May 29, 2019: Santa Fe Reporter

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LOCAL NEWS

AND CULTURE MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

SFREPORTER.COM FREE EVERY WEEK

2019

Summer Guide LIGHT BITES ARTS TREASURE GO FISH

GLOSSY INSERT INSIDE


JUNE AT THE RAILYARD!

THE RAILYARD

TU RQ UA Z S

TU RK UA Z

LEVITT AMP SANTA FE CONCERT SERIES AT THE RAILYARD Railyard Plaza at the Water Tower Saturdays 7-10pm June 8 – August 31 Except Fridays as noted (*)

June 8: JOHN PAUL WHITE June 21: TURKUAZ * June 29: PERUVIAN NIGHT Presented by AMP Concerts concerts.levittamp.org/santafe

E AN T A F

JOHN PAUL WHITE

CURRENTS NEW MEDIA SOL SUNDAYS June 2 / 12– 9pm / Railyard Plaza Yoga, Fitness & Silent Disco Presented by Sol Wellness solwellness.clinic CURRENTS NEW MEDIA 2019 June 7–23 / Inside El Museo & Outside at the Railyard 10 Years of Cutting Edge New Media Art from around the World Presented by Parallel Studios currentsnewmedia.org

ORIGINAL PLANET OF THE APES

RELAY FOR LIFE June 22 / 5–9pm 20th Anniversary in the Fight Against Cancer Presented by American Cancer Society/ABQ cancer.org/about-us/local/new-mexico.html RAINBOW FAMILY PRIDE PICNIC June 23 / 12 –3pm / Railyard Park We are Family! Presented by the Envision Fund santafecf.org/envisionfund

THE FAMILY STONE RAILYARD PARK SUMMER MOVIE SERIES Every other Friday night at dusk May 31– August 23

May 31: FINDING DORY June 14: Original PLANET OF THE APES June 28: BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY Presented by AMP Concerts ampconcerts.org/tag/Movies

SFI INTERPLANETARY FESTIVAL June 14 –16 / Railyard Park Changing the World One Planet at a Time Bands • Scientists • Movies • Experiments IP Beerfest • Fun Including Planet of the Apes, The Family Stone & more! Presented by Santa Fe Institute interplanetaryfest.org

BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY

CONTINUING: SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Tuesdays & Saturdays 7am –1pm Farmers Market Hall & Plaza

SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Saturdays / 8am–2pm Across from REI

RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Sundays /10am– 4pm Farmers Market Hall

LAST FRIDAY ARTWALK 5–7pm/Railyard Art Galleries Jazz from SWINGSET Under The Water Tower

ALL OUTDOOR EVENTS ARE FREE ! FOR TIMES, DETAILS & INDOOR EVENTS GO TO: RAILYARDSANTAFE.COM & SANTA FE RAILYARD FACEBOOK PAGE 2

MAY 1-7, 2019

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MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019 | Volume 46, Issue 22

NEWS OPINION 5 NEWS

Catherine Sandoval | Universal Banker I feel that in our small communities, it’s important to know and support each other.

7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 CURING PLANT BLINDNESS 9 Kids learn the value of plants in a course that sends them traipsing through national forests

I’m happy to help!

PHANTOM LODGE 11 What’s going on up at Bishop’s Lodge? It’s hard to tell, and we found more questions than answers

Inser t

THE INTERFACE 13

2019 SUMMER GUIDE

IMAGINE THERE’S NO CLIMATE CHANGE What would it be like to be optimistic?

From the hottest flicks of summer, the best fishing spots near and far, free National Parks and how not to stink, our humble and glossy Summer Guide is inside.

CULTURE

Cover photo by Chelsey Evans

MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200

SFR PICKS 15 Myths and truths, sweets, feelings and drums THE CALENDAR 16

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM

MUSIC 19

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER AND AD DIRECTOR ANNA MAGGIORE

SET THE VIBE The High Vibes just want you to feel better

ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

3 QUESTIONS 21 WITH MUSICIAN BROTHERS BROTHERS A&C 23 FIRST SOLO Terran Last Gun prints his way into our hearts ACTING OUT 25

CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE STAFF WRITERS LEAH CANTOR WILL COSTELLO COPY EDITOR AND CALENDAR EDITOR CHARLOTTE JUSINSKI CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MATTHEW K GUTIERREZ LUKE HENLEY JULIA GOLDBERG ZIBBY WILDER

SUMMER SCHOOLS Get thy kids out on ye olde boards SMALL BITES 27

DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND

FOOD 29 RUNNING ON EMPTY Hungry on the Southside? Posa’s to the rescue! MOVIES 33 BRIGHTBURN REVIEW Plus partying in Booksmart and the wack-ass Will Smith rap in Aladdin

PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER SENIOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE ROBYN DESJARDINS CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN

www.SFReporter.com

Phone: (505) 988-5541 Office: 132 E MARCY ST.

EDITORIAL DEPT.: editor@sfreporter.com

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

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association of alternative newsmedia

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y r a t e n a l P SFI’s Inter for the moon s t o o h s l n a o v i t a r Festi b e l e c E E R F y a d ! y t i in a  u n e g n i n a m u h f o

Santa Fe Institute’s

Inter planetary festival Fri–Sat–Sun June 14–16, 2019 Santa Fe Railyard park

Join luminary thinkers, creators, and scientists, including physicist SEAN CARROLL, urban designer NICHOLAS DE MONCHAUX, Olympic gold medalist ASHTON EATON, Nebula award winner REBECCA ROANHORSE, Sci-fi novelists DANIEL ABRAHAM & TY FRANK (writing together as JAMES SA COREY), chef MARK MILLER, filmmaker OSCAR SHARP, journalist ALEXANDRA WITZE, adventure photographer MICHAEL CLARK, artist KIYAN WILLIAMS, and game developer LAUREN SCOTT. Geek out on moon suits, watch classic sci-fi films, and enjoy musical performances by stars from the InterPlanetary firmament! FREE FILM SCREENINGS

Fri., /  pm Railyard Park Planet of the Apes () introduced by JW Rinzler Sat., / : pm SITE Santa Fe Alien () introduced by James SA Corey Sun., / : pm SITE Santa Fe Apollo  () introduced by Nicholas de Monchaux OUTDOOR CONCERT SERIES

Sat., / Tone Ranger, Lindy Vision, ThatGuy, Itchy-O Sun., / The Lost Aliens, The Sticky, The Family Stone

INTERPLANETARY PANELS

Sat., / Zen and the Art of Space Exploration, Extremophile Cities, Game Design, Building Life From Scratch Sun., / World Building, Time, Diverse Intelligence, Creative Black Futures INTERPLANETARY INSTALLATIONS

Santa Fe Premier Installation of Don Kennell’s “Long View” “Niner Echo Xray” & “Unit Foxtrot Oscar” by Bob Davis Thomas Ashcraft’s “Sky & Culture Pavilion” Installation by ODD CITY

PLUS!

The Innovations & Ideas Expo The Cosmodity Market “Area ” Beer Garden Live Podcast Episode Recordings by Complexity Explorers, This Week In Science, and Mindscape Debut of Second Street Brewery’s SuperNova InterPlanetary Ale (IPA), the official, limited-edition beer of the InterPlanetary Festival FREE admission to SITE all weekend FREE admission to CURRENTS on Sat., /  pm–midnight for the official IP afterparty w/ Spoolius Melange

See the complete schedule and register for this free event at w w w. I n t e r P l a n e t a r y F e s t . o r g 4

MAY 15-21, 2019

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T H E I N T E R P L A N E TA R Y F E S T I VA L I S M A D E P O S S I B L E B Y T H E M I L L E R O M E G A P R O G R A M .


SHEILA HYDE

LETTERS

Trail. Crazy out there!

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.

NEWS, MAY 22: “LEGER LINES”

REPHRASE THAT Hey folks, she’s not “underrated” at all! Let’s not confuse “less well known” with “underrated.”

LYNN BRICE ROSEN VIA FACEBOOK

ROOTS She actually has roots here, as opposed to friends in Santa Fe. I will say that Ms. Plame got my attention by coming right out in front last week and condemning the Trumpistas march towards war with Iran. I would like to hear the same (at least) from Ms. Leger.

CLAUDE HAYWARD SFREPORTER.COM

JUDY S ECKHART VIA FACEBOOK

NEVER AGAIN Went out once today and home again! Not going out again until the wind subsides.

LORRAINE LOKEN VIA FACEBOOK

ASTUTE Definitely not fake news.

LC FULTON VIA FACEBOOK

ABSOLUTELY probably Trump

GIN MAIYUT VIA FACEBOOK

I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE This wind really blows.

RJ WARD VIA FACEBOOK Editor’s note: Thanks for always being funny on our Facebook page, readers. Keep up the excellent and entertaining work.

WEB EXTRA, MAY 23: “IT’S F***ING WINDY”

TREES DOWN ALL OVER

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

Oh dear! I saw a tree split near Old Santa Fe

SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “This song sounds like if ‘Despacito’ got sick.” —Overheard on the sidewalk below Coyote Café

Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com SFREPORTER.COM

MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

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DAYS

S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / FUN

LOS ALAMOS SCIENTIST CHARGED WITH LYING ABOUT CHINA CONTACTS Forget fake social media— China is still going with old-school double agents at US weapons labs.

SIX LOCAL TEACHERS HONORED BY PARTNERS IN EDUCATION FOUNDATION WITH $1,500 CHECKS Which they’ll probably have to spend on stuff for their classrooms.

SANTA FE FUEGO ANNOUNCE NEW MASCOT: SOME KIND OF BEAR WITH THE SUN FOR A HEAD, WE THINK Furry community unsure how to proceed.

FIRST FRIDAY RETURNS TO SANTA FE JUNE 7 WITH SOME SHOPS AND GALLERIES STAYING OPEN UNTIL 7 PM—AT NIGHT! That’s one of the most Santa Fe things we’ve ever learned.

FARMINGTON MIGHT BAN MINIATURE ALCOHOL BOTTLES Why not just call it the “Never Gonna Happen Bill”?

ABQ BIOPARK GETS WOLF CUBS Go lobos!

CAMPERS LEAVE 30 FIRES BURNING IN FOREST OVER HOLIDAY WEEKEND Down from last year on the dumbass scale, but that’s not saying much.

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New Mexico Performing Arts Society

Music

PRESENTS

SATURDAY

of the

Spheres:

At the intersection of the Arts and Astrophysics! STARRING:

PATRICIA HENNING Astrophysicist

TINA MION

Southwest Artist

A

JUNE 15 3 PM

AND

7 PM

Immaculate Heart Retreat Center Auditorium 50 Mount Carmel Rd. in Santa Fe

STAR PARTY

for ticket holders follows the evening performance!

Sponsored by the UNM Department of Physics and Astronomy

JOHN ANDREWS

President, The Shakespeare Guild

THE NEW MEXICO BACH CHORALE AND CHAMBER ORCHESTRA FRANZ VOTE Artistic Director and Conductor

More information, Event & Dinner Tickets:

nmpas.org

or call Hold My Ticket at

877-466-3404

Sponsored by First National 1870 Additional underwriting from the Santa Fe Institute’s InterPlanetary Festival

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MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

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Congratulations SFCC Class of Spring 2019! 438 GRADUATES earned 516 certificates and degrees

READY WHEN YOU ARE daytime | evenings | weekends | online

More than 100 degree and certificate programs 1, 2 and 3 semester flexible study certificates Adult Education, GED and ESL programs 8

REGISTRATION IS UNDERWAY MAY 15-21, 2019

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505-428-1270 | sfcc.edu/ready


Curing Plant Blindness local plant life as part of a broad curriculum. “We want kids to get their hands in the dirt, to have a direct experience of their own connection to the Earth and the land, and also of the relationship of plants to everything else,” Digby says. The week-long program includes hiking trips into the national forest for education on plant identification and aspects of ecology such as the role of insects and pollinators. Each day, students get to learn about local ecosystems through a different activity. An ethnobotany segment gets them familiar with medicinal and edible properties of native plants through a cooking class where they make things like piñon pancakes and healing salves. Students study seed collection through a field trip to areas of the forest where they learn to gather, clean and preserve seeds from wild plants from areas of the forest where collection is permitted. “We try to plan activities where kids not only learn about nature, but get to make a real contribution to the field,” says Digby. “Some of the seeds they collect will be cultivated for restoration purposes. Another example is our hands-on restoration day in the Santa Fe Watershed.

Summer program helps teens see the value of botany BY L E A H CA N TO R l e a h @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

Students help with invasive plant removal and native plantings.” Students also get to know careers that are part of taking care of the natural world. “What we have been doing for the last couple of years with Forest Bound is having some of the people from all different fields involved in stewardship to expose those students to some of the things they could potentially do if it interests them,” says Daryl Ratajczak, a wildlife biologist

COURTESY INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED ECOLOGY

M

ost humans today live in a society plagued by plant blindness, or the cognitive “inability to see or notice the plants in one’s own environment,” according to the Native Plant Conservation Campaign. Yes, plant blindness is a real thing. And it’s a real problem, too, says Sara Digby, an educator at the Institute for Applied Ecology’s free summer youth program, Forest Bound, which gets New Mexico teens out into national forests to learn about local plant life. Curing plant blindness is one of the program’s goals. When people are unable to recognize, identify and ultimately value plants in our natural surroundings, they are less likely to protect them or learn about them. For example, though 57% of endangered species in the US are plants, they only receive 4% of federal endangered species funding. And while plants are the most important factor in maintaining healthy ecosystems and provide for breakthroughs in medicine, agriculture and even technology, the number of undergraduate degrees in botany is rapidly declining, according to a study by the Chicago Botanic Garden and the Botanic Gardens Conservation International. Perhaps a solution lies in educating young people that plants are important. Naseem Dhaouadi, a 15 year-old from Albuquerque who participated in Forest Bound last summer, tells SFR that he has always loved being outdoors and physics is one of his favorite subjects in school. “But honestly, I never really thought about plants,” he says. “Forest Bound provoked deeper thought when I was sitting somewhere looking at a plant or walking. I’m definitely more interested in biology now.” His favorite activity was helping build a rainwater garden. The program teaches teens aged 13 to 18 all about the amazing properties of

COURTESY INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED ECOLOGY

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

The Forest Bound program aims to get youth ages 13 to 18 exposed to careers in stewardship.

NEWS

with the Santa Fe National Forest who teaches students in Forest Bound about large carnivores such as bears and mountain lions. Ratajczak says there are many more career opportunities than most students are aware of. For instance, students who are interested in working with wildlife are frequently only aware of the role of park and forest rangers, when in fact biologists, geologists, ecologists, botanists and water experts are all just as likely to engage directly with wildlife out in the field, and are needed. The agency illustrates this by taking students to visit projects where many different kinds of professionals are involved, such as creating artificial beaver dams to encourage more beaver activity and restore wetlands in the Jemez Mountains. “I personally think there is no better career,” says Ratajczak, “because it’s just so rewarding, and the fact that you get to go out into the forest and that you get paid to do it is one of the most amazing things in my life.” The Forest Bound program conducts four sessions over the course of the year, one of which is with participants of Santa Fe’s YouthWorks nonprofit. Both the Santa Fe National Forest session, which runs from June 17-21, and the Cibola National Forest session, July 8-12, are currently open for registration. Visit appliedeco. org for more information or to apply.

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Dr. Roybal Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore e t dolore . Ut enim ad minim veniam, ing elit, sed do eiusmod temquis nostrud. Dr. Gabriel Roybal

Genesis, 2017

704 Camino Lejo, Santa Fe, NM 87505 • 505-982- 4636 wheelwright.org 10

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WILL COSTELLO

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

NEWS

Partial reconstruction left the main lodge building exposed to the elements, and a historic preservationist says the Lamy chapel is likely in danger.

