LOCAL NEWS
AND CULTURE APRIL 5-11, 2017
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ATTENTION LADIES!
Join us for an informative seminar on women’s gynecologic issues and breast cancer care. Meet experts from CHRISTUS St. Vincent Breast Institute and CHRISTUS St. Vincent Women’s Care Specialists as they share the latest information on important women’s health concerns.
WOMEN’S HEALTH SEMINAR Saturday, April 15 • 8:00 – 11:00 am Eldorado Hotel & Spa 309 W. San Francisco St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 Limited parking in valet on a first-come first-served basis. Registration is required. RSVP to 800-908-8126 no later than April 14 by 12:00 pm. 8:00 – 9:00 AM
Registration, complimentary breakfast and optional free blood cholesterol test conducted by CHRISTUS St. Vincent Laboratory Services for seminar participants only. (You must fast for 12 hours prior to testing.)
9:00 – 10:00 AM Board Certified Oncological Breast Surgeon Dr. Anna Voltura will speak on Updates in Breast Cancer Care. 10:00 – 11:00 AM Board Certified Obstetrician-Gynecologist Dr. Eric Manske will speak on “The Pap Smear, HPV, and Cervical Cancer: Staying Happy and Healthy for Life.” CHRISTUS St. Vincent Breast Institute is a comprehensive breast center delivering state-of-the-art diagnosis and treatment. The Breast Institute cares for both benign and malignant breast disease. Patient services include benign breast conditions, breast cancer risk assessments, diagnostic workup, surveillance and survivorship clinic, breast cancer treatment, lymphedema and nurse navigation. CHRISTUS St. Vincent Women’s Care Specialists are dedicated, caring specialists who have a long-standing commitment to women’s health in our community. Our clinic provides comprehensive pregnancy care, gynecologic care and hospital midwifery. Services include laparoscopy and micro-invasive surgery, infertility, urogynecology, annuals and general gynecology, cervical cancer screening, pessary fitting, family planning and biopsy.
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APRIL 5-11, 2017 | Volume 44, Issue 14
I AM
NEWS OPINION 5
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Fred Cisneros, Executive Creative Director of Cisneros Design
NEWS 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6
With Online Banking and Treasury Management, Century Bank is like a silent partner.
8
THREE DAYS IN COURT 8 SFR took the governor to trial last week. Here are the highlights from three days of daily web coverage IN DEFENSE OF BOOKS 11 Under the proposed 2018 federal budget, New Mexico libraries would lose a significant chunk of change, which would be acutely felt in rural and tribal areas
THREE DAYS IN COURT According to the governor’s lawyers, since SFR is a “left-wing tabloid” (their words), our journalists’ public records requests are OK to be ignored. They’re all kinds of wrong. Marisa Demarco reports.
COVER STORY 12 CASTLES, RUINS AND MYSTERIES Every town’s got strange, unique, perhaps slightly spooky houses—SFR’s tracked down the details about Santa Fe’s buildings different
Cover photo by Hollis Engley, 1984 Palace of the Governors
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER AND AD DIRECTOR ANNA MAGGIORE
CULTURE
ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
SFR PICKS 19 Photos from the front, Sky-ward, seeds and valuable operatic information
STAFF WRITER MATT GRUBS COPY EDITOR CHARLOTTE JUSINSKI
THE CALENDAR 21
CULTURE STAFFER MARIA EGOLF-ROMERO
MUSIC 23
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR
SAINT PETER We’re obsessed with Peter Williams
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MARISA DEMARCO JORDAN EDDY ERIC KILLELEA MICHAEL J WILSON
ACTING OUT 25 BUILDING OF WORLDS Say hello to our brand-new theater column
17-CENT-40590-Ad-Fred-SFReporter(resize)-FIN
Cisneros Design:
505.471.6699
Client:
Century Bank
Publication:
Santa Fe Reporter
Run Dates:
March 8, 2017
Contact: nicole@cisnerosdesign.com Ad Size: 4.75" w x 5.625” h Due Date: March 1, 2017 Send To: Anna Maggiore: anna@sfreporter.com
DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER WEB INTERN LEONORA SANCHEZ
UNMASKED Comics artists join forces FOOD 31 TODAY & TOMORROW Pie Quest 2: Back in the Habit MOVIES 33 GHOST IN THE SHELL REVIEW This movie sucks so bad ... Like, so bad
www.SFReporter.com
Filename & version:
EDITORIAL INTERN KENDALL MAC
SAVAGE LOVE 26 Keep the crop, the art of the humblebrag and better late than never A&C 29
MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200
CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE
Phone: (505) 988-5541 Fax: (505) 988-5348 Classifieds: (505) 983-1212 Office: 132 E MARCY ST.
MAJOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVES MICHELLE RIBEIRO NOAH G SIMPSON CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE OFFICE MANAGER JOEL LeCUYER PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN
EDITORIAL DEPT.: editor@sfreporter.com
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LETTERS Editor’s Note: While we understand the aversion to altered religious imagery, we would like to stress that Chewbacca (the “evil face”) was, in fact, a brave Wookiee warrior of the Resistance who fought valiantly against the Dark Side in both the Clone Wars and the Galactic Civil War. He was a decidedly positive character and, arguably, the most consistently virtuous member of the Star Wars pantheon.
COVER, MARCH 29: “SANITIZED SCIENCE”
NO RELIGIOUS FILTER This a disgrace and a great disservice to the children of New Mexico. Governor Martinez and Secretary Skandera, you need to implement these standards immediately without a religious filter.
JEFF CARR SFREPORTER.COM
WEB EXTRA, MARCH 29: “THE JOURNALISM RACKET”
COURTS AIN’T INNOCENT Mail letters to PO Box 2306, Santa Fe, NM 87504, deliver to 132 E Marcy St., 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.
CALENDAR, MARCH 22 SACRED HEART OF CHEWIE In reference to that picture [“Untitled”], by Jared Antonio-Justo Trujillo: I believe it’s a disgrace to our Sacred Heart. Yes—it’s only a picture, but to put an evil face on it is so disgusting. … There is enough evil going on in the world as it is, without advertising something like this. I loved reading your paper, but this has made me very sad that your paper would print something like this. Let him put his own body on that ugly face, not something sacred.
JOSIE P MARTINEZ PECOS
It will be interesting to see what the Santa Fe District Court does with this. Typically, they (District Court judges in Santa Fe) are pro-corporation. No matter what outrageous malfeasances the corporations have infamously committed and been found guilty of and fined for nationally, our local courts remain unaware to the detriment of families who are taken advantage of by legions of corporate lawyers. Our overwhelmingly pro-corporate governor has behaved outrageously on so many issues important to New Mexican families. I hope this case highlights both the governor’s behavior and the local judicial response.
LANNIE LOEKS SFREPORTER.COM
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’ve never seen that many tortillas in one place in my life.” —Overheard at Walmart
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SunDAY, April 9, 2017 9 am – 5 Pm
IHM RETREAT CENTER 50 Mount Carmel Rd, Santa Fe $125 per person, includes lunch ONLINE REGISTRATION:
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Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM
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7 DAYS GOVERNOR “COMPROMISES” ON TEACHER SICK DAYS, BRINGING THE TOTAL UP FROM FIVE TO SIX, AND SOFTENING TEST SCORE ELEMENT “I cut your baby in half, but you can keep the half.”
NEW LAW RESTRICTS PHYSICAL RESTRAINT, SECLUSION FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL KIDS If ever you were going to act out, the time is now, you little shits.
BRAWNY PAPER TOWEL LUMBERJACK REPLACED BY WOMAN FROM ESPAÑOLA There—misogyny fixed forever. Thanks, Brawny!
RAILYARD BOWLING ALLEY STILL ISN’T GONNA OPEN, YA GOOBS Stop. Expecting. This. Place. To. Open. It’s. Not. Gonna. Happen. Jeeze!
ICE-T, BODY COUNT TO RELEASE NEW ALBUM “Cop Be-er Nice-er” doesn’t have quite the same ring to it. e cto r
A r t D ir
CRAYOLA REMOVES DANDELION COLOR FROM ITS CRAYON LINEUP “Who cares?” sighs an exhausted nation.
BIG TOBACCO TO PAY NM $15 MILLION FOLLOWING SHORTCHANGE ALLEGATIONS So that’s where they’ll get the money to pay for Pre-K.
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MARK WOODWARD
Three Days in Court Press access, strength of state open-records law are at issue in SFR v. Gov. It’s been over three years since SFR filed a District Court lawsuit against Gov. Susana Martinez alleging her office discriminated against the newspaper and violated the state’s open-records law. Last week, on March 29-31, we finally got our day(s) in court. Now it’s time to wait some more as lawyers for both sides await a final court transcript, draft and file written closing arguments, and wait for the judge to rule. Here are highlights from our coverage in the courthouse from independent Albuquerque-based journalist Marisa Demarco:
DAY 1
‘The Journalism Racket’ The first day in court featured the governor’s high-powered contract defense lawyer attacking the credibility of SFR’s journalists, suggesting they were not precise, not knowledgeable, not prepared and not invested in the profession. “How long have you been in the journalism racket now?” lawyer Paul Kennedy asked former Santa Fe Reporter staff writer Joey Peters, prompting chuckles in the courtroom. Kennedy used the term “racket” several times to describe the profession.
Peters testified about a brief 2013 phone call with the governor. During the call, Peters told Martinez her spokesman wouldn’t reply to his requests for comment. She replied: “I wonder why.” The comment, Peters said, was sarcastic. The governor’s recalcitrance and tone in the call signaled to SFR’s staff that its increasingly frosty relationship with the Martinez administration—brought on, the newspaper contends in its lawsuit, by critical coverage of the administration— could not be salvaged. So the newspaper filed suit. SFR was known as an investigative newspaper and aimed to get at the “why” behind a story, as opposed to simply covering the news of the day, former editor Alexa Schirtzinger said from the witness stand. The paper’s policy was to always ask for comment on any story that pertained to Gov. Martinez’ administration and officials’ activities. Responses to those requests came consistently through the early part of Schirtzinger’s term as editor, even if Martinez’ officials got back to journalists with a “no comment.” But then, in 2012, the paper published a year-end cover story that emphasized the hypocrisy of the administration’s secrecy. After that article, SFR stopped receiving responses at all, Schirtzinger testified. “We certainly had the feeling that we were being completely cut off.” This not only contributed to an erosion of the paper’s credibility, but “readers weren’t able to get as full of a story that we wanted to get to them,” Schirtzinger said.
DAY 2
The Governor’s Message
Alexa Schirtzinger, former SFR editor, testifies that the paper’s access was “cut off.”
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A former spokesman for Gov. Susana Martinez testified that pushing her message, not responding to inquiries from journalists, was his top priority. Enrique Knell was Martinez’ public voice between 2012 and April 2015. During questioning, he said responding
Judge Sarah Singleton tells the governor’s private attorney to slow his roll.
to media inquiries “was a small part of [his] job.” The rest of his job, he testified, was conveying the governor’s message to the people of New Mexico. Knell said he chose which reporters to respond to based on which ones best carried what the governor wanted to talk about on a given day. He testified about an email comment he sent to news organizations after word of SFR’s lawsuit spread in 2013: “It’s not a surprise that a left-wing weekly tabloid that published stolen emails containing the governor’s personal underwear order would file a baseless suit like this.” On the stand, Knell said he referred to the newspaper as “left-wing” because the lawsuit “came out of left field.” Kennedy spent the day trying to prove SFR was inferior to other news organizations and also that Knell was often too busy to respond. “Do you give priority to the governor’s message? Or do you give priority to what some weekly tabloid wants to know?” Kennedy asked. “I give priority to the governor,” said Knell, who was paid an $80,000 annual salary by New Mexico taxpayers to speak for Martinez.
Even though her office employs no fewer than four staff lawyers, the governor hired Paul Kennedy, left, to fight SFR’s team, led by Daniel Yohalem, right.
Kennedy showed that SFR filed 23 Inspection of Public Records Act requests in 2013—the most of any news organization in the state that year. SFR journalists have said in interviews that they increasingly turned to IPRA requests because they were not receiving responses from Martinez staffers. One of SFR’s attorneys, Daniel Yohalem, asked Knell about instances when he didn’t respond to SFR journalists’ emails and phone calls. Yohalem also admitted into evidence multiple emails from Knell offering comment to other news organizations on topics about which SFR had inquired. Yohalem asked whether Knell would ever get back to SFR in the months after they covered the Martinez administration’s use of private email.
Enrique Knell was paid $80,000 to speak for the governor—but not to everyone.
“I know that in that time, on various issues, I did respond to the Reporter on a case-by-case basis,” Knell testified. Yohalem pressed him to remember an instance. He couldn’t. Yohalem also showed emails with news tips Knell sent to other news organizations without, it seemed, ever being asked a question.
NEWS SFR’s case hinges on the idea that when government officials get picky about which media outlets they communicate with—and when they blacklist news organizations that are critical of the government—they’re trying to influence what the press reports.
DAY 3
Size Matters Testimony ended with Mark Zusman, who co-owns SFR and two other weeklies, saying all three prioritize the watchdog function of journalism. “We strongly believe that the most important thing standing in the way of tyranny is a truly independent press that understands the watchdog role,” Zusman said from the stand. Kennedy spent much of the trial trying to paint SFR as an insignificant entertainment tabloid. Zusman testified that the bulk of the paper’s resources are devoted to news as opposed to entertainment. You can’t do investigative journalism without source documents, Zusman said. When he and the newspaper’s staff decided to sue Martinez in 2013, he wasn’t sure whether they would win or lose, he said—but he knew it was a fight worth waging. “Is this a government of the people, by the people, for the people?” Zusman said in an interview in the courthouse hallway. “Or is it simply for the ruling class who’s in power right now, who can determine what information they want to give to which reporters, and who can show favoritism depending on the coverage?” The lawsuit alleges the governor’s office doesn’t have an adequate method for handling public records requests. Former records custodian Pamela Cason testified that it would not have been humanly possible to search each employee’s email herself when seeking records to fulfill a request. The way she ensured compliance was to “instill the fear of God into the employees that you have to respond to these in a timely manner.” Before she left the stand, she testified that she still doesn’t keep a log of IPRA requests as they come in. Gov. Martinez’ current spokesman, Chris Sanchez, was questioned about a tweet he posted following a story written by former SFR staff writer Justin Horwath for The Santa Fe New Mexican, where Horwath
works now: “Embarrassing. Reporter should have done his homework. No surprise given his previous ‘reporting’ for liberal tabloid.” From the stand, Sanchez testified that when he said “tabloid,” he meant the size and shape of the newspaper. SFR Editor and Publisher Julie Ann Grimm said if the newspaper receives a judgment in its favor, it will send a message to elected officials that “you can’t, as a public official, pick and choose which members of the media you are going to communicate with.” And if it doesn’t break SFR’s way? “Although we like to think our place in the journalism landscape in New Mexico is important,” Grimm says, “it’s true that we’re not as big and well-funded as the Albuquerque Journal, for example. So if it’s OK to ignore small media organizations, that’s dangerous.”
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The C. G. Jung Institute of Santa Fe presents
Jung
In the World
Lecture & Workshop
Carolyn Bates, Ph.D., Jungian analyst practicing in Austin, TX
Mark Zusman, co-owner of SFR, says the press is “standing in the way of tyranny.”
Yohalem, who represents SFR, said, “We should not have had to go to court to resolve these issues. We should have been able to sit down with the governor’s office and work this out,” he said. “I think it’s going to take a court case, and maybe ultimately a change in government, before we’re going to see improved relations with media.” Yohalem took the case pro bono; Kennedy did not. Kennedy was contracted for more than $500,000 to represent Martinez, but the governor’s administration has refused to turn over his billing records. When asked about his fee after the trial, Kennedy said, “You’ll have to contact the governor’s [communications] people.”
Lecture: Meeting the Monster under the Bed: Archetypal Expressions of the Other reflected in Film, Dreams, and Culture Friday, April 7th 7-9pm $10 2 CEUs or 2 Cultural CEUs
We meet “monsters” at key moments in the process of psychological growth. The dark creatures that haunt the imaginations of children, the threatening strangers, terrifying killers, and vicious animals that move through the dreams of adults, the terrors encountered in agedness – we fear and avoid our monsters. But Jung considered that monsters bring us vital messages and warnings regarding the psychological status quo. These images appear terrifying because they represent a fundamental otherness within us, something tapping at the windows of our consciousness, pressing to be integrated so that our own psychological development may proceed. Using lecture and film clips, we will explore how threatening, ominous, and frightening images and experiences present us with valuable opportunities for individuation. We will draw on historical examples of monstrosity to clarify the tasks at hand when encountering it in our personal lives, and in our encounters with the collective.
