August 7, 2019: Santa Fe Reporter

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PRE-OPENING COCKTAIL HOUR

2019 OPENING NIGHT PARTY

2019 GENERAL SHOW DATES

THURS | AUGUST 8 | 5PM-6PM

THURS | AUGUST 8 | 6PM-9PM

FRIDAY - SUNDAY | AUGUST 9-11 11AM-5PM

BENEFITING

Don’t miss our series of talks during the week! Speakers include: Marissa Roth (Photojournalist & Documentary Photographer), Baron Wolman (Rolling Stone Magazine’s First Chief Photographer), John Morris (Head of Production at Woodstock, Managing Director of The Fillmore East, & Owner/Producer of the Rainbow Theatre in London), and Bob Dodge (Co-founder/ Owner Artemis Gallery and Artemis Testing Lab). Please see our “Events” web page for more information.

2019 OPENING NIGHT PARTY TUES | AUGUST 13 | 6PM-9PM

2019 GENERAL SHOW DATES WED - FRIDAY | AUGUST 14 - 16 | 11AM-5PM

Don’t miss our series of talks during the week! Speakers include: Iva Honyestewa, Hopi/Navajo Basketmaker (presented by SAR) and Paul Unks, Founder & Owner of Mountain Hawk Fine Art Curtis Prints. Please see our “Events” web page for more information.

SPECIAL EXHIBITS The Museum of International Folk Art will curate a special exhibit, The Creative World of Alexander Girard. Hosted by Objects of Art Shows and El Museo Cultural. Runs during both shows. Four Winds Gallery and Waddell Gallery present a special showcase exhibition, Tradition and Innovation, the Legacy of Julian Lovato. Runs during The Antique American Indian Art Show only.

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JUNE 19-25, 2019

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019 | Volume 46, Issue 31

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 INTRODUCING, FRIENDS 7 A new way to support local journalism

I’m happy to help!

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SOUTHSIDE LIBRARY SQUEEZE 9 Of the city’s three library branches, one has more vacancies and worse planning

THE ONCE AND FUTURE QUEEN

PROSPECTING THE PECOS 11 Is history about to repeat itself with a proposed mine near the Pecos Wilderness? COVER STORY 12 DRAINING THE FOOD SWAMP Unbalanced choices lead to unhealthy lives, so the food desert and food swamps in Santa Fe are serious. Check our map of fast food and grocery stores across the city

Eliza Lutz and her Future Scars cohorts come out swinging with Harrow, a new full-length album packed with symbolism, personal narrative and visual arts. Find an exclusive stream two days early at SFReporter.com/music

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

CULTURE

MyCenturyBank.com 505.995.1200

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM

SFR PICKS 17 Josh Glenn experiements, the opera’s almost over, Dr. Dog returns and Diego Romero wins your heart

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER AND AD DIRECTOR ANNA MAGGIORE

THE CALENDAR 18

CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE

MUSIC 21

STAFF WRITERS LEAH CANTOR KATHERINE LEWIN

THE ONCE AND FUTURE QUEEN Future Scars gets colorful on new album

CALENDAR EDITOR COLE REHBEIN CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR

A&C 22 BY THE TIME HE GOT TO WOODSTOCK Rolling Stone’s first-ever photographer recalls his Woodstock sojourn on the eve of the festival’s 50th 3 QUESTIONS 25

EDITORIAL INTERN NICOLE MADRID

PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER

FOOD 27 ¡VIVA LA REVOLUTION! Gluten, schmuten—Revolution Bakery is back! MOVIES 33

SENIOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE ROBYN DESJARDINS CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE

LIGHT OF MY LIFE REVIEW Oh, good—yet another movie about post-apocalyptia

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

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MOLLY BOYLE MATTHEW K GUTIERREZ LUKE HENLEY ZIBBY WILDER

DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND

WITH ORIGINAL SANTA FE GHOST TOURS GUIDE PETER SINCLAIRE

www.SFReporter.com

ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN

EDITORIAL DEPT.: editor@sfreporter.com

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

THOUGH THE SANTA FE REPORTER IS FREE, PLEASE TAKE JUST ONE COPY. ANYONE REMOVING PAPERS IN BULK FROM OUR DISTRIBUTION POINTS WILL BE PROSECUTED TO THE FULL EXTENT OF THE LAW. SANTA FE REPORTER, ISSN #0744-477X, IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, 52 WEEKS EACH YEAR. DIGITAL EDITIONS ARE FREE AT SFREPORTER.COM. CONTENTS © 2019 SANTA FE REPORTER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. MATERIAL MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION.

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63RD SEASON JUNE 28 – AUGUST 24

APPRENTICE SCENES NIGHTS THE NEXT GENERATION CENTER STAGE

AUGUST 11 & 18 at 8 PM Adults: $15 Youth (ages 6-22): $5

LA BOHÈME Giacomo Puccini

THE PEARL FISHERS Georges Bizet

COSÌ FAN TUTTE Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

JENŮFA Leoš Janáček World Premiere

THE THIRTEENTH CHILD Poul Ruders Libretto Becky and David Starobin Music

santafeopera.org 505-986-5900 Illustration by Stuart McReath

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JUNE 26 -JULY 2, 2019

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Mail or deliver letters to 132 E Marcy St., Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501; 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.

ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN

LETTERS

NEWS, JULY 31: “DASHING FOR DOCUMENTS”

CLASSIC EXAMPLE The story is a classic example of government employees engaged in “data hugging.” We note that Cynthia Whiting is the city’s public records custodian. The culture in City Hall needs to be changed. Let’s begin by changing Ms. Whiting’s job title to “Public Records Custodian and Provider.” Kudos to the SFR for hanging tough in the pursuit of The People’s Data.

TOM JOHNSON IT’S THE PEOPLE’S DATA PROJECT

THE HARD WAY It’s interesting how city officials still haven’t realized they’re being closely watched by residents. You’d think they’d have figured it out by now, and not pull this kind of BS. Punch ‘em in the pocketbook with fines.