Phantom Lodge Bishop’s Lodge Resort renovation is behind schedule and bills have piled up BY W I L L CO ST E L LO w i l l @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

B

ishop’s Lodge, the iconic 1920s resort situated on 317 acres in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo range of the Rocky Mountains is being reenvisioned as one of the top resorts in the nation—respecting the property’s rich history and original design while incorporating state-ofthe-art luxury features throughout its accommodations, grounds and amenities,” reads a description on the Bishop’s Lodge Resort’s website. Above the words rotates a deck of glossy interior photos, artist renderings of happy visitors milling around the lodge and pictures of horses nibbling on grass in pristine stables. Atlanta, Georgia-based HRV Hotel Partners bought the property in 2014 and closed the lodge the next year. The new owners first promised a high-class resort that evoked the spirit of the Wild West that would reopen the summer of 2018, the year of its 100th anniversary. What exists now is more reminiscent of a ghost town. The project sat idle from 2015 until construction began in 2017. Since then, though, developers have made little progress, and county records show they’re behind on payments and taxes. Of the construction permits issued by Santa Fe County for the project in 2017 and 2018, developers reportedly only began construction on the interior of the

main lodge, a spa, an entryway monument and three luxury guesthouses, according to records provided by Santa Fe County. Construction enabled by 12 other permits—renovation of the various structures’ foundations, guest villas and bunkhouses, stables and the ballroom— has yet to begin. Meanwhile, all of the buildings, including Lamy’s Chapel, which appears on the National Register of Historic Places, lay exposed to the harsh New Mexico elements. On paper, it’s a black hole. Creditors including the IRS began to file liens against HRV Hotels in 2018, mounting to more than $3.6 million. While records show it’s repaid about $500,000 on those claims, the company that HRV Hotels set up for the property, BL Santa Fe LLC, has also failed to pay its property taxes. The county treasurer reports $132,495.98 unpaid for the second half of 2017 and all of 2018. Heidi Hanna, president of Hill Strategic Brand Solutions, which represents HRV, tells SFR the company is planning to start the first round of construction in 2019 in two weeks, and she maintains the scheduled re-opening will take place in summer of next year. She says the company is working on a settlement agreement to discharge all the liens “in the next week.” Neighbors who skirt the property or traipse through its footpaths can spot unsecured doors that open and close with the wind that blows through skeletal

frames of once-proud structures. Some windows are boarded up, while others are nothing but holes as incomplete renovations lay bare interiors. The entrance to Lamy Chapel sits open. The historic chapel was established by Bishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy in the 19th century. The rest of the expansive facility has been around since the 1920s, according to a bulletin published by the Santa Fe Historical Society in 1987. Lamy built the chapel on a property north of the city that he bought for $80 as a per-

Only the owner’s sense of responsibility can bring about the needed repairs. -Mac Watson, chair, Historic Santa Fe Foundation

sonal retreat in 1869, the same time period that the Catholic bishop oversaw the construction of what became the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. SFR showed pictures of the chapel as it stands today to Mac Watson, chair of the Historic Santa Fe Foundation and a frequent visitor of the chapel before the site was closed for renovation. “The roof shingles are in terrible shape, and given the amount of rain and snow we’ve had this year, it is hard to think that a great deal of water has not

gone through the roof and inflicted damage to the interior,” Watson tells SFR. “If the building were in the City of Santa Fe, it would be subject to a city ordinance against ‘demolition-by-neglect.’ As the property is outside the city limits, only the owner’s sense of responsibility can bring about the needed repairs,” Watson says. A sign facing Bishop’s Lodge Road still proclaims that the resort will open this year, and bears the names of contractors who say they are no longer affiliated with the project. The original general contractor, Bradbury Stamm, left the project in April of 2018, according to a report compiled by the US Environmental Protection Agency. Lawrence Peterson, executive vice president at the firm, tells SFR he can’t comment on the reason. At least one local contractor, Santa Fe Door Store Inc., filed a money owed suit in Santa Fe District Court against Bradbury Stamm and HRV Hotels last July. The door company, along with other parties, has an outstanding claim on lien worth $32,929.21. Bradbury’s own lien against HRV claims nearly $3.1 million owed. The EPA’s 2018 report dinged the project for failing to create buffers around the Little Tesuque Creek, which flows through the resort and empties into the Rio Grande. The developers also failed to obtain a construction general permit from the EPA, a permit required for any site that impacts stormwater paths. Hanna tells SFR that the issue stemmed from heavy rains in July of 2018, and the property has since been brought back into compliance. HRV Hotels has resorts in Cabo San Lucas and Punta Mita, Mexico, and Key West, Florida, and owns hotels in Charleston, South Carolina; Chicago; Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Gainsville, Florida, as well as 10 Hilton Garden Inns across the US.

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FOR DETAILS VISIT AMPCONCERTS.ORG

SANTA FE RAILYARD FREE MOVIES AND CONCERTS

PRESENTED BY

SUMMER 2019 GUIDE

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LEVITT AMP SANTA FE MUSIC SERIES JUNE 8 JUNE 21 JUNE 29 JULY 6 JULY 13 JULY 20 JULY 26 AUGUST 3 AUGUST 10 AUGUST 24 AUGUST 31

JOHN PAUL WHITE TURKUAZ NOVALIMA DWAYNE DOPSIE AND THE ZYDECO HELLRAISERS GREYHOUNDS NATU CAMARA SANTA FE SALUTES ARETHA FRANKLIN REVEREND HORTON HEAT DEVOTCHKA VALERIE JUNE FANTASTIC NEGRITO

FREE MOVIES IN THE PARK MAY 31 JUNE 14 JUNE 28 JULY 12 JULY 27 AUGUST 9 AUGUST 23

FINDING DORY PLANET OF THE APES BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY ISLE OF DOGS MARY POPPINS RETURNS WALL E INCREDIBLES 2


SFRE P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS / TH E I N TE R FAC E

highest level in 800,000 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Local initiatives include a proposed fracking moratorium, along with advocacy for a statewide Green New Deal. The four featured films were more thought-provoking than cheerful, depicting parched-earth futures, corporate-controlled food supplies and Mars colonization. The fan-favorite—based on intermission chatter, at any rate—went to director Ramin Bahrani’s Plastic Bag, in which an abandoned plastic bag, voiced by German filmmaker Werner Herzog, searches for the woman he considers his maker while falling into existential angst and wishing his life could end (think Bladerunner replicant, except a plastic bag). Despite my intermittent literary pretensions, I was not familiar with solarpunk as a genre (though I picked up the anthology edited by writer Sarena Ulibarri, Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Summers, and am now happily making my way through it). At the event, Ulibarri described solarpunk as “a mode of imagining futures in

Local groups focus on a future in which we fix today’s problems BY JULIA GOLDBERG @votergirl

I

am writing this column while drinking a smoothie using the reusable straw I won in a game of Water Jeopardy after correctly guessing the answer “fugitive water” as the term used for water that escapes its delivery system. No matter that I required more hints than the average third-grader and was, perhaps, unattractively proud of myself when I finally figured it out: A win is a win. The occasion of my dubious triumph was the latest event in Creative Santa Fe’s Disruptive Futures series: Cli-Fi: Altered Futures Through Film and Literature. Held May 22 at the Scottish Rite Temple, the free gathering featured activities with local organizations (the Jeopardy game was hosted by the City of Santa Fe’s Environmental Services Division and Water Conservation Department); short provocative films exploring environmental issues through cultural and social lenses; and fiction readings by writers working in the solarpunk genre. The interdisciplinary happening was part of a larger ongoing dialogue about launching a sustainable technol-

ogies center focused on climate-change mitigation research and development. It’s an idea spearheaded by the Coalition of Sustainable Communities New Mexico (coalitionscnm.org), an organization that formed last fall and grew out of the recommendations of the Santa Fe Sustainability Commission. In my experience, even stalwart optimists falter during climate change discussions. But the Cli-Fi event successfully reframed end-of-theworldism with education and solutions. At 350 New Mexico’s table, Youth Engagement and Education Coordinator Nancy Singham invited attendees to write on ribbons their responses to the question: “What do you love and hope to never lose to climate change?” “We call this the heart of climate change,” Singham said of the activity, “because it asks you to think about how climate change is going to affect your life here in New Mexico. It used to be that people thought climate change was way far in the future and only had to do with polar bears and coastlines. Now, people realize every single person on Earth is going to be impacted by climate change.” 350 New Mexico is part of the 350.org movement founded more than a decade ago by author Bill McKibben and others. It’s named after what scientists say is the acceptable level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere; the world exceeded 400 parts per million two years ago, the

JULIA GOLDBERG

Imagine There’s No Climate Crisis

Nancy Singham of 350 New Mexico asks participants to write down what they love and hope not to lose to climate change at Creative Santa Fe’s May 22 Cli-Fi event.

TECH

which we have made the big structural changes we need to avoid more ecological damage or adapted to the changes we can’t prevent at this point.” Solarpunk narratives, she said, “are often optimistic and imagine a better future, not just for the wealthy and privileged, but for all of humanity and our whole interconnected ecosystem.” CSCNM Executive Director Beth Beloff says real-world counterparts for climate crisis solutions exist, and are her organization’s focus: Its first major action was writing the community solar bill introduced in the last Legislative session. (The bill stalled out in the Senate, but Beloff says she will push for its inclusion in next year’s 30-day session.) The Coalition and Creative Santa Fe also held a roundtable discussion in April with more than two dozen representatives from educational, policy and other groups to discuss pathways toward developing high- and low-tech solutions to climate change through a sustainable technologies center. Beloff, who has chaired the Santa Fe Sustainability Commission since 2015, cites the nonprofit Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC) as a model for what she describes as an inter-institutional, interdisciplinary undertaking. The three focus areas the local group landed on during its meeting include water availability, methane mitigation and carbon capture in soil for local research and development, along with technology transfer. “I think the most important part of the idea is to create a roadmap and momentum to lead to practical outcomes that can be applied here,” Beloff says. “We have financial resources in this state. … We have the talent. … If we can create enough of these ideas here and enough cross fertilization, … we should be able to create a pretty fertile environment in New Mexico for the development of solutions that could be applied both here and elsewhere in the world.” Beats hand-wringing.

  - 

The Practices and Principles of Ecological Dharma Wendy Johnson, Matthew Kozan Palevsky, Keido Troy Fernandez

Enjoy an interactive weekend of meditation and science-based dharma investigation from living systems theory and spiritual inquiry. SANTA FE, NM REGISTRAR@UPAYA.ORG

505-986-8518 UPAYA.ORG/PROGRAMS

We pay the most for your gold coins, heirloom jewelry and diamonds! On the Plaza 60 East San Francisco Street, Suite 218 Santa Fe, NM 87501 • 505.983.4562 • SantaFeGoldworks.com SFREPORTER.COM

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OTHER UPCOMING SHOWS PATTY GRIFFIN • 6/27 • THE KiMo X •7/3 • THE BRIDGE CRACKER/ CAMPER VAN BEETHOVEN • 7/18 TOOTS & THE MAYTALS • 7/24 • THE BRIDGE

ON SALE THIS FRIDAY • 10AM LOVETT OR LEAVE IT • 7/19 • THE LENSIC JENNY LEWIS • 10/2 • MEOW WOLF RYAN BINGHAM • 10/20 • THE LENSIC

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SWEET DREAMS The best kind of niche snacks are the ones that don’t taste niche. You know, healthy that doesn’t taste healthy; all-natural that foregoes the granola-crunch stereotype; something vegan that pleases omnivores too. Thank Gaia, then, for local businesses that specialize in alt-protein snacks, chocolates and ice cream that even the staunchest cattle rancher would eat with glee. Gluten-free goods from local favorite bakers Drift & Porter, creative sweets from Chamisa Chocolate and the cakey creations of Danielle’s Donuts are available this weekend at a pop-up at Sunset Swirl, Santa Fe’s newest (and only?) vegan ice cream parlor. Save room, folks. (Charlotte Jusinski)

SFR E P O RTE R .CO M /A RTS / S FR P I C KS JUSTIN BORUCKI

COURTESY INSTAGRAM / @DRIFTANDPORTERSANTAFE

EVENT SAT/1

The Sweetest Treat Pop-Up: Noon-3 pm Saturday June 1. Free (pay for snacks). Sunset Swirl, Lena Street Lofts, 1708 Lena St., Ste. 101

COURTESY MEOW WOLF

MUSIC SUN/2 THE FEELS Los Angeles musician gnash feels a lot of feelings. That’s not a bad thing, nor is that anything he hasn’t said himself. In fact, it’s kind of his whole thing. With songs like “T-Shirt” and “Happy Never After” off his we album from earlier this year, gnash merges hip-hop elements and indie-pop acoustic jams dripping with emo sensibilities by way of Sacramento spoken word/ music weirdo Hobo Johnson. Perhaps this is a movement—gnash says it is—of those who feel feelings getting out there which, while nothing new (because, like, Get Up Kids still exist), is plenty welcome in an industry that seems to plumb the same old boring depths often. In other words, gnash has a lot of heart, and he’s willing to share that. Are you willing to accept? (ADV) gnash with Ana Clendening: 8 pm Sunday June 2. $20-$25. Meow Wolf, 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369

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WORKSHOP TUE/4 RETURN OF THE BOOM BAP One can hardly throw a rock around Santa Fe without hitting a musician who has something to say about how African drumming changed their music forever. And though some local heroes like Luke Carr and Brothers Brothers have gone so far as to travel to Guinea and beyond in search of the source, many others don’t have to: Drumming master Soriba Fofana lives right here, and he’s offering lessons in djembe and dundun. Fofana takes over Warehouse 21 on Tuesdays for classes in West African drumming. If what we’ve been told about the man is even a little true, more than your music might wind up changed. (ADV) West African Drumming with Soriba Fofana: 6 pm Tuesday June 4. $10-$20. Warehouse 21, 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423

PERFORMANCE THU/30

Trunk Show

Pumpkintown brings the magic “The trunk was found by our friend Silas in his great aunt’s attic after she died,” Tim Eriksen tells SFR. “He’d been looking for a trunk his great uncle had made for him called the Family Trunk— he found, in fact, the wrong trunk, but it did contain a few things …” Inside, Eriksen’s pal found an old hymnal, a magic lantern (like an early projector that works with painted slides changed by hand), some sheet music and some musical instruments. “So we decided to do what we could, to make it a work in progress,” Eriksen continues. “If we couldn’t figure out what the story was, we’d come up with our own.” Pumpkintown was born. Eriksen is a Boston-based ethnomusicologist and multi-instrumentalist. With Pumpkintown, he takes the contents of his friend’s aunt’s trunk and crafts a story of a New England village based in both truth and myth. It’s a far cry from his early days playing in Boston rock and punk bands. Pumpkintown instead requires no small amount of historical research and recreation; the songs and stories wind up like a mix of Americana, wistfully dark acoustic indie and

ancient singing harp. Elsewhere in the show, the magic lantern is put to use by collaborator Susan Brearey, who hand-paints the slides that illustrate the tales, and Eriksen recites facts, fictions and histories culled from the trunk’s items. But as he says, it’s a work in progress and expanding all the time. “Because the story is not of musical genres, I can bring all these things into focus without having to make it about style,” Eriksen says. “It’s a story about us in the broadest sense—us as a nation with this mythical idea of New England as the birthplace of America which, of course, you in New Mexico would understand is a myth.” An album/book combo is currently in the works, but for our money, the live version seems something more special and worth experiencing. “I’ve done a lot of work to let people know [Pumpkintown] exists,” Eriksen says, “and they’ve found something within it that resonates.” (Alex De Vore) TIM ERIKSEN AND SUSAN BREAREY: MUSIC FROM PUMPKINTOWN 8 pm Thursday May 30. $18. Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528

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JAMES DRAKE, "ON AND OFF (BRENDA AND SAMANTHA)”

THE CALENDAR

James Drake’s new body of work draws heavily from his time living along the US-Mexico border in El Paso, Texas, getting to know and photographing transgender sex workers. The show opens at Charlotte Jackson Fine Art on Friday. See full listing, page 17.

WED/29

Want to see your event here?

DANCE

Email all the relevant information to calendar@sfreporter.com.

505 DANCE LAB Santa Fe Oxygen & Healing Bar (Kaverns) 137 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Perfect for beginners and great for returning dancers to continue to refine their technique. 7 pm, $5

You can also enter your events yourself online at calendar.sfreporter.com (submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion). Need help?

EVENTS

Contact Charlotte: 395-2906

GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Pub quiz. 8 pm, free

HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with guides from the New Mexico History Museum. 10:15 am, $15 INTRODUCTION TO ZEN Mountain Cloud Zen Center 7241 Old Santa Fe Trail, 988-4396 Everyone is welcome, newcomers and experienced practitioners alike, to explore the basics and finer points of Zen meditation, including good posture and finding a comfortable position. Also go over questions and instruction. 5 pm, free

SHIDONI SCULPTURE GARDEN PHOTO-OP HUNT Museum of Interactive Art Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 670-2118 Pick up the photo-op list and get snappin' for the gram. Get photos of yourself, friends and family being eaten by the alligator sculpture, in front of the giant flowers pretending to hold them and more. 9 am-5 pm, $5

MUSIC BRING YOUR OWN VINYL NIGHT Santa Fe Brewing Company Brakeroom 510 Galisteo St., 780-8648 Spin your favorite records. 7 pm, free

ERICA SUNSHINE LEE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Southern rock 'n' country. 8 pm, free ESTER HANA Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Jazz and cabaret tunes on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Soulful flamenco guita. 7 pm, free MATTHEW ANDRAE Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Rhythmic covers and originals of a folky bent on guitalele. 6 pm, free

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REVOLUTION STRINGS Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. In a performance that highlight thes talent and musicianship of the finest string players from the Abilene High and Cooper High School Orchestra programs in Abilene, Texas, enjoy warm country fiddle with the energy of Celtic reels. 7 pm, free SANTA FE CROONERS Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Golden Age standards. 7 pm, free TOM WILLIAMS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Country swing. 7:30 pm, free


WORKSHOP ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE CLASS ORIENTATION Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Do you or does someone you know want to learn English as a second language? Look into an intensive four-week ESL session June 3-27. Open to any adult who wants to learn English. New students must attend an orientation session. For more info, call 428-1356. 10 am and 5:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Santa Fe Brewing Company 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Pub quiz. 7 pm, free GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP The Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 The Jewish Care Program offers a grief and loss support group. RSVP to Ya’el Chaikind at 303-3552. 1 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with guides from the New Mexico History Museum. 10:15 am, $15 SHIDONI SCULPTURE GARDEN PHOTO-OP HUNT Museum of Interactive Art Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 670-2118 Pick up the photo-op list at the Museum of Interactive Art and get snappin' for the gram. Kids under 3 get free entry. 9 am-5 pm, $5

MUSIC BERT AND MILO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Jazz with Bert Dalton on piano and Milo Jaramillo on bass. 7 pm, free DJ RAGGEDY A'S CLASSIC MIXTAPE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michèle Leidig takes over the ones and twos with R&B, rock 'n' roll and more. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free DEAR DOCTOR Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Folk 'n' Americana from Stephen Pitts and friends on the deck. 5 pm, free DOUBLE O DJS KARAOKE Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Choose your song wisely and croon away. 7 pm, free