Workshop
Saturday, April 8th 10am-4pm $60 4.5 CEUs or 4.5 Cultural CEUs Saturday’s workshop will expand on Friday night’s explorations of the monstrous in film, dreams, and culture, adding the opportunity for participants to discuss their experiences of the subjective sense of the monstrous in their lives. Both events at: Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe Friday lecture tickets at the door. For Saturday workshop pre-registration call Larry Rayburn, 505-310-5698 For expanded program details go to www.santafejung.org SFREPORTER.COM
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ACADEMY FOR THE LOVE OF LEARNING
Learn more about what lives behind
aloveoflearning.org
505.995.1860
The Wisdom of the Space Between Engaging the urge to learn
• Facilitated by Aaron Stern and Marianne Murray • Sat, April 8 • 9:00AM-5:00PM • $75.00
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A love of learning
SM
Drawing from Experience The power of your story
• Facilitated by Chrissie Orr and Randle Charles • Thur, April 20 • 6:30PM-9:00PM • FREE
MARIA EGOLF-ROMERO
NEWS
In Defense of Books Proposed federal budget would slim down resources for state, rural and tribal libraries BY ERIC KILLELEA
D
uring the New Mexican summers of her youth, Valerie Nye rode the morning bus with her sister and mother to the public library in downtown Albuquerque. The family checked out as many books as they could carry and would meet her father at Civic Plaza before taking the bus back home. “It was a full day of adventure that centered on going to the big public library for picture books,” Nye remembers. Now, as the library director at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, she recalls the importance of such adventures whenever she orders picture books, helps children with homework and works with staff. “It is a great job,” she says. Nye is part of a small New Mexican delegation of librarians and politicians traveling to the nation’s capital next month to oppose President Donald Trump’s proposed budget aimed to eliminate the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. This time around, the annual lobbying trip to Washington DC has ignited a sense of emergency among librarians fighting against the potential gutting of federal funding that now supports a host of resources for cities and rural towns across the state. “Libraries are not romantic, historic, quiet places where people sit and read all day,” writes Nye in an email to SFR. “Libraries provide vital services to communities including internet access and reliable information on health, finance, politics and taxes. Libraries help provide people the tools to search for jobs, apply to jobs,
interview for jobs and start their own businesses.” Eight New Mexico librarians are scheduled to attend the National Library Legislative Day at DC’s Liaison Hotel on Capitol Hill. The event, to be held May 1 and 2, is sponsored by the American Library Association. It’s an opportunity for librarians to meet face-to-face with legislators responsible for approving a 2018 budget. Arts and humanities programs in the US currently make up $741 million—a small bite—of the $4.6 trillion in total federal spending in 2016. President Trump’s new budget slashes the total national budget to $1.1 trillion. Library advocates are
To put it mildly, if the federal funding goes, I won’t be here. ... Our community library won’t be open. -Cynthia Aguilar, librarian, Santo Domingo Pueblo Library
now planning to speak out for their portion of $230 million worth of funding, currently provided through the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which helps buy and maintain services in culturally vibrant towns and cities across the country. The New Mexico State Library receives $1.4 million annually, or $.70 per taxpayer. Kathleen Moeller-Peiffer, director of the New Mexico State Library, fears that the proposed budget calls to cut federal funding meant to distribute state grants
that cover rural bookmobiles, books by mail, the Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped and the interlibrary loan system, as well as most, if not all, of statewide online resources and the statewide summer reading program. The State Library is primarily funded by the state of New Mexico, although the federal government, through the Library Services and Technology Act, provides 20 percent of the overall annual budget. Patricia Hodapp, library director at the Santa Fe Public Library, says 58 staff members welcomed 713,677 visitors in 2016. The city’s three library branches hosted storytellers, art shows, musicians, opera programs, quilting groups, voting groups, City Council get-togethers and neighborhood meetings. “The library is just integral to the arts and humanities,” says Hodapp. Last year, 663,820 books, CDs and DVDs were circulated, while 59,655 library card-holders—20 percent from the county—accessed eBooks, article periodicals, Hoopla, Freegal Music, and free wi-fi. “Federal cuts are not going to hurt us as much as a lot of libraries, but it will impact us and we’ll have to come up with that funding elsewhere,” says Hodapp, who adds that 96 percent of the library’s $3.9 million annual budget comes from citywide gross receipt taxes, while other money arrives in the form of state general obligation bonds amounting to roughly $160,000 every two years. Federal funding goes through the state library, which reallocates about $13,500 to the city for books and computer software. “If the state loses federal funding, databases, such as Chilton Car Guide and Newsbank, will disappear,” says Hodapp. “We will not have the budget to replace the state’s databases.” Support from the Friends of the Santa Fe Library, the Brindle Foundation and anonymous donors supplement the library’s budget by funding Books and Babies, a children’s pre-literacy program, along with bilingual Spanish storytime. But if library funding ends up on the chopping block, Hodapp says she would have to
“get creative to fund things other than salaries, lights, books and maintenance,” and would possibly hold fundraising events as she has in the past. Cynthia Aguilar, librarian at the Santo Domingo Pueblo Library, says at least 60 people ask her for help each day with homework, computer classes, printing tax documents and filling out veterans benefit forms. Less than 25 percent of the library’s $75,000 annual budget comes from federal funding, but the lack of private donors limits options for additional money. “To put it mildly, if the federal funding goes, I won’t be here,” says Aguilar, whose yearly salary is afforded by federal grants. “Our community library won’t be open. It will be a travesty, because the tribe will be at a loss.” Santo Domingo is not the only tribal library facing potential cuts. All 19 members of the New Mexico State Library’s Tribal Libraries Program would suffer greatly if the federal funding goes. “I think Trump needs to rethink,” says Aguilar. “Cutting is not always the best solution, especially to rural areas where we already have to travel longer distances for resources.” Two years ago, Joshua Finnell accepted a position at Los Alamos National Laboratory to become the scholarly communications and data librarian. In that role, he helps researchers plan, curate, disseminate and preserve digital research data. He is an active member on various national science and technology boards and locally serves on the board of the Santa Fe Public Library and plans to be on the lobbying trip next month. Finnell, who remembers spending the majority of his childhood “consuming books about whales and planets” in Illinois, writes in an email that, in the brief time he has spent in Santa Fe, he is “truly in awe of the creative and artistic spirit in the city.” “For many folks,” writes Finnell, “and myself, that creative spirit was sparked at a local public library.” SFREPORTER.COM
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
Women’s Dormitory, St. Catherine’s Indian School
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UNCOVERING THE SECRETS OF SANTA FE’S ICONS AND EYESORES
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anta Fe’s venerable position in the hierarchy of architecture of New Mexico cities is a hard-fought distinction. Home of the “oldest church,” the “oldest house,” the “oldest continuously occupied government building” and the state’s only cathedral basilica, we’re also proud of our John Gaw Meem and our Paolo Soleri (rest in peace). Building codes that keep the downtown historic district looking like an adobe Disneyland have the rest of the city leaning toward brown and round, too. From the stone facade on the McDonald’s on St. Francis to the faux-dobe on the Target and the Walmart Supercenter, even corporations are in on the game. But then there are these buildings. The SFR team picked some of the city’s structures that are, at present, anomalous to the traditional Santa Fe landscape. What we learned is that in most cases, plans to update, finish and reuse these buildings call for millions of dollars, some of which could be on the way, and some of which seem out of reach. Ever drive by that crazy cinder block castle on Agua Fría and wonder what the story is? Puzzle over the vacant Railyard shopping center? Question whether it’s really Boo Radley that lives in the once-fancy house on the corner of Galisteo and Paseo de Peralta? Us too.
ST. CATHERINE’S INDIAN SCHOOL RIO GRANDE AVENUE Nestled on a hillside less than a mile from the Plaza, the buildings on the sprawling, vacant campus of the place locals call St. Kate’s have been crumbling back to the earth. Among the structures are one of the state’s tallest adobes built before the turn of the 20th century, as well as murals painted by Edward O’Brien, an artist who is also buried alongside several nuns in the property’s graveyard. In what seemed like an open invitation for vandalism and squatting, the downward spiral began when the boarding school, with State Supreme Court Justice Barbara Vigil counted among its alumni, closed in 1998. A developer hoping to sell most of the land to the nearby national cemetery took over. Years passed, proposals for development came and went, neighbors raised varying degrees of protest, one dude went to prison, a Colorado bank became the owner, and it seemed like all would surely be lost. Yet, now an organization with a solid reputation for executing housing projects has purchased the campus and holds out a glimmer of hope. When the school went up for auction on the courthouse steps in April 2016, the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority took its title for $2 million. “The board felt that somebody needed to step in and save this property. It was going to continue to deteriorate,” Housing Authority CEO Ed Romero tells SFR. “And we felt like we were probably the only organization that could step in to stabilize the property while we figured out what to do with it long-term.” The housing authority provides apartments for people with federal Section 8 housing vouchers, but also runs a number of market-rate units to help offset the costs. A mixed-use project like that could be in the cards for the school, but with
at least $5 million in capital required for rehabbing the worst and most historic structures, that’s a tall order. Today, the campus is playing host to elaborate sets constructed for the film Cliffs of Freedom, a Greek war drama starring Christopher Plummer and Billy Zane. Right now it’s a feature film, but its producers hope it will turn into a longer-running television series. Romero says the filming lease came at a perfect time, just after the housing authority bought the land in the last part of 2016. It gives them an income source that could last another several years and gives them cash for badly needed work on areas such as the foundation for the tall adobe building, he says. Next, any development plan would need to meet the city’s approval. “We are not ready to discuss long-term solutions to the property at this point,” Romero says. He adds later: “It could be a good deal or it could be a huge nightmare.” (Julie Ann Grimm)
largely the same, with gray cinder blocks exposed and construction remnants haphazardly scattered about. In recent years, though, Romero has spruced up the place, stuccoing over the battlements and the rest of the fortress. He’s gotten creative, too—or stayed creative, and furthered the medieval feel of the place. Huge, flanged concrete pipes are set on their ends on either side of the property, a nod to the towers that often occupy the corners of a castle wall. It looks like it might be used as apartments, but it’s hard to tell. Just the way Romero prefers. “I’d rather have it as a mystery,” he says. While he steadfastly refuses to share the property’s origins, what his designs for it were or even if they started off as his designs, there is some public information available about it. In 2015, Romero convinced the city to let him use the property commercially. His appeal said he’s owned the land for decades and that there’s a well- and pump-repair business on site,
as well as a few mobile homes closer to the Santa Fe River. It doesn’t quite have the same creepy feel since getting a makeover, but Romero is doing his best to at least make the castle sound sinister. “Who knows what you’ll write?” he laughs before saying goodbye. “But I’ll enjoy reading it.” (Matt Grubs)
SPEAKING OF CASTLES RODEO ROAD
“When you throw yourself into the water and you start to swim, you have to keep swimming.” Leonel Capparelli is standing on the second-story veranda of a Spanish Colonial-style building off Rodeo Road on the southeast side of town. He has a big cup of coffee and a cigarette in hand. The sun is shining, a dusting of fresh snow is melting, and the building he’s been working
Agua Fría Street Castle
MARIA EGOLF-ROMERO
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
Cafeteria, St. Catherine’s Indian School
A MAN’S CASTLE IS, WELL, HIS AGUA FRÍA STREET “The less I say about it, the better,” Emelecio “Leroy” Romero tells SFR in a brief phone call about one of the most recognizable homes in town. He’s trying to politely get off the phone, but not before impishly sharing a few thoughts about the cinder block castle in the 2700 block of Agua Fria Street. “I get all kinds of questions about it,” he says. “People tell me it’s haunted, that people have hung themselves in there, that people have been decapitated.” Yeah. Probably none of that is true. SFR’s cover photo was snapped in 1981. The castle’s crenellations have become so iconic since then that the Palace of the Governors archived the photo. A couple of decades later, the castle looked
CONTINUED ON PAGE 15
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on for a decade is, he figures, 90 percent finished. “I just knew what I wanted,” he says of the project he began in 2007. “I didn’t know what it would cost.” He does now: close to $1 million by the time he switches on the lights and opens it to the public. Capparelli plans the project as a showroom for his Hands of America antique restoration and reproduction business. For a time, the work was just too much. The economy tanked shortly after he got started and the building sat with plywood patched over unfinished sections. Stiff winds ripped at the blue tarps that covered spots where the elements eventually poured in. The place looked for all the
world like it would start with a grandiose cry and end with an ugly whimper. But that’s not Capparelli’s style. “These days, people don’t know about art,” he tells SFR, “art that hurts.” The son of Italian parents who raised him in Uruguay, he designed the building with a nod to both his childhood home and the churches he saw throughout Latin America. “I have a thing for churches,” he laughs. “When they build them, they build them for God. You cut corners, he knows.” When someone suggested that he close a massive hole in the roof where he planned to install a $30,000 skylight, he refused. For three years. “The place makes no sense without a skylight,” he
Sargent House
MATT GRUBS
MATT GRUBS
Interior, Rodeo Road Castle
says. He’s right. Morning sun floods the building’s interior through the peaked panes. The structure is an homage, he says, to a time when people were willing to build things that last. Much of the material inside—beams, columns, doors, ironwork— is recycled from old cabins in Veracruz, Oaxaca and southern Mexico. Some of it, he figures, is 200 years old. He moved to Santa Fe 30 years ago and has seen it change, sometimes not for the better. When the city annexed his property a few years back, he had to convince it to let him continue the project, despite the fact he could only spend weekends painstakingly finishing the place. “I could have slapped up a metal building for a couple hundred thousand dollars,” he says, although it takes only a few minutes of talking with him to know he’d never do such a thing. “I think the New Mexican style is something very special that you cannot see throughout the rest of the world,” he muses. He runs a hand along a pile of weathering wood and excuses himself to get back to work. (MG)
IT’S A SIN TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD GALISTEO STREET AND PASEO DE PERALTA On the historical rolls, the two-story Italianate house at the corner of Paseo de Peralta and Galisteo Street is known as Sargent House. We wouldn’t blame you if you thought Boo Radley lives there. Occupying the prominent site since 1912, the house was lived in by former mayor William G Sargent (1914-18) until his death in 1935. Historic surveyors called it an “excellent example of turn-
of-the-century houses that followed the railroad west.” The home unquestionably has a stately air to it, but seems to perennially be in need of repair. When the city surveyed it in 1993, the condition was listed as “fair.” The only other classification left was “deteriorating.” Today, it has a decidedly unkempt appearance: trim is weathered, paint is peeling, window screens are sagging and trees are overgrown. Restoring the structure would be a herculean task for the family trust that owns the property. A representative for the Press family, which became the home’s owners after the Sargents, declined to talk about the property’s history or the cost of keeping the place standing. No one answered the door when we knocked. Neighbors who’ve seen it and know what it takes to rehab old buildings tell SFR the cost to get the old home up to snuff would easily clear $1 million and probably double that. “They did some maintenance about 10 years ago when we asked them to,” says Santa Fe Historic Preservation Division head David Rasch. Since then, he describes the upkeep as minimal. It’s a big job, one the city understands. “Probably the most difficult part of my job is balancing private property rights and the public good,” Rasch says. “Yes, you have the right to handle your property, but you’re in a historic district and there’s a public good to that property.” Because the home is in the Don Gaspar Historic District, there’s the challenge of keeping it looking new and old at the same time. It’s listed as “significant,” so every facade of the house has to stay just as it is. That makes a quick teardown and rebuild impossible. It’s still unlikely the city will crack down on the trust anytime CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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soon, but Rasch points out that the law doesn’t allow what’s called “demolition by neglect.” Across the street, Restaurant Martín faces the structure. Employees say customers routinely ask about the old house. About all the upscale restaurant can share with them is that they think the property has been in the same family for at least three generations and, unless it someday collapses, it’s not going anywhere. (MG)
LITTLE HOUSES MADE OF TICKYTACKY DON GASPAR AVENUE The four casitas across from the Roundhouse are the kind of buildings you might not give a second thought if you pass by them each day. They’re tiny. Three of them have tiny garages, too. And they’re not in very good shape. The stucco is badly cracked and pockmarked on the northernmost house. Paint is peeling from the windows. The roof of one garage has fallen in. They are surrounded by a new parking garage that’s well cared-for and a parking lot that’s in the same rotten shape as the casitas. But the old homes are historically important; just ask Santa Fe’s Historic District Review Board. “Before the state Capitol complex expanded, this was just a residential area like you’d see on the other side of Paseo de Peralta,” says David Rasch, head of the city’s Historic
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Preservation Division. “The casitas are remnants of what used to be here. So they embody the story to be told about this neighborhood.” The garages, as dilapidated as they might be, are some of the first examples of purpose-built car storage in Santa Fe. All the buildings were constructed in the 1920s or ’30s. “You could get a Model T in them, but not one of today’s automobiles,” Rasch offers. The buildings are in the Downtown and Eastside Historic District. So when the H-Board (that’s what city staffers call the Historic District Review Board) named them as contributing structures in the 1980s, the distinction carried with it certain protections. When the state announced plans in 2012 to build an executive office building on the site, it asked for another review. The answer this time was that three of the houses and one garage couldn’t be altered at all, and the other three structures were still contributing. The state says the building plan is on hold. That choice may be as much about money as it is about respect for the casitas, which house state offices and are on state land. While the state does need to seek approval from the H-Board, its appeal doesn’t go to the Santa Fe City Council, as a normal appeal might. It goes to a seven-member board, four of whom are appointed by the state. There are minimum upkeep standards for the buildings—as there are with any historic structure—but don’t look for the city to go slapping fines on the state any time soon; Santa Fe has done the math for its chances of winning an appeal against the state and knows it’s not smart to pick a fight. (MG)
MATT GRUBS
- The Turri Family
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
Halpin Building mural
ARTS HIGH SCHOOL DESTINED FOR SCRAPPY MALL SANBUSCO CENTER When anchor business Borders closed its operations nationwide in 2011, we all pretty much thought that would signal immediate demise for Sanbusco, the Railyard-area shopping center. But the scrappy little mall survived as Santa Fe’s go-to spot for fancy pens, upscale pet accouterments, ladies’ finery and more. After all, the Sanbusco Center is a historical landmark listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Developer Joseph Schepps bought and repurposed the former Santa Fe Bus Company in 1984, more than 100 years after it was first built. Cut to September 2015, and the New Mexico School for the Arts (NMSA) announced it would buy the building for $7.2 million to create its new campus. The move ups the school’s square footage from around 33,000 (at its current location in the former St. Francis Cathedral School) to nearly 76,000, thereby creating the space for more appropriate facilities such as dance and music performance rooms, a theater department, more classrooms, a gallery and an outdoor sculpture studio. The school displaced a number of Sanbusco businesses, forcing locally owned shops like Santa Fe Pens, Teca Tu and Bodhi Bazaar to the DeVargas Center. Others, such as On Your Feet, temporarily stayed put as the school worked out the details (On Your Feet now plans to move across the street to spaces in the Guadalupe Station over the summer). In September last year, NMSA earned City Council approval to alter the building and repair some structural issues that school officials say calls for an investment of about $30 million. That’s right: a three with seven zeroes behind it.