SERIN GUFREDA VIA FACEBOOK

LETTERS, JULY 31: “WHAT’S THE PLAN”

DON’T SOUR THE MEAL To add a category of Free Stuff to the Best of Santa Fe is really scary. These nonprofits that work hard to support our underprivileged do the best they can with the resources they have at hand. How awful it would be to have a homeless person grumble because he/she was only able to score a meal at a nominated Best of SF soup kitchen. That would surely sour the meal. And of course, the volunteers would feel less appreciated [in] their work and contributions.

DWIGHT STRONG SANTA FE

THE FORK, JULY 25: KEEP IT CLEAN I realize that The Fork is meant to be fun and lighthearted, but I’m puzzled by your endorsement of the Impossible Burger and the genetically engineered salmon. There are many red flags surrounding the Impossible Burger. Genetically engineered and GMO are synonymous. ... Humanity does not need to remake what nature made and the planet already provides everything required to live a healthy life. When our focus is on what is going well on the planet instead of buying into fear-based schemes we have a higher quality of life.

KIMBERLY DURAN LAMY

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

SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “Did you have any idea this market was so religious?” —Overheard at Spanish Market

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

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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DAYS

S FREP ORTER.COM / FUN

SENA PLAZA COTTONWOOD MEETS THE CHIPPER Santa Fe’s treehuggers could only muster one angry dude to throw himself at its base on short notice.

TAX-FREE WEEKEND IN SANTA FE TRANSFORMS RETAILERS INTO LAWLESS HELLSCAPES Way to save those four bucks!

TRUMP SAYS HE’LL CRACK DOWN ON VIOLENT VIDEO GAMES FOLLOWING MASS SHOOTINGS IN TEXAS, OHIO Homeboy should crack down on his own hateful rhetoric and maybe think about passing some gun legislation. Also, fuck censorship.

SANTA FE MAN ARRESTED FOR FIRING WARNING SHOT TO FOIL WHO HE MISTAKENLY THOUGHT WAS A THIEF As always, guns are not the solution to anything, unless the question is “What do we need less of?”

MITCH MCCONNELL FELL AND BROKE HIS SHOULDER No tree. Just your classic “yard fall.”

SO. MANY. DEBATES. And they were all ridiculous time vampires seemingly set up to make a mockery of anything good in this world.

MAYOR PETE MADE A SANTA FE APPEARANCE And all the rich, white people who met with him seemed pretty pumped.

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

SFREPORTER.COM

READ IT ON SFREPORTER.COM CITY WORKS ON DRUG STRATEGY Santa Fe City Council heard a report from its Muncipal Drug Strategy Task Force last week. The group says the city could make strides in harm reduction, treatment and prevention.

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

FOR THE DOGS We live here, so we know it. But now a consumer website says the city is 14th in the nation for dog friendliness for travelers. Join our intern Nicole Madrid and her furry friends.


JEWELRY SALE INDIAN MARKET WEEK AUGUST 15 - 17 | 10 - 5 PM 675 HARKLE ROAD Last chance to shop Artisan Jewelry up to 75% off this summer!

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JOHN DENNE

hat you’re holding in your hands is the physical manifestation of the labor of our hands. When people visit the Santa Fe Reporter headquarters on Marcy Street, my favorite part of the nickel tour is the floor-to-ceiling bookshelf stacked with our bound volumes—each weekly issue of SFR since 1974 standing at attention. I tell people that if it fell over, it could kill us. Yet, I like to think more of the tall mountain the books would make, and upon which we are standing. I’m writing because we need help to keep standing there. It’s amazing for me, personally, to be represented in the last five books on the shelf. We’re just about to build a new shelf for the next five. SFR celebrated the paper’s 45th birthday this summer, and as I write this, balloons and candy from our Best of Santa Fe block party in the Railyard are still littering our desks. (That’s me at the party pictured below.) The people on our staff are proud to produce and support journalism every week to help keep the Santa Fe community connected, to hold the government accountable, to raise the volume of voices on topics like public health, housing, water and energy, and to celebrate, question and unpack arts and culture. Not only is our print edition free, but we also provide a free website that’s updated daily with breaking news and other stories and our events calendar. Local business advertising has long been the way we pay for it all. The business model, however, is changing. But, we’re not giving up. Not by a long shot. What we’re doing is opening a new way forward. If you value journalism like ours, and you want it to be here in the future, be a friend. Join Friends of the Reporter at www.sfreporter.com/friends. We want to do more journalism, not less. We’ve got story ideas falling out of our pockets. There’s so much to talk about: not just how Santa Fe will get roofs over your heads, but what kind of businesses and organizations will shore up the larger economy and the people behind them, how New Mexico’s state leaders will solve our big problems, where you’ll work and how you will get around the city in the next decade. If you’re able, help us get there. We’ve set a goal to raise $20,000 this year. We’ll make it easy for you to give a small amount each month or a onetime sum. In return, you’ll get a 15% discount at our merch store, monthly giveaways and other fun stuff. Plus, our gratitude. The first 200 people to join for $9.74 per month get a pair of passes to the CCA. In the coming weeks, watch this spot for more letters on the same topic. Thank you, Julie Ann Grimm SFR editor and publisher

Support us at: sfreporter.com/friends

Visit www.peyotebird.com for more info SFREPORTER.COM

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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NEWS

KATHERINE LEWIN

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

The incoming library director hopes to add more programming to the Southside library and community outreach.

Southside Library Feels the Squeeze The new library division director says she will focus on staffing at what departing worker calls the ‘unmanaged’ branch B Y K AT H E R I N E L E W I N k a t h e r i n e @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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tella Byrne took a job at the Southside Branch Library in December 2017 to help foster a safe, fun place for Santa Feans. That’s proved frustrating, and so have other issues with the job. So, she’s leaving. Now, as her resignation date approaches, Byrne lays out her concerns over poor management, understaffing and a dearth of library programs that reflect the Southside’s varied cultures at the branch off Jaguar Drive in a series of interviews and text messages with SFR. The staff shortage in particular has impacted library patrons, Byrne says, because “someone might not have time to help them adequately, it might take longer for books to get back on the shelves” and overburdened employees sometimes dole out “inconsistent information.” Records provided by the city to SFR after a request under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act support several of Byrne’s claims.