THE CALENDAR

ESTER HANA Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Classical, jazz and cabaret tunes on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free JESUS BAS Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Spanish and flamenco guitar. 6 pm, free JILL COHN Pink Adobe 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Heavenly folky Americana. 5 pm, free JOSEPH GENERAL & THE HIGH VIBRATIONS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Reggae. 10 pm, free KEY FRANCES Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Funky and rockin' blues. 6 pm, free LOST ALIENS AND TANAYA WINDER Santa Fe Oxygen & Healing Bar (Kaverns) 137 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Lost Aliens brings the psychedelic layers of magical music, and acclaimed Native American performer Winder rounds out the evening with music and poetry. 8 pm, $10 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free RASMINKO Starlight Lounge at Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 A Bohemian melange. 6 pm, $2 SLOW CAVES, MIGHTY AND FIBBER Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Slow Caves brings the indie rock down from Fort Collins, Mighty brings even more indie rock from Georgia, and Fibber are some local punks we think play some melodic, energetic tunes. 8 pm, free TIM ERIKSEN AND SUSAN BREAREY: MUSIC FROM PUMPKINTOWN Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 In this experiential music performance, Appalachian Americana musician Eriksen and painter Brearey unlock a mysterious old trunk full of artifacts that inspire sounds of a place that is at once imagined and deeply true: shape-note harmony by the first published Native American composer, fiery Scottish fiddle tunes, apocalyptic Afro-Celtic gospel, traditional and original songs of war, the sea, traveling, tragedy and love, that tie it all together (see SFR Picks, page 15). 8 pm, $15-$18

TOM WILLIAMS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Country swing. 7:30 pm, free

FRI/31 ART OPENINGS 300K AWAY galleryFRITZ 540 S Guadalupe St., 820-1888 A stunning array of works from Albuquerque-based artists showcases our neighbor to the south as a hub of fantastic visual art. Through June 24. 5 pm, free BENBOW BULLOCK AND ELLIE DOLGIN Shidoni Gallery and Sculpture Garden 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 87506, 988-8001, ext. 120 Bullock works in steel, silicon bronze, aluminum and stainless steel, and has developed an affinity for the simple elegance of hard edge geometric constructivism as his preferred form of sculpture. His work is featured with that of Dolgin, who creates figurative bronze pieces that dazzle and fascinate. Through June 6. 9 am-5 pm, free BEYOND PUNCH CARDS form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 216-1256 In this official satellite show of the CURRENTS New Media Festival, independent curators Francesca Rodriguez Sawaya and Renata de Carvalho Gaui unite an international group of artists who straddle the line between tech and weaving craft. Through July 13. 5 pm, free GENDRON JENSEN: BIDDEN 5. Gallery 2351 Fox Road, Ste. 700 Jensen creates exquisite drawings of animal bones in graphite on paper, sometimes as tall as seven feet. 5 pm, free INTO THE WOODS Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Nature provides the artist with endless inspiration. View the works of four artists who create artwork that incorporates and responds to our changing natural environment. Through June 22. 5 pm, free JAMES DRAKE: QUE LINDA LA BRISA Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 S Guadalupe St., 989-8688 Drake presents drawings that are a new interpretation of his photo series of 20 years ago, which focused on the population of transgender sex workers who live and work in Ciudad Juárez on the border across from El Paso. Borders also appear between people: where bodies meet, where ideas encounter and resist one another. Through June 30. 5 pm, free

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THE CALENDAR

SATURDAY 6/1

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TUESDAY 6/11

DRAFT PUNX RITUAL TALK GERUNDING FUTURE SCARS

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THUNDER & RAIN STEPHANIE HATFIELD FREE / 7:30 PM

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JIVAN LEE: CONSTANT / CHANGE LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta, 988-3250 Taos-based Lee’s newest work manifests a deep interest in the formations of the land around him as subject matter that is in a constant state of transformation. Through July 13. 5 pm, free JOEL OROZCO: CLOSING RECEPTION Foto Forum Santa Fe 1714 Paseo de Peralta, 470-2582 Orozco, a Mexican photographer based in Chihuahua and Los Angeles, began taking photos without instruction; while working on a farm in Chihuahua, a Tarahumara man named Cornelio noticed his passion for photography and invited him to observe and document a ceremony in his hometown. The rest, as they say, is history. 5-8 pm, free LIFE IN FLUX: TO CHALLENGE APATHY IN THE 21ST CENTURY Molecule Design 1226 Flagman Way, 989-9806 Michael Jantzen, Ellen Jantzen, Justin Crowe and Jamie Hamilton challenge the familiar and invite us to reflect on the timeless emotions that emerge from fear, life and death; preoccupations and infinite evolution. Through July 31. 5 pm, free THE PENETRATING GAZE Ylise Kessler Gallery 333 Montezuma Ave., 930-1039 Works by sculptor Elise Siegel, along with some 20th-century drawings, are on loan from a collection in New York. Through July 6. 5 pm, free PERI SCHWARTZ AND TAIZO KURODA: FORM + COLOR Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-5700 Master artists with highly divergent styles and mediums both express the innate life in objects. Through June 22. 5 pm, free SUSAN BEINER: SUGAR FIELDS form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 216-1256 A large-scale, modular installation features Beiner’s characteristic floral forms, a porcelain garden of tactile blooms with allusions to architectural structures. Through July 13. 5 pm, free TERRAN LAST GUN: NEW WORKS Hecho a Mano 830 Canyon Road, 916-1341 Hot off the heels of a show at the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Last Gun continues to explore contemporary landscape. His most recent series of prints draws inspiration from his ancestral history, pop art, minimalism, color field and abstraction. Through June 22 (see AC, page 23). 6 pm, free

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UNDER THE INFLUENCE form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 216-1256 Zane Bennett presents a show curated by Kylee Aragonthat captures the zeitgeist of printmaking in the '60s and '70s and its enduring influence on artists and printmakers in the modern day. Through July 13. 5 pm, free ZZ WEI: SOLITUDE Blue Rain Gallery 544 S Guadalupe St., 954-9902 Wei, who started painting at a young age during China’s Cultural Revolution, came to the United States in 1989, and the rural landscape of America has transformed him; he now unites his art and life experiences in China with his perspectives inspired by traveling the backroads of America. Through June 15. 5 pm, free

DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Make a dinner reservation for a show by the National Institute of Flamenco. 6:30 pm, $30

EVENTS ELEGANCE DEFINED natasha Santa Fe 403 S Guadalupe St., 913-9236 A fashion walkabout is neither your typical art opening, nor your typical fashion show. 5 pm, free GARDEN SPROUTS PRE-K ACTIVITIES Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 A hands-on program for 3-5 year olds and their caregivers. 10-11 am, $5 HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things. 10:15 am, $15 MAGIC: THE GATHERING: WAR OF THE SPARK DRAFT Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 In-store tournament play. 7 pm, $15 MAYORAL PROCLAMATION: THE CANDYMAN STRINGS & THINGS DAY The Candyman Strings & Things 851 St. Michael's Drive, 983-5906 Your best friends at Candyman get their due in Santa Fe! 1-4 pm, free SHIDONI SCULPTURE GARDEN PHOTO-OP HUNT Museum of Interactive Art Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 670-2118 Pick up the photo-op list and get snappin'. Get pics being eaten by the alligator sculpture, in front of the giant flowers pretending to hold them, ducking under the jumping dolphins and more. Kids under 3 get free entry. 9 am-5 pm, $5

FILM FINDING DORY Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe Street, 982-3373 Bring your chairs and blankets and enjoy the beloved Pixar animated film about a fish who forgets everything. That's a grossly simplified description, by the way. It makes grown men cry. 8 pm, free THE LIFE OF PARAMAHANSA YOGANANDA: EARLY YEARS 1920-1928 Santa Fe Meditation Circle 1807 Second St., Ste. 83, 988-4157 This documentary follows the master’s footsteps during his efforts to introduce yoga and the spiritual heritage of the East to America. 7:30 pm, free

FOOD NEW MEXICO COCKTAILS & CULTURE CULINARY FESTIVAL Various locations A multi-day celebration of the local culinary and cocktail culture provides live entertainment, cocktail and food tastings, world class seminar opportunities for home entertainers and hospitality professionals alike. Head to nmcocktailculture.com to get the full scoop. Some events are sold out, so take a look to see what you can still get into. All day, $20-$250

MUSIC ALTO STREET Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Folk-pop 'n' bluegrass. 7 pm, free CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes 31 Burro Alley, 992-0304 Modeled after 19th-century Parisian cabarets, enjoy first-rate piano and vocals from Charles Tichenor and friends—playful, interactive, family-friendly and eclectic. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free DR. FRESCH Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 This dude’s signature “Future Ghetto” brand weaves together elements of house, hip-hop and trap. 9 pm, $18-$22 DRASTIC ANDREW AND SUGAR MOUNTAIN Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Original progressive rock ‘n’ a Neil Young tribute. 8 pm, free ED & MARIAH Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Ed Guerra and Mariah Romero strum some acoustic rock and singer-songwriter tunes. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 20


MUSIC

COURTESY THEHIGHVIBESMUSIC.COM

SFRE PO RTE R .CO M /M US I C

The High Vibes are prepared to blast your face off with positivity.

Set the Vibe BY LUKE HENLEY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

H

appy mediums came up a lot during my conversation with Santa Fe act The High Vibes. A lifelong sourpuss myself, it’s refreshing to speak with a band featuring members who are both young and optimistic, far from the traps of cynicism that can riddle the landscape of most working bands. The happy medium that seems to most capture The High Vibes’ aesthetic lies between branching paths that musicians travel of being artists and being entertainers. But, as is often the case, that duality is an illusion, and the members of The High Vibes are perfectly comfortable making music that satisfies a creative itch while providing a good show for an audience. “That’s the fine line that a lot of people try to ride,” singer Jake Reynolds tells SFR. “I think we all still feel extremely creatively fulfilled at the same time.”

The High Vibes set sights on pop greatness

The band formed less than a year ago, and already has an EP under its belt with April’s release of The Way It Is. There’s also a healthy touring schedule in the pipeline, including stops in Colorado and Nevada. The music itself is assuredly poppy, akin to Maroon 5’s bouncing, sunny sound with the occasional nod to Las Vegas alterna-pop act The Killers, unsurprisingly a favorite of Reynolds’. But there is a distinct and more complex musicality than with the usual pop fare. Partly, this is due to drummer Marcus Newell, but the members all cite 17-year-old Justin Reynolds, Jake’s cousin, whose keyboard work often unlocks songs with which the band might otherwise struggle during their collaborative writing sessions. He also has the most firm grasp on music theory, according to his bandmates. Regardless, the band members are up front that their sights are set on radio play and big shows with big crowds—and

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they are not ashamed to say so. Transparent pop ambitions such as these are taboo in some circles, especially in the DIY, punk and metal scenes throughout New Mexico. But The High Vibes aren’t concerned with laying these cards on the table, and that lack of concern has its own integrity. “It’s about what do we like, but also what will people like?” Jake queries, adding that they’ll often play newer, in-progress songs at smaller venues to “beta test” them on audiences, like a stand-up comedian working on material ahead of a gig. As for the material itself, the band is clearly not trying to bum anyone out. EP opener “Smile” acts as a sort of mission statement with danceable melodic hooks and the DNA of any good pop song. The feeling persists throughout the rest of the songs which also dip their toes into some groove-based funk, retro California reverb and other genres. The strongest points of the EP, however, lie in

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the straightforward pop bits, and some of the experimentation falls flat, such as in the unconvincing reggae-tinged track “The Way It Is.” But while it can be easy for artists to lean into doom and gloom in current times, the members of The High Vibes are adamant that the opposite is also necessary. “Things are crappy wherever you go,” says bassist Saunj ( just Saunj; like Cher), “but there’s always going to be that light, and we want to show people that light and positivity.” Of course, it’s easy to eschew mainstream appeal or naively denigrate pop music as some sort of ambiguous evil against … who-knows-what, but Jake Reynolds feels differently. “It’s fulfilling to create something like that, because then you’re like, ‘Oh, that’s how [pop music] works,’” he says, reflecting an approach of songwriting that’s as much about structure as it is about melody and lyrics. Such savvy self-awareness feels unnaturally wise for a group with members so young, especially since The High Vibes’ focus remains on putting out new music at a healthy clip— at least a new song a month, they say, often with accompanying videos on the group’s website (thehighvibes.com). They record the tunes at home and embrace the idea of DIY, and it’s already landed them high-profile gigs, such as the recent Oasis Festival in the Railyard as an opening slot for Los Angeles indie-punk act Cherry Glazerr— yet another happy medium from which the group can continue to pump out blissful pop jams.

THE HIGH VIBES 8:30 pm Saturday June 1. Free. Cowgirl, 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565

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THE CALENDAR

It was a winter of plentiful snow, but our year to year precipitation varies a lot and our wet years have become few and far between. This means that saving water in Santa Fe is a lifetime commitment. So let’s give our reservoirs the chance to fill up and replenish our water supply for future use.

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City of Santa Fe Water Conservation Office 505-955-4225 | savewatersantafe.com 20

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ESTER HANA Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Cabaret tunes on piano. 6:30 pm, free FOOL'S PLAY Starlight Lounge at Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 A jazz quartet. 6 pm, $2 GERRY CARTHY Honeymoon Brewery Solana Center, 907 W Alameda St., Ste. B, 303-3139 Irish tunes and more. 6 pm, free GRACE ASKEW Iconik Coffee Roasters 1600 Lena St., 428-0996 Electronic Americana. 5 pm, free JESUS BAS La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Spanish and flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free JOHN CAREY Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Soulful singer-songwriter tunes. 5 pm, free JOHN KURZWEG BAND El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock 'n' roll. 9 pm, $5 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock 'n' roll. 8:30 pm, free LOS ANGELES MASTER CHORALE: LAGRIME DI SAN PIETRO Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Visionary director Peter Sellars and the formidable chorale present a powerful a cappella work by one of the most revered composers of the Renaissance period: Orlando di Lasso's final composition, Lagrime di San Pietro. 7:30 pm, $14-$110 LUCY BARNA AND TIMBO ARNOLD Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana tunes on the deck, complete with soaring vocals, guitar, banjo y más. 5 pm, free MAYA LIONA ROSE AND ESMÉ OLIVIA Santa Fe Oxygen and Healing Bar (Apothecary) 133 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Olivia incorporates mime and clown to tell stories with movement; she harmonizes, beat-boxes, speaks juicy gibberish and recites poetry. She also plays the piano, guitar, hoop drum, kazoo and operates an RC-505 loop station. She sings original lyrics as well as works by other poets. She’s a one-person show, but also works in collaboration with others—as she does this evening with Rose. 7 pm, free

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

MICHAEL BLOOM AND THE BLUES PROPHECY Evangelo’s 200 W San Francisco St. Chicago blues with rock ‘n’ roll twist. 9 pm, $5 MICHAEL HENRY COLLINS Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Alt-folk. 7 pm, free NEXT 2 THE TRACKS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Outlaw country. 8 pm, free RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SANTA FE MUSIC COLLECTIVE: MARCOS CAVALCANTE Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 Sit back, close your eyes and imagine you're in Rio de Janiero for an evening of bossa nova. For reservations, call 946-7934. 7 pm, $20-$25 SAVOR Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Cuban street music. 10 pm, free SEVDA CHOIR San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 The 17-member mixed choir, led by Grammy Awardwinning vocalist Willa Roberts, stretches its legs to perform songs of spring and summer from the Balkans/ Eastern Europe, the Black Sea, the Mediterranean, the Baltic and the far reaches of Russia in an enchanting evening of song. The word sevda stems from the Turkish word for love, which spread throughout the Balkans during the 500-year Ottoman reign. It alludes to love in the deepest and most passionate sense; that which aches or tugs at a person inextricably. 7:30 pm, $15-$20 SIERRA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Country tunes. 8 pm, free TGIF RECITAL: CHANCEL CHOIR OF FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 The chrous presents the Teresa Mass in Bb by Franz Joseph Haydn. 5:30 pm, free THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Swinging jazz. 7:30 pm, free TONIC BACKLINE BAND Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Cutting-edge jazz. 9:30 pm, free

THEATER ROMEO & JULIET Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 The botanical garden's outdoor stage becomes fair Verona as Shakespeare in the Garden brings the bestknown Shakespeare play to life. Bring a picnic and make a date of it. Check the garden's Facebook page or call ahead if the weather looks iffy, and bring a coat either way; nights get chilly! Tonight's performance at 7 pm is preceded by the Capulet's Ball gala reception, hence the earlier start time and heftier price tag. 5:30 pm, $95 YOU & DISTANT WARS Santa Fe Oxygen & Healing Bar (Kaverns) 137 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Theater professional Nandita Dinesh has turned the Kaverns into an immersive space in which visitors can explore the conflict in Kashmir. Noon-6 pm, $10

SAT/1 ART OPENINGS 50 YEARS OF FIGHT / 50 YEARS OF FUTURE TRANS FUTURITY GROUP SHOW Show Pony Gallery 501 Franklin Ave. Over the past 50 years, trans people have fought mercilessly for their rights and for a society that is both affirming and inclusive. Artists lay the seeds for their future, while honoring the work and those who have come before. Curated by Show Pony Gallery and aung.robo.arts. 6 pm, free MULTI-SHOW GALLERY RECEPTION Johnsons of Madrid Galleries 2843 Hwy. 14 Madrid, NM, 471-1054 The largest and longest-running gallery on the Turquoise Trail kicks off a special year of long-running shows. 3-5 pm, free ROBERTA GLICK: EMERGENCE Counter Culture Café 930 Baca St., 995-1105 Glick’s works on canvas and on art panels are diverse both in subject matter and size. An intuitive painter, her work has been described as edgy, soulful and thought-provoking. Through June 28. 5 pm, free RAVEN REDFOX VQ Gallery 703 Canyon Road, 415-328-4321 The Arikara/Lakota artist not only shows new and recent acrylic paintings featuring contemporary Native imagery, imagination and juxtapositions of the sacred, but plays music (some bluesy slide guitar) at the reception too. 5 pm, free