The director of NMSA’s Art Institute, Cece Derringer, says the school has raised a little over half that goal on their own through private funding and hopes for city government to pick up some of the rest as the school continues its own fundraising efforts. The school says its economic impact should help the city’s adjacent Railyard property with additional jobs, new businesses and more foot traffic. “We’re already starting to build great working relationships with our neighbors and our community,” says Beckie Mascolo, NMSA Art Institute marketing director. “We’re working to strengthen the relationships, and that’s very exciting.” Founded in 2010, the charter school enrolls through an audition process rather than the traditional application or lottery formats of similar institutions. For now, Head of School Cindy Montoya says she hopes the former mall will be student-ready for its 221 students by the summer of 2018, with enrollment numbers increasing in the future. “Our charter cap goes to 300, but we’re hoping to one day increase that to 400,” she says. “We want to reach more of those students who deserve to be here. … I think by 2019 we’ll start to see increased numbers.” (Alex De Vore)
A FUTURE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART GUADALUPE STREET AND MONTEZUMA AVENUE Built in 1938 as a distribution warehouse, the 34,000-square-foot Halpin Building has served as a bottling plant and the State Records and Archives office (and is named after the first records administrator, Joseph Halpin). Since then, it’s been used by the Department of Cultural Affairs as a storage space during the New Mexico
When I walked into it, it just spoke to me. It said, ‘Mary, I am your contemporary art space.’ -Mary Kershaw, Director, New Mexico Museum of Art
History Museum’s construction, and as the Office of Archaeological Studies until it moved into its permanent location off Hwy. 599 in 2013. What used to be a loading dock along Guadalupe Street is now a great place to waste time sitting in the warm rays of the same sun that has faded the mural on the building’s north side. But if New Mexico Museum of Art Director Mary Kershaw and President/CEO Jamie Clements bring their vision to fruition, the building may soon become the satellite site for the contemporary collection of the New Mexico Museum of Art. The state’s art museum opened in its grand building on the Santa Fe Plaza in 1917, when just 5,000 people called Santa Fe home. “Twelve hundred people came to the opening of the museum,” Kershaw says. On its centennial anniversary, leaders are looking just as far into the future. “The museum is too small for what we need it to be as the state art museum,” Kershaw says. “The spaces are not appropriate for contemporary art, collection storage is full, we have no educational rooms. We were looking for how we could expand the footprint of the museum to accommodate contemporary art collection storage.”
Even though the Railyard building is on the other side of downtown, it’s the site they hope will serve that purpose. The state Department of Cultural Affairs took over the structure in the late ’90s, mostly using it for offices until about five years ago. Kershaw had seen the interior of the Halpin building in the past, when it was filled with floor-to-ceiling shelving, dwarfing the giant rooms. In her quest for more collection storage, Kershaw popped into the then-empty warehouse and saw its potential. “When I walked into it, it just spoke to me. It said, ‘Mary, I am your contemporary art space,’” Kershaw says. Clements echoes her sentiment. “We call it the big reveal,” he tells SFR. “The outside doesn’t suggest the magnificence of the inside.” Romanced by the expansive floor plan, Clements and Kershaw conspired immediately to actualize their dream of transforming the building. And, surprise, the museum is trying to raise $10 million to renovate the building. “Very rarely do you find an ideal building, and then to find an ideal building that’s in the right place,” says Kershaw. “It’s in the right place, so there’s the potential for synergy and connectivity.” The museum’s directors see the contemporary venture as an opportunity for deeper and more frequent collaboration with existing like-minded institutions such as SITE Santa Fe and the Center for Contemporary Arts. Clements says the project is on track. “We are about eight months into it and we are a quarter of the way to our goal [for the first phase of the campaign]. We’ve raised $2.5 million, so we feel very optimistic.” In May of 2018, the museum has a gala planned to launch the public donation phase of the Centennial Campaign, at which point smaller donations can be made. Until then, they’re seeking larger dollar amounts, including the option to rename the building, Clements says, “for a cool $4 million.” (Maria Egolf-Romero)
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art • furniture • housewares • jewelry • clothing
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sfhumanesociety.org Laura T., Store Manager and Shelter Alum, Theo
Literacy Volunteers of Santa Fe Providing free tutoring services to adults learning English as a Second Language, improving their basic reading skills, learning U.S. history and civics in preparation for U.S. Citizenship. To find out about volunteer opportunities or to make a contribution, visit us at:
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(505)428-1353
COURTESY DANIEL ISLE SKY
HERB LOTZ
MUSIC WED/5 SKYWARD BOUND Local folk-esque/rock-ish musician Daniel Isle Sky has reached out to us a number of times with some friendly things to say. We liked that, so we checked out his tunes and are happy to report they are also friendly. But, y’know—good, too. Sky is a passionate guy, and his original songs are relatable yet beautiful. Think Dylan or Donovan, but with a modern bent. He is, in fact, a credit to one-guy-and-a-guitar performances. You can check Sky out at the Dragon Room on the reg, but more specifically this very night. (Alex De Vore) Daniel Isle Sky: 5 pm Wednesday April 5. Free. The Dragon Room, 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712.
COURTESY SUNRISE SPRINGS SPA RESORT
WORKSHOP SAT/8 MAKE THAT PAPER Plant new intentions along with your flowers this year and invest in the power of positivity. Spring is time for planting, and after this class taught by Ruth Morris, you can plant your wishes and ambitions on seeded paper. Participants learn the ancient Chinese art of papermaking with a current update: adding wildflower seeds and flower petals to create a unique piece. Simply write down your hopes and stick it in the dirt at home. Spending a few hours making something pretty and planting it with good thoughts in mind sounds like a few hours well-spent in a world of artificial, fastpaced everything. (MER) Handmade Seeded Paper Art Experience: 10 am Saturday April 8. $35-$50. Sunrise Springs Spa Resort, 242 Los Pinos Road, 780-8145.
ROBERT GOLDWIN
LECTURE TUE/11 A NIGHT AT THE OPERA From Viennese waltzes to Scottish castles, who says opera doesn’t have it all? International opera lecturer Desirée Mays proves it with a preview of the Santa Fe Opera’s selections for its 2017 season. The talk is a longstanding tradition for the Santa Fe Opera Guild and provides introductory insights on what audiences can expect this season. Mays, author of Opera Unveiled, shares her knowledge of classical music while describing the opera’s five productions, including a world premiere about tech mastermind Steve Jobs. Daisy Geoffrey, of the opera’s public relations department, says, “Audiences can expect a diverse repertory from the baroque to an innovative and high-tech world premiere—in other words, there’s something for everyone.” (Kendall Mac) 2017 Opera Season Preview: 5:30 pm Tuesday April 11. $10. Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-9674.
ART OPENING FRI/7
Still Lifes From A Bunker Capturing Vietnam with an artist’s eye It took almost 30 years and the encouragement of his fellow vets during a three-year outpatient program at a VA hospital for Herb Lotz to view the photos he took during his service in the Vietnam War. “I couldn’t emotionally handle looking at them,” he confesses. Lotz was an artist before he was a soldier, and he uses his camera lens like many use a paintbrush: to recreate and share his vision with the world. He graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago with a degree in photography before being drafted, whereupon he photographed his fellow soldiers and scenes around him during the conflict. “I just sort of continued to do that when I could,” Lotz says. The young artist took over 50 rolls of film during a 12-month period between March 1968 and March 1969, time he spent in a bunker built around his telecom unit. The best of these images are featured in the upcoming exhibit, Sleeping During the Day: Vietnam 1968. Lotz was not a foot soldier. “My duty was to pass information,” he tells SFR. “I had a secret clearance and I was passing encrypted information over the airwaves.”
Unlike the photographs from the most gruesome time in the jungles of Vietnam, which are often blatantly violent and focused on the machinery of war, Lotz focused on people. “They show the interior of these people,” he says, “their spiritual or cognizant interior.” Normal Joes were the focus of leading photographers at the time, like Diane Arbus and Kenneth Josephson, both of whom inspired Lotz. He says he kept their works in mind as his shutter closed over fellow Vietnam soldiers. “I was just documenting my life,” he says. Today, the images don’t cause him as much pain as they once did, but he still sees loss. “Primarily it’s about the loss of innocence on some level,” he says. “Being a soldier, you’re young and you’re drafted or you sign up and you can’t really know what it’s like to be in a war until you’re in one.” (Maria Egolf-Romero) SLEEPING DURING THE DAY: VIETNAM 1968 OPENING RECEPTION 5 pm Friday April 7. Free. New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200
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Thanks -It’s been fun!
THE EXHIBIT FEATURES CARTOONIST RICARDO CATÉ FROM KEWA (SANTO DOMINGO PUEBLO), NEW MEXICO. ILLUSTRATOR RICARDO CATÉ SHOWS THE HUMOROUS SIDE OF GROWING UP IN A NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY POKING FUN AT THE SIMPLE INTERPRETATIONS OF EVERYDAY LIFE AND THE AMUSING INTERACTIONS BETWEEN NATIVE PEOPLE AND THE DOMINANT CULTURE. RICARDO’S VIEWPOINTS ARE ENTERTAINING AND KEEP THE READER SMILING.
800-747-0181 I-40 Exit 102 Acoma, NM
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After 42 years Pachamama is closing on April 15, 2017, at 5 pm Adiós from Alfie, Mary, Martha, Maru, & Lolly
PACHAMAMA
Latin American folk art & Spanish colonial antiques 223 Canyon Road, Santa Fe, NM 505-983-4020
THE CALENDAR DANIEL ISLE SKY The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Folk rock originals (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free RAMON BERMUDEZ JR. TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Latin and smooth jazz guitar. 6 pm, free SAGALIFFIK: DANCE PARTY Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 House jams and acid synth. 10 pm, free TIFFANY CHRISTOPHER Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Christopher covers hits by greats like Prince and plays her own progressive rock originals. 8 pm, free
Want to see your event here? Email all the relevant information to calendar@sfreporter.com. You can also enter your events yourself online at calendar.sfreporter.com (submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion). Need help?
WORKSHOP FANTASTIC FUTURES CAREER, EDUCATION AND TRAINING RESOURCE FAIR Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Look for a new job as more than 60 employer representatives from local, regional and national businesses related to healthcare, hospitality, government and more come together. 10 am, free WEDNESDAY PAINTING WORKSHOP Mantecon Studio 123 A Camino Teresa, 503-473-2786 A workshop involving pastels, acrylic paints and more. 1:30 pm, $55
Contact Maria: 395-2910
WED/5 ART OPENINGS ARAM FARBER Harry’s Roadhouse 96 Old Las Vegas Hwy., 989-4629 Farber presents his newest paintings, featuing abstract architecture and pretty gold paint. Through May 3. 5 pm, free
THU/6
BOOKS/LECTURES ART IN THE AFTERNOON form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 982-8111 Hit the contemporary gallery for a docent-led art tour, and delve deeper into the works in Shifting Landscapes and other works by the gallery’s artists. 1:30 pm, free DHARMA TALK: ROSHI NORMAN FISCHER AND KATHIE FISCHER Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week's talk is presented by Norman Fischer, founder of the Everyday Zen Foundation, and Kathie Fischer. It is entitled, "Who is Sick?" 5:30 pm, free JOE WATKINS: TRAILBLAZING AN INDIGENOUS ARCHAEOLOGY School for Advanced Research 660 Garcia St., 954-7200 Professor Joe Watkins published the book Indigenous Archeology: American Indian Values and Scientific Practice, which identified a slowly growing trend toward incorporating Indigenous values and points of view. This panel explores the current state of Indigenous archaeology and new projects using these methods. 6 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES
“Nuclei unframed” by Emil Bisttram is on view at Addison Rowe Gallery as part of their annual commemorative exhibit, Emil Bisttram Day, opening Friday.
JOY POOLE: OVER THE SANTA FE TRAIL TO MEXICO: THE TRAVEL DIARIES OF DR. ROWLAND WILLARD New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Joy Poole, deputy state librarian, presents this lecture about Willard’s autobiography as part of the Brainpower & Brownbags series. While there are many notable travel diaries and memoirs of trips along the early Santa Fe Trail, Willard’s experiences predate these by about a decade. Noon, free
EVENTS COMMUNITY-STYLE ACUPUNCTURE Southwest Acupuncture College 1622 Galisteo St., 438-8884 Receive accupuncture community-style, in a group rather than a private setting. 5:30-9:30 pm, $17 GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Beat geeks at their own game by knowing more than they do. Nothing gets ‘em quite like that, and getting ‘em is too much fun to pass up. 8 pm, free
TAPS AND TABLETOPS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Have a happy-hour drink and play your favorite board game at George RR Martin's theater. 6 pm, free
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Pop piano tunes from the ’60s and ‘70s with strong vocals. 7 pm, free
CALVIN HAZEN El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Flamenco and Spanish guitar. 7 pm, free CROSS STITCHED EYES Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 A punk/death-rock/anarcho-punk band from Berlin, Germany with special guest opening performer Econarchy. Get your mosh pit on, lord knows there's enough angry energy to expel. 8 pm, $10-$12
DEBORAH MADISON Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Vegetarians rejoice! Madison is a vegetarian authority and she presents her newest cookbook, In My Kitchen, at this event where she is introduced by local author James McGrath Morris. 6 pm, free INTERFAITH PANEL: OVERCOMING THE POLITICS OF DIVISION AND FEAR Temple Beth Shalom 205 E Barcelona Road, 982-1376 This panel discussion is presented by Retake Our Democracy (a local community political activism group) and includes speakers from seven religious traditions. 7 pm, free RENESAN INSTITUTE LECTURE St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Tom Kelly discusses the book Metaphors We Live By, which argues that metaphors are much more than a device of poetic imagination. 1 pm, $10 CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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THE CALENDAR SHORT SHORT STORIES Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 This event happens for the first time at Meow Wolf (as it used to happen at Collected Works) and it gets a new host. Participants are encouraged to share fiveminute pieces on the theme of "firsts." 6:30 pm, free
MUSIC ALBORZ TRIO: THE SOUND OF PEACE Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6011 Sourena Sefati, Deborah Ungar and Gregory Gutin combine their talents to share the music of Iran. This performance highlights the special qualities of the Iranian santour and various percussion accompaniments through new arrangements of folk music. 7 pm, $20 ALEX MARYOL Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 The local troubadour, who’s internationally known for doing his talented thing, performs a solo set of Americana guitar tunes. 7 pm, free BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Pop covers from the ’60s and ’70s played on piano with some vocals. 7 pm, free BROTHER E CLAYTON El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Clayton sings the blues. 7 pm, free D'SANTI NAVA Starlight Lounge at Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 Latin-inspired guitar. 7 pm, free
HA HA TONKA The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 424-3333 Rock songs with narrative tributes to friends and memories past abound on their newest album, Heart-Shaped Mountain, which they'll play from at this concert. 7 pm, $15-$20 HALF BROKE HORSES Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Americana and honky-tonk. 7 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Jazzy guitar. 6 pm, free REGGAE NIGHT: BROTHERHOOD SOUND Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Brotherhood Sound is a collective formed by Magek Selektah and Sistah Vibes dedicated to playing reggae. 10 pm, free
THEATER 1984 Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 This adaptation of Geroge Orwell’s 1949 novel is still the most powerful telling of this scarily psychic story (see Acting Out, page 25). 7:30 pm, $15-$25
FRI/7 ART OPENINGS BRIAN FLEETWOOD: PROPAGATION Axle Contemporary 670-5854 Biological structures made of plastics, wood and textiles make up this exhibit. Catch the mobile gallery under the shade structure at the Farmers Market in the Railyard. Through April 30. 5 pm, free
CADY WELLS: RUMINATIONS New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 See watercolor works, many of which were created in the ’30s, by this late artist who painted dynamic scenes and presented modernist interpretations of Southwestern landforms and cultural and religious traditions. Through Sept. 17. 5 pm, free EMIL BISTTRAM DAY 2017 Addison Rowe Gallery 229 E Marcy St., 982-1533 Bisttram Day was declared a state holiday in 1975 by Gov. Jerry Apodaca. This retrospective exhibit celebrates the late artist and reminds the community of his significance. Through May 20. 5 pm, free GIVING VOICE TO IMAGE 5 ViVO Contemporary 725 Canyon Road, 982-1320 In this unique celebration of the beauty of words and images, readings explore how each discipline intensifies the power the other. Former Santa Fe poet laureate Valerie Martinez reads a poem she created specifically for this show. 5 pm, free ILLUSTRATED! MASTERS OF GRAPHIC NOVEL ART City of Mud 1114A Hickox St., 954-1705 Nationally recognized illustrators come together to show their publication-related works along with some of their personal works. The show is curated by gallery partner Jamie Chase and includes works by George Pratt, William Wray, Scott Hampton, Andy Kuhn and more (see A&C, page 29). 5 pm, free
COURTESY MARTIN ROSEN PRODUCTIONS
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See cute bunnies, like this one, do horrible and sad things in the animated film Watership Down, playing Saturday at the Jean Cocteau Cinema.