For example: The Southside library staff is short by four key workers, including the library services director, a part-time librarian, a part-time library technician and a full-time library technician. That’s despite more than $100,000 in the branch’s $1 million budget for the current fiscal year sitting unspent. And by comparison, it appears the Southside library is getting less attention from the city than the other two branches. The main library branch downtown is down just one position—a library section manager—and the Midtown La Farge branch is hiring one part time library technician. The whole system has a staffing shortage. In the technical services department, the city needs to hire a library services director, a full-time librarian, a library systems manager and a part-time temporary librarian. But the Southside location has battled with the most understaffing and has been “unmanaged” with “one manager doing the job of two people,” Byrne tells SFR. “I don’t think we’ve been at 100% the entire time I’ve worked here. … but seriously understaffed over the last year,” Byrne, who has worked as a library tech, writes in a text message. The “missing manager position is from someone retiring a year ago. There should be a library

section manager here in addition to a circulation manager.” Byrne’s experience opens an insider’s window on difficulties at the Southside library, but they are well-known among city administrators. There’s a candidate under consideration to fill the branch’s open management position, and interviews are being conducted for “some” of the other vacancies, meeting minutes from the most recent Public Library Board meeting on July 17 show. Filling the library division director vacancy—which has been open since longtime director Patricia Hodapp took medical leave in November 2018— was the city’s priority. Maria Sanchez-Tucker starts later this month in that post. Her first day is Aug. 19, and she says she’ll work with the library board to fill the branch’s vacant positions. When asked what she hoped to do with the Southside library, Sanchez-Tucker says she has experience engaging low-income communities at libraries. Many of her ideas match the concerns raised by Byrne. She tells SFR she hopes to bring multi-generational programs that can bring adults and their children to the Southside library—and a Latino book festival and summer reading programs. That would match the library’s place in the community, Byrne says. “This library plays an important role in the neighborhood and it could be supported in collaboration with other city and community groups. It could be more deeply rooted in the community,” Byrne tells SFR, adding that the branch “serves a huge number of people.” She also hopes to see the Southside branch start programs for adults and teach older students and the youth at the Boys and Girls Club across the street

how to use the library’s services. Southside residents would be better served if the city would prioritize hiring bilingual librarians, of which there are currently none, Byrne says. The city has taken some steps to look into improving the library system, such as contracting an assessment company to conduct a planning study. According to city documents, the library board must meet with the company two more times before the results come before the City Council. Despite staffing and administrative struggles, the Southside library remains a community staple for the area, nestled between several schools, housing and the Boys and Girls Club. On a busy, burning hot Monday afternoon, Ericka Kidde sits on a low wall out front of the library with her oldest daughter, Raven. Her younger daughter is still inside getting books. Kidde tells SFR she’s brought her children here once a week or more for 12 years, including when she brought her daughters to the Books and Babies program. Raven’s only complaint is that sometimes the library doesn’t have complete series of books she’s reading, but she loves coming to the Southside branch. “The kids have grown up here, leaving with a stack of books,” Kidde says. “It’s a cool gathering place for parents and young children, too.” “I think [the library] is amazing for this community because that’s Section 8 housing right there,” Kidde continues, gesturing across the street from the entrance to the library. “To have a safe place for your kids to go after school and during the summertime I think is a huge gift. I think it’s keeping a lot of kids safe and out of trouble.”

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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R E G I S T E R N O W ! S F CC . E D U / R E A DY O R 5 0 5 - 4 2 8 - 1 0 0 0 7/19/19 12:20 PM


Pecos Prospectors Opposition mounting as foreign mining company wants to dig for gold, cooper and zinc on public lands 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

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LEAH CANTOR

alph Vigil, the chairman of the New Mexico Acequia Commission, stands at the edge of the fields of his acequia-irrigated organic farm, looking out on the national forest that stretches to the peaks of the Pecos Wilderness. It’s a place where people spend weekends hiking, fishing and camping along the mountain road that also leads past the scar of the old Tererro mine. The spot is where 2 million tons of ore were excavated in the 1920s, leading to the contamination of nearby wetlands and $28 million in remediation and environmental clean-up costs partially paid by taxpayers. Nearby, a new mining proposal threatens to repeat history. Comexico LLC, a Colorado subsidiary of Australian mining company New World Cobalt Ltd, wants to start prospecting in the area for gold, copper and zinc. It has secured the rights to 20 federal mining claims on 400 acres in the Jones Hill and Macho Canyon areas of the Pecos Ranger District in Santa Fe and San Miguel counties and has secured interest in 4,300 acres of surrounding national forest. The potential consequences have Vigil and others raising red flags. This season, the old Terrero site is a grassy hillside arrayed in wildflowers. But Vigil remembers when it was a mess of rocky debris, open mine shafts