THE CALENDAR

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

BOOKS/LECTURES 3 WOMEN POETS: A SHARED VOICE op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321 Carol Moldaw, Madelyn Garner and Kate Northrup present poetry readings and sign books. 2 pm, free ALLISON HOLLEY: THE ERA OF THE TRUE CREATOR The Ark 133 Romero St., 988-3709 Holley's book is a guide to releasing old patterns of drama so that we can learn to exist clearly within the present moment. 2 pm, free ARTIST TALK: SUSAN BEINER form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 216-1256 The Arizona State University professor discusses her current show at the gallery, a large-scale, modular installation which features her characteristic floral forms. 2 pm, free JOE ILLICK: THE RING IN 60 MINUTES—A TALK AT THE PIANO SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 In just 60 minutes, multi-talented maestro Illick introduces us to the entire saga of Richard Wagner's The Ring Cycle, playing the piano (and sometimes singing) the complex notes that Wagner wrote for an orchestra of 88 or more. 6 pm, $5-$10

DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Experience the National Institute of Flamenco's dinner show. Reservations required. 6:30-9 pm, $30

EVENTS ANNUAL YARD SALE Ventana de Vida Apartments 1500 Pacheco St. The apartment residents offer their wares. For info: 470-5022. 8 am-1 pm, free FIESTA PARA BEBÉS El Camino Real Academy 2500 South Meadows Road The fifth annual community health and wellness fair invites families with young children, age birth to 5. 11 am-1 pm, free KEEP THE SANTA FE PLAZA BEAUTIFUL Santa Fe Plaza 100 Old Santa Fe Trail Beat the summer heat at the fifth annual event. Meet at the Bandstand for team assignments for painting and cleaning around the Plaza. No experience is needed; team captains and parks crews provide guidance. Free lunch afterward, too! 7-10:30 am, free

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

olunteers eeded for Research Study

with Brothers Brothers

BRANDON SODER

Eagle-eyed (or -eared) readers might recognize Brothers Brothers as the force behind solo act ppoacher ppoacher—a powerful songwriting force conveying emotive lyricism, freak-folk stylings and sick-ass harp. Bad news first? Brothers is leaving Santa Fe before too long. The good news? You can still catch a show or two, starting this Friday May 31 at Second Street Brewery’s Rufina Taproom (7:30 pm. Free. 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068) alongside locals Vonnie Kyle and Laughing Branches. (Alex De Vore) You’ve gone in some pretty interesting musical directions with numerous projects. Where are you now, musically speaking? Right now, I’m just focusing on ppoacher ppoacher, but with an openness to put energy in other places. Nothing’s popped up yet, and I’m kind of waiting for something that feels like the right fit, but it feels good to be investing 100% of my energy into ppoacher ppoacher after showing up for other people’s stuff for a long time. It felt initially strange to just be doing ppoacher ppoacher, but I think I’m settling in. What is about ppoacher ppoacher that keeps you coming back or that makes it your main focus? For a long time I’ve really wanted to cultivate greater skill in songwriting, and I think I have relative skill, but I really want to be better. I want to be on the same level as my heroes. I wanna listen to my own song and feel like … you know when a song breaks your heart then puts you back together? When it takes you so far out of your comfort zone then brings you back home? I want to write songs like that. I think I’m getting closer, but I don’t know if I’ll be successfully able to do that for a long time, and I’m OK with that. I’m not feeling so attached to the name ppoacher ppoacher or the aesthetic I’ve presented up to this point. This is where I’ve focused the solo music for so long, but it’s my commitment to myself and my healing, and what I feel like I have to offer the world is all in incredible reflection and analysis. The place it’s easiest to do that musically is through ppoacher ppoacher. You’ve studied and traveled pretty extensively in the service of music. What’s in the future as far as that stuff goes? I’m going on a tour for three weeks in July, and the main stopping point is a festival called California World Festival. Then I’m going to keep going west, do the coast; Joshua Tree and Arizona. Recording is really weird for me, because I can’t ever decide what’s worth capturing or preserving and I have this fear of [releasing music] constantly. … I’m trying to be careful about what I put out there, but [local guitarist] Nathan Smerage and I might get together again and do something. And I’m moving away from town this fall. I’m going back to Arkansas to kind of regroup. I’m totally open about that; I don’t know what it means to be a musician in the world we live in right now, and I don’t know what it means to be me in the world we live in right now. For a long time those things were stuck together for me, and now I’m seeing them as a little more separate. In my entire time in Santa Fe, it feels like I’ve spent all my time developing myself in support of music, and I’m grateful to that—but I’m wondering who I am outside of a person who plays music for other people and what more I have to offer the world.

You may be eligible to participate if you: • • •

re years of age or older re healthy ave never received a vaccine to prevent pneumococcal infections such as Prevnar 13 or Pneumova 23

Study participation involves:

• Receiving an investigational vaccine to prevent pneumococcal infections or the approved pneumococcal vaccine • 2 visits to our clinic with blood draws and 2 phone calls over a 6 month period Compensation for time and travel is provided. Contact Southwest Care Center Research Department at

505-395-2003

Celebration!

2.69 Special %

ANNIVERSARY

APY* CERTIFICATE

With qualifying checking account And recurring direct deposit.

For Terms & Conditions visit dncu.org

*Annual Percentage Yield. In order to qualify for the 65th Anniversary Share Certificate (Certificate), the following requirements must be met: a recurring direct deposit completed into a DNCU checking account product. The share certificate special term is 8 months and at maturity will rollover to our six month share certificate at our current rates. Offer good for new or existing money. Minimum amount $10,000 and maximum amount $100,000 per social security number. Dividends are compounded daily and paid monthly. Early withdrawal penalty does apply. No tiered rates apply on this share certificate special. Terms and conditions are subject to change without notice and offer expires end of business day July 9, 2019.

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21


THE CALENDAR

NEW MEXICO

COCKTAILS & CULTURE

CULINARY FESTIVAL

May 31 through

June 2

S TA RT SUMMER RIGHT!

NMCocktailCulture.com for tickets and information!

Want to see your event listed here?

S

pecializing in issues related to anxiety/ depression and increasing the capacity for intimacy and sexual expression

EXTENSIVE TRAINING IN: • Eriksonian Hypnosis • EMDR, Brain-Spotting (Trauma Resolution) • Techniques that Enhance Mindfulness & Connection

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38+ YEARS OF CLINICAL EXPERIENCE

JacobM.S.,Daniel Cohen L.P.C.C., L.M.F.T. (505) 984-8431

2019 Galisteo St., M-2 • Santa Fe, NM 87505 22

MAY 2 9-JUNE 4, 2019

KIDS FISHING DERBY Santa Fe River West Alameda Street, 955-6840 The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish and the city sponsor a free fishing derby for children 12 and younger, so drop a line (you can even borrow a rod) at the Santa Fe River Park from Don Gaspar Avenue upstream to Old Santa Fe Trail. 7 am-noon, free MAGIC: THE GATHERING: STANDARD SHOWDOWN Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 In-store tournament play. 7-11 pm, $5 SAND PLAY SATURDAY Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe Street, 982-3373 Kids can play and learn in the Railyard's outdoor science classroom for toddlers (aka “the sandbox”). 10 am-noon, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market Street at Alcaldesa Street, 310-8766 Find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, sculpture, furniture, textiles and more. 8 am-2 pm, free SHIDONI SCULPTURE GARDEN PHOTO-OP HUNT Museum of Interactive Art Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 670-2118 Pick up the photo-op list at the Museum of Interactive Art and get snappin'. Kids under 3 get free entry. 9 am-5 pm, $5 SPRING & FIBER FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 Celebrate Golondrinas' re-opening and see what life was like on the Camino Real, Santa Fe Trail and Spanish Trail. Experience ranch activities like sheep shearing, wool dyeing, spinning and weaving. 10 am-4 pm, $6-$8

SFREPORTER.COM

We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to Charlotte: calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. We want to know it all, folks! Submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion, but we do our best.

For help, call Charlotte: 395-2906.

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

FOOD NEW MEXICO COCKTAILS & CULTURE CULINARY FESTIVAL Various locations A multi-day celebration of the local culinary and cocktail culture. Events are of varying price levels, so head to nmcocktailculture.com to get the full scoop. All day, $20-$250 SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Not only the place to see and be seen in Santa Fe, this is one of the oldest, largest and most successful growers’ markets in the country. 7 am-1 pm, free THE SWEETEST TREAT POP-UP Sunset Swirl 1708 Lena St., Ste. 101 At the most delicious pop-up ever, it’s all vegan all the time. Taste treats from Chamisa Chocolate, Danielle's Donuts, Drift + Porter bakers and Sunset Swirl ice cream (see SFR Picks, page 15). Noon-3 pm, free

MUSIC ALPHA CATS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Blues, jazz and swing. 7 pm, free CASEY MRAZ & LOS METAMORFOS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Everything from Latin to Celtic to blues, jazz, 'n' pop, up on the deck. 3 pm, free CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley, 992-0304 First-rate piano and vocals from Charles Tichenor and friends. 6 pm, free CONTROLLED BURN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock 'n' blues. 9 pm, $5 ED GORMAN & TWO LEFT SHOES Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Irish-inspired folky fun tunes. 5 pm, free ESTER HANA Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Classical, jazz and cabaret tunes on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free THE GRUVE Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Soul and R&B. 5 pm, free HALF BROKE HORSES Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Country and Americana. 8 pm, free

THE HIGH VIBES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock (see Music, page 19). 8:30 pm, free HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC CAMP STUDENT CONCERT Jemez Historic Site 18160 Hwy. 4, Jemez Springs, 575-829-3530 Students from Hummingbird Music Camp perform outdoors at San Jose de los Jemez Mission at the historic site, then explore the historic site after hours. 6-8 pm, free THE JAKES Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Southern rock ‘n’ roll. 10 pm, free KATY P AND THE BUSINESS Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 High-energy rock 'n' roll. 10 pm, $5 LONE PIÑON Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Ranchera, swing and Norteño favorites. 1 pm, free LOS PRIMOS MELØDICOS La Posada de Santa Fe 330 E Palace Ave., 986-0000 Afro-Cuban, romantic and traditional Latin music. 6:30 pm, free MONO Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 The Tokyo-based instrumental group blends orchestral arrangements and shoegaze guitar noise. 8 pm, $15-$18 NEW MEXICO PEACE CHOIR: COME TO LIFE! Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-9674 The choir offers music concerning social justice, the human spirit and the search for peace. 4 pm, $15 RON ROUGEAU The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Acoustic rock. 5:30 pm, free RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SEVERALL FRIENDS: THE LASCIVIOUS LOW ROAD San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 The group, devoted to medieval music, presents selections on period instruments from the epic Roman de Fauvel with a display of images from the manuscript. A 14th-century spin on political influence, utter incompetence and toadies galore, this early critique of the abuse of power is razor sharp, appalling and very funny. 7:30 pm, $20 CONTINUED ON PAGE 24


First Solo

A

Artist Terran Last Gun on his life, art and getting there BY ALEX DE VORE |

a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

COURTESY THE ARTIST

s artist Terran Last Gun gears up for his first-ever solo show at newly minted Canyon Road space Hecho a Mano, as well as a first-time appearance at this summer’s Indian Market, it’s time to help put him on the map. Last Gun hails from Browning, Montana, and the Blackfeet Reservation. There, he says, the borders between Canada and Glacier National Park have drastically changed and cut down on his people’s ability to exist and thrive over the years. His tribe has certainly dwindled, though he also says those still there are going strong. As a youth in Montana, his artistic interests rested more in dance as well as in the archival and exhibition categories. “My dad—he’s definitely an artist, too, and a historian for our tribe in terms of the images he uses—told me about the museum studies program that [the Institute for American Indian Arts] offers, because I was really interested, and still am, in the care and representation of cultural objects within collection-based settings,” he tells SFR. “I was drawn to that program, but it was at IAIA where I started to take art classes as something to do; it was printmaking that really struck me as the most exciting.” Last Gun graduated with a BFA in museum studies, and his own work has taken other forms such as photography. But his skillful hand creates some of the cleanest and most colorful prints I’ve ever seen. For his self-titled run, which he’ll show at Hecho a Mano starting this week, Last Gun sought influence back home. “It’s inspired by how home follows you and, specifically, the Blackfoot painted lodges, which were pretty rare within my tribe,” he explains. “[The paintings] were on the exterior of the lodge, and usually the owner received [the imagery] through a dream. It was broken into three parts: the bottom, being the land, the mountains; the middle, being whatever that authority is, like an animal, a bird or a natural water element; and the top, the sky world and cosmologies, the … stars, clouds, rains.”

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

Last Gun says the lodges and their paintings would eventually wear out over time, and his people would “give it back to the sun” before recreating it all over again. “It was alive, in a sense,” he says. “And no one dared replicate a lodge without permission of the owner.” Last Gun’s depictions of his own histories are more open to interpretation, but he adopted the three-tiered format as a nod to the practice with a focus on doorways or portals which, he says, were a common theme within his tribe.

Shakespeare in the Garden presents

Romeo & Juliet

For full details and to buy tickets:

www.TheatreSantaFe.org

directed by Patrick Briggs Produced by Santa Fe Classic Theater At the Santa Fe Botanical Garden on Museum Hill

May 31–June 9 7 pm

“I’ve come across different things in terms of meaning, and it can either be a doorway for the spirit helper, or it could be for the sun—rising in the East, it shines through the human door, setting in the West, it leaves through that back door,” Last Gun says. “But there’s this idea of constantly moving, being on a path, or almost how when one door closes, another opens.” Last Gun’s pieces are more abstract than their inspiration, with vertical bars representing trails and the rectangle or

No Man’s Land

A&C

square representing the aforementioned doorway. For the color scheme, he sought relaxing and soothing tones to play with the concept of elevated spirituality through mood. As for the decision to use serigraphs (an ink-on-paper technique similar to silk screening, the most famous of which may be Warhol’s portrait of Marilyn Monroe or his Campbell’s Soup can), Last Gun says the he finds the medium enticing as a piece of labor-intensive fine art, as a way to make multiple original editions by hand, and as a great artistic leveler. “I think paper can be more accessible than canvas or other mediums,” he says. “As long as you have a flat surface, you can print on anything.” Unlike many printmakers, however, Last Gun uses an uncommon full bleed technique wherein an entire piece of paper receives a base color, upon which he builds further layers with screens also crafted by hand. For now, he’s auditing courses at IAIA for access to equipment but, if the year goes well, he hopes to build his own studio and setup. And the year does look promising. Just last week, Last Gun showed at the Museum of New Mexico Foundation’s Native Treasures event for the fourth year running and, at this year’s Indian Market, he’ll show alongside his father, though in separate booths. Perhaps most impressive, however, is that he’s done it all while embracing a methodology and ethos based in personal artistic freedom. “I feel like I’ve just been flying under the radar and creating work slowly and meeting people who maybe appreciate it,” Last Gun says. “I’ve been taking my time and building up all these things; I’ve been feeling on the verge of being overwhelmed, but I’m able to take the pressure off somehow. I have to give credit to my partner Samantha, who helps me with everything and who I’m sure gets tired of hearing about my art—but in terms of the body I’m working on, I just want to explore.” TERRAN LAST GUN 5 pm Friday May 31. Free. Through June 22. Hecho a Mano, 830 Canyon Road, 916-1341

Fun Home

by Harold Pinter directed by Nicholas Ballas Presented by New Mexico Actors Lab At Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie

by Lisa Kron, Jeanine Tesori and Alison Bechdel directed by Vaughn Irving At the Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E. DeVargas Street

June 13–30

June 6–23 Thursdays – Saturdays, 7:30 pm; Sundays, 2 pm

Thursdays – Saturdays, 7:30 pm; Sundays, 2 pm

SFREPORTER.COM

MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

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P L E A S E N O T E : A L L E V E N T S S TA RT AT 6 : 0 0 P M U N L E S S O T H E R W I S E S TAT E D ( S U B J E C T T O C H A N G E )

For the month of June, photographic works by Alan Ogard will hang in the CW Gallery. W E D N E S D AY, J U N E 5 @ 4 PM

FRIDAY, JUNE 21

ARTIST RECEPTION

NATIVO A reading and discussion with author Oliver Galvan de-la Cruz, co-author Jaima Chevalier, Illustrator, Israel Francisco Haros Lopez and readings by Gomeo Bobelu and Natachee Momaday Gray

Alan Ogard, Pinhole Photography and Reverse Perspective F R I D AY, J U N E 7

THE 2019 SANTA FE OPERA SPOTLIGHT SERIES WITH OLIVER PREZANT:

TUESDAY, JUNE 11

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12

New Mexico’s Palace of the Governors: Highlights from the Collections featuring a discussion with contributors to the book

Mary Miller Biloxi W E D N E S D AY, J U N E 2 6

Marin Sardy The Edge of Every Day: Sketches of Schizophrenia FRIDAY, JUNE 28

Peter Gabel The Desire for Mutual Recognition: Social Movements and the Dissolution of the False Self, co-presented by Journey Santa Fe WINNER: BEST BOOKSTORE

2008-2018

FRIDAY, JUNE 14

THE 2019 SANTA FE OPERA SPOTLIGHT SERIES WITH OLIVER PREZANT:

Fairytale Operas: The Grimm Reality, The Thirteenth Child, by Poul Ruders

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

S AT U R D AY, J U N E 2 2

Love and Death in a Czech Village, Jenůfa by Leos Janáček Malcolm Ebright & Rick Hendricks Ph.D. Pueblo Sovereignty: Indian Land and Water in New Mexico and Texas

SUSAN BEINER, “EVERLASTING REVOLUTION”

JUNE 2019 EVENTS

THE CALENDAR

Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo Street 505-988-4226

www.cwbookstore.com

SUMMER HOURS: MON-SUN 8 AM -6 PM

(UNLESS THERE IS AN EVENT)

Susan Beiner’s Sugar Fields blurs the line between botany, art, sculpture and geometry. It opens Friday at form & concept; see full listing, page 18.