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KATY KIDD ART
MUSIC
Congrats, Pete Williams—you’re the coolest dude in town
TRACKS
HEAR, HERE We’ve got our ears to the ground in search of interesting tidbits of music-related information, Santa Fe. Are you recording an album? Hitting the road to tour? Thinking of going major-label? We want to know about it, so email your best friend Alex De Vore at alex@sfreporter.com.
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Well, great (opposite!)— musician Josh Martin is moving back to Los Angeles any second now, and that’s a pretty huge loss to local music, but also to the people-who-are-totallynice-to-me-when-I-run-into-them list. Turns out Martin’s awesome wife got a job offer she couldn’t refuse. We love Martin and will miss his super-cool attitude and also his fine musicianship. Come visit at least, Josh?
BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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M
y dad graduated high school in 1939 and enlisted for World War II,” musician and educator Peter Williams says. “He wanted to fight Nazis … kind of—he really just wanted to be in a swing band, and the Army had the best players.” Williams says music ultimately became a way for he and his father to connect. “My mother died when I was 6, but I think I was more interesting to her at first because she was an active musician,” Williams recalls. “She played [piano] for people like Aretha Franklin or The Staples Singers; my dad, by the time I was born, was an active-duty soldier, and really didn’t want me to go into music until one summer when I showed him the money I was making playing with this band that would go out and do Nugent songs. … That’s when he started showing me the real blues.” Williams hopes to recapture this love of swing and down ’n’ dirty juke-joint honkytonk—and spread it—at his open-to-thepublic workshop series. He’s dubbed the series Genuine House-Rockin’ Music, and it’s held at at Santa Fe University of Art and Design, where he teaches music. “It’s a history lesson, it’s an appreciation lesson. I’m talking about X-rated, adult themes; hardcore,” he says. “Like, my dad would tell me he and his friends would go out and smoke reefer, and when a Chuck Berry song came on the radio, they’d do donuts in the intersection because they were just so freaked out.” The workshop aims to get attendees playing the songs and culminates with a performance at Skylight in May. It’s great for people who want to learn more about legendary performers like Howlin’ Wolf or Muddy Waters. “Instead of showing them the same five Stones tunes, we go back further—this is the shit the Stones would trip on,” Williams explains. “My dad told me that it used to be, if you went into to one of
FIRST
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You don’t even know about Peter Williams. Like, you don’t even know! But you should. And you can. And you will.
these juke-joints and started playing something heady, they’d kick your ass, take your instruments and finish the set. That’s what I’m talking about.” Williams is himself a studied and multi-faceted musician, having played in numerous Santa Fe bands since his days as a student at the College of Santa Fe (now SFUAD, for at least the next little bit). These days, he’ll lend a hand to KISS cover band Love Gun for shows and is available for session work, but his main passion lies with his funk act, The Sticky. Following last year’s fabled Prince tribute show in the Railyard (it was magical, sorry if you missed it), Williams returned to his day job at The Candyman Strings ’n’ Things where, he says, owner Cindy Cook asked him why he wasn’t pursuing music full-time. “That was a damn good question,” he says with a laugh, “and so now I’m just at this point where I’ve jumped in with both feet.” Since its inception some years ago, The Sticky has written more original material than ever and has grown to include a full horn section. They sexy, and you can generally catch them at Skylight once a month. Otherwise, Williams says that if SFUAD closes he’ll still teach music. “It’s so fun-
ny, because I used to get nervous about that kind of thing when I wasn’t hustling enough,” he says. “But the shit I tell my students all the time is that it’s really your job to make art, and sometimes that has nothing to do with being in a school. … What I learned about the blues had nothing to do with school! To get out there and experience life and heartaches and setbacks and soul-crushing defeats, the next step you make—that’s the blues! You either play it out or sing it out or you bottle it up and get cancer.” You can catch both the Genuine House-Rockin’ Music workshop and a performance from The Sticky this Saturday. We’d highly recommend you do both of those things.
GENUINE HOUSE-ROCKIN’ MUSIC 2-5 pm Saturdays April 8-May 19. $500 for entire series. Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 920-4843 THE STICKY 9 pm Saturday April 8. $8. Skylight, 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775
While we’re talkin’ about The Sticky in this week’s music column, did you know that their singer, Amy Lindquist, also hosts a community singing group series with Hidden Whale’s Angela Gabriel? Yup. It’s true. Says Lindquist: “[It] is expanding into many areas: activism, workplace, anywhere it would be a benefit to a group to connect and create stuff together.” Solid! Check ‘em out at 7thwavesingers. com for locations and pricing.
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Local “artist” and “promoter” Sam Atakra (aka Sam Hazous, aka that one jerk) has basically been on fire lately. First it was Moldover at The Underground a few weeks back (I’m not saying that was his first show ever—relax), and now it’s German anarcho-punk act Cross Stitched Eyes at Meow Wolf on Wednesday, April 5 (8 pm. $10. 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369). Albuquerque’s Econarchy (featuring members of Logical Nonsense) is slated to play as well. Score!
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Some guy who is Facebook friends with the culture editor of our sister paper in Portland, Oregon, the Willamette Week, told me to get into the deep tracks of 311. I am understandably skeptical of their reggae-rock trash music and really don’t wanna, but is there something I don’t know? Should I do it? Let me know!
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THE CALENDAR
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IN CONCLUSION: 2017 BFA EXHIBITION IAIA Musem of Contemporary Native Arts 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 The Institute of American Indian Arts’ 2017 BFA thesis exhibition showcases the diversity of work created by the student artists. The work of each of the artists is grounded in ideas of personal, political, social and cultural exploration. 5 pm, free JIM BAGLEY, GERALD BALKIER AND LAURA BRUZZESE: SOUTHWESTERN CHRONICLES Sorrel Sky Gallery 125 W Palace Ave., 501-6555 See Southwestern-inspired paintings, sculptures and ceramic vessels. Through April 30. 5 pm, free MEGAN GOULD AND ANDY MATTERN: LIGHT TIGHT New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Gould continues her exploration of photography and the ways in which it affects our perception of the world. She uses unique photographic development techniques in her work. Mattern presents works confronting the standardization of manufactured photography paper by transforming the boxes it comes in into collaged canvases. Through Sept. 17. 5 pm, free RACHEL HOUSEMAN: THE SOUL OF NOWHERE Eye on the Mountain Gallery 614 Agua Fría St., 928-308-0319 This solo exhibit is devoted to the spirit of the land and honors the natural world. Attend this closing event and meet the artist as she releases her second artist’s book, The Soul of Nowhere. 5 pm, free SLEEPING DURING THE DAY: VIETNAM 1968 New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 This collection of photographs documents the war in Vietnam through the eyes of Herbert Lotz, an artist who was a young gay soldier during one of the most controversial wars in US history. Through Oct. 1 (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free STEPHAN MARTINIÈRE: SCIENCE FICTION BOOK COVER SERIES Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 See fantasy-worlds through the eyes of this prolific illustrator—who did concept art for Star Wars—in this exhibit of his works relating to fantasy novels. 5 pm, free
ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL
SUSAN DEWSNAP, MARTINA LANTIN AND SUSIE RUBENSTEIN Santa Fe Clay 545 Camino de la Familia, 984-1122 These women create functional pots, each with their own unique approach. Through May 27. 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES JAY SMITH St. John’s College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 The Dean’s Lecture and Concert series continues with a lecture from Smith titled “The Precautionary Principle.” 7:30 pm, free LEONA ZASTRO True West Gallery 130 Lincoln Ave., 982-0055 Local author and appraiser Zastro presents her newest book, My Tree of Life as an Appraiser of American Indian Art – My Viewpoint. 5 pm, free PETER MARRA: CAT WARS Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-9674 Get first dibs on Marra’s book, Cat Wars, which explores the dangers free-roaming cats present when it comes to public health and biodiversity. He’s a conservation biologist and director of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, so he knows his stuff. 7 pm, free
DANCE NOCHE DE FLAMENCO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Dancing can be fun, if you’re watching professionals do it. 7 pm, free
EVENTS DREPUNG LOSELING MONKS CHANTING FOR PEACE Thubten Norbu Ling Tibetan Buddhist Center 1807 Second St., Ste. 35, 660-7056 The monks chant and say prayers for peace in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. 7 pm, $15 SFUAD STUDENT SHOWCASE AND FUNDRAISER FOR OUTDOOR VISION FESTIVAL Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Enjoy an evening of music, art and fun at this presentation of works by students from the Santa Fe University of Art and Design with a live performance by local progressive rockers Massively Parallel. Proceeds benefit the upcoming art festival hosted by SFUAD. 8 pm, $15
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. 7 pm, free DAVE SMOOTH & DAVID BERGER Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Deep progressions and house music. 10 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Broadway standards by this pianist who worked in New York with composers like Stephen Sondheim for years. 6 pm, $2 FLOSSY CLOUDS Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Will McGovern and Aaron Blumenthal perform their experimental rock originals, which are flossy, of course. 7 pm, free FRED KRONACHER First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 Kronacher performs a series of compositions by Beethoven, Mozart, Debussy and Chopin on piano. 5:30 pm, free FRITZ & THE BLUE JAYS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Spend your Friday listening to the blues. 6 pm, free JOE JOHNSON The Burger Stand at Burro Alley 207 W San Francisco, 989-3360 Americana originals. 8 pm, free THE JOHN KURZWEG BAND Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock ’n’ roll. 8:30 pm, free PHIL ROCKER Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 South American rockabilly hailing from Medellín, Colombia. 8 pm, free THE TODDLERS WITH STEPHEN PITTS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Pitts joins the alt.rock band to perform progressive originals. 5 pm, free THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Three faces are better than one and this jazz trio welcomes a different special guest each time. 7:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
Acting Out
LYNN ROYLANCE
THEATER Building of Worlds
BY C H A R LOT T E J U S I N S K I c o p y e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
E
1984
ven before the election last November, Santa Fe Playhouse Artistic Director Vaughn Irving chose the lineup for the theater’s 2017 season, leaning heavy on politics and controversy. One of his choices soon became uncomfortably appropriate. Welcome to 1984. With the theatrical version of George Orwell’s dystopian 1949 novel, the Santa Fe Playhouse presents the unnerving story that has again shot to the top of bestseller lists. Here, The Party rules, and love of anything but hate is a crime punishable by vaporization. If it sounds heavy, it is heavy. But presented live in the playhouse’s intimate quarters, it is digestible, even for those sickened by current events. When Winston (played beautifully, achingly, by Irving), a loyal Party member, meets Julia (a deft yet tender Tallis Rose), they realize that love is rebellion; emotion is terrifying yet necessary. They slowly break out of their walking-only-inright-angles trappings, secretly marrying and moving in together. There, we meet the Landlady, brought to magnificent life by Libby King. She is boisterous and funny without being a caricature, reminding us that it is still possible to be human. Alternately, Hania Stocker as Comrade O’Brien affects an unsettling, breathy manner and ominous stooped posture—we, like Winston and Julia, don’t know what to make of him in the best worst way.
At the sold-out preview night, simple scenes of dialogue were most often brilliant. Glitchy projected videos from Freedom Hopkins broadcasted Big Brother’s message straight into our brains. But a few cluttered moments, mostly during scene changes, gave us pause. Was this too ambitious an undertaking for a small outfit? No. That pause was brief. We trusted this cast, under direction of Robyn Rikoon, to lead us to an uncomfortable place. Ultimately, the audience is left unsettled by the play’s content because it is delivered in a sturdy vessel, and we come willingly along to Room 101. 7:30 pm Thursday-Saturday April 6-8 and 1315; 2 pm Sunday April 9 and 16. $15-$25. Santa Fe Playhouse, 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262
Pie “What do you do when you don’t know what to do next?” This question, as posed by director Kent Kirkpatrick, is at the heart of Pie, the latest ensemble-produced performance from Theater Grottesco. It opens April 13 at the Adobe Rose Theatre. The play was sparked by a quote from the astronomer Carl Sagan: “If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe.”
So, what does that mean? The cast of four (John Flax, Danielle Louise Reddick, Tara Khozein and Apollo Garcia Orellana) has been trying to figure that out for two years, and Pie is the result. They play concrete characters—a geologist, an astrophysicist, an economist and a youth minister—in an increasingly non-concrete world in which the universe both dissolves and is re-created. With less than 15 pages of dialogue, the script is short. The rest is movement and interaction. As humans become demigods and the setting shifts repeatedly, we see complex questions about existence brought to life in, hopefully, a relatable way. “We all took themes from our lives and from the lives of the people around us that are very universal,” Orellana explains. When told it still sounds pretty heady, Khozein offers: “If you were to describe a Looney Tunes cartoon, it would feel super cerebral. But it’s not. Children can see it and adults can see it because it’s done with comedy. We’re using a lot of those techniques to take very complex ideas [and make them] read onstage.”
Indeed, our own world grows a mite too Orwellian for comfort. 1984 has arrived.
