103 See Shakespeare's comic antics involving two sets of twins in magical Ephesus with sorcery. 6:45-9:45 pm, $35-$50

WORKSHOP MEDITATIVE ART EXPERIENCE Strata Gallery 418 Cerrillos Road, Ste. 1C (505) 780-5403 A meditative (and artmaking) opportunity. A body-scan meditation will be led by two artists and students within the exhibition space. Noon-1 pm, free

NATURAL HEALTH TALK: ABSTRACT THERAPIE— HEALING WITH CREATIVE INTELLIGENCE Fruit Of The Earth Natural Health 909 Early St. tinyurl.com/4xjae6ww Are you a creative person who struggles to stay clam? Does your mind talk a lot? Abstract Therapie is a mix of energy healing, intuition training, creative permission and mindfulness. Learn it here. 1:30-3:30 pm, free PAINTING DEMONSTRATION WITH JIVAN LEE Couse-Sharp Historic Site 138 Kit Carson Road, Taos (575) 751-0369 A plein air painting demonstration by Taos artist Jivan Lee. 2-5 pm, free QUANTUM LANGUAGING SALON Fruit Of The Earth Natural Health 909 Early St. tinyurl.com/mwv376ux Bring your challenges and hiccups, plus your visions and manifestations: Quantum Languaging Practice Salon is a space which is devoted to up-leveling our languaging habits. 3:30-4:30 pm, free

SUN/7 ART BRANCHING OUT (ARTIST RECEPTION) Wild Hearts Gallery 221 B Highway 165, Placitas (505) 867-2450 New work from artist Bunny Bowen, featuring mixed media work and wax-resist paintings on silk. 1-4 pm, free RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Railyard Artisan Market 1607 Paseo de Peralta (505) 983-4098 The Railyard Artisan Market is dedicated to local artisans and small creative businesses. Each week rotates vendors, so check it out every week. 10 am-3 pm, free


E NTE R E V E N TS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

EVENTS HONORING TRADITION AND INNOVATION: 100 YEARS OF SANTA FE’S INDIAN MARKET New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave. (505) 476-5100 A spectacular exhibition of the market’s history, tracing that history through artwork, photos and interviews. 10 am-5 pm, free NEW MEXICO OUTDOOR PASS: BIRDS Los Luceros Historic Property West of Hwy. 68, Alcalde (505) 476-1165 Luceros Historic Site opens early for Dawn to Dusk Day. See the sun emerge over the historic site, and join the Audubon Society's activities and bird activities and games. 6 am-8 pm, $7

MUSIC ALTO STREET TRIO El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 High Desert Americana. 7-9 pm, free BILL HEARNE La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St. (505) 982-5511 Americana classics for Western dancers in the historic bar. 7-9 pm, free CHAMBER MUSIC AT SAN MIGUEL CHAPEL San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 983-3974 Unique contemporary repertoire by Birtwistle, Rogerson, Messiaen and Golijov. 7-8 pm, $0-$20 DOUG MONTGOMERY Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail (505) 955-0765 Piano tunes from a master. 6:30-9:30 pm, free FESTIVAL OF SONG: NICHOLAS BROWNLEE AND ELENA VILLALÓN WITH ROBERT TWETEN, PIANO Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta (505) 982-4414 Nicholas Brownlee, bassbaritone and Elena Villalón, soprano sing for us. 4-6 pm, $45-$105 GARY GORENCE Ahmyo Wine Garden & Patio 652 Canyon Road (505) 428-0090 Gorence performs live on six and 12-string guitar, five-string banjo, harmonica and vocals. 2-5 pm, free

LUCY BARNA The Hollar 2849 NM Hwy 14, Madrid (505) 471-2841 Original, lyric-driven folk tunes. Noon-3 pm, free

THEATER A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM UU Santa Fe 107 W Barcelona Road upstartcrowsofsantafe.org Yup, there’s a whole lotta Shakespeare goin’ on. 6:30-9 pm, $15 JOE HAYES STORYTELLING Museum of Spanish Colonial Art 750 Camino Lejo (505) 982-2226 Joe Hayes returns this summer, telling Southwestern folktales at the Spanish Colonial Art Museum on Sundays in July and August. 7 pm, free NM DRAG KINGS PRESENT: KINGDOM BRUNCH, SANTA FE STYLE Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave. (505) 466-5528 Santa Fe? Are you ready for NM Drag Kings? Cause they are ready for you. Includes Drag Kings that are national pageant title holders, draglesque, burlesque and everything in-between. Noon-2 pm, free SHOP/TALK: AMRITA DHALIWAL Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St. (505) 988-4262 Part panel discussion, part workshop and part Q&A. Visiting artists are paired with local theater artists to share works in progress and engage in conversations with each other and the audience. 11 am, free SHAKESPEARE IN THE GARDEN: THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo (505) 471-9103 One of Shakespeare's early "funny" comedies, The Comedy of Errors has been making us laugh since 1592. 6:45-9:45 pm, $35-$50

WORKSHOP KIDPROV Santa Fe Improv 1202 Parkway Drive, Unit A santafeimprov.com This four-week series starts today. Not only will you laugh, but improv supports courage and reduces social anxiety. It’s a safe place to make choices, fail and let go of self-judgement. 2-4 pm, $100 YOGA IN THE PARK Bicentennial Alto Park 1121 Alto St. 60-minute Vinyasa flow class. Pop those knees and spreads those wings. 10 am, $10-$15

MON/8 ART FIBER, FLORA AND WHIMSY POP-UP 26 Alteza 26 Alteza (503) 468-9432 Eco-printed silks, eco-dyed wearables and papier mache animals and birds. 10 am-5 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES ARCHAEOLOGY IN 19TH CENTURY SANTA FE: ARTIFACTS AND ANTIQUARIANS Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta (505) 982-1200 Richard Ford, ethnobotanist and Arthur Thurnau, professor of anthropology, speak. 6 pm, $20

MUSIC HEY COWBOY! El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 This week's queer night includes three gals doing synth pop. 8-10 pm, free AUGUST HEAT La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St. (505) 982-5511 Smooth, smooth jazz. 7 pm, free

OPERA CARMEN Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 Carmen is a free-spirited factory worker. But this is opera, so you know drama will ensue due to her rebelliousness. 8 pm, $54-$376