SUN

SAT

You’re invited!

In honor of the Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s 80th birthday, we invite the public to celebrate with us! First, join us where it all began, at the School for Advanced Research, former estate of the White sisters—founders of the SFAS. Plus, later in the month, swing by our main campus to enjoy a day of food, music, and family and dog-friendly fun and activities!

SFAS/SAR PUBLIC OPEN HOUSE

The School for Advanced Research (SAR) 1-4 P.M. • SAR Campus (660 Garcia St.)

SFAS 80TH BIRTHDAY BASH

Fun Walk/Run • Food & Spirits • Live Music 10 A.M. • SFAS Campus (100 Caja del Rio) For more information about these and other upcoming events, visit sfhumanesociety.org or follow us on Facebook or Instagram!

505-983-4309 • 100 Caja del Rio, Santa Fe, NM 87507

STANLIE KEE AND STEP IN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Blues ‘n’ rock. 1 pm, free THE SANTA FE REVUE Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana ‘n’ rock ‘n’ roll. 8 pm, free TONIC BACKLINE BAND Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Cutting-edge jazz. 9:30 pm, free VONNIE KYLE, PPOACHER PPOACHER AND LAUGHING BRANCHES Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Kyle, frontwoman of Ten Ten Division, offers a fun blend of garage-rock and indie-pop ppoacher ppoacher’s unique use of voice and earnestly goofy stage presence have left audiences wondering if the performer before them was an ethereal goblin, a feral roof dog, a long lost friend, a hillbilly Kate Bush impersonator, a banshee suffering an identity crisis, or a bag of feelings parading as a human. Laughing Branches is Santa Fe’s newest folk duo, comprised of singer-songwriters Jesse Kohn and Zioleta (see 3 Questions, page 21). 7:30 pm, free

VINCENT COPIA Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 New original acoustic guitar tunes. 7 pm, free

THEATER KARAOKE PARTY WITH DRAZTIK Cities of Gold Casino 10 Cities of Gold Road, 455-4232 Get yourself signed up for the State Fair karaoke showcase. 9 pm, free NEW MOON CABARET Honeymoon Brewery Solana Center, 907 W Alameda St., Ste. B, 303-3139 At a variety show celebrating beauty, sensuality, the playful and the profound, fabulous performance artists entertain you then invite everyome up for a funk dance party. Savor kombucha brews and dress to impress. 8 pm, $5 ROMEO & JULIET Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Featuring a stellar cast, the botanical garden's outdoor stage transforms Santa Fe to fair Verona as Shakespeare in the Garden brings the bestknown Shakespeare play to life. Bring a picnic and make a date of it; you'll be glad you did. Call ahead if the weather looks iffy. 7 pm, $10-$45

SUN/2 ART OPENINGS JUDY CHICAGO: THE BIRTH PROJECT, FROM NEW MEXICO COLLECTIONS Harwood Museum of Art 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 The famous (and some might consider infamous) artist, author, feminist, educator and intellectual designed and executed dozens of pieces that incorporates painting and needlework to explore and celebrate the various dimensions of the birth process. This is your first day to check it out. Through Nov. 10, 2019. Noon-5 pm, $8-$10

BOOKS/LECTURES JOURNEYSANTAFE: ANNA HANSEN Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Big things are happening at Santa Fe County. Meet with County Commissioner Hansen and learn about current initiatives, ranging from the construction of a new administration building, sustainability projects, improvements and changes to the DCI code for hard rock mining, and much more. 11 am, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26

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MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

SFREPORTER.COM


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ACTING OUT Summer Schools

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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

ith the Santa Fe theater boom has finally come a renaissance in young folks’ activities. There have always been activities for kids wanting to get onstage, but three new opportunities are perfect for getting kids into a new hobby, out of the house and hanging with friends in a positive environment.

something about this community made them feel comfortable and capable.” Students ages 10-18 who want to try their hands at Monty Python and Shakespeare this summer (tuition $295) have only a few days to sign up; rehearsals start June 3. Get all the information you may need at upstartcrowsofsantafe.org.

Santa Fe Improv

Upstart Crows of Santa Fe

The bigger, flashier, famouser improv troupes that get all the attention (think the Upright Citizens Brigade or Second City) are known for being hilarious, presenting shows that get audiences rolling in the aisles. But Santa Fe Improv Managing Director Kita Mehaffy is quick to remind folks that the origin of improv education is not humor—it’s simply truth. “Actually, we discourage trying to be funny,” Mehaffy says. “We talk about

Young Playwrights Project

An initiative from the Santa Fe Play-

CARYL FARKAS

Upstart Crows has been around for four or five years now, but with the acquisition of The Swan (the former Adobe Rose Theatre) by the International Shakespeare Center, UCSF now has a brick-and-mortar home for students crafting classical theater, including Shakespeare and Oscar Wilde. This summer sees a fun new addition: And Now For Something Completely Different, a mashup of Shakespearian scenes and skits from Monty Python. When it comes to kids and classical theater, there might be a “type” that want to get involved with Shakespeare (perhaps kids who love history and reading would be most inclined), but really anyone can become enamored. “I think what excites them is the language,” director Caryl Farkas says of UCSF actors. “There is a lot of excitement about having ownership of that language, because it’s so rich, and there’s so much passion and life in it.” This love of language makes for more ougoing young people. “We began having kids sign up who previously had been terrified to even speak in class,” Farkas continues. “Our actress who played Hamlet two summers ago … had been, in her own words, ‘painfully shy.’ … [On our website,] you find accounts from a bunch of kids about why they like this—and most of them had no theater background at all.” Further, Farkas says, beyond word nerds (and we don’t mean that in the pejorative) and shy kids, “We’ve had a couple of kids with autism who didn’t really function in other environments, and

truth-telling all the time. … Through the story-building process, as we move from person to person, we encourage people to say what spontaneously comes to their mind at that moment; don’t secondguess themselves don’t edit themselves.” Of course, what then comes out is often hilarious, but that is never the end goal. Sometimes improv can be touching and poignant; it’s just a matter of what is true that day. Further, “[improv] is for kids who are shy,” Mehaffy says definitively. “Who have self-confidence issues in social settings. … I mean, I don’t want to say it’s not for the theater kids. But it has been shown to be really helpful for kids who have issues with social anxiety.” The teachers of these brand-new teen courses are kind and encouraging, and Mehaffy says the classes end up as safe spaces where kids and teachers alike can laugh and learn—and fail. “You don’t have to be funny, you don’t have to have acted, you don’t have to have any experience in any of this,” she says. “You simply have to be willing to open your mouth spontaneously and see what comes out.” Santa Fe Improv’s one-week-each teen classes include an improv class for all teens (13-16 years old) and a sketch-writing class (15-18 years old) starting mid-June, and improv for girls (13-16 years old) in July. Tuition runs $220-$300. Head to santafeimprov.com for all the info.

The Upstart Crows of Santa Fe specialize in classical theater (think Shakespeare or Oscar Wilde), but branch out into pet parades and, new for this summer, Monty Python.

THEATER

house, brand-new for 2019, sees theater professionals Quinn Fontaine and Marguerite Louise Scott shepherding young folks through improvisation, acting basics and playwriting workshops, set to culminate in public performances in August. The response from local kids has been overwhelmingly positive, Scott tells SFR—and the best part? It’s all free. Ariana Roybal, 14, who does YPP with her brother Jonathan, 10, says she was drawn to YPP by an unlikely source. “I found an interest in acting because I’ve watched TV shows, and I’ve been thinking that the actors in the TV shows make it look fun.” (She thought Andi Mack on the Disney Channel looked particularly exciting to make.) She’s now particularly enamored of YPP, and of the supportive environment that Scott and Fontaine have created. “When I walk in the door, Marguerite and Quinn have big, open smiles and say, ‘Hey! There she is!’” Ariana says happily. After a welcome like that, she says that after group sharing and improv practice with Fontaine, the group then gets down to writing with Scott. Ariana says she eventually wants to see one of her full-length plays produced at the Playhouse. Her father, Jonathan Roybal, is an eager unofficial spokesman for the program. He says of his son, “Jonathan’s always been naturally shy and kind of timid and soft-spoken; around strangers, at least.” This was surprising to hear, though, because the 10-year-old was nothing but charming and gregarious when I met him at a recent fundraiser, and he won over audiences with a Teddy Roosevelt speech at the Playhouse’s 100year birthday party at the St. Francis Auditorium last month. The elder Roybal continues, “The way he has come out of his shell, so to speak, has been a pleasant surprise and definitely one of the many positive effects of YPP. Another is the fact that our kids have developed a passion for writing that’s akin to their peers’ obsession with Fortnight. It’s actually becoming a nightly occurrence where I have to ask Ariana several times to quit writing in her notebook and go to bed.” I’d be remiss not to mention that, since YPP is free and supported by donations, it’s incumbent upon the community to show how much we love the idea. Feel free to open the wallet if you have philanthropical inclinations. Kids aged 8 to 14 are invited to drop in to weekly sessions at the Santa Fe Public Library, either at the La Farge branch on Wednesdays or the Southside branch on Mondays, from June 10-July 29. Get info at santafeplayhouse.org/education, or email ypp@santafeplayhouse.org.

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THE CALENDAR

SLEEPING BEAR of Santa Fe

SCOTT OURY: NEW MOON BY HALF op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321 Oury reads from his poetry collected from over five decades, featuring finely crafted work with a precision all its own. 2 pm, free

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FESTIVAL Various locations A multi-day celebration of the local culinary and cocktail culture. nmcocktailculture.com has the full scoop. All day, $20-$250

BERT DALTON & FRIENDS Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Piano-led Latin jazz. 11:30 am-3 pm, free BORIS AND FRIENDS Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., 87507 Gothic Americana. Noon, free ERYN BENT Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Country and folky Americana. 2 pm, free GNASH Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle 395-6369 This hip-hopper and R&B'er makes music for people who have emotions and who don't care who knows it (see SFR Picks, page 15). 8-11 pm, $20-$25 JOE WEST & TIMBO ARNOLD Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Alt.country on the deck. 3 pm, free LAURIA & KOTT: ASTATINE 85 San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 Never mind the traditional elements of earth, air, fire, water, metal and wood. Lauria (aka Laurianne Fiorentino—composer and songwriter/vocalist) and Michael Kott (cellist) embark on a more in-depth elemental concert series of "elemental Americana" music. Periodic table elements, one per concert, are explored as they are related to human qualities. Also featuring local singersongwriter Trevor Bahnson. 8 pm, $20 LEXY PETTIS Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Alternative folk from the mountains of Magdalena, New Mexico. 5:30 pm, free NACHA MENDEZ La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Latin music from around the world from Santa Fe's most buttery-voiced cantadora. 7 pm, free PAT MALONE AND JON GAGAN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A jazz duet with guitarist Malone and bassist Gagan on Civilized Sunday at the historic bar. 7 pm, free ROBERT MARCUM AND BRIAN DEAR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Folk 'n' rock. Noon-2:30 pm, free RYAN PAINTER Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Country tunes that are more red-dirt Texas than Nashville. 8 pm, free

H C N RU B T NC H RE RUNC BRU H MUSIC

AL ROGERS Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards 'n' jazz on piano. 6:30 pm, free BAILE DOMINGUERO Golden Cantina Lounge 10-B Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3313 Get dancing to the best cumbia, Norteña, pasito satevo and reggaeton tunes with DJ Quico. 9 pm, free

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NEW MOON CEREMONY Santa Fe Community Yoga Center 826 Camino De Monte Rey A ceremony will begin with a discussion lead by Stephen, a vedic astrologer, on the astrological energies of this new moon cycle to help you align with the cosmos. Chant and drum, pull a tarot card, do a guided meditation, journaling and more. Bring a journal and pen and wear comfortable clothing. 6 pm, $10-$15 RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 The perfect place to buy a gift for yourself or a loved one, or to find one-of-a-kind souvenirs and mementos. 10 am-4 pm, free SOL SUNDAYS Railyard Plaza Market and Alcaldesa Streets, 982-3373 At a free community wellness event, enjoy DJs, a silent disco, fitness and yoga classes, pet adoptions, wellness treatments and more. Noon-9 pm, free SPRING & FIBER FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 See what life was like on the Camino Real, Santa Fe Trail and Spanish Trail; learn about the people, goods and livestock that came and went on the arteries of the Southwest. Experience ranch activities like sheep shearing, wool dyeing, spinning and weaving. Plus a fiber arts marketplace and crafts for children. 10 am-4 pm, $6-$8 ZEN MEDITATION INSTRUCTION Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Those new to Upaya can get acquainted and receive instruction on Zen meditation and temple forms. RSVP to 986-8518 ext. 111. 3 pm, free

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CELEBRATION OF HWEELDI: THE WOVEN TRIBUTE AND LIFEWAYS OF THE SOUTHERN ATHABASKANS Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Say goodbye to two exhibitions with hands-on activities for children, as well as guest speakers Oliver Enjady (Mescalero Apache), Vernon Petago (Jicarilla Apache) and Vida Vigil-Garcia (Jicarilla Apache), who discuss the Southern Athabaskan language at 2 pm with closing comments from Joyce BegayFoss (Diné); Dinétah dancers perform at 1 pm and 3 pm. 1-4 pm, free THE GATE OF SWEET NECTAR LITURGY Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 A Buddhist ceremony calls out to all those who are lost and left behind; offer them the bodhi mind of love, wisdom and transformation. Please arrive by 5:20 pm to be polite. 5:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Desert Dogs Brewery and Cidery 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 307, 983-0134 Pub quiz. 7 pm, free JULESWORKS FOLLIES #58: THERAPY EPISODE: DO WE NEED, WANT OR PROVIDE IT Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Santa Fe's longest-running (and only) variety show rides again, presenting theater, music, comedy, standup, spoken-word, Ask the Revisionist Historian and much more. 7 pm, $5 MAGIC: THE GATHERING: STANDARD SHOWDOWN Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 In-store tournament play. 2-7 pm, $5 MAGIC: THE GATHERING: WAR OF THE SPARK LEAGUE Big Adventure Comics 418 Montezuma Ave., 992-8783 Even more! 2-6 pm, $35 MEDITATIONS IN MODERN BUDDHISM Zoetic 230 St. Francis Drive, 292-5293 Learn more about Buddhism; open to all levels. Presented by the Santa Fe branch of Kadampa Meditation Center of New Mexico. 10:30 am-noon, $10

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PC’s Restaurant & Lounge

Sweetwater Harvest Kitchen

Everyone has their New Mexican restaurant standbys, but for a surprisingly excellent meal with no frills and a fair price, PC’s is the undoubted reigning Southside champ. With a sprawling dining room and bar at the mouth of Airport Road, PC’s has been serving up classic local dishes for as long as anyone can remember. The flavorful red and green coupled with the laid-back atmosphere provides a different experience from sometimes-stuffy downtown restaurants. Here, we sampled vegetarian options like the cheese enchiladas (Christmas, of course) for $8.40, with a fried egg on top (an extra $1.30). The carnitas plate ($9.80) and chicharrón burrito ($9.15) downed by our meat-eating companions were reportedly fantastic. As an added bonus, PC’s officially has the best sopaipillas we’ve ever had in Santa Fe—strong words, indeed, but they were somehow dense and airy all at once and perfectly held drizzling honey and mopped-up chile alike. Find also a full bar with the usual beer and margarita suspects, sports on the TV and some of the creamiest and most flavorful guacamole around. PC’s is no place for needless chitchat, but for those in search of well-made and quickly served New Mexican highlights. (Alex De Vore)

Bright, vivacious and fun, this Pacheco Street institution serves delicious food that can be really good for you in an open space that’s trendy without being pretentious. Created by Soma Franks and Fiona Wong, Sweetwater boasts an eclectic menu available with counter service during the day and tableside waitstaff in the evenings and for Sunday brunch. The breakfast burrito, stuffed with sweet potatoes, black beans, green chile and fried eggs and smothered with Monterey jack cheese, is craveable ($8-$11.50). Lunch and dinner menus have plenty of vegetarian, vegan or gluten-free options. Highlights include a salmon donburi bowl ($16.50), with grilled fish served on top of brown rice with crisp peas and an egg, punctuated with scallions and pickled watermelon radish. The tri-color quinoa cakes ($12) are both artful and tasty. The house-made veggie burger ($12) does its own thing without attempting to be meat, and comes with a salad or cup of soup—Sweetwater regularly competes quite well at the annual Souper Bowl, so consider slurping some goodness as you sit in your green Navy chair and sip on a Bhakti chai latte ($4.50-$8) or hibiscus lemon cooler ($3). Glutenfree dessert options abound, such as a dense, flavorful carrot cake ($7). (Matt Grubs)

4220 Airport Road, 473-7164 Lunch and dinner Tuesday-Saturday, breakfast and lunch Saturday and Sunday

These restaurants also appear in SFR’s recent 2019/19 Restaurant Guide. Find pickup Locations at SFReporter.com/pickup.