Of an experimental theater performance about existence, I say: “I think a lot of people would be afraid to see something like this.” In response, the cast breaks into hearty laughter—not at the idea, but with the idea. Yes, an experimental creation of the universe done onstage with little speaking is intimidating. “But this is the one they should see,” Flax says, “because this is the one that makes it all funny and clear.” At Grottesco’s rehearsal space on the Southside, there are giant pieces of butcher paper on the wall with charts and graphs and storylines, the cast’s guide to creating the universe. One square says “shitstorm poop ballet.” Another simply reads, “BABY BOUNCE!” with energetic arrows pointing to other points of action. Whatever this is going to be (and believe us, we don’t really know), we are excited. 7 pm Thursday-Saturday, April 13-15, 20-22 and 27-29; 2 pm Sunday, April 15, 22 and 29. $12-$25. Adobe Rose Theatre, 1213-B Parkway Drive, 474-8400
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Get savager at: SFReporter.com/savage
personal insights, Dan, since performing oral sex on women isn’t your thing. But perhaps your readers have a few surefire tricks that work when all else fails? -Perhaps Everyone Really Says It’s Some Trick
I’m a woman in my late 40s. In my early 20s, I married a much older man. We did all the requisite things: kids, house, intercourse once a week. When the sex fell off due to his declining health, he surprised me by suggesting we open our marriage. He said I was too young to be limited and he didn’t want me to leave him for sex. I spent time contemplating how to truly fulfill my desires. I read a lot of erotica, indulged in porn, and discovered that what turned me on was Dominance. Not intercourse particularly, but power play with me as the Queen controlling a slave. I like chastity, face-sitting, and light bondage. I have found that this type of play appeals to smart and kinky gents. But I am finding that, despite a gentleman’s declaration of “wanting something long-term,” perhaps a friends-with-benefits arrangement, they tend to drop out in short order. Three times in the past two years I have spent a great deal of time getting to know someone before there was any play—a lot of time chatting online, several vanilla dates. In each of these instances, I felt that I had found a good friend. Each of these three men dumped me in exactly the same way. Each said that I was too overwhelmingly beautiful and powerful, and that their obsession with me took up too much room in their lives. This is very frustrating because I feel like I give someone the space they need. I think this is likely BS. Could “I’m overwhelmed” be the new “It’s not you, it’s me”? I am tired of having my feelings hurt. Must I hang up my crop forever? -Done Offering My Mental Energy Forever hanging up your crop because a few guys tactfully ended things over a two-year period seems a bit melodramatic. So hang in there, DOMME, and hold on to that crop. The mistake you’re making, if I may be so bold as to offer some constructive criticism to the Queen, is investing too much time and energy up front, i.e., you’re making large emotional investments in these guys before you get around to the play. You’ll want to screen guys for your own safety, of course, but spending “a great deal of time getting to know” a potential kinky FWB is a recipe for disappointment. Because if you don’t click during play—if your style of BDSM doesn’t do it for them or vice versa—there are really no “benefits” in continuing. I suspect that was the case with your last three gents. But instead of ghosting you or saying something that could be construed as critical or unkind, all three heaped praise on you instead. You were too beautiful, too overwhelming, etc. It was, indeed, a kinder, gentler, subbier way of saying, “It’s not you, it’s me.” Dominant women are in such short supply relative to demand that submissive men will, well, they’ll submit to an endless vetting process. During that process, submissive guys open to something long-term will say so, DOMME, but submissive guys who aren’t looking for something long-term will say so, too, if they sense that’s what you want to hear. In order to be safe while avoiding avoidable heartache, DOMME, you’ll want to invest a little time in getting to know guys before you play—again, for your safety—but not so much emotional energy that you’ll be annoyed/ upset/devastated if it doesn’t work out. Last night, the GF was on the receiving end of a session of oral sex, but maybe because we were in her sister’s spare bedroom, or for whatever reason, she would repeatedly get within a whisker of coming only to say, “STOP! Too intense!” But I am persistent if nothing else, and on the fourth try, we got there. Boy, did we get there! I can’t ask for
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Your first three attempts got the GF close, PERSIST, and the fourth got her off. You obviously know what works for your girlfriend and don’t really need tricks or tips. You just keep doing what you’re doing, and next time you want to brag about your ability to get your GF there, go ahead and send me an honest brag. There’s no need to phrase your bragging in the form of a question—this is Savage Love, not Sex Jeopardy. My husband is wonderful. We are into BDSM. It’s always been super hot for me, and he’s always respected my boundaries. The other night, both of us had a lot to drink. I had WAY too much. We’d also been talking all night about me sucking his dick later. When we got home, he asked if I was too drunk for sex and I said we should have sex. I encouraged him. But when kinky stuff happened—him fucking my mouth, slapping my face a little—I quickly realized I was too drunk. I felt hurt and confused instead of feeling turned on, I felt sad, but I didn’t want to tell him to stop. At some point, he realized I was too drunk for what we were doing and he stopped. The next day, I felt so sad. He feels horrible and says that, regardless of me insisting (more than once) that he continue, he should’ve known I was too drunk. He feels bad. I feel bad. Any direction you could point me in—perhaps a book to read?—would be appreciated. -Didn’t Know My Limits You don’t need a book, DKML, you need a shift—a shift in focus. Right now, you’re focused on everything that went wrong that night—the boozing, the confusion, a bad sexual experience with a trusted partner—and you don’t seem to be really registering or giving enough weight to what went right that night. Your husband sensed you weren’t feeling it, realized you were too drunk (a little late, but still), and then, despite the fact that you encouraged him to continue, he sensed you weren’t in the right head space (you weren’t enjoying yourself, you were too drunk) and stopped. Your husband, even with a hard dick, even inebriated himself, even while topping during BDSM, didn’t lose sight of your safety and comfort. Don’t feel bad about the sex, or the kink, or your partner, DKML. Learn from this experience—BDSM and boozing don’t mix—and move on. My wife and I are poly. Next week, my wife is going on a business trip, and I made plans with a woman who we sometimes hook up with to come over. The complication is that, at 8 a.m. the next morning, our housekeeper is supposed to show up—and she’s likely to see that my wife is away but I’m eating breakfast with another woman. I’m not sure what to do. We’re open about being poly, but that seems like an awkward and inappropriate conversation to have with your housekeeper. -An Inconvenient Guest You shouldn’t have to sneak around in front of your housekeeper, AIG, but your housekeeper probably—definitely—doesn’t want to hear the details of your sex life. So sneak out the back door or pass your lady friend off as a houseguest (remember to rumple the sheets in the guest room)—or reschedule either your housekeeper or your hookup. On the Lovecast, the science of monogamous versus nonmonogamous happiness: savagelovecast.com mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter ITMFA.org humpfilmfest.com
THEATER 1984 Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Orwell depicts with great power the horrors of man’s fate in a society where Big Brother is always watching— and now that’s our reality. This adaptation, written in 1963, is still the most powerful telling of this story (see Acting Out, page 25). 7:30 pm, $15-$25
WORKSHOP JUDITH FORD St. John’s College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 Ford leads participants on a writing journey that explores fears and holding back in her lecture titled, “Write What Scares You: Why It Matters.” 4:30 pm, free
SAT/8 ART OPENINGS ANNUAL SLOW ART DAY New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 One day each year people around the world visit museums taking time to enjoy the beauty of art. Participants take a look at five pre-selected works of art for 10 minutes and then come together for a conversation about their experiences. Wow, 10 whole minutes, ya’ll. 9 am-5 pm, $7-$12 MARCUS ZÚÑIGA: YA VEO NO LAND 54 E. San Francisco St. #7, 216-973-3367 This art space transforms into a futuristic planetarium for its inaugural exhibition as Zúñiga incorporates cosmic imagery into projections and sculptures, opening windows into the universe. Through June 10. 6 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ALICIA BAILEY: ARTIST’S BOOKS ON THE ROAD Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Owner of Abecedarian Gallery in Denver, Bailey travels around with books of works by her gallery artists to spread the word about their art. 1 pm, free GERALDINE LAWSON: DOS CUENTOS MISTERIOSOS Santa Fe Public Library Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 Teatro Paraguas hosts this library tour of traditional Northern New Mexico folk tales by storyteller Lawson. The stories include “El Bailé de los Tecolotés” and “Mujer de Maiz.” 1 pm, free
JULIA GOLDBERG Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 This nationally acclaimed local journalist and former SFR editor presents her latest book titled Inside Story: Everyone’s Guide to Reporting and Writing Creative Nonfiction (see 3 Questions, page 27). 6 pm, free LAURA RUIZ MONTES AND ALFREDO ZALDÍVAR Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Both of these Cuban poets are launching new books of poetry published in the US. The books, which are bilingual editions with Spanish-English translations by Margaret Randall, share a detailed picture of the current literary scene in Cuba. 6 pm, free LINDA WHITTENBERG St. John’s College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 Whittenberg reads from her latest collection, True North, in the Junior Common Room. 2 pm, free
DANCE ASPEN SANTA FE BALLET Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Yo—you seen these fools dance?! Dang! The company unveils the world premiere of a ballet by newcomer Cherice Barton. 7:30 pm, $36-$94
EVENTS 7000 BC COMIC CREATORS POP-UP Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 Nab a new graphic novel and meet its creator at this showcase of new comics by local graphic artists and writers. 1 pm, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe Street, 310-8766 See works by local artists representing a ton of different mediums, and enjoy the sunshine. 8 am-1 pm, free
FILM WATERSHIP DOWN: BENEFIT FOR NEW MEXICO HOUSE RABBITS SOCIETY Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 A family of rabbits seeks out a new home after fleeing their doomed homeland in this animated film directed by Martin Rosen. Proceeds from ticket sales benefit the New Mexico House Rabbit Society. 4 pm, $9-$10
MUSIC ALTO STREET Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Bluegrass. 6 pm, free BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano pop songs. 7 pm, free DAVID BERKELEY WITH BEN WRIGHT, PAUL FEATHERICCI & JOSH MARTIN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Dance, dance, dance, yeah! 7 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Broadway tunes on piano. 6 pm, $2 GARY PAUL Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 Engaging narrative songs. 6 pm, free GREG BUTERA & THE GUNSELS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Cajun country. 6 pm, free HALF BROKE HORSES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Honky-tonkin’ Americana. 1 pm, free HIGHLAND PIPING EDUCATIONAL CONCERT San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 Bob Shaler performs band and solo pipe tunes, and talks about the instrument. 7 pm, $10 IGOR & THE RED ELVISES Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Surf rock hits and a dance-worthy atmosphere. 9 pm, $5 KIRK KADISH JAZZ QUARTET El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 A fearsome jazz foursome. 9 pm, free LORI OTTINO AND ERIK SAWYER Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana tunes. 3 pm, free NEON INDIAN DJ SET Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Get your dance on as locals Spoolius Melange (from Santa Fe) and REIGHNBEAU (from Albuquerque) play innovative sets before Alan Palomo, aka Neon Indian, performs trippy electronica. 9 pm, $20-$24
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THE STICKY Skylight 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Funk and blues and probably some funky blues (see Music, page 23). 9 pm, $8 TIM NOLEN AND THE RAILYARD REUNION Santa Fe Farmers Market 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Classic bluegrass, Tim’s originals and more. 9 am, free THE WHOLE DRUM TRUTH The Forum at SFUAD 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 473-6011 Locals John Trentacosta and Loren Bienvenu take the stage with Horace Alexander Young led by Albert “Tootie” Heath as they perform a skilled set of jazz tunes. 7 pm, $10-$25
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JOURNEYSANTAFE: MARCELA DIAZ Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 As executive director of Somos Un Pueblo Unido—an immigrant-run community advocacy group with strong local ties—Diaz has firsthand experience dealing with immigration in our state. She speaks about the importance of sanctuary cities and other immigration issues, which are more controversial than they’ve been in years, in this morning lecture. 11 am, free
EVENTS RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Santa Fe Farmers Market 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Hit the market and peruse a variety of handmade works. 10 am-1 pm, free
MUSIC ANNUAL NEW MEXICO BACH SOCIETY CONCERT Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel 50 Mt. Carmel Road, 988-1975 Members of the New Mexico Bach Society perform famous classical music. 5:30 pm, $29
with Julia Goldberg
THEATER 1984 Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Orwell depicts the horrors of man’s fate in a society where Big Brother is always watching—and now we live in it (see Acting Out, page 25). 7:30 pm, $15-$25
WORKSHOP
SUN/9 BOOKS/LECTURES
SPECIAL LECTURE & BOOKSIGNING
You know her, you love her, she used to work here—it’s journalist/Santa Fe University of Art and Design educator Julia Goldberg, and she’s written a new book about—get this—writing! Inside Story combines textbook, memoir, tips and tricks into one compendium perfect for anyone from the newest student to the most grizzled whiskey-swilling newspaper writer. Published through local imprint Leaf Storm Press, Inside Story drops this week (6 pm Saturday April 8. Free. Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226) so we caught up with Goldberg to get the inside scoop on this wildly useful tome. (Alex De Vore) The obvious question: Why’d you write this book? I don’t think I would have thought to do this book if I hadn’t started teaching. There’s so many great books, but I couldn’t find one that had exactly what I wanted in it. You have to write a book to get that. I thought, ‘I want you to have this anecdote that happened to me.’ I kept telling a lot of stories in class and finally I thought it would be a lot easier if I just had a book. Was it an easy or challenging project, given your writing background? It took me about a year. I think writing on a deadline is, to some degree, ‘easy.’ I think if I have a very finite assignment, I can usually bang it out. But this book was hard for me to write. When I write my own personal thing ... I’m not Stephen King who can’t stop writing. I have been working on the worst American novel, I read a lot of fiction, I read a lot about everything, but it wasn’t as though someone handed me a curriculum. Do you think people are getting sick of looking at screens and hoping to get back to print media? I don’t think print is dead as long as we have paper. Some of the predictions about the book industry turned out to not be accurate ... so far. It’s hard to feel like there’s any end to people’s love of it.
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
FREE • FRIDAY, APRIL 7 • 7 PM Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Santa Fe 107 W. Barcelona Road
CAT WARS
The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer Dr. Peter Marra
SPONSORED BY
Sangre de Cristo Audubon Society This is not an activity of the Santa Fe Unitarian Universalist Congregation
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CONNIE WILLIS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Willis is a celebrated author who has won 10 Hugo Awards and six Nebula Awards, and she lectures on her writing process. 7 pm, free GERALDINE LAWSON: DOS CUENTOS MISTERIOSOS Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Teatro Paraguas hosts this library tour of traditional Northern New Mexico folk tales by storyteller Lawson. The stories include “El Bailé de los Tecolotés” and “Mujer de Maiz.” 1:30 pm, free
JESSICA PRESTON
GUNS • KNIVES • AMMO
HANDMADE SEEDED PAPER ART EXPERIENCE Sunrise Springs 242 Los Pinos Road, 780-8145 Make artisan paper from a flax mixture that you can embellish with organic inclusions and wildflower seeds. Once the paper is dried, scribe your own words, hopes or ambitions on the paper. When the paper is planted, it will sprout future blooms, nourishing your hopes and dreams (see SFR Picks, page 19). 10 am-noon, $35-$50
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THE CALENDAR THE BARBWIRES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Soul tunes and blues songs. 3 pm, free BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano jams, like pop from the ‘60s and ‘70s with vocal accompaniment, by this oneman band. 7 pm, free EDUCATE YOUR EAR CONCERT: VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: A LONDON SYMPHONY St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace Ave., 982-1890 Take a closer look at Williams’ brilliant, brassy, folksy, mysterious Symphony No. 2, A London Symphony. 2:30 pm, free THE KYLE MARTIN TRIO Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A threesome of alt.country rockin’ dudes performs on a Sunday night. Yee-haw. 8:30 pm, free
THEATER
TAKE HOME A WINNING PHOTO at the 2017
SFR Photo Show APRIL 25
PHOTO CONTEST WINNER 2016 SANTA FE REPORTER Fe” “Angel of Santa by Mark S Shepherd
FINALISTS
Decorate your walls with a largeformat version of one or more (!) of the winning images during a SILENT AUCTION from 6 to 8 pm at the Violet Crown Cinema in the Santa Fe Railyard.
IN THE 2017 SFR PHOTO CONTEST
Daryl Black David Darby Dan Gerth Gayther Gonzales Bobby Gutierrez Paul Horpedahl
Jamie Kaminskas Roderick Kennedy Angela Kirkman Mary Kobet Judy Sanchez LeRoy Sanchez
Proceeds benefit the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government
?
1984 Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Orwell depicts the horrors of man’s fate in a society where Big Brother is always watching. We now live in that future Orwell imagined, and this adaptation, written in 1963, is still the most powerful telling of this timeless story (see Acting Out, page 25). 2 pm, $15-$25
WORKSHOP SUNDAY MEDITATION HOUR Center for Inner Truth 1807 Second St., Ste. 84, 920-4418 Explore the topic of the week through guided meditation, inspirational readings and music. Take time to take some time, life is short and moves much too quickly. 10 am, free
MON/10 BOOKS/LECTURES MICHAEL MATHIOWETZ: ANCIENT SITES AND ANCIENT STORIES III Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Mathiowetz has authored essays on the ancient cultures in the Southwest, and now presents a lecture titled “What Began with Chaco Ended with Paquime: History & Consequences of Pueblo Connections to West Mexico.” 6 pm, $15
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EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Bring your smartest friends along and compete against other teams for trivia knowledge victory. Not much feels better than knowing you know more than everyone else. 7 pm, free
FOOD SECOND ANNUAL NEW MEXICO SEDER Drury Plaza Hotel 828 Paseo De Peralta, 424-2175 The Jewish Federation of New Mexico hosts the second annual Federation Seder the first night of Passover. This celebration of spring and liberation, with a uniquely New Mexico twist, is catered by Eloisa Restaurant. All faiths are welcome and encouraged to attend. 5:30 pm, $49
MUSIC DAVID WOOD Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. 7 pm, free MELLOW MONDAYS WITH DJ OBI ZEN Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 This DJ mixes live percussion into his electronica sets, so you can find your mellow in his combination of instruments and electronic tunes. 10 pm, free
WORKSHOP TRANSCENDENTAL RHYTHM: DRUMMING WORKSHOP Studio Nia 851 W San Mateo Road, 989-1299 All you need is your hands to join this workshop taught by Johanna Nelson. 7:15 pm, $20
TUE/11 BOOKS/LECTURES 2017 OPERA SEASON PREVIEW Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-9674 The Santa Fe Opera Guild’s Desirée Mays’ preview of the season’s upcoming operas—which includes musical examples—is a popular tradition for Santa Fe Opera Guild members and guests. From Viennese waltzes to synthesizers, this season promises rich experiences of great productions (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5:30 pm, $10
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. Submissions don’t guarantee inclusion.
For help, call Maria at 395-2910.
ANN E WEISMAN St. John’s College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 As a spoken word artist and performance poet, Weisman brings energy to her readings that some poets may overlook. Catch her in the Senior Common Room. 7 pm, free ANNE HILLERMAN: SONG OF THE LION Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Hillerman presents her newest thriller, Song of the Lion, which follows a Navajo Tribal Police officer as she tracks a vengeful car bomber. 6 pm, free
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Bring your best tango moves to this weekly dance. 8:30 pm, $5
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Battle others for the seat as king of knowing everything about trivia and show them just how many useless facts you know about the Starks, or whatever subjects they’re trying to master this week. 8 pm, free
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Finnie performs pop songs on piano, and he sings along too. Watch him with a glass of vino in hand, because wine is life. 8 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
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COURTESY CITY OF MUD
A&C
Unmasked Legendary cartoonists reveal fine art powers at City of Mud BY J O R DA N E D DY @jordaneddyart
T
here’s a way to be a cartoonist without ever spilling a drop of ink. “Most comics are done completely digitally these days,” says Jamie Chase, a local illustrator who works with respected publishers such as Dark Horse Comics. He hasn’t hopped on the digital bandwagon, though. His propensity for putting pen to paper is linked to the other masks he wears: fine artist and gallerist. Chase exhibits his figurative and abstract paintings at Mill Contemporary on Canyon Road. He also co-directs City of Mud (1114-A Hickox St., 954-1705), which opened in October 2015 to spotlight artists who eschew Santa Fe’s notorious regional style for aesthetics that are making waves on the national contemporary art scene. The gallery’s never done anything like Illustrated!, an exhibition of legendary comic artists showing off their fine art chops. Chase, who curated the show, still can’t quite believe he’s managed to assemble such a super group. “This is like my fantasy superhero team,” he says. “Except a couple of them have died.” Chase’s first friend in the larger comics community was Jeffrey Catherine Jones, a transgender artist whose remarkable career in comics stretched across five decades. Jones accepted Chase’s first-ever Facebook friend request, and the two kept in contact on the social network until Jones’ death in 2011. Through her, Chase met many of the career comic artists who appear in Illustrated!. “The thing that connects these artists is that they all work in traditional materials,” Chase says, strolling through the half-installed show on a Wednesday afternoon. “It represents a moment in illustration that may be dying, because it’s being replaced by purely digital creators. I would like for those younger artists to come in and see what it looks like when an artist actually does it on paper.” The artists in Illustrated! sent Chase stacks of ink-on-paper
“Thinker” by William Wray shows a different side of Spidey. BELOW: Scott Hampton’s “American Gods.”
sketches to frame, but they also offered up paintings that they worked on in their free time. Chase sifts through a cardboard box full of watercolors by George Pratt, a painter and illustrator known for his critically acclaimed graphic novel Enemy Ace: War Idyll from 1990. “Some of these watercolors look like work by John Singer Sargent,” says Chase, evoking the early-1900s Edwardian portrait painter. Leaning against the wall nearby, there’s an
oil painting of a World War I soldier in a foxhole that captures the expressive energy of a great modernist canvas. “Anybody who thinks illustration can’t be abstract hasn’t looked up close at this thing,” Chase says. “It’s beautiful.” Around the corner, Chase has arranged a series of small ink-and-watercolor drawings by Scott Hampton in a frame. Each of these works is a panel from the Hampton-illustrated “A Haunted Island” (from the graphic novel compilation Spookhouse 2), but he worked on them as individual compositions. Chase illustrates comics in the same manner, carefully balancing details and abstract strokes within each panel to keep a viewer’s eyes on the move. “We’ll have the books on display during the show, so people can see how these panels look in context with the writing,” Chase says. Other notable artists in the show include Bill Sienkiewicz, an Eisner Award winner who has illustrated The New Mutants and Elektra: Assassin for Marvel Comics, as well as Bruce Jones, a writer and illustrator who’s known for his racy 1980s retellings of sci-fi horror stories from the 1950s. Albuquerque illustrator Andy Kuhn, who contributed several sketches to the show, was floored when he heard the list of artists. “I have a pretty clear-cut idea of where I am in the hierarchy
of the comics world,” Kuhn told SFR by phone. “Most of the guys who are in this show are well above my station. My teenage self is geeking out, and my 50-year-old self is geeking out.” Kuhn’s quarter century-long career is nothing to sneeze at: He’s illustrated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Mars Attacks for IDW Publishing, and co-authored FIREBREATHER, which was adapted into an Emmy Award-winning film for Cartoon Network in 2010. Kuhn studied painting and drawing as an undergraduate student at Indiana University’s Herron School of Art, but took up cartooning after art school and hasn’t looked back. Participating in Illustrated! has inspired him to consider returning to his long-abandoned paint palette. “I am definitely going to be picking up a brush,” he says. That’s exactly the sort of cross-pollination Chase is hoping to inspire. “These artists are amazingly talented, and it’s exciting to introduce them to entirely new audiences,” he says. “Being a commercial artist offers you the freedom to paint what you want in your free time, even if it wouldn’t necessarily sell in a gallery.” Unshackled from the pressures of the fine art market, these illustrators create imagery that soars—even if the title of “fine artist” is something of a secret identity.