LEAH CANTOR

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

NEWS

tions of 30 drill holes, each 500 to 4,000 feet deep, that the company will use to assess mineral deposits. “I really could not think of and abandoned buildings. He a worse place for a mine,” says remembers when the Pecos VeneKlasen, explaining that the River ran yellow with acidic mountain is at the headwater mineral runoff after heavy spring for four distinct watersheds rainstorms in 1991, killing the and is home to endangered and trout in the river and 90,000 fish at threatened species, including the Lisboa Springs Fish Hatchery the spotted owl, Rio Grande downstream. Even today, though cutthroat trout and the flowering reclamation efforts have helped Holy Ghost ipomopsis, a plant camouflage the damage, it is still only found wild in the Holy Ghost a Superfund site leaching poisons Canyon of the Santa Fe National into the surrounding watershed. Forest. “We have to protect the right to Part of the problem, he says, clean and healthy water. I mean, is that Comexico is planning to that should be our most essencontract third-party analysts to tial right other than the right to conduct required assessments. breathe, even before freedom of “The Forest Service has no speech or any other freedom we plans to conduct its own surveys should have the freedom to clean and is relying on experts who are water because that’s what sustains getting paid by a foreign company life for all of us,” says Vigil, his that stands to make millions if not brow furrowed as he gazes north Ralph Vigil, the Chairman of the NM Acequia Commission, billions of dollars,” VeneKlasen looks down at the acequia running through his property towards the mountains where where his family has farmed for nearly 200 years. says. “How can they not see this the streams that feed the Pecos as a clear conflict of interest?” acequia system originate. “It’s not Overton confirms that the just about turning on a faucet, it’s agency often relies on biologiThe company states that drilling could about where does that water come from cal and archaeological surveys done by begin as early as October. However, Santa when that fountain turns on? It’s up third-party contractors when they “don’t Fe National Forest Service Geologist Larthere, it all starts up there. A lot of people have the available staff to conduct surry Gore tells SFR by phone that’s a highdon’t understand that.” veys internally.” However, both Overton ly unrealistic timeline, partly due to the In June, Comexico submitted a plan of operations to the Santa Fe National For- complexities of the terrain and wildlife and Gore say outside consultants, even if est and the state Energy, Minerals and habitats of the area and public pushback, hired by the mining company, must be reNatural Resources Department’s Mining but also because Comexico “keeps chang- viewed by the department and meet Forand Minerals Division. It also applied for ing their proposal,” delaying the permit- est Service standards. Though counties have no jurisdiction an exploratory permit for core drilling op- ting process. over federal land, in June the Board of Julie Anne Overton, the Officer of erations on up to 2.2 acres on Jones Hill. Commissioners of San Miguel County Public Affairs for the Forest Service, is According to the investor page of New passed a resolution in opposition to also quick to point out that the 1872 MinWorld Cobalt’s website, the company hopes “that mine development [at Jones ing Act prohibits the Forest Service from Comexico’s application. The Santa Fe Hill] can be advanced as quickly as prac- stopping any mining activity on federal County Commission is set to discuss it ticable,” and has plans for “aggressively land. Overton says the Forest Service is soon, a spokeswoman tells SFR. Tribal concerns are geared more exploring” prospects in the surrounding in the process of deciding what level of toward the possible disturbance of assessment will be required for the new area, including in Dalton Canyon and cultural sites of the Pecos and Tesuque Terrero mine site. Doctor Creek. The Upper Pecos Watershed organi- pueblos located in the area, says Roger zation is leading a coalition in the hopes Fragua, a member of the Jemez Pueblo of stalling the process if not stopping it and a descendant of the Pecos Pueblo. Fragua is careful to clarify that his role altogether by demanding the most rigorous environmental and cultural review in the coalition is as a member of Climate assessments called for by law under the Advocates/Voces Unidas (CAVU), an environmental media organization covering National Environmental Policy Act. The coalition includes Pecos residents the mine, and not as an official represenand business owners, environmental ad- tative of any of the impacted pueblos. “This is an opportunity for the federal vocacy groups, and traditional land users such as Vigil and members of the Pecos, government and industry to do the right The old Tesuque, and Jemez pueblos whose lands thing. We are still early enough in the Terrero process for proper [tribal] consultation to could be affected by the mine. Mine site is subject At the proposed mine site on Jones occur,” he says. to ongoing The permit process going forward Hill, Garrett VeneKlasen, the northreclamation could take months, Forest Service officials ern field coordinator for New Mexico efforts. Wild, points out the little pink prospect- tell SFR. The next step is scoping public ing flags that mark out the possible loca- opinion. SFREPORTER.COM

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Draining the Food Swamp Unbalanced landscape of food access in Santa Fe puts Southside in fight for healthy eating options

That’s no secret in the capital city. Through a close analysis of government data bolstered by spot checking and mapping tools, SFR has found that the problem appears to be worsening, particularly on the Southside, where fast food restaurants and convenience stores outnumber grocery stores at a higher ratio than ever. Upside-down food access like that can have consequences, particularly for impoverished, non-white communities without reliable transportation, researchers say. Food deserts and, even more so food swamps, are hotbeds of dietrelated illness.

B Y K AT H E R I N E L E W I N k a t h e r i n e @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

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riving from north to south, Santa Fe slips from adobe mansions built into the dusky foothills to the quiet, tree-lined neighborhoods, boutique shops and gourmet restaurants of downtown. The scene shifts quickly from there into the Southside, sloping gently downward into the suburbs and out toward the wider desert. Lining Cerrillos Road and its tributaries is a mix of businesses: carnicerias, panaderias, Mexican restaurants of varying authenticity. Then there are the fast food joints, rising from seemingly every sidewalk and street corner. Heading farther south to the blurred line between the city’s edge and the desert’s beginning, there are swaths of vacant space—a distance that for many people is insurmountable—between homes and places to buy healthy food. Along with the chain restaurants, dollar stores and convenience stores dot those empty spaces. Many families in this farthest southern portion of the city can’t afford or reasonably access fresh vegetables and other healthy foods. It takes substantial effort to get to a grocery store. Researchers have long-identified Santa Fe, in Southside council Districts 3 and 4 in particular, as a network of both food deserts (low-income neighborhoods that lack easy access to healthy, affordable food) and food swamps (places where unhealthy foods are more readily available than healthy foods).

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

“Balanced food environments where someone steps out into their neighborhood and they’re equally enticed to shop healthy and unhealthy, that’s where we want to get to,” says Kristen Cooksey-Stowers, the main author of a study by the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity on food swamps. “If you’re wanting to make healthier choices, your built environment shouldn’t be working against you. It shouldn’t be hurdle after hurdle to decide between getting produce at a grocery store and passing through McDonald’s.” But those are exactly the hurdles Southsiders face. It’s easy to picture swaths of the area that way: Calorie, sodium and sugar-dense foods like Wendy’s hamburgers and Allsup’s chimichangas abound. A recently completed study from Christus St. Vincent connects the food landscape to instances of disease. Youth obesity is on the rise in Santa Fe, the study found, and nearly 80% of the adults in the county are not getting the recommended number of fruits and vegetables per day. People interviewed for the study said excessive access to fast food played a major part in unhealthy eating habits, and many identified lower socioeconomic status as a driver of chronic disease. Coalitions of local politicians, activists and nonprofits have tried in the past to

increase healthy food access on the Southside. One former Southside city councilor says he tried to regulate the number of fast food restaurants in his district through zoning changes around 2012, but the idea died quietly without broader support. Yet the Southside is more than a food swamp and desert. While unhealthy food options and the shortage of grocery stores is a common complaint, there is also a network of tiendas serving the Hispanic and Latino populations that live in the area. Organizations like The Food Depot and Earth Care are also filling the gaps the city has left open through careless planning and development—and some people believe local stores and other efforts cancel the need for a big-box grocery store.