1512 Pacheco St., Ste. B, 795-7383 Breakfast and lunch daily, dinner Tuesday-Saturday sweetwatersf.com

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ANASTASIO WROBEL, “TIME TO COME – A THEORY FOR TOMORROW”

Help shape your child’s future through clinical research

THE CALENDAR

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

You may be eligible to participate if your child: • is 2 months of age and healthy

Study participation involves:

• Receiving Prevnar 13 or investigational pneumonia vaccine with all routine pediatric vaccines • 6 visits to our clinic • Daily electronic vaccination report card captured by the guardian to monitor the patient outside of the clinic Compensation for time and travel is provided. Contact Southwest Care Center Research Department at

505-395-2003

The work of Anastasio Wrobel is featured in Show Pony Gallery’s groundbreaking exhibition of art by trans creators, opening Saturday. See full listing, page 20. SEVERALL FRIENDS: THE LASCIVIOUS LOW ROAD Unitarian Church of Los Alamos 1738 N Sage St., Los Alamos The group, devoted to medieval music, presents selections from the epic Roman de Fauvel with a display of images from the manuscript. A 14th-century spin on political influence, utter incompetence and toadies galore, this early critique of the abuse of power is razor sharp, appalling and very funny. 3 pm, $20 SOUND CIRCLE AND SHEPHERD MOON: THE LITTLE ROAD: SONGS OF JOURNEY AND HOME St. James Episcopal Church 208 Camino de Santiago, Taos Boulder's 19-voice acapella women's chorus joins Taos instrumental/vocal ensemble Shepherd Moon in songs featuring women composers; it's a unique collaboration that's fresh, fun, warm and reassuring, with a dazzling range of styles and colors, grounded in simple presence. 3 pm, free

THEATER ROMEO & JULIET Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Featuring a stellar cast, the botanical garden's outdoor stage transforms Santa Fe to fair Verona as Shakespeare in the Garden brings the Shakespeare play to life. 7 pm, $10-$45

WORKSHOP MAKING HISTORY: APRON PAINTING New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 It’s barbecue season! Need a father’s day present? Or just a whenever-present? Kids can stencil and paint an apron for a parent or themselves. Limited to 15 participants. RSVP to melanie. laborwit@state.nm.us. Free with museum admission, and New Mexicans are free the first Sunday of every month. 1:30-3:30 pm, $6-$12 WOOD SHOP BEGINNER BADGE MAKE Santa Fe 2879 All Trades Road, 819-3502 Get a broad understanding of navigating a wood shop while learning the safety basics. Makers begin with unmilled lumber and process it through various wood shop machines to get hands-on experience with a variety of tools in the shop resulting in a mini hat rack to keep. 12:30-4 pm, $48

MON/3

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. Submissions doesn’t guarantee inclusion.

For help, call Charlotte: 395-2906.

DANCE MONDAY NIGHT SWING Odd Fellows Hall 1125 Cerrillos Road, 470-7077 Arrive at 7 pm for a lesson if you desire, then get dancin' to DJ'ed music. Singles are just as welcome as partners, all ages are invited. 7 pm, $3-$8

BOOKS/LECTURES

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MONDAY STORY TIME Bee Hive Kid's Books 328 Montezuma Ave, 780-8051 Story time for all ages at the fabulous little book store. 10:30 am, free

ART WALKING TOUR New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 An hour-long tour highlights the art and architectural history of downtown Santa Fe. 10 am, $10 CONTINUED ON PAGE 30

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was strolling the aisles of Target with the one thing I actually needed and a cart filled with everything I didn’t when it hit. The fluorescent lights seemed to pulse, my palms got sweaty and my head started spinning. This was it—the dreaded side effects of hitting a big-box store on an empty stomach. I needed real nourishment, and quick. Thankfully, just around the corner was Posa’s Zafarano (3538 Zafarano Drive, 473-3454). Seeing that I had spent pretty much all my money on a bunch of nothing at Target, I was in luck. At Posa’s you get a lot of bang for your buck. It was busy enough during a Friday lunch rush that I had time to peruse the enormous menu. I settled on a burrito, but which one? Among the plethora of options there’s a Frito pie burrito, a chile dog burrito or even a chicharron burrito (you can choose that last one with ALL chicharrones—skipping the beans, chile, and cheese—if you don’t want anything coming between your belly and pork belly). I went with the basics and ordered a rice and bean veggie burrito ($6.75) with red chile. I always think if the rice and beans can hold their own, then the rest of the menu is worth continued exploration. The sizable burrito arrived surprisingly fast, considering the crowd. The rice was light and fluffy, the beans

JOY GODFREY

BY ZIBBY WILDER a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

farano is the same Posa’s that has been cranking out tamales since 1955, marketed under the brand El Merendero. This tamales of this family-owned operation (also located at 1514 Rodeo Road, 820-7672) are so popular that during the busiest times of the year, it can make upwards of 14,000 per day. They are served at local restaurants and shipped across the country; probably more than a few leave New Mexico crammed in a carry-on. Posa’s tamales are a little dif different than most, not so light and fluffy and with a little more heft. This comes from the use of fresh-ground corn versus the more processed masa harina, which also gives Posa’s tamales that special flavor: the sweet of fresh corn. At Posa’s Zafarano, ta tamales can be ordered to go, hot or cold, fresh or frozen ($2.95 each, $14.75 per half-dozen or $27.95 per dozen). In addition to red chile pork, green chile chicken and green chile cheese, Posa’s has made the effort to create vegan tamales, something you don’t see often. I scooped up a frozen block of these green chile veggie tama tamales on my way out to see if they were as good at home as in the restaurant. I had to let it thaw for a couple of days before the little packages inside the big bigger, tightly packed pack package came loose. Once they did, I simply popped a cou couple in the steamer, and out came tamales just as deli delicious as in the restaurant. I now look forward to shopping, thanks to Posa’s Zafarano. It’s good food, fast. All day, every day.

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ditional dish in Ecuador, which is where I horked them down some two dozen years ago; but that specific combination of flavors and textures is one I remember and think of often. It was truly delicious. This unassuming breakfast at Posa’s, though obviously made of different ingredients, left me with that same happy feeling. It’s a simple thing: when every ingredient works together to make something memorable. But, back to modern times. Posa’s Za-

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Running on Empty

well-seasoned, the chile not so spicy that its lingering burn covered up the other flavors, such as the sharp bite from the many crunchy chunks of raw onion. The best thing, though, was that the fillings were all mixed together. There is nothing worse than getting a “compartmentalized” burrito: one bite beans, another bite just rice, another just onion. As I ate, I continued to eye the menu thinking I might have to make Posa’s Zafarano my go-to power-up spot for the energy-sucking sport of shopping. And that’s just what I did a few days later before braving the racks at Forever 21 (or, Forever 40-something, as I like to call it.) Posa’s offers breakfast all day, and breakfast tamales with eggs ($8.65) were the ideal choice to charge my cells. I chose the cheese and green chile tamales (two to an order), topped with red chile and two eggs, over easy, with potatoes. Have you ever heard of a more delightful combination? The tamales really stood out against all those competing flavors, more dense than usual tamales and with a ripe, fresh, corn Posa’s Two Tamale Plate, with flavor. This dish was original red chile like the Southwest pork tamales. version of one of the most delicious things I have ever eaten: llapingachos. Llapingachos are seasoned fried potato pancakes stuffed with cheese and usually topped with a creamy peanut gravy, fried eggs and avocado. It’s a tratra

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JUNE 23, 2019

GFNYSanta Fe RIDE LIKE A PRO

The Global Cycling Marathon Series 81-mile Gran Fondo & 55-mile Medio Fondo Included in Registration:

THE CALENDAR GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Pub quiz. 7 pm, free SANTA FE INDIVISIBLE MEETING Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 Join the politically progressive group for occasional guest speakers, discussing your concerns, and group activism. 7 pm, free THE SANTA FE HARMONIZERS REHEARSAL Zia United Methodist Church 3368 Governor Miles Road, 699-6922 The barbershop chorus is looking for men and women who can carry a tune; join in on any of the four-part harmony parts (tenor, lead, baritone or bass). 6:30 pm, free

FILM THE BRILL BUILDING Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 A mockumentary based on the life and work of Las Vegas (as in, Lil' Vegas) singersongwriter-satirist Jim Terr— mostly factual—featuring scores of local actors and a few celebrities. 6 pm, $12 WATER LILIES OF MONET: THE MAGIC OF WATER AND LIGHT Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Voyage through the masterpieces and obsessions of the genius and founder of impressionism, Claude Monet. The film is an in-depth, exclusive tour led by the scholars of the museums that house the largest collections of the prolific artist's lilies paintings. 7 pm, $15

MUSIC We want to thank our sponsors for helping make GFNY Santa Fe possible.

Register at

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COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Santa Fe's most famous night of karaoke. 9 pm, free DAVID WOOD Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free GERRY CARTHY Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 From the West of Ireland to Santa Fe, Carthy plays the tradition wild and sweet on tin whistles, fiddle, banjo, concertina, saxophone and guitars. 6 pm, free SIM BALKEY Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 A modern twist on traditional country music. 6 pm, free

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WORKSHOP ELECTROBICS COLOR MOVEMENT Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 The Living Theatre presents a practical engagement into electrobics. For more info, visit thelivingtheatre.com. 6:30 pm, free

TUE/4 DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Put on your best tango shoes and join in (or just watch). 7:30 pm, $5

EVENTS ARTS ALIVE! FAMILY PROGRAMMING: POTTERY MAKING Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 A hands-on family art program starts over every hour on the hour (last one starts at 1 pm), and is perfect for all ages. Participants need to reserve a space, so call or email Joyce Begay-Foss at 476-1272 or joyce.begayfoss@state.nm.us to do so. 10 am-2 pm, free METTA REFUGE COUNCIL Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 A support group for sharing life experiences around illness and loss in a variety of its forms. 10:30 am, free SANTA FE INDIVISIBLE MEETING Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 Join the politically progressive group to put into action the planning you did last night. 8:30 am, free

FOOD SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Not only the place to see and be seen in Santa Fe, this is one of the oldest, largest and most successful growers’ markets in the country. 7 am-1 pm, free

MUSIC CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Sign up to sing or play if you desire, but be forewarned— this ain't amateur hour. 8 pm, $5 CHUSCALES La Boca (Original Location) 72 W Marcy St., 982-3433 Exotic flamenco guitar from a dude who knows his stuff. 7 pm, free

ESTER HANA Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Classical, jazz and cabaret tunes on piano and vocals. 6:30 pm, free JULIAN DOSSETT Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Delta tunes. 8 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free POSSESSED BY PAUL JAMES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Folk-punk and roots straight outta Texas. 7 pm, free ROSE, WHITE & BLUES Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Smoldering blues chanteuse Myrrhine Rosemary and Santa Fe’s most beloved former bellboy Pete White tease your ears with a mix of blues, R&B and soul. 6 pm, free VINTAGE VINYL NITE The Matador 116 W San Francisco St., 984-5050 DJ Prairiedog and DJ Mama Goose spin the best in garage, surf, country and rockabilly till the wee hours. 9 pm, free

THEATER ROMEO & JULIET Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Featuring a stellar cast, the botanical garden's outdoor stage transforms Santa Fe to fair Verona as Shakespeare in the Garden brings the bestknown Shakespeare play to life. Bring a picnic and make a date of it; you'll be glad you did. Check the garden's Facebook page or call ahead if the weather looks iffy, and bring a coat either way; nights get chilly! 7 pm, $10-$35 THEATRE LOVERS CLUB: FUN HOME: CREATING A MUSICAL Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Fun Home director Vaughn Irving talks through the process of producing, directing and creating works of musical theatre. RSVP if you so desire at theatresantafe.org/TLC. Fun Home runs at the Santa Fe Playhouse from June 13-30. 6 pm, free

WORKSHOP FIRST TUESDAY WHAT’S BLOOMING IN THE GARDEN TOUR Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Join docents Ken and Susan Bower to learn to identify plants that are currently in bloom and their characteristics. Free with admission. 9:30-11 am, $7-$10


PET ROCK MAKING WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 670-2118 Mix and match eyes, noses, mouths and ears on pet rocks. Plus hit up the interactive exhibits and ongoing art activities like the builda-beast toy workshop. Enjoy Shidoni’s five-acre sculpture garden and galleries, as well as glass-blowing demonstrations at Tesuque Glassworks nextdoor. Kids under 3 get in free. 9 am-5 pm, $5

THE CALENDAR

WEST AFRICAN DRUMMING Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 Join Soriba Fofana to learn the magic of Guinean drumming on the djembe and dundun. All levels welcome (see SFR Picks, page 15). 6 pm, $20 YOGA IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Head to the garden for stretching, wellness and relaxation. Mats available. 8-9 am, $10-$15

That was fun! We like making calendars. Want your event in one of these puppies? Send all the info over to Charlotte: calendar@sfreporter.com.

6401 Richards Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87508

JUNE 2019 EVENTS

~ free unless otherwise noted.

Empower Students, Strengthen Community. Empoderar a los Estudiantes, Fortalecer a la Comunidad.

Submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion, but we do our best.

Ready when you are — daytime, evenings, weekends, online.

GET REGISTERED. GET LEARNING. GET STARTED TODAY! CREDIT CLASSES START MONDAY, JUNE 3.

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MUSEUMS

FRI

Opening Reception: Joe Long Retrospective Exhibit 4:30 to 6 p.m., Visual Arts Gallery 505-428-1501

From Seedlings to Graduates: Growing Santa Fe’s Culinary Future for Champagne Reception & Culinary Arts Dinner

ADDISON DOTY

CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 In-between exhibitions; stay tuned for new installations. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Abstract Nature; Becoming Georgia O’Keeffe; The Candid Camera; Georgia O’Keeffe at Lake George, 1918-1928; My New Yorks; Ritz Tower; A House of Her Own; O’Keeffe’s New Mexico; Preserving a Legacy: Frames of Mine; The Wideness and Wonder of the World. All permanent exhibitions. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Afton Love: Ranging. Through June 23. Judy Chicago: the Birth Project from New Mexico Collections. Through Nov. 10. IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Action/Abstraction Redefined. Through July 7. Art for a New Understanding: Native Perspectives 1950 to Now. Through July 19. Robyn Tsinnajinnie and Austin Big Crow: The Holy Trinity. Through Oct. 31. Wayne Nez Gaussoin: Adobobot. Through Nov. 30. Reconciliation. Through Jan. 19. Heidi K Brandow: Unit of Measure. Through Jan. 31. Sámi Intervention/Dáidda Gázada. Through Feb. 16. MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART 632 Agua Fría St., 989-3283 No Creative Boundaries. Through July 7. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Lifeways of the Southern Athabaskans. Through July 7. Beyond Standing Rock: The Past, Present, and Future of the Water Protectors. Through Oct. 27. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200

PHOTO BY KATE RUSSELL, COURTESY OF MEOW WOLF @KATERUSSELLPHOTO

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

Benefiting Cooking with Kids and SFCC Culinary Arts Scholarships

Thursday, June 20, 2019, 5:30-8 p.m. A Gathering of Voices at the Museum of International Folk Art could perhaps also be aptly titled A Gathering of Faces. Crafting Memory: The Art of Community in Peru. Through July 17. A Gathering of Voices: Folk Art from the Judith Espinar and Tom Dillenberg Collection. Through Sept. 8. Alexander Girard: A Designer’s Universe. Through Oct. 27. Gallery of Conscience: Community Through Making from Peru to New Mexico. Through Jan. 5, 2020. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Paul Pletka: Converging Faiths in the New World. Through Oct. 20 NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 On Exhibit: Designs That Defined the Museum of New Mexico. Through July 28. The First World War. Through Nov. 11. We the Rosies: Women at Work. Through Feb. 29. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Carved & Cast: 20th Century New Mexican Sculpture. Through July 28. Social & Sublime: Land, Place, and Art. Through Aug. 25. The

Great Unknown: Artists at Glen Canyon and Lake Powell. Through Sept. 15. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Closed for renovations. POEH CULTURAL CENTER 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 In T’owa Vi Sae’we. EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road,471-2261 Closed for winter until June 1. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDEN 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Human Nature: Explorations in Bronze. Through May 10, 2020. SITE SANTA FE 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 Bel Canto: Contemporary Artists Explore Opera. Through Sept. 1. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 LIT: The Work of Rose B Simpson. Bob Haozous: Old Man Looking Backward. Both through Oct. 6.

Enjoy a uniquely crafted gourmet celebration while you support Santa Fe’s future chefs. Tickets on sale now through SFCC Foundation www.sfcc.edu/2019chaine or 505-428-1855. Tickets are $150 each; $50 is tax deductible. This event sells out and seats are limited.

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WED

Groundbreaking: Automotive Technologies Building 2 p.m., Automotive Technologies Bldg 505-428-1177 SFCC Governing Board Meeting — Public Welcome 5:30 p.m., Board Room, Room 223 505-428-1148

Congratulations, SFCC Spring Class of 2019! View the graduation ceremonies on SFCC’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/sfccnm REGISTER FOR COURSES, FIND MORE EVENTS & DETAILS

505-428-1000 | www.sfcc.edu

Individuals who need special accommodations should call the phone number listed for each event. SFREPORTER.COM

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MOVIES

RATINGS

Brightburn Review

BEST MOVIE EVER

10

Anti-hero

9

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

8

Writers Brian and Mark Gunn posit the following: What if an alien child crash-landed on Earth, but instead of becoming some kind of souped-up patriotic Messiah, it totally wanted to kill everybody? Tori and Kyle Breyer (Elizabeth Banks and The Office alum David Denman) live in Brightburn, Kansas, one of those rural communities where everyone is a farmer and knows or is related to each other. Things are great and all, but the Breyers can’t seem to have a kid. Enter mysterious spaceship carrying weirdly humanoid baby. We cut 10 years, and they’ve raised the kid as their own, but something starts to awaken in young Brandon (Jackson A Dunn, previously from bit parts in film and television) as he turns 12 (though no one says how we’re supposed to know his age), and it’s not something good. Brightburn tries to convince us it’s Banks’ film, and to an extent, she’s great as a mother struggling to accept what her kid might be capable of doing. Dunn’s dead-eyed evil, however, does the most heavy lifting. Denman, while probably im-

7 6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER

7 + COOL IDEA;

DUNN IS SUPER-CREEPY

- SOMETHING’S MISSING, LIKE THE OTHER HALF OF THE MOVIE

portant to the narrative or something, feels pretty pointless for the most part because, like most everyone else in this movie, he’s basically a foil for Brandon’s evolution. This evolution is particularly irksome, however, because we almost empathize with the tween angst. How might we have done things differently when we were hormone-riddled middle-schoolers if we’d had alien powers? Maybe not with evil, but surely things might have been different. Brandon, meanwhile, goes the straight-up horror route, toying with his prey and unleashing gruesome vengeance wherever he sees fit. Thus, Brightburn proves an interesting foray into mostly uncharted waters. Oh sure, 2012’s Chronicle asked us to envision what everyday people with newfound powers going rogue

might look like, but the Gunn brothers’ take feels more visceral and fun, especially since it might open the door to horror themes within the increasingly homogenized superhero genre. Still, at its core, Brightburn screams its desire to birth a franchise, leaving us with half a movie worth enjoying and half that seems like a money grab. Will you enjoy Brightburn? Probably, but the potential sequel—and it’s coming, believe me— prematurely robs the first entry from being anything particularly special outside of its admittedly neat premise. BRIGHTBURN Directed by David Yarovesky With Dunn, Banks and Denman Regal 14, Violet Crown, R, 91 min.