TUE/9 BOOKS/LECTURES 77TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ATOMIC BOMBING OF NAGASAKI: MASS AND INTERFAITH DISCUSSION Cathedral Basilica 131 Cathedral Place (505) 982-5619 Join Archbishop John C. Wester for Mass followed by an interfaith panel Q&A on his pastoral letter: Living in the Light of Christ's Peace: A Conversation Toward Nuclear Disarmament. 5:15-8 pm, free

EVENTS IAIA MAKING HISTORY 2022 SCHOLARSHIP AUCTION ART EXHIBITION Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road (505) 424-2300 View contemporary Indigenous art from the live/online auctions. 1-5 pm, free

TAROT TUESDAYS AT EL REY El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 Open yourself up to a night of reflection and self-discovery with Tarot Tuesday at La Reina. 6-8 pm, $10 VÁMONOS: TAKE A WALK ON THE SOUTHSIDE Southside Library 6599 Jaguar Drive sfct.org/vamonos Talk a walk with your neighbors. 5:30-7 pm, free

MUSIC BIG CEDAR FEVER El Rey Court 1862 Cerrillos Road (505) 982-1931 A string swing band specializing in classic Western swing. 8-10 pm, free DOPAPOD Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle (505) 395-6369 A hypnotic hybrid of funk, rock, jazz, bluegrass and electronica. 7 pm, $20-$25

CLOACAS Santa Fe Plaza 63 Lincoln Ave. ampconcerts.org Cloacas composes the imagined folk music of a fictional country, eclipsing time, tradition and geography. Listening to Cloacas is like traveling sideways in time. In short, it’s a cool feeling. 6 pm, free MELLOW MONDAYS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St. (505) 988-7222 DJ Obi Zen and DJ Sato bring a bit more life to Mondays with their non-intrusive beats. 9 pm-midnight, f$5

OPERA FALSTAFF Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive (505) 986-5900 Someone needs to teach the pompous Sir John Falstaff a lesson, and who better to do it than four cunning women? Hell yeah, get his ass. 8:30 pm, $49-$356

WORKSHOP FOUNDATIONS IN MINDFULNESS MEDITATION First Christian Church 645 Webber St. caryvirtue@gmail.com This class series covers the foundations of mindfulness meditation, hence the name. 6-7 pm, $5-$20 MEDITATIONS IN MODERN BUDDHISM: LET GO OF YOUR ANGER Zoetic (505) 292-5293 230 St. Francis Drive Understanding how anger arises and why it has no benefits allows us to gain control of our mind and respond with a peaceful mind of patience. 6-7:15 pm, $10

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

MUSEUMS IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place (505) 983-8900 Athena LaTocha: Mesabi Redux. Matrilineal: Legacies of Our Mothers. 10 am-4 pm, Wed-Sat, Mon 11 am-4 pm, Sun, $5-$10 MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE 706 Camino Lejo (505) 476-1200 Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, $3-$9 MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo (505) 476-1200 Dressing with Purpose: Belonging and Resistance in Scandinavia. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, $3-$12 NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave. (505) 476-5200 Setting the Standard: The Fred Harvey Company and Its Legacy. The First World War. WORDS on the Edge. The Palace Seen and Unseen: A Convergence of History and Archaeology. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, $7-$12, NM residents free 5-7 pm first Fri of the month MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART 18 General Goodwin Road (505) 424-6487 Juried encaustic wax exhibition. 11 am-4 pm, Fri-Sun, $10

BLAIR CLARK

DANCE NAKOTAH LARANCE YOUTH HOOP DANCE CHAMPIONSHIP 2022 Museum Hill 710 Camino Lejo (505) 984-8900 See the best there are in Native youth hoop dancing. See it, it’s impressive stuff. 9 am-5 pm, free

THE CALENDAR

An engraved pocket watch from Setting the Standard: The Fred Harvey Company and Its Legacy at the New Mexico History Museum. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo (505) 982-2226 Pueblo-Spanish Revival Style: The Director’s Residence and the Architecture of John Gaw Meem. Trails, Rails, and Highways: How Trade Transformed New Mexico. 1-4 pm, Wed-Fri, $5-$12 NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave. (505) 476-5063 Transgressions and Amplifications. 10 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, $7-12

SFREPORTER.COM

POEH CULTURAL CENTER 78 Cities of Gold Road (505) 455-5041 Di Wae Powa: A Partnership With the Smithsonian. Nah Poeh Meng: The Continuous Path. 9 am-5 pm, Tues-Sun, $7-$10 WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo (505) 982-4636 Rooted: Samples of Southwest Baskets. Abeyta | To’Hajiilee K’é. 10 am-4 pm, Tues-Sat, $8

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O Y U K N A H T

ARKET MIRACUL M 2 2 OU 0 2 S E H T G N I AK M

FO R

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IT'S NO SECRET, WE GET BY WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS AND THAT INCLUDES: 2022 IFAM Accepted & Nominated Artists The IFAM Board of Directors 1,300 IFAM 2022 Volunteers IFAM Staff IFAM Staff Friends and Family IFAM Production Team AMP Concerts Amy Kaslow Aruna Cafe Aspen Medical Center Bon Appétit At IAIA Brenda Gaines Busy Bee Frozen Custard Capitol Computer & Network Solutions Celina's Biscochitos Cowgirl BBQ Daniel Quat Photography Daniel Ulibarri D'Ann L Brown Customs Broker David and Pamela Jaderlund DJ Raashan Ahmad El Rey Court Elaine and Ken Cole Española Valley Fiber Arts Center Greer Enterprises Groome Transportation Hank and Kathryn King Coleman Heath and Pamela Wingate Inspired Living Design Jambo Cafe Jan Stürmann Jane Bernard, LLC Jessey Lee JoAnn and Bob Balzer Kelly Liquor Barn Kind World Foundation Kohinoor Catering & Pantry La Posada de Santa Fe

Leigh Ann and David Brown Level Fine Art Services Linda Marcus Lindblad Expeditions Lisa Adelman Madison McClintock Manolla Café Market Street Molly’s Crepe Escape Museum Hill Café Museum of Indian Arts & Culture Museum of International Folk Art Museum of New Mexico Foundation Museum of Spanish Colonial Art Nance and Ramón José Lopez Nath’s Inspired Khmer Cuisine Nella Domenici New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs New Mexico Sabor Nusenda Credit Union Ortega’s Concession Stand Paseo Pottery Patricia Newman Peter Speliopoulos Platero Fry Bread & Navajo Tacos Prairie Dog Glass Blowing Raaga Go Railyard Urgent Care Ramson Lomatewama Randall Davey Audubon Center & Sanctuary Rick Throckmorton and Edith Howle Sabor Peruano Santa Fe Botanical Garden Santa Fe Farmers Market Institute Santa Fe High School Football Team Santa Fe Party Rentals Santa Fe Screenprinters Santa Fe Trails