A known issue

The phenomenon of the food swamp is more than anecdotal; it’s codified. In 2011, the Center for Disease Control rated the city’s farthest southern corner as a food swamp. Four years later, the USDA’s Food Access Research Atlas mapped the Southside as a food desert, where low-income people are more than a mile from the nearest grocery store. The USDA also found that fast food restaurants increased in Santa Fe County from 90 to 109 between 2009 and 2014. That’s a 21% increase, most of it on the Southside where the city is developing the fastest.

Mapping Food In Santa Fe

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Fast Food

Grocery Store

Airport R

D Convenience Store

S Dollar Store


Creating the map

SFR’s analysis found 49 fast-food restaurants, three dollar stores and eight Allsup’s convenience stores south of St. Michael’s Drive, plus eight grocery stores. But only Walmart Supercenter, Target, Sprouts Market and Mini Super Delicias sit south of Zafarano Road. Conversely, north of St Michael’s Drive, in a slightly smaller geographic area, there are seven grocery stores that have to contend with three Allsup’s, one dollar store and just 26 fast-food restaurants. The proliferation of convenience stores, fast food restaurants and dollar stores (an often overlooked culprit in a swampy food desert) are concentrated in the city’s southern portion, which holds a heavier proportion of Santa Fe’s 54% Latino population. Most of the city’s poverty disproportionately affects Latinos: According to the latest Census projections, around 40% of Hispanic and Latino people are living in poverty throughout Santa Fe. Just a few hours on the Southside is more than enough to bring all that data to life.

Downtown

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KATHERINE LEWIN

St. Michaels Dr

The food swamp effect

Organizations like The Food Depot and Earth Care are also filling the gaps that the city has left open through careless planning and development.

COMPILED BY KATHERINE LEWIN

SFR created the map using geographic information system (GIS) mapping and data from Esri, the USDA and the US Census Bureau. Esri supplies software, web GIS and geodatabase management applications. We also spot-checked the restaurants, grocery stores and convenience stores for location and accuracy. We labeled an establishment as a fast food restaurant using the loose definition from the US government: a limited-service place where patrons generally order or select items and pay before eating. We chose to only include Allsup’s convenience stores on the map because it is one of the most well-known companies in New Mexico for fast shopping. However, any gas station that also sells food inside, such as hot food to grab, snacks and candy are also typically identified in food swamp studies, including a publication used in this story from the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity. That means SFR’s map likely presents a conservative picture of the city’s food swamps. Visit sfrerpoter.com/foodmap for an interactive version.

On a weekday afternoon at Riverside Mobile Home Park, The Food Depot volunteers spoon out hot vegetables, meat and rice for a group of families and kids at the neighborhood’s community center. Younger children play while their parents or caretakers eat and try to drag them back to their plates. Riverside is one of four locations for The Food Depot’s eight-week summer meal program, which takes free meals into mobile home communities in Santa Fe, mostly on the Southside. Each location attracts about 25 people a day. The program aims to provide healthy food in places where there otherwise isn’t much. That’s Riverside, which sits in the far southwest portion of the city. Nearby: a Family Dollar, Dollar General, an Allsup’s and a McDonald’s. The closest full-service grocery store is Walmart Supercenter—4 miles away. It could be considered a classic swamp. A recent study from the Rudd Center found that a typical food swamp has four unhealthy eating options for every healthy option. The study also found that the presence of a food swamp is a stronger predictor of adult obesity rates than the absence of full-service grocery stores, such as in a food desert. The food swamp effect is stronger in areas with greater income inequality, with disproportionate effects on poorer sections of towns, and where fewer residents have cars—hallmarks of the Southside. The Rudd study found that minorities and low-income people are more likely than whites to live near unhealthy food retailers. “Do the residents stand a chance to get optimal health? In these areas where there is low access to reliable transportation, the food swamp effect is much higher,” Cooksey-Stowers, the Rudd Center researcher, tells SFR in a telephone interview. “We have these areas where not only are people close to inequitable food environments but they are stuck there from a mobility sense. Higher income people are navigating outside of their immediate neighborhood. They can broaden their food choice set.” Earlier this year, Christus St. Vincent released its 2017–2019 Community Health Needs Assessment. The examination reflects the Rudd Center’s findings. Heart disease and diabetes, both diet-related diseases, consistently have ranked in the top 10 leading causes of death in New Mexico. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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• AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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Southsiders who responded for the study “noted that although [Santa Fe’s] chronic disease and obesity rates are lower, the economic disparities between rich and poor in Santa Fe make the data seem more positive than it actually is,” the study reads. “They expressed that there is a segment of our population with financial means who can afford preventative care, healthy food and time for physical activity that casts the data in a different light.”

Dominguez spearheaded the idea. “We kind of toyed around with fast food stuff but the overarching theme to the whole entire overlay zone was healthy lifestyles,” he tells SFR. “It wasn’t about getting rid of fast food restaurants. It was about what can we do to make sure that, as it is in every other community of poverty, every place you shop is not fast food or convenience stores?” Yet that’s not what happened. “I actually had a policy written up that was going to regulate fast food restaurants and I just completely blew it out,” Dominguez says. “I saw this division between what’s healthy and what’s not healthy food.” Area residents delivered a message, he says: “We just want food, we don’t even care if it’s healthy or not. We just want access.”