QUICKY REVIEWS

7

BOOKSMART

1

ALADDIN

7

JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3 —PARABELLUM

6

THE CHAPERONE

BOOKSMART

7

+ FELDSTEIN AND DEVER; SMARTER THAN EXPECTED

- RUSHED ENDING

On the surface, Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut Booksmart exists someplace between Harold & Kumar, Dazed and Confused and comedian Bo Burnham’s stellar Eighth Grade. But on a deeper level, it examines friendships, modern teenaged interpersonal politics and sexuality, and a bevy of other issues with humor, sensitivity and wit. Think of Booksmart like Superbad, only with better leads, a well-done feminist angle and smarter writing. Best friends Molly (Ladybird’s Beanie Feldstein) and Amy (Kaitlyn Dever, Last Man Standing) have reached the final day of high school, but the previous four years spent forsaking social lives in the service of good grades and college admissions seem misspent when they learn the apparent slackers of their graduating class are also attending Ivies. Molly hatches a plan: one wild night to prove they could have done both before they leave high school forever having never partied. A seemingly Sisyphean journey follows, from the ill-attended yacht party thrown by

Beanie Feldestein (left) and Kaitlyn Dever kill it as best buds just looking to party in the new teen-based comedy Booksmart.

8

AVENGERS: ENDGAME

that one dweeb no one likes (a surprisingly poignant Skyler Gisondo of 2015’s Vacation) to the drama kids’ absurd murder mystery gathering; from the principal’s weekend Lyft driver status to the mysteriously disappearing and reappearing weirdo (a gloriously melodramatic Billie Lourd). No matter the stakes, though, Molly and Amy remain steadfast in their mutual support, a wonderful but never overwrought premise that eschews the tired cinematic pitfall of competitive women while leaving room for drama and growth. Said growth is admittedly minimal, and there’s an accelerated rate at which conflict is resolved, but these characters learn and evolve readily rather than simply progress by circumstance; the redemptions may be small or feel inconsequential but, for teens, they’re downright monumental. Booksmart is hilarious when it wants to be and clever when it needs, striking a balance between the understanding that high school was somehow the worst time of our lives, but we miss it for its simplicity. Add points for Feldstein and Dever’s effortless chemistry— the film is at its best when it’s simply them riffing—and for queer representation alongside a few worthwhile bit performances from Jason Sudeikis, Will Forte, Lisa Kudrow and CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

SFREPORTER.COM

• MAY 29-JUNE 4, 2019

33


MOVIES

FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM

Jessica Williams. Add a few more for Dan the Automator’s hype-ass soundtrack. Subtract a few for a shoddy resolution which plays out too quickly, but then relax a little because it’s ultimately a ridiculous high school comedy that still winds up being clever and, in many ways, a step in the right direction. (ADV)

previous films in pretty much all respects. That’s kind of hard to believe possible, but is amazingly true. Halle Berry as the mysterious Sofia is a particularly welcome addition, especially since she also likes dogs and hers didn’t show up to the party to mess around so much as they did to rip throats. Chaos ensues, stunning fight choreography explodes everywhere—a fucking horse kicks a guy in his face so hard that his head practically bursts! … Look, high art this ain’t, but one doesn’t look to John Wick for the next evolution in cinematic artistry, one looks to John Wick so they can have their mind blown by whatever insane stunt or bizarre death comes next, tap their movie-going companion and whisper, “Holy shit!” (ADV)

Regal 14, Violet Crown, R, 102 min.

ALADDIN

1

+ THE CARLTON DANCE, THAT’S IT - ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING ELSE

Despite the weather, summer can certainly be felt in the cinemas with Disney’s newest live adaptation of one of its own animated features, Aladdin. Whatever joy you think you’ll find, however, you are mistaken—this is possibly the worst film of the year. Mena Massoud (Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan) plays titular hero Aladdin, carrying with him as much charm as the high school jock thrown in the spring musical for unknown reasons. Massoud’s delivery is consistently flat, forced and uninspired. Naomi Scott (Power Rangers) as the headstrong Princess Jasmine brings more effort and panache than Massoud, yet we are still left with a yearning for more. Arguably the worst performance, however, belongs to Marwan Kenzari (Ben Hur; not the old one) as the insufferable counselor and villain, Jafar, and is he ever insufferable. Kenzari’s performance comes off as less threatening than an opened top of canned cat food, less devious than a child with desires for world domination (not counting Brightburn). And then, of course, Will Smith arrives as The Genie, one of the most memorable characters in Disney history thanks to Mister Robin Williams. You’ll certainly laugh and cry while Smith performs; the laughter from embarrassment and the tears from yearning for his predecessor. It’s hard to imagine director Guy Ritchie had promise in the Disney vein given his pedigree of blue-collar hooligan movies like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, anyway, but it’s almost as if the Disney execs demanded the director repeat his last disaster (King Arthur, if you’re curious) only with a bigger budget and more beloved characters to destroy. There is approximately a half hour of new scenes not in the animated original, and the tedium Ritchie builds up within them is enough to make anyone fidget. In fact, hardly any highlights can be mentioned whatsoever: The sets look as if they were assembled over a weekend, the costumes are unconvincing, the lighting is beyond flat. Even worse, the musical numbers are mindnumbing and lacking any joy in choreography as

Regal (both locations), Violet Crown, R, 130 min.

THE CHAPERONE “But my kid liked it!” isn’t an excuse for Aladdin being as shitty as it is. Also, we now have Will Smith nightmares all the time. voices are excessively lathered with autotune; at least Alfonso Ribeiro’s famous Carlton dance from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air can be seen in a dance sequence. The special effects might be the worst, though, especially when it comes to the animals. Abu the monkey, Iago the parrot and Raja the tiger are all featured, but reduced to reactionary set pieces, devoid of any personality. Who would’ve thought Gilbert Gottfried’s voice would be missed? Oh, and one last word of advice—if you’re a parent, lay ground rules for bathroom and possible bar breaks with whichever adult accompanies you. You’ll need, and deserve, personal rewards for your endurance. (Matthew K Gutierrez)

Regal (both locations), Violet Crown, PG, 128 min.

JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3—PARABELLUM

7

+ A RIDICULOUS GOOD TIME - IT’S NOT, LIKE, GOOD, BUT WE KNEW THAT

When last we left our dog-loving titular hero (Keanu Reeves), he’d run afoul of the High Table—a clandestine organization with assassins and operatives pretty much everywhere around the globe. He was given an hour, however, to get his shit together by the manager of the New York Continental Hotel (which is, like, secretly an assassin safe haven, y’know?), and we join him at the tail end of this 60 minutes. Of course, this hour sets into motion a whole string of unfortunate circumstances for said manager (Ian McShane), the Bowery King (Laurence Fishburne), The Director (Anjelica Huston)

and whatever other High Table allies might have helped John Wick, even a little bit. Turns out the High Table’s top brass are sticklers for rules, and now John Wick has a massive bounty on his head, which dredges up every assassin in the whole wide world. Our bud’s gonna die unless he can make and execute some serious life decisions; namely, how he’s going to shoot everyone in the face. It’s sooooooo stupid. But it’s sooooooo crazy fun. See, John Wick succeeds because it knows exactly what it is—an excuse for absurdist violence doled out amidst New York City’s teeming backdrop, Casablanca’s bustling back alleys and the weird retro-futurist environs of the Continental’s bowels. Never does the film take itself seriously enough as to err into the heavy-handed, never does it try to be more than what it is; instead, John Wick revels in its own blood-soaked ballet and subterfuge hidden in plain sight. Sure, Keanu is there, but he has about six lines, four of which are “Yeah.” In other words, who even knows what the stakes are? In fact, we don’t even really remember how the movie began, we just know people started getting stabbed. Which reminds me—John Wick makes violence hella fun. Believe me, I know, that is a tough sell for many. But someplace between the brilliantly shot martial arts, the popping color schemes of the various acts and the acrobatic gunplay and/or fights, you’ve just got to let go and realize that escapism doesn’t come much better than this, that it’s goofy. And that that’s OK. Don’t take your kids, though. Onetime stuntman Chad Stahelski returns for directing duties, upping the ante over the

6

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TV MOVIE ATTITUDE

Television director Michael Engler helms The Chaperone, a coming-of-age story about two very different women traveling together to New York City from Kansas. Mostly set in 1922, Prohibition, suppressive gender dynamics and xenophobia all rear their ugly heads, revealing an olderlooking but relevant America; If you thought our past were full of smiles and ragtime, this shows otherwise. Haley Lu Richardson (Split) plays a teenage version of screen star Louise Brooks, New York-bound for dancing reasons. Richardson’s youthful exuberance and natural talent makes her fascinating to watch and she steals entire scenes. Elizabeth McGovern (Downton Abbey) as Norma Carlisle, meanwhile, is Louise’s chaperone, and a counter to her personality. McGovern finds her character’s greatest power either via cooly expressing her values to the ignorant, or in discovering her New York past. The supporting cast are pleasant enough with eyes on Lord of the Rings star Miranda Otto as Louise’s dance instructor, and Singles lead Campbell Scott as Norma’s secretive husband in particular. Unfortunately, accomplished thespian Blythe Danner couldn’t be bothered to do anything other than arrive and collect her check. Julian Fellowes, also of Downton Abbey, pens a screenplay average in narrative structure, but clever in the quiet conversations, and the film’s biggest blunders are in allowing well-written dialogue to be ruined by a lack of direction. One wishes Engler were more active in helping his actors make choices in both body language and pitch. Despite that, the production design is quite convincing. Nothing looks fake, but rather aged,

Cleanest, Friendliest, Best Quality Products and Service. Appointment or Walk in.

WINNER – Best of Santa Fe 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 , 2017, 2018!

+ LEADING LADIES; VIBRANT - LAZY POST-PRODUCTION;

You can adopt Arroyo de Los Pinos by calling:

(505) 820-1696

See what other arroyos are up for adoption by visiting:

Arroyo de Los Pinos is a delightful little arroyo that loves being a part of the Santa Fe Community. A bit temperamental when it rains, Arroyo de Los Pinos just needs some TLC from humans that love her.

www.santafewatershed.org


FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM

MOVIES

WEDNESDAY, MAY 29 12:15p Meeting Gorbachev 12:30p The White Crow* 2:15p The White Crow 3:15p Red Joan* 5:00p The White Crow 6:00p Meeting Gorbachev* 7:45p The White Crow 8:00p Meeting Gorbachev* THURSDAY, MAY 30 12:30p The White Crow* 1:45p The White Crow 3:15p Red Joan* 4:30p The White Crow 6:00p Meeting Gorbachev* 7:00p The Biggest Little Farm Sneak Peek by Quivira Coalition

Wick! Wick! Wick! Wick! as if preserved in time for this exact production. Camera work and lighting are fluid as well; bright, yet accommodating to the environment. Other elements are wonkier, such as choppy editing that robs lead actors of emotional moments landing with gravitas or poor vocal dubbing that makes one wonder when the Shaolin monks might fly into the air, swords in hand. As one can guess, The Chaperone would have made a far better special on PBS than a theatrical release. Its relatively small viewership could have found a charming enough program for a Sunday evening view, favorite vice in hand. (MKG)

Jean Cocteau Cinema, NR, 93 min.

AVENGERS: ENDGAME

8

+ BREAKNECK FUN AND INCREDIBLE SPECIAL EFFECTS; SO SATISFYING

- MANIPULATIVE WITH THE FEELS

It’s been a little over 10 years since the first Iron Man film taught us that comic book flicks could be well-made, quite fun and well worth it, and the saga it spawned—which of course rolls up about a zillion other titles from Guardians of the Galaxy and Captain Marvel to Dr. Strange and Spider-Man: Homecoming—comes to a close in the latest and final (we think) Avengers movie, Endgame. We rejoin Iron Man, Thor, War Machine, Black Widow, Rocket Raccoon, Ant Man and a whole cadre of other heroes in the aftermath of super villain Thanos’ finger-snapping annihilation of 50% of the universe’s living creatures. This meant a whole mess of our favorites—like Spider-Man, dammit—had faded to death and to dust. Cue tears. But despite the despotic madman from across the stars’ best hopes for some sort of universal balance restoration, pretty much no one in the galaxy is grateful. Hence, the surviving Earthlings and non-Earthlings alike keep the teamwork going and hatch a plan to try and bring everyone back. Cue more tears. It’s true what you’ve heard about Endgame‘s long runtime (just pee before), but the magic in directors Joe and Anthony Russo’s latest entry is in how it never ever stops rocking even for an instant. If anything, it feels a little shorter than it could have been. Perhaps it’s in how everything from every extended franchise has been leading to this showdown since day one, or maybe it’s in the clever ways the Russo brothers manage to present a greatest hits feel without exhausting the audience. Even the slower moments feel necessary, even the clearly emotionally manipulative swelling of the music as fight scenes go down or friends come together feel warranted. For this and so many other reasons, Endgame is

wildly satisfying, even when it doesn’t pan out in the ways we might like. Cue even more tears— which is odd, really, because these are comic book characters with fantastic powers who are wrapped up in utterly absurd scenarios time and time again. But they’ve been with us most of our lives, in comic form and on television, in movie theaters and video games. Scoff if you will, non-fans, but for those who surrender to the siren call of Marvel Comics and Studios, it feels like we’re rooting for our friends through every painful twist and heart-soaring victory. Toss in that tech that makes old folks look young and young folks look old, some honest-toGod tearjerker moments and the return of Brie Larson’s ultra-fun Carol Danvers, and we’ve really got something going. Think of it like a love letter to the fans—a bombastic, over-the-top love letter rife with the smoothest CGI, a darker tone and a couple cameos from the Community cast (from whence the Russo brothers came) all working together in glorious synergy for what is easily one of the best action movies of our time. Go for the face-punching, stay for the hugs; engage in the culture every once in awhile. (ADV)

FRI - TUES, MAY 31 - JUNE 4 12:00p The White Crow* 12:15p The Biggest Little Farm 2:15p The Biggest Little Farm 2:30p The White Crow* 4:15p The Biggest Little Farm 5:15p Long Day’s Journey Into Night* 6:15p The Biggest Little Farm 7:45p The White Crow* 8:15p The Biggest Little Farm

Regal (both locations), Violet Crown, PG-13, 181 min.

CCA CINEMATHEQUE 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338

JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528

REGAL SANTA FE PLACE 6 4250 Cerrillos Road, Ste. 1314, 424-6109

REGAL STADIUM 14 3474 Zafarano Drive, 844-462-7342 CODE 1765#

THE SCREEN 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 428-0209

WED 2:30p 4:45p 7:00p

THURS, MAY 29 - 30 Walking on Water Walking on Water Walking on Water

FRI - SUN, MAY 31 - JUNE 2 12:00p Red Joan final shows 2:30p Iyengar: The Man, Yoga, The Student’s Journey 4:45p Walking on Water 7:00p Walking on Water MONDAY, JUNE 3 2:30p Iyengar: The Man, Yoga, The Student’s Journey 4:45p Walking on Water 7:00p Walking on Water TUESDAY, JUNE 4 1:30p Iyengar: The Man, Yoga, The Student’s Journey 3:45p Walking on Water 6:00p Walking on Water

VIOLET CROWN 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678

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BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND!