AND MANY MORE! 24

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Santa Fe Valet Serum Organic Juice Bar Shiprock Santa Fe Street Food Institute Suzanne & Joel Sugg The Paleta Bar The Whole Package Tibet Kitchen Travel Masters Walter Burke Catering Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian Whole Hog Café Wild Leaven Bakery Wise Fool New Mexico World Hope Forum IFAM Volunteer Chairs: Adel Kheir-Eldin, Alison Brushaber, Andrea Fisher, Anne Salzmann, Bob & Patricia Hinton, Bonnie Clark, Brian Graves, Carol Lynn Moder, Cathaleen McGrath-Farmer, Cathy Brannon, Chris Mann, Dan & Judy Muenzberg, Daphne Miller, David & Edelma Huntley, David Schell, Denise Carter, Diane Bethune, Diane Friedman, Diane Ramsey, Donna Seifert, Ed Reiss, Elaine & Ken Cole, Elias Murray, Gloria Zamora, Hilary Cooper, John Littrell, Julia Dickenson, Juliana Romano, Khadija Ahmed, Kimberly Zeilik, Kitty Squire, Laurie Holmes, Liliana Addington, Linda O'Leary, Margie Hiestand, Maurice Oliver, Melora Palmer, Natalya Zvyagin, Nidhi Garg Allen, Nikita Shah, Pam English, Rob Kurtz, Russ Garland, Sheila Ellis, Stephanie Wilson, Stephen Newhall, Susanna MirelesMankus, Terrell Falk, & Valarie Nebres. IFAM Regional Coordinators: Belinda Wong-Swanson, Bill Zunkel, David & Lea Soifer, Deborah Weinberg, Gayle Gertler, Hal & Margie Hiestand, Linda O’Leary, Lou Ringe, Peggy Gaustad, & Rosa Carlson. *This is in addition to the amazing donors mentioned in the Market Magazine


S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / FO O D

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

S

ome years ago I found myself utterly grossed-out while halfway through eating a beautiful steak I’d cooked perfectly. Not only was the act of eating sickening, but I kept reading about how factory farming was destroying the planet. Armed with prior years of vegetarianism that I’d given up on because I really wanted a Bobcat Bite burger that one time, I quit meat right then and there and entered a world of more bread and cheese per meal than I ever thought possible. Veganism was never an option. Eventually, my doctor told me I had to add an occasional piece of fish to my repertoire because—and I say this with all respect to the vegans—I found myself exhausted regularly despite how I was supplementing my diet with vitamins and upping my non-meat proteins. Still, for the most part, I did not experience the siren call of meat. But then something interesting happened recently while I was working on a story: I watched chef Fernando Ruiz make pork tacos, decided I at least needed to try a bite and, just like that, fell in love with pork again. I started slowly—pretty much just the carnitas tacos at Paloma during a dinner and then, for a long time, nothing. But during two separate meals over the last week, I found myself riding the pork train hard, and you know what? No regrets. Last Friday, a friend suggested we check out Fiesta Oaxaca (135 W Palace Ave., (505) 982-9525), an eatery their partner

Fiesta Oaxaca and Los Amigos lured me back to the pork side swears by and one that had been on my “I’ll get to it at some point” list. Now that I’ve eaten there, I’m forced to ask myself why I slept on it for so long. First of all, the entire menu cuts a swath across the cuisine of Southern Mexico (with nods to Spanish, French and Afro-Caribbean styles to boot), and literally every item can be made vegan thanks to a little something called fake meat (mostly Seitan in this case). In other words, I could’ve been going to town this whole time, and I feel like it was a missed opportunity. My plan was to avoid meat, too, but then you see something on the menu like the al pastor burrito ($14), and you think that slow-cooked pork might just recapture those feels from Ruiz’s tacos. And so they did. Fiesta Oaxaca’s take on the pork dish finds the meat sautéed with tomatoes, guajillo chili, chipotle, garlic, onion

and pineapple. Wrapped in a gargantuan tortilla and served with red and green salsas frescas plus Oaxacan cheese, it was a triumph of flavors and textures. Even better? I felt stronger than the freaking Hulk after I crushed that bad boy—and I particularly loved the interplay of the sweet pineapple against the slight bitterness of the red salsa. My buddy zeroed in on a dish dubbed lengua capiada, a delightful meal featuring battered beef tongue lightly fried with tomato, olives and capers. “Ohmygod,” they remarked at first bite. “They’re nailing this.” Still unable to bring myself into the red meat arena, I could only watch as they tore through it ravenously. Occasionally, they’d offer up comments about its tenderness and how well it was cooked. If you’re a beef tongue kinda diner, I gleaned, this could be a new favorite. My abridged take on Fiesta Oaxaca? I’ll be back so hard. Two days later and I was on the Southside to hit up a restaurant I haven’t visited in ages but always consider whenever I drive by: Los

LEFT: The al pastor burrito from Fiesta Oaxaca. RIGHT: Carne adovada at Los Amigos.

FOOD

Amigos (3904 Rodeo Road, (505) 4380600). Santa Fe is one of those towns where a healthy number of old-timers inside can be an earmark of culinary quality, and the bevy of those, not to mention the laid-back ambiance, made the trip feel right. This time I dined with another companion who didn’t want to go the meat route and selected cheese enchiladas ($9.99). But seeing as how I’d already veered into pork country several times in recent weeks, I chose to order one of my all-time favorite New Mexican dishes and one of the few I missed during my myriad meatless months: the carne adovada burrito ($11.99). While my companion said they would describe their X-mas enchiladas as “fine, better with the red chile,” I’m prepared to call Los Amigos’ carne adovada the best I’ve eaten in a million years. Don’t get me wrong, you’ll find plenty of places that serve this dish, but I’ve nary had a more tender and flavorful version. You’re probably thinking that it had been so long since I’d eaten meat, how would I have known? Well, and I’m sure you know what I’m talking about, one doesn’t forget an incredible adovada, and this one ranked among them. Los Amigos knows what it’s doing in the red chile department, and with an explosively flavorful combo of subtle spices making up a sauce that prioritized flavor over heat (something I love when restaurants do), I could barely contain myself. Los Amigos has a massive sopaipilla, too, which I used to create my own mini stuffed sopa. “Do I just eat pork now?” I wondered to myself inside my head. “If it comes like this, I just might,” I responded to myself. One suggestion? Los Amigos offers small and large burrito sizes, and you should go with the large. Lord knows I will when I return, which will likely be any day now.