There have been previous attempts to prevent or remedy the Southside’s food access problems, notably the Food Oasis, a team composed of city councilors, activists and nonprofits, whose goal was to bring a grocery store to the city’s southwest corner. It formed around 2015. “It had a lot of good ideas and I think a lot of potential,” District 3 Councilor Chris Rivera tells SFR. “Unfortunately, none of the grocery stores were really interested.” The coalition fell apart after about a year. But Rivera thinks there’s still a need for more food access in the area—along with more bus service. “I think a grocery store somewhere on Airport [Road] would be great,” he says. “And clearly transportation needs to get better and provide a faster service.” Rivera and other city leaders acknowledge the lack of food access. But they have no plans to address the systemic issues that led to and exacerbated the food swamp effect. Those issues include what’s been built in the area since a 2012 overlay zoning ordinance went into effect. While the law aimed to incentivize businesses such as gyms, doctor’s offices and grocery stores with fee waivers, it did little to restrict development of fast food restaurants, convenience stores and dollar stores. Former city councilor Carmichael

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

Zona del Sol, typically filled with the sounds of children talking and playing, is quiet and empty as Miguel Angel Acosta, co-director of Earth Care, sets a brown paper bag on the table. Inside are ripe apricots he picked from his yard that Friday morning. Acosta has worked on food access issues in Santa Fe since 2011, when he first teamed up with Dominguez to push the overlay district. “We were trying to get people to understand that there was another part to the Southside that needed to be taken into consideration: different consumption patterns, different ideas around healthy food, different needs in terms of even having food pyramids make sense to other cultures,” Acosta says. “Also that there were other connected issues that

KATHERINE LEWIN

The demise of the food oasis

Communities against the swamp

SFREPORTER.COM

Cesar Araiza rolls out dough for fresh beer empanaditas in the kitchen of his bakery and store.

needed to be addressed that a big box wouldn’t resolve.” He proposed a “mercado system” of smaller stores to sit on city land and be managed by the city that employed residents who would sell food and provide nutrition education. The spaces would also include community gardens. It fell apart, Acosta says, “because there was no interest.” Real estate developers opposed the idea because “they saw it as a gateway drug to socialism,” Acosta says, laughing without much humor and tapping his fingers on the table. What the Southside doesn’t need, he continues, is a big-box grocery store that will depress wages and not solve the transportation issue, which forces many people to walk to a nearby Allsup’s, dollar store or McDonald’s for a meal. Because of people like Cesar Araiza, who owns Panaderia Sani y Tortilleria and a carniceria on the Southside, Acosta says the area’s people have most of what they need. On a recent Saturday afternoon, Araiza and one of his longtime employees stand around a table covered in flour and fresh dough. In the warm kitchen at the back of his store, they make beer empanaditas for La Fonda. Some have strawberry filling, some pineapple or sweet potato; all are handmade using a mason jar to create the perfect circle of dough. Each one looks identical to the one before it. His stores offer different Mexican pastries, take out food, cakes, tortillas, bread and meat. “In our culture, we buy groceries from small stores, like a carniceria,” Araiza says. “I don’t want a big supermarket around here, of course.” But he also knows that small businesses like his, as well as residents, have difficulty finding fresh, affordable food. “What I think Santa Fe needs is a big wholesale store,” Araiza says. “I’ve been planning to get a big warehouse for His-


KATHERINE LEWIN

‘Fast food is very political’

• Create food swamp maps to identify “priority areas inspired by zoning regulations.” • Always make choices based on evidence. Not doing so “is not only potentially ineffective in reaching health goals, but also these things don’t happen in a vacuum and there are politics around the industry. Fast food is very political.

Without [the food swamp map] and assessment the backlash can actually undermine the policy effort.”

panic food because sometimes [finding it] is kind of hard.” Food in Santa Fe is so expensive, he adds, it’s cheaper for him to source some ingredients and products for his stores from Albuquerque, Denver, Texas and California.

• “If the fast food is already [in the community], then zoning regulations are still helpful because there are many types.” Total bans on fast food restaurants are not the only option. “Temporary bans and quotas are also helpful. As we know, local governments have these choices.” It’s important that residents step up to pressure and support their elected officials in order to get zoning changes. • “You can only make as much change as zoning policies allow. It’s time to look at land use and zoning as a potential barrier and facilitator of these improvements… For the most part the municipalities that have been successful in introducing fast food regulations are predominantly white and affluent. … There are other things that are competing with [grocery stores] and if a community has not had healthy retail in a long time there will be a need for a culture shift and a culture change to adjust to those options.” • “The other policy tool is licensing. For [the unhealthy retail] that is already there, how can we set some standards on the within-store food environment in fast food restaurants to at least get a little bit closer in the right direction. These establishments have to pass certain requirements to renew their license. That involves an auditing process, so how can you introduce politics so that in the licensing renewal process, there is a nutrition and health focus?”

‘Access to healthy food is a right’

In a bright office at The Food Depot, Executive Director Sherry Hooper says that even the county’s largest food bank has had trouble getting food into the Southside. Despite this half of the city having the least access to grocery stores, The Food Depot doesn’t currently have a partner agency in the area. KATHERINE LEWIN

Santa Fe officials have known for nearly a decade that the city, particularly its Southside, meets the well-agreed upon definition of a food desert: a low-income neighborhood that lacks easy access to healthy, affordable foods. They have known for even longer, but perhaps paid less attention to a potentially more insidious, more dangerous phenomenon: The Southside is also filled with food swamps, defined as neighborhoods where unhealthy foods are more readily available than healthy foods. While there have been efforts, nearly all of them unsuccessful, to address the food desert issue, the Southside’s food swamps remain less discussed. Kristen Cooksey-Stowers, an adjunct professor and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Connecticut’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, spoke with SFR about the ways in which city leaders, activists and residents can change public policy to prevent or stop the expansion of food swamps in neighborhoods and about the importance of creating maps with a focus on the food swamp effect versus food deserts. Here are some of Cooksey-Stowers’ suggestions to address food swamps and create healthier food environments:

Santa Feans pick up free groceries at Zona del Sol via The Food Depot.

“What we’ve ended up doing is treating it like we would a rural community,” Hooper tells SFR. “When you look at the Southside, the fact that it is a food desert or food swamp, it is very much like a rural community in that they’re relying on convenience stores, gas stations, things like that.” The agency holds a monthly mobile food pantry distribution at the cityowned Zona del Sol building. Long picnic tables are pushed together into the main room as Santa Feans walk around the large rectangle, picking from mountains of bread, strawberries, bananas and even wheatgrass. Even with programs like the Food Depot and businesses like Araiza’s continuing to pop up on the Southside, the food desert and swamp could persist for low-income communities throughout the city without different policy direction from city leaders, says Cooksey-Stowers of the Rudd Center. But officials would have to define the scope of the problem first. “Taking a food swamp measure allows for policy makers and elected officials to know where, exactly, to focus their efforts, at least to start,” she says. City Parks and Recreation Director John Muñoz tells SFR the city hopes to add more community gardens and expand existing ones, like at Colonia Prisma on the Southside. The next one planned is at SWAN Park, possibly ready by the spring. It will be a “good sized” garden in the “growth part of town.” It’s not all forward momentum. At a recent community forum, developers from Tierra Contenta’s next phase insisted that because of SWAN Park and “the new Walmart,” the housing project did not need to have plans for green recreational spaces or access to food, like a grocery store, Acosta says. “It would take some real political will to push back on real estate, to push back on the Chamber of Commerce,” he says. “It would take some decisions by the city that access to healthy food is a right. Just like access to housing should be. The Super Walmart has been bad for business and it’s been bad for people’s health and bad for wages, salaries. This is an opportunity to create commercial spaces where we have access to healthy food.”