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PETCO: 1-4 pm Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Sunday TECA TU at DeVargas Center: 12 noon-3 pm, First Saturday of each month Please visit our cats at PETCO and TECA TU during regular store hours. FOSTER HOMES URGENTLY NEEDED FOR ADULT CATS OF VARIOUS AGES SANTA FE CATS not only supports the mission of FELINES & FRIENDS from revenue generated by providing premium boarding for cats, pocket pets and birds, but also serves as a mini-shelter for cats awaiting adoption. For more information, please visit www.santafecats.com

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55 Had some hummus 57 Skin care brand 1 Beyond zealous 58 Tweety’s guide to business 6 Household appliance, for short planning? 9 ___ Life (Tupac tattoo) 63 “Beloved” novelist Morrison 13 Deft 64 Cuts through a small fish? 15 In the past 66 Satirical HBO interviewer, once 16 She played Talisa on 67 Bar brew, briefly “Game of Thrones” 68 Like some coffee 17 Sketch a habanero? 69 Coffee alternatives 19 Runaway win 70 “30 Rock” star Tina 20 Midweek time for floods? 71 “Enchanting”-sounding book 22 N.L. East team in the Septimus Heap series 23 Kyoto cash 24 Like some change DOWN 25 Aquatic barrier 27 His record for patents was 1 Cool, 30 years ago 2 Magazine publishing info surpassed by a Japanese 3 Rumbled inventor in 2003 31 Masi of “Heroes” 4 Louisiana Territory state 32 Obsolete PC operating 5 The green Teletubby system 6 Smoke an e-cig 34 Language spoken in “Avatar” 7 Like some whiskey 35 Tajikistan, once (abbr.) 8 Succotash ingredient 36 Intersection where pet 9 Sculpture piece feet meet? 10 Jinxes 40 See 33-Down 11 Reveals the celebrity dressed 43 British subcompact as the Poodle, Deer or Hippo, e.g. 44 Triatomic form of oxygen 12 Time off between classes? 48 Suffix for prop or meth 14 Little giggle 49 Gary Numan lyric after 18 Defeated without mercy, in “It’s the only way to live” leetspeak 52 Beat easily 21 Cause of aberrant weather 53 Model plane material

22 Sleeve tattoo spot 26 Dandy sort 28 Only country name in the NATO phonetic alphabet 29 Wayne Shorter’s instrument 30 Egg, for openers 33 Only named character in “Green Eggs and [40-Across]” 37 “All I Do Is ___” 38 Ref. book set 39 “The Genius” of the Wu-Tang Clan 40 Ecological abode 41 1921 Literature Nobelist France 42 Somehow, first lady after Michelle 45 “Nothing Compares 2 U” singer 46 “On to the ___” (2009 Jay-Z song) 47 Dreyer’s ice cream partner 50 Tattered threads 51 Cherry leftovers 54 Tosses down 56 Casts forth 59 “Clueless” catchphrase 60 Neck region 61 Out of the office 62 “My Fair Lady” professor, to Eliza 65 Chicago-based cable superstation

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SUNNY is handsome domestic medium hair light orange tabby. He was apparently dumped in his rescuers yard in southern New Mexico several years ago and was quite shy of humans at first. With time and love, SUNNY has turned into a wonderful, social cat who gets along with other cats and cat-friendly dogs. He is neutered, current on his vaccinations and between 6 and 8 years old.

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MIA BELLA is a beautiful calico whose human recently passed away. Originally rescued as a tiny kitten, she was much loved. MIA BELLA gets along with small dogs and while she tolerates other cats, she would be happy to be the only cat her new home. MIA BELLA is spayed, current on her vaccinations and approximately 3 years old.

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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TAI CHI CHIH Beginners Course starts June 1. This weekly course will be taught outside at the Galisteo Rose Park. Day & Time: Saturday mornings 9:00 - 10:15 am It takes about 8 - 10 sessions to learn the 20 postures. OK to miss a class. Cost: $10./ session Benefits: Stress reduction, Balance and Coordination, Brain gym: Neurogenesis & Resiliency You must register by email: info@danieljbruce.com, NO pre-payment necessary. For more information: visit the web site: The Santa Fe Center for Conscious Living DEL CORAZON HOSPICE invites you to participate in our June Volunteer Training. Bring the gift of companionship with one visit a week. We’ll provide the training, you bring the heart. Call Adrienne at 988-2049 to reserve your place. Volunteering will change your life.

TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD. Get TESOL Certified & Teach English Anywhere. Earn an accredited TESOL Certificate and start teaching English in USA & abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. It’s an engaging & empowering course. Hundreds have graduated from our Santa Fe program. Next Course: July 8-August 2, 2019. M-F for 4 weeks. Contact John Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. www.tesoltrainers.com

ADVERTISE AN EVENT, WORKSHOP OR LECTURE HERE IN THE COMMUNITY ANNOUCMENTS

NM CONFERENCE CALL EVERY MONDAY at 7:30 PM (605) 313 -5140 Access code: 953205 We discuss your community and governmental concerns while updating you on current issues. PLEASE JOIN US.We the people have a duty to our country. We need you in the People’s Grand Jury and not the, for profit, private, foreign corporate government that keeps extorting We the people

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ACUPUNCTURE Rob Brezsny

Week of May 29th

ARIES (March 21-April 19): In the coming weeks it will make good sense for you to travel down winding paths replete with interesting twists and provocative turns. The zigzags you’ll be inspired to pursue won’t be inconvenient or inefficient, but rather will be instrumental in obtaining the healing you need. To honor and celebrate this oddly lucky phase, I’ll quote parts of “Flying Crooked,” a poem by Robert Graves. “The butterfly will never master the art of flying straight, yet has a just sense of how not to fly: He lurches here and here by guess and God and hope and hopelessness. Even the acrobatic swift has not his flying-crooked gift.”

ing mathematician meditating on an almost-impossibleto-solve equation as I practice my skateboard tricks; and a fierce forest witch who casts spells on naturedespoilers; and a gothic heroine with twelve suitors; and the sexiest cat that ever lived.” I love how freewheeling and wide-ranging OceanAlgorithms is with her imaginative fantasies. In light of current astrological omens, I encourage you to do the same. Give yourself permission to dream and scheme extravagantly.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Has a part of you become too timid, docile, or prosaic? Is there an aspect of your beautiful soul that is partially muzzled, submissive, or housebroken? If so, now is a favorable time to seek an antidote. But listen closely: the cure isn’t to become chaotic, turbulent, and out of control. It would be counterproductive to resort to berserk mayhem. Here’s a better way: be primal, lush, and exciting. Be wildly playful and unpredictably humorous and alluringly intriguing. Try experiments that rouse your rowdy sweetness, your unkempt elegance, your brazen joy, and your sensual intelligence.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Geologists aren’t exactly sure why, but almost six million years ago, the Strait of Gibraltar closed up. As a result, the Mediterranean Sea was cut off from the Atlantic Ocean, and within a thousand years, it had mostly disappeared. Fast forward 600,000 years. Again, geologists don’t understand how it happened, but a flood broke through the barrier, allowing the ocean to flow back into the Mediterranean basin and restore it to its previous status as a sea. I propose that we invoke that replenishment as a holy symbol for the process you’re engaged in: a replenishment of your dried-out waters.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I invite you to meditate on this proposal from freelance writer Radha Marcum: “The spiritual definition of love is that when you look at the person you love, it makes you love yourGEMINI (May 21-June 20): I prefer live theater over self more.” I hope there’s a lot of that kind of action movies. The glossy flawlessness of films, accomplished by machines that assemble and polish, is less going on for you in the next four weeks. According to my assessment of life’s secret currents, all of creation emotionally rich than the direct impact of live perwill be conspiring to intensify and deepen your love for formers’ unmediated voices and bodies and emotions. Their evocative imperfections move me in ways yourself by intensifying and deepening your love for other people. Cooperate with that conspiracy, please! that glossy flawlessness can’t. Even if you’re not like me, Gemini, I invite you to experiment with my CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Is there a creature on approach for a while—not just in the entertainment earth that’s more annoying than the mosquito? I’ve you choose, but in all areas of your life. As much as never heard anyone gaze upon one of the pesky monpossible, get your experience raw and unfiltered. sters sucking blood out of her arm and say, “Aw, what a cute little bug.” And yet every year there is a town in CANCER (June 21-July 22): I’ve got a message for you from Cancerian poet Tyler Knott Gregson. Please read it Russia that holds a jokey three-day celebration in honor every day for the next 15 days, including when you first of the mosquito. The people who live in Berezniki even wake up and right before sleep. Here it is: “Promise me stage a “most delicious” competition, in which people you will not spend so much time treading water and try- allow themselves to be pricked by mosquitoes for twenty minutes, with an award going to whomever accumuing to keep your head above the waves that you forget, truly forget, how much you have always loved to swim.” lates the most bites. I highly approve of the spirit of this approach for your own use in the coming weeks, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In 2003, a group of thieves in Capricorn. If you have fun with the things that bother Antwerp, Belgium pulled off the biggest jewelry heist you, I bet they won’t bother you as much. in history. To steal the diamonds, gold, and other AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s the Forever Season, gems, together worth more than $100 million, they had to outsmart security guards, a seismic sensor, a Aquarius. You have a poetic license to act as if your body will live for a hundred years and your soul will protective magnetic field, Doppler radar, infrared live for all eternity. You are authorized to believe that detectors, and a lock. I mention this, Leo, because I in the coming decades you will grow steadily wiser, suspect that in the coming weeks you will have a kinder, happier, and wilder. During the Forever Season, comparable ability to insinuate yourself into the you may have dreams like flying over a waterfall at presence of previously inaccessible treasures and secrets and codes. You’ll be able to penetrate barri- sunset, or finding the lost magic you were promised ers that have kept you shut off from valuable things. before you were born, or discovering the key to a healing you feared would always elude you. As you careen (P.S. But I hope that unlike the Antwerp thieves, through this unpredictable grace period, your underyou’ll use your superpowers in an ethical manner.) standing of reality may expand dramatically. I bet VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In the northeast corner of you’ll get practical epiphanies about how to express Spain, bordering France, is an area known as Catalonia. yourself with greater effectiveness. With its own culture and language, it has a long history PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A musical historian from of seeking complete autonomy. On four occasions it has declared itself to be independent from Spain. The Cambridge University decided it would be amusing to most recent time was in 2017, when 92 percent of the perform forgotten songs that were written in the Catalans who voted expressed the desire to be free of Rhineland a thousand years ago. His research wasn’t Spain’s rule. Alas, none of the rebellions have succeed- easy, because musical notation was different back ed. In the latest instance, no other nation on Earth rec- then. But he ultimately reconstructed the tunes in ognized Catalonia’s claim to be an independent repub- ways that he felt were 80 percent faithful to the originals. He and other musicians subsequently performed lic. In contrast to its frustrated attempts, your own and recorded them. I propose a somewhat comparable personal quest to seek greater independence could assignment for you in the coming weeks, Pisces. You make real progress in the coming months. For best results, formulate a clear intention and define the pre- will benefit, I believe, from trying to recover the truth cise nature of the sovereignty you seek. Write it down! about events that occurred a long time ago and/or by trying to revivify old beauty that has new relevance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): A Libran blogger named OceanAlgorithms wrote, “I’m simultaneously wishing I Homework: Finish this sentence: “The one thing that really keeps me from being myself is _ _ _ _ _ _ _.” were a naturalist whose specialty is finding undiscovered species in well-explored places; and a skateboard- Testify at Truthrooster@gmail.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 © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 9 R O B B R E Z S N Y at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. 38

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MASSAGE THERAPY

SAVE THE DATE! The Santa Fe Reporter is planning the 6th Annual

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LEGALS NOTICE that in LEGAL NOTICE TO TAKE accordance with the provision CREDITORS/NAME of Section 40-8-1 through Section 40-8-3 NMSA (1978) CHANGE et seq., the Petitioner JOANNE STATE OF NEW MEXICO DARLENE TAFOYA, will apply COUNTY OF SANTA FE to the Honorable Matthew FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Justin Wilson, District Judge COURT of the First Judicial District at IN THE MATTER OF A Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 PETITION FOR CHANGE Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, OF NAME OF JOSE ERNEST at 2:00 p.m. on the 19th day MADRID of June, 2019, for an ORDER Case No.: D-101-CV-2019-01312 FOR CHANGE OF NAME from NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME JOANNE DARLENE TAFOYA TAKE NOTICE that in to DARLENE JOANN TAFOYA. accordance with the STEPHEN T. PACHECO, provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 District Court Clerk through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA By: Leah Martinez, 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Deputy Court Clerk Jose Ernest Madrid will apply Issued: 4-9-2019 to the Honorable Matthew J. Submitted by: Wilson, District Judge of the Kristi A. Wareham First Judicial District at the Kristi A. Wareham, P.C. Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 708 Paseo de Peralta 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 Fe, New Mexico, at 2:45 p.m. 505-820-0698 on the 19th day of June 2019 kristiwareham@icloud.com for an ORDER FOR CHANGE Attorney for Petitioner OF NAME from Jose Ernest Madrid to Ernest Joe Madrid. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, LEGAL NOTICES District Court Clerk ALL OTHERS By: Leticia Cunningham, Deputy Court Clerk FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Submitted by: COURT Jose Ernest Madrid COUNTY OF SANTA FE Petitioner, Pro Se STATE OF NEW MEXICO Case No. D-101-DM-2018-00870 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT JULIA CABRERA MORA, COURT Petitioner COUNTY OF SANTA FE v. STATE OF NEW MEXICO JANETH ORTIZ and OSCAR IN THE MATTER OF THE GOMEZ, Respondent, PETITION FOR CHANGE OF IN THE MATTER OF THE NAME OF CIARA AMELIA MCKENZIE CHAVEZ, a minor KINSHIP GUARDIANSHIP OF Case No.: D-101-CV-2019-01333 L.G ad V.G., children NOTICE OF HEARING NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF TAKE NOTICE that in ACTION To the above named accordance with the provisions Respondent: of Sections 40-8-1 through A petition has been presented 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq., to this Court by Julia Cabrera the Petitioners Monique Mora, seeking Kinship Chavez and Andres Garcia will Guardianship of the children. apply to the honorable Francis You must file a response with J. Mathew, District Judge of this Court by June 21, 2019 the First Judicial District, at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex or a default judgement may be entered. Allegra Love Building, 225 Montezuma Attorney for Petitioner Ave., Santa Fe, New Mexico PO Box 8009 at 1:15 p.m. on the 12th day Santa Fe, NM 87504 of June, 2019, for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from (505) 490-2789 or allegra@santafedreamers.org CIARA AMELIA MCKENZIE CHAVEZ to CIARA AMELIA MCKENZIE CHAVEZ GARCIA. STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE STEPHEN T. PACHECO, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT District Court Clerk By: Jill Nohl, CASE NO.: D-101-DM-2019-00007 Deputy Court Clerk APRIL LUCERO, PLAINTIFF Dated: May 16, 2019 V. Submitted by: JOHN SCHMITT, DEFENDANT Tracy E. Conner, P.C. ORDER FOR SERVICE OF Post Office Box 23434 PROCESS’ BY PUBLICATION Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502 IN A NEWSPAPER Attorney for Petitioners April Lucero has filed a motion requesting that the STATE OF NEW MEXICO court approve service of COUNTY OF SANTA FE Process upon John Schmitt by FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT publication in a newspaper of IN THE MATTER OF THE general circulation. PETITION OF JOANNE The court finds that the April DARLENE TAFOYA TO Lucero has made diligent CHANGE HER NAME TO efforts to make personal DARLENE JOANN TAFOYA. Case No.: D-101-CV-2019-00856 service, but has not been able to complete service AMENDED NOTICE OF of process. The last known CHANGE OF NAME

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SERVICE DIRECTORY address of John Schmitt is 4241 Agua Fria #13 Santa Fe, NM 87507. The court further finds that the newspaper of general circulation in this county is the Santa Fe Reporter [and that this newspaper is most likely to give the defendant notice of the pendency of the action] [and in the county of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, a newspaper most likely to give notice of the pendency of this proceeding to the person to be served is: Santa Fe Reporter]. Therefore, it is hereby ordered that the petitioner serve [process on John Schmitt by publication once a week for three consecutive weeks in the Santa Fe Reporter [and one a week for three consecutive weeks in Santa Fe Reporter in Santa Fe]. The April Lucero shall file a proof of service with a copy of the affidavit of publication when service has been completed. Dated this 23rd day of April, 201

ARTS

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

RICHARD IAN GREENE My play is on Vimeo “Eden Unveiled.” Revisionist Theatre in The Garden of Eden. ‘90 produced by Saint John’s College SFE in The Great Hall.’ Now digitized, upgraded sound & color. Thank you for viewing.

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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT JONATHAN THE CYNTHIA Y HERNANDEZ, HANDYMAN OF SANTA FE PLAINTIFF Carpentry • Home Maintenance V OMAR E. MARRUFO, DEFENDANT Windows & Doors • Portales Painting: Interior & Exterior Case No.: D-101-DM-2019-185 ORDER FOR SERVICE OF Landscaping & Fencing PROCESS BY PUBLICATION Tile Work • Stucco Repair IN A NEWSPAPER Reasonable rates, Reliable. Plaintiff has filed a motion Discounts available to requesting that the court seniors, veterans, handicap. approve service of process Call or Text - 670-8827 upon Omar E. Marrufo by www.handymannm.com publication in a newspaper of general circulation. The court finds that the LANDSCAPING plaintiff has made diligent LANDSCAPES BY DENNIS efforts to make personal service, but has not been able Landscape Design, Xeriscapes, to complete service of process. Drip Systems, Natural Ponds, Low Voltage Lighting & The last known address of Maintenance. I create a cusOmar E. Maruffo is 3741 Luna tom lush garden w/ minimal de Miel, Santa Fe, NM, 87507. use of precious H20. The court further that 505-699-2900 the newspaper of general circulation in this county is the The Reporter [and that this newspaper is most likely to give the defendent notice of the pendency of action] [and the county of Santa Fe, State of New Mexico, a newspaper most likely to give notice of the pendency of this proceeding to the person to be served is: The Reporter. THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the petitioner serve pocess on Omar E. Marrufo by publication once a week for three consecutive weeks in the The Reporter [and one a week for three consecutive weeks in The Reporter in Santa Fe]. The plaintiff shall file a proof for service with a copy of the affidavit of pulbication when service has been completed. Dated this 6th day of May, 2019. Maria Sanchez-Gagne District Judge

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INNER FOR TWO 106 N. Guadalupe Street (505) 820-2075 •

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Gluten-free kitchen, paleo, vegan,CBD edibles, nutrient-rich comfort food. Sun-Wed (10AM - 8PM) Thu-Sat (10AM - 10PM) 133 W. SAN FRANCISCO STREET | (505)986-5037 | santafeoxygenbar.com

Delivering Santa Fe’s favorite restaurants for over 16-years happy hour everyday Open 7-days: 4:30-9pm Check out Dashing’s facebook page for daily specials - LIKE us on facebook and get more promos

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