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THE

RAILYARD

ROCKS IN AUGUST

ELI “PAPERBOY” REED

FRIDAYS AT THE RAILYARD RAILYARD PLAZA SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Every Friday night at the Water Tower / 7-10pm

AUGUST 5 • D NUMBERS AUGUST 12 • MARY & MARS WITH JOE WEST AUGUST 26 • SUMMER SERIES FINALE: ELI “PAPERBOY” REED Presented by AMP Concerts • Ampconcerts.org

FRIDAY NIGHTS @ SITE SANTA FE Every Friday • 5-7pm

LAST FRIDAYART WALK

August 26 • 5-7pm Railyard Art Galleries Jazz from Swingset at the Galleries

SPECIAL EVENTS IMAGINE CHALK Thursday /August 4/ 2–4pm / Railyard Plaza Community chalk drawing for the Global Village • Tomorrowswomen.org

OBJECTS OF ART & AMERICAN INDIAN/ TRIBAL SHOW Thursday /August 11 / 6–9pm / El Museo Cultural OPENING NIGHT BENEFIT FOR SWAIA! Friday – Sunday /August 12–14 / 11am–5pm Celebrate 100 Years of Indigenous Masters Objectsofartshows.com

INDIGENOUS WAYS FESTIVAL Wednesday /August 17/ 5–8 pm / Railyard Park Indigenous Arts, Culture, Music • Indigenousways.org

RAILYARD PARK SUMMER MOVIE SERIES Every other Saturday night at Dusk Come Early! Bring a picnic or create one from a food truck. AUGUST 6 • BRING YOUR DOG TO THE MOVIE NIGHT FOR DOG AUGUST 13 • MAMMA MIA! RESCHEDULED With Pre-Show Karaoke! AUGUST 20 • NATIVE SHOWCASE FILM: “ENCANTO“ Presented by National Museum of the American Indian AUGUST 27 • SUMMER FINALE: DUNE All but August 20 presented by AMP Concerts

CONTINUING:

SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET • Tues & Sat /8am -1pm Farmers Pavilion & Plaza • USA Today’s #5 in the Nation! SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET • Sat /9am-2pm • Across from REI RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET • Sun /10am- 3pm • Farmers Pavilion EL MUSEO MERCADO • Sat / 8am- 4pm Sun /10am- 4pm • El Museo Cultural FREE COVID VACCINE POP-UP CLINIC Tuesday Farmers Market /Water Tower Saturday Farmers Market/Picnic Grove East of Railroad tracks Register here: https://vaccinenm.org/registration.htm or drop by. No appointment necessary!

ALL OUTDOOR EVENTS ARE FREE! MORE DETAILS & INDOOR EVENTS: RAILYARDSANTAFE.COM & SANTA FE RAILYARD FACEBOOK PAGE

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S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / A RTS /O P E R A

CURTIS BROWN FOR THE SANTA FE OPERA

Beautiful Metamorphosis

Santa Fe Opera’s transformational M.Butterfly soars BY JULIA GOLDBERG @votergirl

M.

Butterfly librettist David Henry Hwang first encountered the true and then-sensational story of French diplomat Bernard Boursicot and Chinese opera singer and spy Shi Pei Pu at a cocktail party. Boursicot and Shi met in China in the 1960s and carried on a 20-year affair before Boursicot learned Shi was actually a spy and a man. Both were eventually convicted for espionage in the 1980s. Hwang thought—correctly—the story would make a good play. M.Butterfly— which fictionalized the true events to tell the story of diplomat René Gallimard and soprano Song Liling—became a 1988 Tony Award winner, a Pultizer Prize finalist, spent several years on Broadway, including a 2017 revival, and has been performed in several dozen countries. Director David Cronenberg adapted the play into a film in 1993. Composer Huang Ruo first saw Hwang’s play when he was a student at Oberlin College and, spotting a poster for M.Butterfly, thought perhaps it was a theatrical version of Giacomo Puccini’s opera Madame Butterfly. He attended and “walked out a different man,” Ruo told an overflow audience last weekend at a pre-performance discussion between himself and

Santa Fe Opera’s world premiere of M. Butterfly, starring, from left to right: Kangmin Justin Kim (Song Liling) and Mark Stone (René Gallimard).

Hwang with dramaturg Cori Ellison. Hwang hadn’t actually heard Puccini’s opera when he first thought of the story’s connection to Madame Butterfly. Rather, he’d been pondering what Boursicot “thought he’d found” in Shi. “And the answer came to me, ‘Oh, he probably thought he’d found his version of Madame Butterfly,’” which Hwang knew as “a cultural stereotype of service, submissive Asian woman.” He began listening to the opera and found, “the libretto had everything that I needed to write the play.” But the story, Hwang notes in a video introduction to the opera “really works best when there is abundant theatricality and an ability for the audience to suspend disbelief” and fall into the diplomat’s world of fantasy and self-delusion. For that, he says, “I always felt on some level opera would be the right form.” That opera, which had its world premiere in Santa Fe last weekend, adds to Hwang’s play, layering references not just from Puccini’s opera, but also from the classic Chinese story and opera Butterfly Lovers. That tale also explores issues of gender and identity: A young girl disguises herself as male in order to attend school, where she falls in love with a classmate. Their love is doomed and only by dying and becoming butterflies can they be together. Song’s third act aria, “Awoke as a Butterfly,” is based on text written by Daoist philosopher Zhuangzi, in which he dreamt he was a butterfly and awoke wondering if he was a butterfly dreaming he was a man (in short).