City officials hope to add more Southside community gardens like the one at Colina Prisma, where Mayordomo Jose Ortiz waters his plants.

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Leer en español sfreporter.com/espanol

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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FOR THE FIRST TIME IN FESTIVAL HISTORY Violinist Ida Kavafian and pianist Anne-Marie McDermott play all 10 of Beethoven’s exquisite Sonatas for Violin & Piano.

Ida

Anne-Marie

KAVAFIAN

McDERMOTT

Tue, Aug 13 • 6 pm BEETHOVEN SONATAS 1

The first three Op. 12 sonatas in the cycle include the spirited Sonata in D Major, No. 1; the Sonata in A Major, No. 2—the best known of the set; and the virtuosic Sonata in E-flat Major, No. 3.

Wed, Aug 14 • 6 pm BEETHOVEN SONATAS 2

The second of three concerts features, among other works, the fiery Sonata in A Minor, Op. 23, and the radiant “Spring” Sonata, Op. 24.

Thu, Aug 15 • 6 pm BEETHOVEN SONATAS 3

Our first-ever presentation of all 10 of Beethoven’s Sonatas for Violin & Piano comes to a close with a program that includes the groundbreaking “Kreutzer” Sonata.

SPONSORED BY THORNBURG INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT

3-CONCERT PACKAGE or INDIVIDUAL CONCERT TICKETS AVAILABLE All Concerts at The Lensic Performing Arts Center. Reserve Your Seats Now: 505.982.1890 • SantaFeChamberMusic.com • Ticket Office: NM Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave.

Marc Neikrug, Artistic Director

The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival is funded, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts, the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and 1% Lodgers’ Tax, and New Mexico Arts, a division of the Office of Cultural Affairs.

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

SFREPORTER.COM


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

SING, SING We’d like to address the people who haven’t visited the opera this year: Why haven’t you visited the Santa Fe Opera this year? Your time is running short. It’s a good season, too, according to our reviewer, anyway (read more at SFReporter.com), and the five mainline productions vary from charmingly gorgeous to endearingly flawed. Did we mention those sunsets? The special one-off events? The world-class talent on loan from some of the best opera houses and companies around the world? Get the cheapest tickets you can. Try standing room. Just do it before the season fades and you have to wait another year. We understand it’s expensive and not for everyone, but if you’ve ever had the inkling, just do it. It’s far more beautiful than you know. (ADV) Santa Fe Opera 2019 Season: Various times through August 24. $15-$320. Santa Fe Opera, 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900.

RYAN VESTIL

KEN HOWARD FOR THE SANTA FE OPERA, 2019

THEATER THROUGH AUG/24

COURTESY DRDOGMUSIC.COM

MUSIC SUN/11 DOGGED Let us re-welcome psych-ish indie-rock wunderkinds Dr. Dog—who previously appeared in New Mexico at Meow Wolf’s Taos Vortex festival last year—for their bazillionth local show. It’s good to have ’em back, too, particularly since the release of Live 2 earlier this year (a limited edition run, folks—sorry if you missed it) was so damn good, it’s almost criminal. See, Dr. Dog exists in this strange vacuum niche that no other band has managed to find nearly as well. Think of the tunes like a strange and wonderful merging of Lennon-style lyrical and melodic sensibilities merged with Dylan-level poetry and Nilsson-y weirdness. And the vocal harmonies? Chills. Dr. Dog would have been at home in the 1970s easily but, lucky for us, they belong to now, today, when one can still catch them live and wonder why they haven’t loved the band since always. We sure have. (ADV) Dr. Dog: 8 pm Sunday August 11. $36-$39. Meow Wolf, 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369.

COURTESY DIEGO ROMERO

ART OPENING TUE/13 MR. ROMERO Earlier this year, master ceramicist Diego Romero collaborated with his brother, the painter Mateo Romero, for an exhibit at the Museum of Indian Art and Culture, but we’re highlighting his solo efforts this week because Romero’s works come together some place between pop culture phenomena and age-old ceramics tradition, and we love them. Certain design and thematic elements are instantly recognizable (Pueblo life and colonization), while others are more subtle, slyly humorous or tricky to unearth. Getting lost in a Romero is easy, and he is, without question, one of our favorite artists in the state. In the leadup to Indian Market, Romero shows at Shiprock Santa Fe for the first time ever after 30 years working with the Robert F Nichols Gallery (Nichols, sadly, passed away recently), and word on the street is that the show’s incredible. We don’t doubt that for a moment. (ADV) Diego Romero, Ceramacist: 2-4 pm Tuesday August 13. Free. Shiprock Santa Fe, 53 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-8478.