ILLUSTRATED! MASTERS OF GRAPHIC NOVEL ART OPENING RECEPTION 5 pm Friday April 7. Free. City of Mud, 1114-A Hickox St., 954-1705
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CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 El Farol’s famous Tuesday night blues jam has moved to boxcar for the next two months during renovation, so don’t go to the wrong place, dummy. 8:30 pm, free CHICANO BATMAN, SADGIRL AND THE SHACKS Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 A dollop of Brazilian tropicalia and a dash of ‘70s psychedelia-soul make this four-man-band and their fuzzed-out soul the kind of
THE CALENDAR
music you won’t soon forget. Plus, they dress in beautiful vintage suits. Expect some new tunes from their latest album, Freedom is Free. Opening acts SadGirl and The Shacks play their respective branches of rock to kick the evening off. 7 pm, $14 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery performs piano standards with so much talent, they don’t seem standard at all. 6:30 pm, free
PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Jazzy guitar goodness supplied by Malone in his solo venture in the wine-packed venue. One rose please. 6 pm, free PAWZ ONE: THE PICK YOUR POISON TOUR The Underground 200 W San Francisco St. The West Coast hip-hopper performs at the downstairs venue as part of his 2017 tour. 9 pm, $5
COURTESY NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART
MUSEUMS
southwestcare.org
Greater Santa Fe Restaurant Association Second Annual
CHEFS’ GALA
April 11, 2017 | 5:30 pm L a Fo n d a Ho t e l , Lumpkins Ballroom
FIVE course wine dinner prepared by these top chefs:
Jose Rodriguez (La Casa Sena) Ahmed Obo (Jambo Café) Paddy Rawal (Raaga) Lane Warner (La Plazuela at La Fonda) Cristian Pontiggia (Osteria d’ Assisi)
reception cocktails & wine silent auction • live guitar special la fonda room rate $125 per ticket TO ORDER TICKETS
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The retrospective exhibit of works by Cady Wells, Ruminations, includes works like “untitled” and others through Sept 17. EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 Living history. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St.,946-1000 O’Keeffe at the University of Virginia. Through Aug. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Ken Price, Death Shrine I. Agnes Martin Gallery. Continuum, Through May. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Athena LaTocha: Inside the Forces of Nature. Through May. New Impressions: Experiments in Contemporary Native American Printmaking. Through June. Daniel McCoy: The Ceaseless Quest for Utopia. Through Jan. 2018. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE
710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Frank Buffalo Hyde: I-Witness Culture. Through Jan. 2018. Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art. Jody Naranjo: Revealing Joy. Through Sept. MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 No Idle Hands: The Myths and Meanings of Tramp Art. Through Sept. 16. Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico. Through Sept. Sacred Realm. The Morris Miniature Circus. Under Pressure. Through Dec. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Chimayó: A Pilgrimage Through Two Centuries. The Beltran Kropp Collection. The Delgado Room. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 Agnes Martin and Me. Through Aug. Out of the Box: The Art of the Cigar. Through Oct. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072
Meggan Gould and Andy Mattern: Light Tight. Through Sept. 17. Cady Wells: Ruminations. Through Sept. 17. Conversations in Painting. Through April. Be With Me: A Small Exhibition of Large Paintings. Through April. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Treasures of Devotion/ Tesoros de Devoción. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 Water Is Life Pushpin Show. Through June. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Bill Barrett: Visual Poetry. Through March. Ojos y Manos. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Eveli: Energy and Significance.
FOOD
Today and Tomorrow BY MICHAEL J WILSON t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
T
he odd little space between Pink Adobe and Rio Chama has housed a number of different businesses over the years. I worked there 14 years ago when it was Café Pink, the Adobe’s failed attempt at a coffee shop. As of last fall, the space has become home to Gourmet Today Café (410-A Old Santa Fe Trail, 903-649-2128). I’ve always liked the spot. It’s cozy, narrow and has a great patio with a very large mural celebrating Fiestas and the reconquest of Santa Fe that, subject matter aside, is a really a nice piece of art. Owner TJ Griffith has managed to do something strange and beautiful here. The place is an unapologetic throwback. There are prints of birds on the walls. The seats have crocheted cushions on them. Each table has a little potted plant on it. This may sound like a backhanded compliment, but there is a sense that your grandmother has opened her sitting room to visitors. The concept of the restaurant is pretty unique as well. Griffith sells a list of standard sandwiches and soups, but the attraction is the rotating entree and dessert menu. Every day is a slightly different experiment in cooking with a mostly traditional American lean. It’s clear that this comes from a place of gen-
uine love of food—that it is also a business is probably a benefit. The day I stopped by, the food gods were clearly happy with me—it was chicken pot pie day. I mean ... meat pies are my thing, and I think the meat pie drought has ended for Santa Fe. As luck would have it, I was with my friend Lefty (who went with me for the sad shepherd’s pie at Blue Corn Café in my first column). We both ordered the chicken pot pie ($15) with a side of corn bread served with fresh-made butter. Entrees come with a nice small salad with seasonal veggies. Ours had beets and cucumber in it. The house dressing is a tangy, poppy vinaigrette that I could have poured on nearly anything.
Pie Quest 2017 Update
FIRST IMPRESSIONS: 1
The food is plated really well.
2 I was immediately comfortable in the space. 3
The food looks so, so good!
The pot pie was perfect: buttery, melty crust overflowing with creamy, but not overly thick, gravy and large hunks of chicken. Ample vegetables. The portion was just right. The cornbread was bright yellow and sweet, and the crust on top added just the right level of texture. The butter wasn’t skimpy. After such a meal it may sound gluttonous to get dessert, but the options
for the day were Texas chocolate sheet cake with pecans ($7) or hot apple cobbler ($6.50). We got one of each, and this was the right choice. The cake was a slab of dense chocolatey sugar served warm enough to melt on your tongue. It was sweet but not cloying. You could taste the chocolate and the frosting was the right balance of fudge and heart attack. Cobbler is usually difficult. Most is just applesauce with a sad topping. This was light, eggy and delicate. Simply wonderful. And this brings up the greatest positive of the place: It isn’t Mexican food. I know this sounds weird, but a menu without green chile on it is something to behold. This is a restaurant serving what you find at family reunions, but at a fourstar level. It’s Southern comfort food, raised up. And Griffith doesn’t care for food trends. The menu features shrimp cocktail! I couldn’t even tell you the last time I saw that on a menu. There is something oddly satisfying about simple, well-made cooking. The only drawbacks are price—it is definitely a touch pricey for lunch—and the location. Parking is a bit rough in that area. Take a chance on it, though. We often talk about restaurants as extensions of their chef, and this one is clearly an extension of Griffith. The place is a one-woman show; she cooks, waits on tables and does the dishes, the whole time chatting about the meal of the day. I can imagine myself being in a mood where this would annoy, but Griffith is too damn nice to not want to talk to her. This is restaurant as personality, and it just works.
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MOVIES
RATINGS
Ghost in the Shell Review
BEST MOVIE EVER
10
A major disappointment
9 8
BY KENDALL MAC i n t e r n @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
7
Strap in for yet another blockbuster blunder. Scarlett Johansson’s (Avengers) latest motion picture dumpster fire, Ghost in the Shell, explores a not-so-distant-future where technology runs the lives of everyone in a racially ambiguous world. Major Mira Killian, portrayed by Johansson, is created and outfitted with a completely synthetic robotic body but controlled by a human brain. Her soul (the eponymous “ghost”) is trapped inside a cybernetic cage (the eponymous “shell”), rendering her an obedient, emotionless drone subject to her commander’s orders. Throughout the entirety of the film it is apparent that Major truly cannot trust anyone and that you probably should have just gone to see Boss Baby. Serving as an invisible assassin, fighting machine-gun misogyny with straight bangs and a rebel-without-a-cause attitude, Johansson’s performance does little to create a genuine connection with an audience. This film is actually an
6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER
2 ++ THERE’S A DOG -- WHITEWASHING
awful attempt to subliminally solidify whiteness as an indication of power through flashy graphics and obvious objectification of women. All the lead characters were portrayed by actors perceived to be white, living in a fictitious Asian-inspired foggy inferno fighting amongst themselves. Equipped with shiny robotic ladyparts and a bad haircut, ScarJo fights robotic geishas with spider legs, oily-faced club owners and of course, like all great mysterious leading ladies, her inner demons. Johansson, who was clearly conjuring her character’s brooding and monotone demeanor from The L Word’s Shane, gives audi-
ences little to work with in an already-confusing storyline. Director Rupert Sanders (Snow White and the Huntsman) has created a new and improved manic pixie robot dream girl who does little to distract from the racist and overly sexualized adaptation of Masamune Shirow’s 1989 manga of the same name. Just start there instead. GHOST IN THE SHELL Directed by Sanders With Johansson Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 107 min.
QUICKY REVIEWS
6
THE BLACKCOAT’S DAUGHTER
THE BLACKCOAT’S DAUGHTER
6
++ KIERNAN SHIPKA -- SLOW AS HELL; MINIMAL PAYOFF
The introspective, perhaps more socially conscious “new wave horror” movement in cinema has achieved some pretty killer results (what’s up, It Follows?!), but generally speaking, the tone and pacing of such movies can err toward the tedious. Whether this is meant to convey a methodical or even clinical approach remains unclear, and though themes and inspiration from the heyday of 1980s horror are surely part of the equation, we’re often left with a lot of “atmospheric” quiet moments and little payoff. The Blackcoat’s Daughter (which is from 2015 but somehow opens now) falls someplace in there, though the closing few minutes kind of make it worth it … kind of. Two teen girls are left stranded at their upstate New York boarding school over a break when their parents don’t arrive, and as things start to get creepy—y’know, because boarding schools are big and also creepy—young Rose (Lucy Boynton of Sing Street) begins to get the heebie-jeebies from Kiernan Shipka’s character, Kat. Meanwhile, another young woman, Joan
9
LIFE
5
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
(Emma Roberts), heads toward the school with an older couple facing the loss of a child. Roberts, in all of her not-talking, weird-face-making, not-responding-to-simple-questions glory, disappoints, though it seems she sincerely tried to bring her all.
8
KONG: SKULL ISLAND
But still, questions remain. What’s up at the school? Why is Joan heading there? Where the hell are everyone’s parents? And why would the school be like, “Sure, you guys can just stay here by yourselves, just maybe call once in awhile or something”?
7
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LOGAN
KEDI
The answers slowly (and we mean slowly) unfold and we start to think that maybe Kat’s, like, got a demon all up in her. Ultimately, Shipka’s performance becomes the film’s saving grace. She’s always carried a certain quiet intensity and, with very little dialogue, she brings a new twist to the horror trope of “creepy-ass little girl.” You’ll probably need to be a horror fan to get the most out of this one, but The Blackcoat’s Daughter also has a funny way of sticking with you afterwards. It’s slightly rewarding to figure out the mild twist, but more exciting to revel in Shipka’s mastery of scary faces. (Alex De Vore) Jean Cocteau Cinema, R, 93 min.
LIFE
9
“Ohmygod. Would I even be in movies if not for my Aunt Julia?” Emma Roberts asks herself in The Blackcoat’s Daughter. “Probably not,” says everyone else.
++ RYAN REYNOLDS’ SMARMY WIT,
INTERGALACTIC BATTLE ROYALE
-- NO UGLY ASTRONAUTS
Director Daniel Espinosa’s (Safe House) new science-fiction thriller, Life, follows six absurdly attractive astronauts attempting to control a celestial lifeform. After recovering dirt samples from Mars, the team discovers a rapidly evolving single-cell organism unlike any intergalactic inhabitant ever seen. The malevolent Martian CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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MOVIES
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begins to fight back against its captors with gnarly open-mouth kisses and floating spacecraft bloodshed. This film’s ever-evolving extraterrestrial assassin will surely make you glad you’re seated safely on Earth, maybe for the first time since election night. Before you write off this film as a shiny new imitation of Ridley Scott’s creation spawned by money-hungry Hollywood executives, don’t let the pretty-faced playboys, Jake Gyllenhaal (Nightcrawler) and Ryan Reynolds (Deadpool), stifle an otherwise intense and entertaining movie; the acting is surprisingly impressive, the effects are outstanding and the sound cues will surely have you on the edge of your seat screaming, “Kill it with Fire!” Though Espinosa may exploit the same basic storyline and similar shock elements of precursor sci-fi flicks, these inspirations further Life’s excellence rather than mangle its predecessors’ iconic, suspenseful style. Similar to the Xenomorph in Alien, this creature, lovingly referred to as Calvin, grows into a murderous squid-like desperado throughout the film, proving one of Life’s more horrifying lessons: Don’t screw with aliens. Espinosa does pick up extra credit for including underappreciated international stars like Hiroyuki Sanada (Game of Chance), Rebecca Ferguson (The Girl on the Train), Olga Dihovichnaya (Twilight Portrait) and Ariyon Bakare (The Dark Knight), rather than center on the survival of one character. Yet, by the end of the film, Hugh Derry (played by Bakare) will probably go down in movie history as the worst fictional astroscientist. Turns out, when you are emotionally invested in more than one character, it makes the inevitable internalization of “Who’s going to make it out alive?!” even more unbearable. The last five minutes of the movie alone make the film worth the down payment necessary for popcorn and a small soda. (Kendall Mac) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 103 min.
inevitably falls in love despite the meager machismo and brutish advances of resident asshole Gaston (Luke Evans from Fast & Furious 6). With the help of his house staff, Lumière (Trainspotting’s Ewan McGregor), Cogsworth (Lord of the Rings’ Ian McKellen) and Mrs. Potts (Love Actually’s Emma Thompson), the Beast is able to prove he’s worthy of Belle’s love through manipulation and coercion. Spoiler alert: The two lead characters inevitably fall in love and Gaston is the winner of the No Belle Prize. The Beast, who never once gives his real name and doesn’t correct anyone when they call him such, tears Belle from her ailing father, falsely imprisons her, uses threats of violence and withholds food to convince her he’s “not like most guys,” only to triumphantly win her over with his extensive collection of leather-bound books. Modern romance. While the introduction of new songs, bright colors and subtle hints of Lafou’s queerness (portrayed by Book of Mormon’s Josh Gad) were distracting from the ragtag bunch of feeble fellas this film has to offer, Belle’s line rang true that “there must be more than this provincial life.” Perhaps maybe a plot point that doesn’t center around the
alienation or objectification of women who make their own choices? Just a suggestion. Running a nearly unbearable two hoursplus, this film has all the fun-loving problematic characters we know and love from the original animated version. However, the best review for this film is probably a vague “ehhhh” noise and a noncommittal wiggly hand gesture. (KM) Regal, Violet Crown, PG, 129 min.