Those rich thematic layers meet their musical counterpart in Ruo’s score, which marries elements of Western and Eastern musical styles into a driving polyphonic sound that captures the disjunctive tension inherent in Gallimard and Song’s relationship within the larger cultural tensions of the era in which the story unfolds. Conductor Carolyn Kuan, whose SFO debut was Ruo’s Dr. Sun Yat-sen in 2014—commandingly led the orchestra through the opera’s many propulsive moments, as well as its nuanced ones. The opera is Ruo’s second world premiere at SFO—he’s the only composer to have two world premieres here, the first was Dr. Sun Yat-sen—and the SFO and US mainstage premiere for countertenor Kangmin Justin Kim as Song Liling. As the elusive Song, Kim’s performance was simply breathtaking. The countertenor voice works perfectly in this role to convey the character’s gender fluidity, but the beauty of Kim’s mezzo-soprano range also allows the audience to enter Gallimard’s delusion as well. Kim’s use of vibrato to convey Song’s tremulous moments—her fluttering—were highly effective. Both Hwang and Ruo have spoken of the importance to them of authentically casting an Asian opera singer in the role, as well as the scarcity of Asian countertenors. In turn, Ruo said, Song’s role was in many ways written specifically for Kim, who has now set a high bar for future Song Lilings. As Gallimard, baritone Mark Stone fully embodied the striving and ultimate-

OPERA

ly humiliated diplomat. Stone’s final aria, when he faces himself and transforms into M.Butterfly himself, was an incredibly moving performance on opening night. Well, there are no bad performances here under the leadership of Director James Robinson. Mezzo-soprano Hongni Wu, in her SFO debut, effectively portrays Comrade Chin, the People’s Liberation Army envoy who recruits Song. SFO favorite bass Kevin Burdette ably performs the parts of both Gallimard’s boss, Manuel Toulon, and one of the judges in Gallimard’s espionage trial. The choral work, via Choral Master Susanne Sheston, is particularly effective, such as in the cocktail/gossip/singing/laughing scenes that open Acts 1 and 2. The story is told in a series of flashbacks across time and space, conveyed through Greg Emetaz’s evocative projections. One particularly poignant moment occurs when Gallimard and Song are alone together in the night, surrounded by stars, truly intimate even in the face of their shared deceits. The world has changed in many ways in the years since both the true events at the heart of the story and Hwang’s original play. One key way is a radical shift in the way people view and understand gender. The opera incorporates that shift to present the issue of gender in a more contemporary intersectional manner and re-centers the story to more fully present Song’s perspective alongside Gallimard’s. As Hwang noted in his comments prior to opening night, there is no Crying Game “gotcha” moment in M.Butterfly (there is nudity). Rather, he said, the story is now “about the way it is that lovers kind of create their own world, and they create a reality that works for them.” Ultimately, the opera transcends its source material, finding universal and operatic themes in a very specific story that still grapples with the issues of gender and racial stereotyping. In his remarks, Ruo described the goal as attempting to see the world “through a drop of water” and in so doing “to tell a human story whether about whether one could see another person as truly who that person is.”

M. BUTTERFLY 8 pm, Aug. 3, 12, 18, 24 $54-$375, subject to change; $15 standing room First-time NM residents are eligible for a 40% discount; call the box office in advance: (505) 986-5900 or (800) 280-4654. Day-of discounts available for students, seniors and military via the box office by phone or in person. santafeopera.org

SFREPORTER.COM •• AUGUST AUGUST 3-9, 3-9, 2022 2022 SFREPORTER.COM

27


MOVIES

RATINGS BEST MOVIE EVER

10

I Love My Dad Review The wrong kind of fatherly love

7

9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER

Fledgling filmmaker James Morosini (who has done a ton of acting in shows like American Horror Story and The Sex Lives of College Girls) comes out swinging with his directorial/screenwriting debut, I Love My Dad—a strange trip through the lives of an estranged father and son and a slight critique of how social media can connect us or tear us further apart. Morosini also plays the lead here, the enigmatic Franklin who, following a failed suicide attempt, moves back in with his mother to try and get on with his life. We don’t learn the particulars of Franklin’s case, but we do know he’s a bit of a gaming nerd, he’s not quite healed and he’s set some healthy boundaries with his father, Chuck, (a brilliantly pathetic Patton Oswalt) after years of missed graduations, birthdays, etc. We learn about these things through a rather clever montage of voice mails from Chuck that will likely feel all too real to some viewers. Flailing and desperate, Chuck creates an online persona using photos nicked from a local diner waitress named Becca (Claudia Sulewski). The idea is that he’ll regain some semblance of closeness to his kid, but Franklin

NOPE

8

+ THE CAST; THE MESSAGING - COULD PROVE TOO SUBTLE FOR SOME

Filmmaker Jordan Peele returns to the sci-fi/ horror milieu with Nope, his third feature film and a darkly funny rumination on how and why we consume content—and how the fallout of our obsession tends to exploit those already in compromised positions, particularly people of color. Here we follow OJ (Daniel Kaluuya) and Emerald (Keke Palmer) Haywood, estranged siblings from a family of Hollywood horse wranglers descended from the Black jockey featured in Eadweard Muybridge’s 1878 work The Galloping Horse—widely considered the first motion picture ever made. When their father (the legendary Keith David in an all-too-brief appearance) dies in a mysterious one-in-a-billion accident, our heroes find themselves the sole proprietors of the family business just as an unexplainable phenomena takes to the skies above their ranch. Meanwhile, nearby, former child actor Ricky Park (a subtly chilling Steven Yeun) runs a Western-themed amusement park with his family and attempts to make a buck off his own tragic backstory. He, too, knows of the thing in the sky, and both he and the Haywoods hope to be the first to capitalize upon its appearance. There will be no winners. 28

+ WEIRD

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

BUT REAL; FUNNY BUT THOUGHTFUL - COULD HAVE GONE DEEPER INTO THE FALLOUT

ultimately falls in love with the fake young woman, and Chuck keeps the ruse going despite his better judgment. Franklin perceives his new DM-based relationship as real-world exchanges with Becca, which come across as funny and silly at first, but ultimately devolve into scary, unhealthy and downright gross. This is where Morosini’s writing and acting chops work best, and Sulewski’s take on a ghostly non-person is a delight. Somehow, she manages to create a character we feel like we know without actually knowing, and played against Morosini’s sweet-but-damaged Franklin, it works. Oswalt, as always, is a delight. How can it be you’d still feel for a man who would have fake phone sex with his son, or who lies to his own girlfriend (a brief appearance from the inimitable Rachel Dratch) so easily? You do, though, and that might have something to do with how we all create our own personas and deploy

Peele, who both writes and directs here, deftly interweaves deceptively simple plot lines about survival into a layered indictment of both capitalism and entertainment, and the positions into which they put those with the least power. Take, for example, both the Haywood and Park families’ knee-jerk decisions to seek fame and fortune from the thing in the sky rather than considering their own safety. At first, this seems short-sighted—a bit of the old “just get out of the haunted house!”—but the longer their terse coexistence continues, the more we learn about how both camps are simply trying to get by. Their stations aren’t so different, really, and their shared desire to struggle less becomes a central sticking point. Why don’t they work together to survive? Perhaps because we’ve been trained to get our own, screw the other guy. What might any of us do if faced with an opportunity to claw our way out of meager lives? Having mouths to feed might not be the most glamorous of stakes but, when we strip away artifice, there are none higher. Kaluuya once again proves an actor who lives in the quiet intense moments, while Yeun brings an odd charm to what is essentially a faded star role. A short but vital B plot explains his horrifying origins, and you actually come to feel for the guy. Newcomer Brandon Perea shines as well as an employee from a local electronics store who wants to believe in UFOs, but Nope becomes Palmer’s movie so gradually you almost don’t notice until she steps fully into her power. When

AUGUST AUGUST 3-9, 3-9, 2022 2022 •• SFREPORTER.COM SFREPORTER.COM

them across various milieus, online and real-world. Morosini reportedly based the film on his real-life relationship with his father, and one could probably wax poetic on how acting is a search for the truth. Point is, it’s ballsy and relatable for those who struggle to reconcile with disparate ideas of their own fathers. In other words, at what point do we perceive our parents as real people? The film even says something to the effect of, “He’s just some guy who ended up having a kid.” Through those feelings, Morosini takes us to the brink of despair and back out again. Families are complicated—hope might be the best some of us can do for now.

she does, allusions to kaiju and anime cinema pump up the badassery, and the intensity rises straight through to the climax. In the end, it feels like questions remain, and Nope likely won’t deter anyone from consuming trauma as entertainment, but when simply living through another day continues to be the best most folks can hope for, unanswered questions and doomscrolling seem about right. (ADV) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 130 min.

MURINA

7

+ STRONG DIRECTION - PACING COULD’VE BEEN TIGHTER

On an island off mainland Croatia, a land-owning family hopes to move to Zagreb. Paradise, it turns out, can be isolating, almost prison-like, and young Julija (Gracija Filipovic) learns this as the family patriach Ante (Leon Lucev) maintains his position as an emotionally abusive asshole as slimy as the eels the family hunts for sport. Ante wants to sell the family land to his old millionaire friend Javi (Cliff Curtis), but Julija has designs to escape her father’s rage before she’s trapped in it forever—if she plays her cards right, Javi might just take her away. The only path to freedom is something far beyond the sea in Director Antoneta Alamat Kusijanovic’s Murina, and Julija can envision it even if she’s unable to fully believe it. One may

I LOVE MY DAD Directed by Morosini With Morosini, Oswalt, Sulewski and Dratch Violet Crown, R, 96 min.

not entirely buy the 20-year old Filipovic as a 15-year-old, but she constructs a fantastic pathos for a character walled off by a sort of manufactured hostility. Kusijanovic (who’s adapting her own short film Into The Blue) builds Julija’s prison beyond mere symbolism, where the waves rhythmically hit the coast and the towering cliffsides become claustrophobic. We long for Julija to escape, even if it means acting on the darker ideas that slide into her mind. Murina is a great example of competent filmmaking, of every department working together toward a common goal—of a crew that seemingly believes in the project. It shouldn’t be novel, but that’s something that catches one’s attention these days when tricks, twists, CGI and franchising dictate cinematic trends. Murina is proper filmmaking with solid direction and a restrained cinematography style that sells the grandiosity of the region without relying on distracting camera motions. Its thematic qualities could come across stronger, and first act pacing issues keep things kind of slow; Kusijanovic’s also sidesteps urgency in the buildup to its climax, but that doesn’t detract from its enticing simplicity. With a well-deserved win at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival for Best First Feature (the Caméra d’Or award), Kusijanovic proves herself to be an up-and-coming director worth watching. The next thing will probably be a triumph. (Riley Gardner) Jean Cocteau Cinema, NR, 92 min.


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1 Produced, biblical-style 6 Fox’s foot 9 Sweet stuff 14 Make up (for) 15 “... sorta” 16 One end of a battery 17 Bialik who will continue as a host of “Jeopardy!” 18 Samantha who will not continue as the host of “Full Frontal” (because it was canceled) 19 Charlie Parker genre 20 Some imaging services out of Florida? 23 Seek permission 24 They’re often split 25 Lazy river conveyance 28 Thespian 31 Disco hit centered around four characters? 35 UFO passenger 37 “Then I knew that ___ my heart” (The Supremes lyric) 39 Alternative conjunctions 40 Cheap, flimsy consoles to play “Grand Theft Auto” on? 43 Bad ___ (German spa) 44 Blue sky hue 45 Whodunit focus 46 Umlaut components 48 Ignited 50 Insect repellent compound

51 Spongy brand 53 It ended on 11/11/18 55 “Star Wars” starfighters whose pilots were too scared to show up? 61 “Yay!” 62 Burj Khalifa’s loc. 63 Word after corn or Cobb 65 Martin Van ___ 66 Saw publication 67 Delete 68 Gnarls Barkley singer Green 69 ___-Caps (Nestle candy) 70 Winona of “Stranger Things”

DOWN 1 “Batman” sound effect 2 Coup d’___ 3 Painter of “The Clothed Maja” 4 Like Studio Ghibli content 5 Heat wave figures, for short 6 ___ Xtra (Dr Pepper rival) 7 Between continents, perhaps 8 Protein shake ingredient derived from dairy 9 Hummus brand 10 Apprehensive 11 Elapse 12 Big scenes 13 Public image, for short 21 Letters before a pen name

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22 Company founded in Rochester (not, surprisingly, New York, New York) 25 Sped along 26 “King of the Hill” beer brand 27 On top 29 They’ll get you where you need to go, for a fee 30 ___ Sewell, Alabama’s only Black Congresswoman 32 New England-based soft drink brand 33 Cookie filling 34 It’s a plus 36 Org. of Blazers and Heat 38 “The Voice” network 41 Jason Bateman Netflix drama 42 Routine 47 Whimper 49 Squicked-out outburst 52 “Low-priced” commercial prefix 54 Smartened up 55 Mˆtley ___ (group depicted in “Pam & Tommy”) 56 Long-eared leaper 57 Palindromic flatbread 58 Strange beginning? 59 “Orange you ___ I didn’t say banana?” 60 Ed.’s requirement, once 61 “This Is Going To Hurt” airer 64 Falco’s “___ Kommissar”

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SFR CLASSIFIEDS MIND BODY SPIRIT PSYCHICS Rob Brezsny