KONG: SKULL ISLAND
6
++ GIANT MONSTERS AND A SWEET ’70S SOUNDTRACK
-- SHALLOW, PREDICTABLE AND SILLY
The most recent Hollywood take on the giant ape himself, King Kong, should have left us with a monstrous hunger for more. Instead, it feels like a souped-up version of Honey I Shrunk the Kids meets the third or fourth Jurassic Park all set to the soundtrack of Good Morning, Vietnam. Knowing this movie was heavier on the action than the plot, and wanting the throat-shaking sounds and sights to feel even closer, we went to a 3D showing and don’t regret it. Seeing Kong bat choppers out of the air and smash them
LOGAN
7
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
5
++ PISSING OFF ONE MILLION MOMS -- MEN AND UNREALISTIC DISHWARE
Is your masculinity feeling fragile? Fear not, delicate dudes, for the fraternity of frivolous bros in Disney’s newest live-action movie-musical has enough beefcakes and bestiality for audiences of all ages. Director Bill Condon’s (Dreamgirls, Kinsey) adaptation of the 1991 animated film of the same name illustrates the story of a cursed narcissistic prince (Dan Stevens of Downton Abbey) and a thoughtful, young woman (Emma Watson) who
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together in a fiery explosion was pretty badass, and we were entertained by not just Kong but the surprising other monsters that emerge from the forbidden jungle, splendid in its CGI majesty. Yet, part of what made the flick promising was the thought of seeing Samuel L Jackson take on the biggest gorilla this side of the galaxy and John Goodman as a government monster-chaser. Whether it’s the silly script or their shallow characters, neither leaves a remarkable impression. The story is not supposed to be complicated, but did it have to be so predictable? Did the filmmakers have to write in one more female journalist (Brie Larson, Rampart) who seems to have brought too few clothes for a jungle mission? Why on earth didn’t she put her hair in ponytail while she tried to take pictures from the open door of the ‘Nam helicopter? And, oh no, why does she go from detesting to flirting with the ex-military expedition leaders in a matter of minutes? Wait for it: Why is she looking so lovingly into Kong’s terrifying red eyes? These and more questions are sure to get non-answers as it seems all but certain there will be a sequel. Maybe even more than one. Plus, do yourself a favor and get your $11 out of the deal by staying through to final scene at the end of the credits. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 120 min.
This living effing candelabra is like, “Do you care that two men dance together in our movie?” And the living clock is like, “Naw, man. Ain’t nobody got time for that.”
++ A PLOT YOU CAN FOLLOW AND
FAMILY TIES YOU CAN RELATE TO
-- GORE AT THE HANDS OF A KID
You know when Clint Eastwood got old and made Million Dollar Baby and it finally sunk in that even he too would wither and fade right in front of us on the big screen? At first, you feel this way about Hugh Jackman in the latest— and they promise us, sorta, the last—Wolverine movie. But then you realize that Logan is getting old, only he’s not going to go quietly into that good night. While this is really the bajillionth in a series of long, sometimes-overproduced and complicated tales in the X-Men franchise, it’s true that you don’t really need a lot of backstory to follow along. Wolverine is tired. He coughs and limps. He works as a chauffeur and carries businessmen and bachelorette parties in a limo around a city that resembles El Paso. But like a lot of those battling the marching of time (read: all of us), he’s got some bigger fights ahead. It’s not just ol’ Wolvie who’s aging, but also Professor X (Patrick Stewart). Once the teacher/savior/organizer for mutants, now it’s X who needs protecting. But what happens when a man whose brain can stop time develops
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MOVIES
Kong is not as fun to hang with as Grape Ape or Magilla Gorilla. Not even at all.
dementia? It’s what one character says is “degenerative brain disease in the world’s most dangerous brain.” This, and so much more, is on Wolverine’s scarred-yet-still-shapely shoulders. Although “new mutants” were supposed to be a thing of the past, a child with killer instincts and familiar metallic claws arrives in need of saving. After that, maybe their fights have less in common with our fights. Rated R for violence, there’s a ton of gore in the story—no shortage of decapitations, impalements and claws through the head, eyes, neck and every other bloody part you can think of. Yet somehow when a little girl (a great performance, BTW, from a mostly otherwise silent Dafne Keen) lets out a grunt as she delivers it, you’re rooting for her along with the familiar man with the muscles. He’s old. But he’s still got it. (JAG) Regal, Violet Crown. R, 137 min.
Through this, Kedi sneakily becomes perhaps more about the humans in the cats’ lives rather than the opposite. A sailor, for instance, who once lost everything but was saved by a cat who led him to a hidden cache of money, spends his days roaming the port feeding feral kittens with a bottle. Elsewhere, a baker forms an unlikely alliance with a cat who unwittingly gives his life meaning beyond his work. In a nearby home packed to the rafters with countless strays, two women cook for and feed dozens of street cats daily. Even those who aren’t in love with these fascinating creatures will find a captivating human story here. And rather than linger on the more cutesy aspects of felines, Kedi instead proves an inspiring treatise on the enriching aspects of animals and a satisfying glimpse into the beauty of the city itself. (ADV) Center for Contemporary Arts, Violet Crown NR, 80 min.
KEDI
9
++ NOT JUST FOR CAT LOVERS -- COULD HAVE BEEN LONGER
The camera moves along the ancient streets of Istanbul, following a particularly adorable orange cat. Diners at streetside cafés hand over treats. Passersby respectfully step around her. Nearby, a clever striped fellow scales a three-story building to visit a human friend in her apartment. At an outdoor flea market across town, young and old cats alike sleep amongst the wares. The camera pans along the port and cranes up over the gorgeous Golden Horn, revealing the massive labyrinth of a city. This is Kedi, a new documentary on the street cats of Istanbul from director Ceyda Torun, and it is awe-inspiring. We follow the seemingly ordinary lives of various cats who live throughout the sprawling Turkish metropolis on the sea. From a rather polite comrade who haunts a deli patio (but is never so rude as to go inside), a beat-up old tabby who rules her perceived turf with an iron paw, a portside puffer who keeps the mouse population under control and beyond, the brief windows into the lives of cats come together to prove one thing: Cats are beloved in Istanbul.
CCA CINEMATHEQUE 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338
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LILLY 3 is a sweet girl who is a little shy at first but quickly warms up to human attention. She is good with kids, however, she has never been introduced to a dog. LILLY 3 has a short black and white coat in a tuxedo pattern. AGE: born approx. 2010
SPOOKY 1 and his siblings LILLY 3, ROSCOE 2 and CHUNKY were the beloved pets of a couple who passed away within two months of each other. The couple’s children who live 2,000 miles away, wanted what is best for the cats and decided to relinquish them to F&F to find forever homes rather than try to integrate them into families with large numbers of cats and dogs.
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MIND BODY SPIRIT ASTROLOGY Rob Brezsny
Week of April 5th
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be interested in first things, Aries. Cultivate your attraction to beginnings. Align yourself with uprisings and breakthroughs. Find out what’s about to hatch, and lend your support. Give your generous attention to potent innocence and novel sources of light. Marvel at people who are rediscovering the sparks that animated them when they first came into their power. Fantasize about being a curious seeker who is devoted to reinventing yourself over and over again. Gravitate toward influences that draw their vitality directly from primal wellsprings. Be excited about first things.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) I hope that by mid-May you will be qualified to teach a workshop called “Sweet Secrets of Tender Intimacy” or “Dirty Secrets of Raw Intimacy” or maybe even “Sweet and Dirty Secrets of Raw and Tender Intimacy.” In other words, Libra, I suspect that you will be adding substantially to your understanding of the art of togetherness. Along the way, you may also have experiences that would enable you to write an essay entitled “How to Act Like You Have Nothing to Lose When You Have Everything to Gain.”
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Are you weary of lugging around decayed guilt and regret? Is it increasingly difficult to keep forbidden feelings concealed? Have your friends been wondering about the whip marks from your self-flagellation sessions? Do you ache for redemption? If you answered yes to any of those questions, listen up. The empathetic and earthy saints of the Confession Catharsis Corps are ready to receive your blubbering disclosures. They are clairvoyant, they’re non-judgmental, and best of all, they’re free. Within seconds after you telepathically communicate with our earthy saints, they will psychically beam you eleven minutes of unconditional love, no strings attached. Do it! You’ll be amazed at how much lighter and smarter you feel. Transmit your sad stories to the Confession Catharsis Corps NOW! GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Now is an excellent time to FREE YOUR MEMORIES. What comes to mind when I suggest that? Here are my thoughts on the subject. To FREE YOUR MEMORIES, you could change the way you talk and feel about your past. Re-examine your assumptions about your old stories, and dream up fresh interpretations to explain how and why they happened. Here’s another way to FREE YOUR MEMORIES: If you’re holding on to an insult someone hurled at you once upon a time, let it go. In fact, declare a general amnesty for everyone who ever did you wrong. By the way, the coming weeks will also be a favorable phase to FREE YOURSELF OF MEMORIES that hold you back. Are there any tales you tell yourself about the past that undermine your dreams about the future? Stop telling yourself those tales.
EVOLUTIONARY ASTROLOGER TERRI ZEE has recently moved to Santa Fe SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) If you have a dream of eat- and is now welcoming new ing soup with a fork, it might mean that in your waking clients. She is certified by life you’re using the wrong approach to getting nourboth schools of Evolutionary ished. If you have a dream of entering through an exit, Astrology, Steven Forrest’s it might mean that in your waking life you’re trying to Apprenticeship Program, and start at the end rather than the beginning. And if you Jeffrey Wolf Green’s School dream of singing nursery rhymes at a karaoke bar with of Evolutionary Astrology. unlikable people from high school, it might mean that Terri has over seventeen in your waking life you should seek more fulfilling ways years of experience in soulto express your wild side and your creative energies. based astrology and offers (P.S. You’ll be wise to do these things even if you don’t consultation either in person have the dreams I described.) or via Skype. Please visit her website http://terrizee.com/ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) If you’re a Quixotic lover, you’re more in love with love itself than with any or email zee2@airmail.net or person. If you’re a Cryptic lover, the best way to stay in call 214-912-3126. love with a particular partner is to keep him or her guessing. If you’re a Harlequin, your steady lover must provide as much variety as three lovers. If you’re a Buddy, your specialties are having friendly sex and having sex with friends. If you’re a Histrionic, you’re addicted to confounding, disorienting love. It’s also possible that you’re none of the above. I hope so, because now is an excellent time to have a beginner’s mind about what kind of love you really need and want to cultivate in the future.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your new vocabulary word is “adytum.” It refers to the most sacred place within a sacred place—the inner shrine at the heart of a sublime sanctuary. Is there such a spot in your world? A location that embodies all you hold precious about your CANCER (June 21-July 22) How big is your vocabulary? journey on planet Earth? It might be in a church or temTwenty thousand words? Thirty thousand? Whatever size ple or synagogue or mosque, or it could be a magic zone it is, the coming weeks will be prime time to expand it. in nature or a corner of your bedroom. Here you feel an Life will be conspiring to enhance your creative use of lanintimate connection with the divine, or a sense of awe guage…to deepen your enjoyment of the verbal flow…to and reverence for the privilege of being alive. If you don’t help you become more articulate in rendering the mystehave a personal adytum, Capricorn, find or create one. rious feelings and complex thoughts that rumble around inside you. If you pay attention to the signals coming from You need the refreshment that comes from dwelling in the midst of the numinous. your unconscious mind, you will be shown how to speak and write more effectively. You may not turn into a silver- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You could defy gravity a tongued persuader, but you could become a more elolittle, but not a lot. You can’t move a mountain, but you quent spokesperson for your own interests. may be able to budge a hill. Luck won’t miraculously enable you to win a contest, but it might help you seize LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) We all need more breaks from the routine—more holidays, more vacations, more days a hard-earned perk or privilege. A bit of voraciousness may be good for your soul, but a big blast of greed off from work. We should all play and dance and sing would be bad for both your soul and your ego. Being more, and guiltlessly practice the arts of leisure and savvy and feisty will energize your collaborators and relaxation, and celebrate freedom in regular boisterous attract new allies; being a smart-ass show-off would rituals. And I’m nominating you to show us the way in the coming weeks, Leo. Be a cheerleader who alienate and repel people. exemplifies how it’s done. Be a ringleader who springs PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Here are activities that will all of us inmates out of our mental prisons. Be the be especially favorable for you to initiate in the near imaginative escape artist who demonstrates how to future: 1. Pay someone to perform a service for you relieve tension and lose inhibitions. that will ease your suffering. 2. Question one of your VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) People in your vicinity may fixed opinions if that will lead to you receiving a fun be preoccupied with trivial questions. What’s more invitation you wouldn’t get otherwise. 3. Dole out sinnutritious, corn chips or potato chips? Could Godzilla cere praise or practical help to a person who could help kick King Kong’s ass? Is it harder to hop forward on one you overcome one of your limitations. 4. Get clear foot or backward with both feet? I suspect you will also about how one of your collaborations would need to encounter folks who are embroiled in meaningless deci- change in order to serve both of you better. Then tell sions and petty emotions. So how should you navigate your collaborator about the proposed improvement your way through this energy-draining muddle? Here’s with light-hearted compassion. my advice: Identify the issues that are most worthy of Homework: Who’s the person you’d most like to meet your attention. Stay focused on them with disciplined and have coffee or a drink with? Why? Testify at devotion. Be selfish in your rapt determination to serve your clearest and noblest and holiest agendas. 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 1 7 R O B B R E Z S N Y
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Kirk Vincent Barrows Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-00597 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Kirk Vincent Barrows will apply to the Honorable FRANCIS J. MATHEW, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 11:15 a.m. on the 13th day of April, 2017 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Kirk Vincent Barrows to Kirk Ruben Mikiah. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Veronica Rivera Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Kirk Vincent Barrows Petitioner, Pro Se STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF MALIA REIN BACA, A CHILD. Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-00639 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et. seq. the Petitioner Alexandria O’Dell will apply to the Honorable David K. Thomson, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe, New Mexico at 9:00 a.m. on the 10th day of May, 2017 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of the child from Malia Rein Baca to Malia Rein O’Dell. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Gloria Landin Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Alexandria O’Dell Petitioner, Pro Se STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Ricky Benjamin Martinez Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-00742 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Ricky Benjamin Martinez will apply to the Honorable SARAH M. SINGLETON, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 1:00 p.m. on the 3rd day of May, 2017 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Ricky Benjamin Martinez to Ricardo Benjamin Martinez 38
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PUBLICATION 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 two FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT months after the date of the COUNTY OF SANTA FE first publication of this Notice STATE OF NEW MEXICO or the claims will be forever NO. D-101-PB-2016-00153 barred. Claims must be preIN THE MATTER OF THE sented either to the undersigned ESTATE OF MARCIA Personal Representative, DAVID OESTE-WEST, Deceased. ADELSON, c/o PADILLA LAW NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY FIRM, P.A., P.O. Box 2523, Santa PUBLICATION Fe, New Mexico 87504-2523, or NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN filed in the First Judicial District that the undersigned has been Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, appointed personal representa- PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, New tive of this estate. All persons Mexico, 87505. having claims against this estate Dated: March 14, 2017 are required to present their DAVID ADELSON, Personal claims within two months after Representative of the Estate of the date of the first publicaDEBORAH A. SPEAR, Deceased tion of this Notice or the claims PADILLA LAW FIRM, PA will be forever barred. Claims By: /s/ ERNEST L. PADILLA must be presented either to the ERNEST L. PADILLA undersigned Ancillary Personal Attorney For Applicant Representative, JEANETTE PO Box 2523 GOODWIN, c/o PADILLA LAW Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 FIRM, P.A., P.O. Box 2523, Santa 505-988-7577 Telephone Fe, New Mexico 87504-2523, or 505-988-7592 Fax filed in the First Judicial District padillalaw@qwestoffice.net Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, New STATE OF NEW MEXICO Mexico, 87505. IN THE PROBATE COURT DATED: March 16, 2017 SANTA FE COUNTY JEANETTE GOODWIN, Ancillary No.: 2017-0045 Personal Representative of the IN THE MATTER OF THE Estate of Marcia Oeste-West, ESTATE OF Gloria Martinez, Deceased. DECEASED. PADILLA LAW FIRM, PA NOTICE TO CREDITORS By: /s/ ERNEST L. PADILLA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ERNEST L. PADILLA that the undersigned has been Attorney for Applicant appointed personal representaPO Box 2523 tive of this estate. All persons Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 having claims against this estate 505-988-7577 Telephone are required to present their 505-988-7592 Fax claims within four (4) months padillalaw@qwestoffice.net after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the STATE OF NEW MEXICO claims will be forever barred. COUNTY OF SANTA FE Claims must be presented either FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT to the undersigned personal repIN THE MATTER OF A resentative at the address listed PETITION FOR CHANGE OF below, or filed with the Probate NAME OF Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mary Sue McEvers Mexico, located at the following Case No.: D-101-CV-2017-00687 address: 102 Grant Ave., Santa NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME Fe, New Mexico. TAKE NOTICE that in Dated: March 30, 2017 accordance with the provisions Noberto Ben Martinez of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 1640 Pasada del Ben 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Santa Fe, NM 87507 Petitioner Mary Sue McEvers (505) 474-6099 will apply to the Honorable FRANCIS J. MATHEW, District FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Judge of the First Judicial COUNTY OF SANTA FE District at the Santa Fe Judicial STATE OF NEW MEXICO Complex, 225 Montezuma No.: D-101-CV-2017-00748 Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION at 11:15 a.m. on the 13th day FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF of April, 2017 for an ORDER MARGARET VIOLA VALDEZ FOR CHANGE OF NAME from NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR Mary Sue McEvers to Suashia CHANGE OF NAME Mikumari McEvers. TAKE NOTICE that in accordance STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District with the provisions of Sections Court Clerk 40-8-1 through 40-8-3 NMSA By: Monica Chavez Crespin 1978, et seq., the Petitioner Deputy Court Clerk Margaret Viola Valdez will Submitted by: apply to the Honorable David K. Mary Sue McEvers Thomson, District Judge of the Petitioner, Pro Se First Judicial District, at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex Building, 225 IN THE FIRST DISTRICT COURT Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe, New STATE OF NEW MEXICO Mexico at 9:00 o’clock a.m., on COUNTY OF SANTA FE the 10th day of May, 2017, for an NO. D-101-PB-2017-00013 ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME IN THE MATTER OF THE from MARGARET VIOLA VALDEZ ESTATE OF DEBORAH A. to VIOLA MARGARET VALDEZ. SPEAR, Deceased. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY District Court Clerk STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Veronica Rivera, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Ricky Benjamin Martinez Petitioner, Pro Se
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By: /s/ Jill Nohl Deputy Court Clerk Dated: March 29, 2017 Submitted by: Tracy E. Conner, P.C. Post Office Box 23434 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502 (505) 982-8201 Attorney for Petitioner
County of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted to Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, (“Villas De Santa Fe”). LEGAL NOTICES - Inc. Villas De Santa Fe was awarded a Default Judgment Decree of ALL OTHERS Foreclosure on November 2, NOTICE OF SALE ON 2016, in the principal sum of FORECLOSURE/ $3,158.67, plus attorney fees D-101-CV-2016-00151 and tax in the sum of $262.15 Angel Onwardo, LLC and attorney costs in the sum STATE OF NEW MEXICO of $510.70 for a total amount of COUNT OF SANTA FE $3,931.52, plus interest thereFIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT after at the rate of 8.75% per No. D-101-CV-2016-00151 annum from November 2, 2016, Villas De Santa Fe until the property is sold at a Condominium Association, Inc. Special Master’s Sale, plus costs Plaintiff, v. Angel Onwardo, LLC,; of the Special Master’s Sale, JOHN DOES I-V, inclusive; JANE including the Special Master’s DOES I-V, inclusive; BLACK fee in the amount of $212.50, CORPORATIONS I-V, inclusive; plus any additional attorney fees WHITE PARTNERSHIPS I-V, and costs actually expended inclusive; Unknown Heirs and from the date of this Default Devisees of each of the aboveJudgment until the date of named Defendants, if deceased, the Special Master’s sale, plus Defendant(s). those additional amounts, if any, NOTICE OF SALE ON which Plaintiff will be required FORECLOSURE PLEASE TAKE to pay before termination of NOTICE that the above-entitled this action for property taxes, Court, having appointed me or and insurance premiums, or my designee as Special Master any other cost of upkeep of the in this matter with the power to property of any sort. NOTICE IS sell, has ordered me to sell the FURTHER GIVEN that the real real property (the “Property”) property and improvements situated in Santa Fe County, concerned with herein will be New Mexico, commonly known sold subject to any and all patas 400 Griffin Street, Santa ent reservations, easements, all Fe, New Mexico 87501, and recorded and unrecorded liens more particularly described as not foreclosed herein, and all follows: 1 Timeshare Interest recorded and unrecorded special consisting of 1 undivided 1152 assessments and taxes that may interest in fee simple as tenbe due. Villas De Santa Fe and ant in common in and to the its attorneys, and the Special below-described Condominium Master disclaim all responsibilUnit, together with a correity for, and the purchaser at the sponding undivided interest sale takes the property, subject in the Common Furnishings to the valuation of the property which are appurtenant to such by the County Assessor as real Condominium Unit, as well as or personal property, affixture the recurring (i) exclusive right of any mobile or manufactured every calendar year to reserve, home to the land, deactivation use, and occupy an Assigned of title to a mobile or manufacUnit of the same Unit Type tured home on the property, if described below within Villas any, environmental contaminade Santa Fe, a Condominium tion on the property, if any, and (the “Project”); (ii) exclusive zoning violations concerning right to use and enjoy the the property, if any. NOTICE Limited Common Elements and IS FURTHER GIVEN that the Common Furnishings located purchaser at such sale shall within or otherwise appurtenant take title to the above described to such Assigned Unit; and (iii) real property subject to a one non-exclusive right to use and (1) month right of redemption. enjoy the Common Elements of PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS the reserved in accordance with AT SALE ARE ADVISED the provisions of then-current TO MAKE THEIR OWN Rules and Regulations promulEXAMINATION OF THE TITLE gated by Villas de Santa Fe AND THE CONDITION OF THE Condominium Association, Inc., PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT all pursuant to the Declaration THEIR OWN ATTORNEY of Condominium for Villas BEFORE BIDDING. de Santa Fe, a Condominium, By: Robert Doyle, Special Master duly recorded in the Office of P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, the Clerk of Santa Fe County, NM 87181 New Mexico, in Book 1462, at 505-417-4113 Page 195-294, as thereafter NOTIFICATION OF ELECTION amended (the “Declaration”). CANCELLATION Unit Number: 2220 Vacation Santa Fe-Pojoaque Soil and Week Number: 12 Unit Type: 1 Water Conservation District Bedroom Timeshare Interest: Floating Annual Year Timeshare The canvassing board for the Santa Fe-Pojoaque Soil and Interest The sale is to begin at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, April Water Conservation District certifies that since no more 26, 2017, on the front steps than one candidate has filed a of the First Judicial District declaration of candidacy district Courthouse, 225 Montezuma supervisor position #3 and Avenue, City of Santa Fe,
position #4, and there being no other questions on the ballot, the election has been canceled in accordance with Rules for Conducting an Election of District Supervisors (21.9.2.9 F, NMAC). Those individuals that have applied for, or received absentee ballots for this election will be contacted by the election superintendent. Date of this certification 3/23/2017 Signed: Edward Lucero, John L. Lenssen, Tim Henry Legal No. 205824 NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-0101-CV-2017- 0107 MARTHA E. MONTOYATRUJILLO and ALEX TRUJILLO, Plaintiffs, vs: 1. OLIVIA CALABAZA, CHARLENE MARTINEZ, GILBERT E. MONTOYA, POLLY MONTOYA, EVALINA MONTOYA, DAN MONTOYA, MARIO MONTOYA, ANITA BLIVEN-GALLEGOS, MARTIN BLIVEN, AARON BLIVEN, MELISSA GONZALES, CHRISTOPHER ARCHULETA, MICHAEL BLIVEN, JR., MATTHEW BLIVEN, EUGENE MONTOYA, MARYANN MONTOYA-SARMIENTO, ESTEFANITA CALABAZA, JIM CALABAZA, TYSON CALABAZA, DION CALABAZA, NAOMI CALABAZA, WILLIAM MONTOYA, PAUL MARTINEZ, VICTORIA DEAN, DAVID JAMES DEAN, VANESSA MONTOYA, NICHOLAS MONTOYA, VIRGINIA KAMM, JACOB TRUJILLO, MATEO TRUJILLO, ANGELICA TRUJILLO, CLEMENTE TRUJILLO, JIM TRUJILLO, LUCIANO TRUJILLO, ARSENIO TRUJILLO, GERALDINE MANNIX, CLARA DEMARIA, RAMON TRUJILLO, GEORGE TRUJILLO AND CHARLIE TRUJILLO; JEANIE TRUJILLO, VICKIE MARTINEZ, JR TRUJILLO, RAMON TRUJILLO, JAMES TRUJILLO, JEFF TRUJILLO, JAY TRUJILLO, WILLIAM TRUJILLO, RENEE MONTOYA, CARL TRUJILLO, CHRIS TRUJILLO, ANGELINA TRUJILLO, LAURA OMIDVARAN, JAN TRUJILLO, ARSENIO ‘JR’ TRUJILLO, NANETTE MAYFIELD, DAMIEN TRUJILLO, DANNY TRUJILLO, THOMAS MANNIX, JEANNIE MUELLER, MICHAEL MANNIX, ELIZABETH KREDIT, FRANSICO DEMARIA, JOANNA STROTHER, AND ANNAMARIA COLON; and 2. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF MICHAEL BLIVEN, FRANK MONTOYA, ABIE TRUJILLO, BILLY TRUJILLO, DAVID TRUJILLO AND JERRY TRUJILLO, DEFENDANTS. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION To the following named defendants and persons against who constructive service is sought to
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LEGALS be obtained, to wit: Michael Bliven, Jr., Victoria Dean, David James Dean, Vickie Martinez, Arsenio “JR” Trujillo, Damien Trujillo, Danny Trujillo and Thomas Mannix, Defendants: THE UNKNOWN HEIRS of Michael Bliven, Frank Montoya, Abie Trujillo, Billy Trujillo, David Trujillo And Jerry Trujillo, all deceased, Defendants; and ANY UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS of interest, who may claim a lien, interest or title adverse to the plaintiffs, Defendants. You are notified that the plaintiffs, Martha E. Montoya-Trujillo and Alex Trujillo have commenced a suit against you, as a named defendant in Cause No. No. D-0101-CV-2017- 0107, now pending in the First Judicial District Court, in Santa Fe County, by filing therein, their Complaint To Quiet Title and For Declaratory Judgment; that the general object of said suit is to quiet title and declare title to the Subject Real Estate, described below, in the names of the plaintiffs and to obtain a judgment declaring and adjudging that plaintiffs’ estate in the Subject Real Estate, described below, to be fee simple absolute and indefeasible title and that Plaintiffs’ title therein and thereto is established against the adverse claims of the defendants and each of them, and any party claiming through or under them; and that you have no right, title, interest or lien in, to or upon the Subject Real Estate, described below, or any portion thereof, and you be barred and forever estopped from having or claiming any lien upon or any right, option to, title or interest in or to the below-described Subject Real Estate or any portion thereof, adverse to plaintiffs, Martha E. Montoya-Trujillo and Alex Trujillo The Subject Real Estate is located at 7 Shalom, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87506 and is more particularly described as: A tract of land lying and being within a portion of Exception 258, Private Claim 326, and a portion of Exception 259, Private Claim 327, within the Pojoaque Pueblo Grant, In Section 9, Township 19 North, Range 9 East of the New Mexico Principal Meridian, Santa Fe County, New Mexico and being more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of the tract herein described, thence a tie to a U.S.G.L.O. brasscap identified as angle point 3 of said Exception 258, P. C. 326 Bears S08°06’37”W, 202.86 feet; thence from said point of beginning, N08°06’37”E,190.54 feet; thence S81°53’23”W. 156.22 feet to point and place of beginning. Containing 0.75 Acres, more or less. All as shown on Plat of Survey, prepared for Gilbert J. and Mary A. Montoya, by Cipriano Martinez, N. M. P. L. S. No. 3995, dated June 2, 1992, together with all restrictions and covenants as identified as “Attachment A”. “Subject Real Property”. The Subject Real Property is located within the Pojoaque Pueblo Grant. The Subject Real
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS Property was part of a family transfer and was conveyed to Plaintiff Martha E. MontoyaTrujillo, subject to Attachment A which reads and provides: “Covenants and Restrictions. The following Covenants and Restrictions are included in the conveyance of the attached warranty deed, and will remain in effect under the family transfer by Gilbert Joe & Mary A. Montoya. 1. The re-sale of any lot conveyed under this family transfer, will not be allowed without first option to purchase given to family. Further options shall be reviewed by family members. ***” Plaintiffs are seeking to quiet title to the Subject Property in themselves asking the Court to find that no Defendant has exercised his/her first option as described in Attachment A and that such first option and any other option which any Defendant may have is extinguished and of no further effect and that no Defendant has any other lien upon, right, title or interest adverse to Plaintiffs so as to permit Plaintiffs to sell the Subject Real Property to a third party intended purchaser, warranting their fee simple and indefeasible title to such intended purchaser. This notice of pendency of action will be published once a week for three consecutive weeks in this newspaper; service by publication is complete on the date of the last publication. Publication of this notice of pendency of action is scheduled to be published on March 29, 2017, April 5, 2017, and April 12, 2017, after which service by publication is complete. Unless you file a responsive pleading, or motion on or before May 15, 2017 (30 days after final publication date), judgment as prayed for in Plaintiffs’ Complaint for Quiet Title and Declaratory Judgment will be rendered against you in said cause by default. The name and address of plaintiffs’ attorney is Patricia J. Turner, Attorney at Law, 200 W. DeVargas Street, Suite 7, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501; (505) 982-9229. Dated March 22, 2017. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of the First Judicial District Court By: Maureen Naranjo Court Clerk II Legal No. 205824 Pub. March 29, April 5, April 12 2017
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JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mentalemotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. On Saturday, April 15th at 10:30 AM we will TEACH YOUR WAY hold our Monthly Gratitude AROUND THE WORLD. Service. Please bring your Get TESOL Certified & Teach open heart! All are Welcome! English Anywhere. Earn an The Johrei Center of Santa accredited TESOL Certificate Fe is located at Calle Cinco and start teaching English in Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite the USA and abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. 10, 87505. Please call 8200451 with any questions. Take this highly engaging & empowering course. Hundreds Drop-ins welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. have graduated from our Donations are gratefully Santa Fe Program. Summer Intensive: June 12 - July 7. accepted. Please check Limited seating. Contact John us out at our new website Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. santafejohreifellowship.com info@tesoltrainers.com UPAYA ZEN CENTER: DEVELOP www.tesoltrainers.com GREATER MINDFULNESS. RECLAIMING YOUR VOICE. Upaya is a community Workshop exploring memory, resource for developing greater myth and story through writing, mindfulness and inspiring storytelling and art. This journey positive social change. Come for of growth and self-discovery DAILY MEDITATION; WEEKLY will help you to see your life DHARMA TALKS Wednesdays as a source of inspiration, 5:30-6:30pm: Speakers 4/5 creativity and joy, bringing and 4/12 Norman Fischer, back your childlike ability to founder of the “Everyday dream, wonder, and see beauty and magic in everyday life. Tap Zen Foundation,” and Kathie Fischer. Norman and Kathie into your imagination, creative flow and sense of humor. Bring also lead on 4/8 Zazenkai: A Daylong Meditation Retreat writing materials and an open mind. Third Saturdays, 9:30-12, and 4/14-4/21 SESSHIN: An Intensive Meditation Retreat. ongoing. Unity Santa Fe, Learn more at www.upaya.org, 1212 Unity Way. By donation. Upaya@upaya.org, 505-986-8518, Information: Mireya, 1404 Cerro Gordo, Santa Fe, NM. 505-424-7725
EMPLOYMENT
IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you go on eating binges or fasts without medical approval? Is your weight affecting your life? Contact Overeaters Anonymous! We offer support, no strings attached! No dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, no diets. We meet every day from 8-9 am at The Friendship Club, 1316 Apache Avenue, Santa Fe. 505-982-9040.
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ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Self-starters with ambition and people skills are the perfect candidates for this career opportunity. The Santa Fe Reporter has an immediate opening for an advertising account executive to help build our digital and print publications. We offer attractive compensation and bonuses including 100% medical benefits. Your earning potential is only limited by your own motivation. Like local businesses? We love them. Sales savvy a plus.. To apply, please email a letter of interest and resumé to Anna Maggiore, Advertising Director advertising@sfreporter.com Santa Fe Reporter 132 E. Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 No phone calls please.
SERVICE DIRECTORY CHIMNEY SWEEPING FENCES & GATES
SANTA FE COYOTE FENCING Specializing in Coyote Fencing. License # 16-001199-74. No job too small or large. We do it all. Richard, 505-690-6272
HANDYPERSON Safety, Value, Professionalism. CARPENTRY to LANDSCAPING We are Santa Fe’s certified Home maintenance, remodels, chimney and dryer vent additions, interior & exterior, experts. New Mexico’s best irrigation, stucco repair, jobs value in chimney service; small & large. Reasonable get a free video Chim-Scan with each fireplace cleaning. rates, Reliable. Discounts avail. Baileyschimney.com. Call to seniors, veterans, handicap. Bailey’s today 505-988-2771 Jonathan, 670-8827 www.handymannm.com THE HANDYMAN YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED. Dependable and creative problem solver. With Handyman Van, one call fixes it all. Special discounts for seniors and referrals. Excellent references. 505-231-8849 www.handymanvan.biz
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BEING HELD
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Pruning and Fertilizing Roses Sat., April 8, 9-12 p.m. Harvey Cornell Rose Garden
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April 15 at 2:00 pm
MAINTENANCE & REPAIR. ALL ISSUES RESOLVED. MODERN AUTOWORKS. 1900 B CHAMISA ST.
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FICTION EDITOR
Bucket Siler, 505-577-7682 www.theliteraryarchitect.com
Private Spanish JERRY COURVOISIER language tutor PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTOSHOP Affordable hourly rates! LIGHTROOM Call Pablo at 505-919-8064 PROFESSIONAL 1 ON 1 505-670-1495
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TAKE YOUR NEXT STEP Positive Psychotherapy • Career Counseling
SAM SHAFFER, PHD 982-7434 • www.shafferphd.com
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This is a hands-on rose pruning session at 1315 Galisteo Parkway. Bring your hand held pruners, gloves and long sleeved clothing. Learn the correct way to prune roses and then practice what you learn with Master Gardeners in this historic garden. Pruning instruction is by Master Gardener and Consulting Rosarians, Cindy Hoffman, Jack & Juanita Ortega and Katherine O’Brien of the Santa Fe Rose Society. Instruction: 9-9:30 and actual pruning in the garden from 9:30-12:00.
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