Week of August 3rd

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries poet Ada Limón advises us to notice and love “the music of the world.” She says that praising and giving attention to the good things “are as important and necessary as witnessing and naming and holding the grief and sorrow that comes with being alive.” This is always a crucial principle to keep in mind, but it will be extra essential for you in the coming weeks. Your ability to attract the influences and resources you need most will thrive if you focus on and celebrate the music of the world. PS: I encourage you to sing more than usual, too.

how I define it for you during the coming weeks: 1. an openness to consider several different ways to capitalize on an opportunity, but to ultimately choose just one way; 2. the ability to see and understand all sides of every story, while also knowing that for pragmatism’s sake you must endorse a single version of the story; 3. the capacity to be both constructively critical and supportively sympathetic; 4. the facility to be welcoming and inviting while still maintaining healthy boundaries.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Life is enchanting for me because I have so much control over what I think,” my TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Here’s my hope for you in Scorpio friend Daria told me. “If I decide to flatter myself the coming months: You will cultivate a specialty for with comments about how attractive I am, I can do just connecting people and situations that need to be affiliat- that. If I would like to imagine a good fairy visiting me ed but aren’t yet. You will regard your flair for blending while I sleep and giving me a dream of having an orgasm as a gift you offer generously. Can you picture yourself with my lover while we fly over the Serengeti Plains, I doing that? I think it will be fun and will also benefit you can.” I asked her about the times when worries gush in unexpected ways. So here’s my proposed plan: forth unbidden from her subconscious mind and disturb Conspire to heal fragmentation and schisms. Unite her joy. She said, “I simply picture myself shoving those heavenly and earthly things. Keep the far side and the worries in a hole in the ground and blowing them up near side in touch with each other. Never let the past with an exploding rose.” I bring Daria’s mind-manageforget about the future, and vice versa. One more thing, ment expertise to your attention, Scorpio, because the Taurus: Be gleefully imaginative as you mix and conjoin coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to raise and combine. your mastery over what you think. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In a play by Gemini philoso- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): People might impapher Jean-Paul Sartre, a character says, “Hell is other tiently advise you to relax and settle down. Others might people.” What did he mean by that? One interpretation tell you to stop dreaming such big visions and formulatis that our fellow humans always judge us, and their ing such adventurous plans. Still others might give you judgments rarely align with who we really are and who the side-eye because they imagine you are having too we imagine ourselves to be. Here’s my solution for that much fun and brainstorming too wildly and laughing too problem: Choose allies and companions whose views of loudly. If you receive messages like those, give the comyou match your own. Is that so hard? I suspect it will be plainers a copy of this horoscope. It will tell them that easier than usual for you in the coming months, Gemini. YOU WILL NOT COMPLY WITH ANY INHIBITING Take advantage of life’s natural tendency to connect you DIRECTIVES. Your astrologer, me, authorizes you to be with cohorts who appreciate you. Be picky as you avoid as vast and venturesome and enterprising and spontathe hell of other people. neous as you dare. In doing so, I am speaking on behalf CANCER (June 21-July 22): The people most likely to of the cosmic rhythms. Your plucky audacity has been succeed as entrepreneurs are those with a high degree heavenly ordained. of analytical intelligence. Right? Well, it’s more compliCAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In accordance with cated than that. Reasoning ability and problem-solving astrological omens, I hereby authorize you to worry, skills are key skills, but not as important as emotional intelligence: the power to understand and manage feel- worry, and worry some more. Stew and simmer and ferment as you weigh all the options and mull the correct ings. I mention this, Cancerian, because the coming actions. But when the time is right, end your fretting months will be a favorable time to advance your ambitions by enhancing and expressing your emotional intel- with crisp decisiveness. Shake off any residual doubt that still clings to you. And then undertake robust action ligence. Here’s some reading to foster your powers: to transform the situation that provoked your righteous 1. tinyurl.com/EmotionSmarts brooding. In my astrological opinion, what I have just 2. tinyurl.com/SmartFeeler described is your best plan for success in the coming days. 3. tinyurl.com/WiseFeeler 4. tinyurl.com/BrightFeeler LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In the coming weeks, Leo, I urge you to always be confident that YOU ARE THE PARTY! Everywhere you go, bring the spirits of fun and revelry. Be educationally entertaining and entertainingly educational. Amuse yourself by making life more interesting for everyone. At the same time, be kind and humble, never arrogant or insensitive. A vital part of your assignment is to nourish and inspire others with your radiance and charm. That formula will ensure you get everything you need. I foresee bounty flowing your way! PS: Regularly reward your admirers and followers with your magnanimous Chesire-cat grin.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “I was looking for a love unlike my parents’ love or my sister’s love or the love on a foreign kitchen floor,” writes Rebecca Dinerstein Knight in her novel The Sunlit Night. “I wanted to forgive my mother and father for their misery and find myself a light man who lived buoyantly and to be both his light and his dark.” I offer you her thoughts, Aquarius, in the hope of inspiring you to expand and deepen your ideas about the love you want. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to revise and reinvigorate your definitions of intimacy and togetherness. You will have extra power to see new truths about how best to create maximum synergy and symbiosis.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In my Astrological Book of Life, here’s what I have inscribed about Virgos: You may not always find the perfect solution, but you are skilled at finding the best solution available. This will be an especially valuable knack in the coming weeks, both for yourself and others. I trust you will scan for practical but compassionate answers, even if they are partial. And I hope you will address at least some of everyone’s needs, even if no one is completely satisfied. You can be the master of creative compromise that we all need. Thanks in advance for your excellent service!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Even raw and messy emotions can be understood as a form of light, crackling and bursting with energy,” writes Jungian psychoanalyst Clarissa Pinkola Estés. For example, “We can use the light of rage in a positive way, in order to see into places we cannot usually see.” Likewise, confusion might be a healthy sign that a long-held misunderstanding is dissolving. Disappointment may herald the demise of an unrealistic expectation. So let’s unleash a big cheer for raw and messy emotions, Pisces! I suspect they will soon be your gateway to clarity and renewal.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Everyone knows that “balance” is a keyword for you Librans. However, there are many interpretations of what balance entails. Here’s

Homework: Ask for something you’ve never had the clarity or chutzpah to ask for until now. 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 2 R O B B R E Z S N Y 30

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FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO In the Matter of the Estate of Robert Paul Borak, Decedent. No. D-101-PB-2022-00179 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of this Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative, Raymond Borak, ℅ Barry Green, Law Office of Barry Breen, PO Box 1840, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-1840, or filed with the First Judicial District Court Clerk, PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2268. DATED: July 18th, 2022 /s/ Raymond Borak, Personal Representative Submitted by, LAW OFFICE OF BARRY GREEN By: /s/ Barry Green Barry Green Attorneys for Personal Representative PO Box 1840 Santa Fe, New Mexico 875041840 505/989-1834 LawOfficeOfBarryGreen@msn. com

Wendy W. Harn/016528 Theron M Hall, Jr/003358 Attorneys for Successor Trustee In the Matter of the: N.W. OLIPHANT LIVING TRUST, dated June 17, 2019 NANCY W. OLIPHANT, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS PURSUANT TO A.R.S. § 14-6103 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that NANCY W. OLIPHANT, Trustor of the N.W. OLIPHANT LIVING TRUST, dated June 17, 2019, passed away on April 17, 2022. GREGORY WATTLES OLIPHANT was appointed to serve as Successor Trustee (“Trustee”) and is the acting Trustee of the Trust. 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 sixty (60) days after the date of mailing or other delivery of this notice, whichever is later, as prescribed in A.R.S. §14-3801, or claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented by delivering or mailing a written statement of the claim to the Trustee, ℅ Morris Hall, PLLC, 4380 N. Campbell Ave., Suite 205, Tucson, Arizona 85718. DATED this 23rd day of May, 2022 /s/ WENDY W. HARN MORRIS HALL, PLLC 4380 North Campbell Avenue, Suite 205 Tucson, Arizona 85718

1978, et seq. The Petitioner Alexandra Bradley will apply to the Honorable Matthew J. Wilson, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico at 2:30 p.m. on the 26th day of August, 2022 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of the child from Marialena Christina Espinosa to Marialena Christina Bradley Espinosa. KATHLEEN VIGIL, District Court Clerk By: Johnny Enriquez-Lujan Submitted by: Alexandra Bradley Petitioner, Pro Se

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION Be a hero for local journalism. FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF And build a fun, rewarding ALLIYAH NOOR MIRZA. career. Connect local Case No. D-101-CV-202201299 businesses to people who live NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME in and visit Santa Fe, And keep TAKE NOTICE that in accordance independent media alive. Santa with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 Fe Reporter is seeking new through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. The Petitioner ALLIYAH members of our advertising NOOR MIRZA will apply to the team. Can you cultivate Honorable Francis J. Mathew, relationships? Stay organized? District Judge of the First Judicial Look to the short term and District at the Santa Fe Judicial long term future? Earn a good Complex, remotely via Google living selling digital and print Meets in accordance with the products for this small media Sixth Amended Notice Dated company. May 10, 2021 (Effective for All Hearings Set On or After May 31, We are fiercely local and we’re 2021), at 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday, looking for full time and part August 20, 2022 for an ORDER time workers in our advertising FOR CHANGE OF NAME from department. Alliyah Noor Mirza to Alliyah STATE OF NEW MEXICO Strong verbal skills are a must. Noor. COUNTY OF SANTA FE Compensation includes a base STATE OF NEW MEXICO KATHLEEN VIGIL, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE PROBATE COURT salary for the first six weeks Deputy Court Clerk IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION By: Marquel Gonzales-Aragon SANTA FE COUNTY and aggressive commission on IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Deputy Court Clerk new clients for the first three OF Mary Ann Prada, DECEASED. LISHA ANN HANSEN. Submitted by: months. Permanent, full-time Case No.: D-101-CV-2022001249 No. D-101-PB-2021-00119 Alliyah Noor Mirza hires get benefits, including NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME NOTICE TO CREDITORS Petitioner, Pro Se TAKE NOTICE that in accordance health and dental insurance, a NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 401(K) retirement plan. that the undersigned has been STATE OF NEW MEXICO Candidate must possess own appointed personal representative through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, COUNTY OF SANTA FE et seq. The Petitioner LISHA vehicle and valid driver’s license of the estate of the decedent. FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT All persons having claims against ANN HANSEN will apply to the COURT and insurance. Honorable Francis J. Mathew, the estate of the decedent are Kitar Haiyan Ju v. Timothy W. Ju District Judge of the First Judicial Case No. D-101-DM-2022-1612 Send letters of interest to: required to present their claims District at the Santa Fe Judicial NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN four (4) months after the Complex, remotely via Google advertising@sfreporter.com within that Kitar Haiyan Ju has filed date of the first publication of Meets in accordance with the with the Court a Verified Petition any published notice to creditors No phone calls. Sixth Amended Notice Dated May for Dissolution of Marriage. The or sixty (60) days after the date 10,2021 (Effective for All Hearings Respondent in said action, of mailing or other delivery of Set On or After May 31, 2021), Timothy W. Ju, is required to this notice, whichever is later, at 11:45 a.m. on Friday, August answer the or the claims will be forever 19, 2022 for an ORDER FOR said Petition within thirty (30) barred. Claims must be CHANGE OF NAME from LISHA days of presented either to the ANN HANSEN to LISHA ANN the first publication of this notice. undersigned personal LASSERRE. Failure to so answer will result in representative at the address KATHLEEN VIGIL, the listed below, or filed with the District Court Clerk entry of a default and Final Decree Probate Court of Santa Fe By: Johnny Enriquez-Lujan Of Dissolution of the said County, New Mexico, located Submitted by: marriage. Lisha Ann Hansen at the following address: The Respondent’s Answer must be Petitioner, Pro Se P.O. Box 1985, Santa Fe, NM presented to the First Judicial 87504 District STATE OF NEW MEXICO Dated: July 14th, 2022 Court, PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, NM COUNTY OF SANTA FE Helen Maestas 87504-2268 and a copy provided FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT 3578 N. Carefree Circle, Apt C to IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION Colorado Springs, CO 80917 Petitioner’s Attorneys: FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF 719.557.7924 Natalie Campbell, Esq., Marialena Christina Espinosa, A Jay Goodman and Associates MINOR CHILD. MORRIS HALL, PLLC Law Firm, PC 4380 N. Campbell Ave., Suite 205 Case No.: D-101-CV-2022-01277 2019 Galisteo, Suite C3 ROBYN@ NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME Tucson, Arizona 85718 Santa Fe, NM 87505 TAKE NOTICE that in accordance (505) 989-8117 SFREPORTER.COM Phone: (520) 320-5100 with the provisions of Sec. 40Email: courtrulings@morristrust.com 8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA

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