MUSIC THU/8

Loops and Such Josh Glenn’s mad experimentation “For the first year of experimenting, it was really just me in my room playing around with ideas,” Josh Glenn tells SFR. “I’d take all these ideas, put my favorites onto one piece of paper, what I call my ‘one sheet,’ and I would jam out for an hour or two; sometimes one progression, one idea, and gradually I came to realize I needed to consolidate these ideas.” That consolidation is today known as the John Glenn Experiment, a one-man band of singer-songwriter-style lyrics meets experimental folky looping project from San Antonio, Texas. Looping, for those not in the know, is the process of playing and recording snippets and pieces of music and slowly adding more and sections to create layered, repeated sounds that might otherwise never exist. Glenn’s brand of looping makes use of a single acoustic guitar—riffs, chords, beats and solos, all blending into one fascinating melange of melodic sounds at the intersection of folk, electronica and indie rock. “The initial reason was to be a better solo guitarist,” Glenn explains. “I could just rip two chords then solo on top of [them], but I ended up developing. …I don’t know what to call it, but it’s my way of playing folky electronic sounds without

using electronics.” Indeed, some of Glenn’s best work, such as his 2016 album Orange Moon, has sounds that might easily be mistaken for synths or effects, but everything was recorded live with one guitar. Glenn did perform with the shortlived band Nat’l Parks for a time, but solo success has been more within grasp. He tours often, usually alone, and camps out during his sojourns to leave more room for music making—a far cry from his pop-punk roots and early love of electric guitar. And though he’s tightened his style over more than a year of development, he says he still likes to bring as many improvisational elements into live sets as possible, so you never quite know what version of a Josh Glenn Experiment song you’re going to get, but you know it’ll be phenomenal. Next comes more touring, a better website (jgexperiment.com) and as many songs as he can put together between the stacks and layers and sounds Glenn crafts. (Alex De Vore)

JOSH GLENN EXPERIMENT 7 pm Thursday August 8. Free. Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery, 225-1600

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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THE CALENDAR

Oquwa – Rain God by José Disiderio Roybal (San Ildefonso Pueblo, 1922-1978). Part of a new exhibit on San Ildefonso art at Adobe Gallery; see listing on page 29.

WED/7

Want to see your event here?

BOOKS/LECTURES

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

DHARMA TALK: RECIPES FOR COMMUNITY Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 By Alan Senauke and Petra Hubbeling. Begins with a 20 minute meditation. 5:20-6:30 pm, free FRAN GRACE Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way, 989-4423 The author of The Power of Love: A Transformed Heart Changes the World. 6:30-8 pm, free

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

Contact Cole: 395-2906

MEDICINAL HERB WALK Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Learn about local plants and their medicinal uses. 5-7 pm, $15-$20

DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero et al. 7:30 pm, $25-$40 STARS OF AMERICAN BALLET: PROGRAM 1 Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 An all-star ensemble of principals and soloists. 7:30-9 pm, $29-$115

EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Pub trivia. 8 pm, free HIPICO SANTA FE SUMMER SERIES HIPICO Santa Fe 100 S Polo Drive, 474-0999 Santa Fe's best party for horse lovers. Info at hipicosantafe.com. 8 am-5 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe. 10:15 am, $15

Saturday, August 17 10AM

SECRET 18

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

Brunch

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WAYWARD WEDNESDAYS Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Local comedy. 7:30 pm, free SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 Stock up on locavore delights and craft items. 3-6 pm, free

MUSIC CALVIN HAZEN El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Flamenco and classical Spanish guitar. 7 pm, free

CHEYENNE SKYE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Timeless folk and soul. 8 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, plus pop, rock and contemporary favorites— with vocals, too. 6:30 pm, free MATTHEW ANDRAE Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Rhythmic covers and originals of a folky bent on guitalele. 6 pm, free

| $40

For Reservations:

SFReporter.com/brunch


ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

OPEN MIC NIGHT Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., 303-3808 Singer-songwriter Jason Reed hosts his long-beloved open mic. 7 pm, free PSYCHOTIC REACTION, TAN COLOGNE, STILL LOOKING Zephyr Community Art Studio 1520 Center Drive, Ste. 2 Garage rock and psychedelic. 8-11 pm, $10 STEPHANIE HATFIELD Honeymoon Brewery Solana Center, 907 W Alameda St., Ste. B, 303-3139 Wild rock 'n' roll. 6 pm, free TIFFANY CHRISTOPHER La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Heady loopy super-fun electronic rock 'n' roll. 7:30 pm, free TINY'S ELECTRIC JAM Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Plug it in and rock out. Hosted by Nick Wimett and Albert Diaz. 8:30 pm, free

OPERA LA BOHÈME Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 The story of starving artists trying to survive in 1800s Paris is often called the most beautiful opera in existence and was unofficially dubbed the best-selling opera ever at the Met in New York. Rather than feature a bunch of drunken male artists per the status quo, director Mary Birnbaum brings a fresh perspective on the show’s archetypal and symbolic interactions. 8 pm, $42-$320

THU/8 ART OPENINGS AGUILAR POTTERY Adobe Gallery 221 Canyon Road, 955-0550 A rare collection of 15 Pueblo pots from Felipita Aguilar Garcia & Asunción Aguilar Caté. 5-7 pm, free

DANCE COUNTRY-WESTERN AND TWO-STEP Dance Station Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda St., Show off your best moves at your favorite honky-tonk. Learn from the pros; all levels welcome. 7:15 pm, $20 EMIARTE FLAMENCO The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, 992-5800 Master dancer and teacher La Emi with Manuel Tañe. 8 pm, $20-$50

THE CALENDAR

ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero and his renowned dance company. 7:30 pm, $25-$40 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Experience the longest-running tablao in North America. Reservations required. 6:30-9 pm, $30 STARS OF AMERICAN BALLET: PROGRAM 2 Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 An all-star ensemble comprised of principals and soloists. 7:30-9 pm, $29-$115

EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Santa Fe Brewing Company 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Pub trivia. 7 pm, free GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP The Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 The Jewish Care Program offers a grief and loss support group; anyone over 18 years can join and participate. 1 pm, free HIPICO SANTA FE SUMMER SERIES HIPICO Santa Fe 100 S Polo Drive, 474-0999 Santa Fe's best party for horse lovers of all ages. Get info at hipicosantafe.com. 8 am-5 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with a guide from the History Museum; kids 17 and under are free. Get more info at santafewalkingtour.org. 10:15 am, $15

MUSIC BERT DALTON TRIO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 A mix of jazz and Latin jazz; tonight, joined by vocalist Kathryn Radakovich. 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 y más. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards and Broadway faves. 6:30 pm, free GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, plus pop, rock and contemporary favorites. 6:30 pm, free

JESUS BAS Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Spanish and flamenco guitar. 6 pm, free JOSH GLENN EXPERIMENT Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., 303-3808 Psychedelic indie folk out of San Antonio, Texas (see SFR Picks, page 17). 7 pm, free LEFTOVER SALMON Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Americana and progressive bluegrass. 8 pm-1 am, $24 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free TIFFANY CHRISTOPHER La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Heady loopy super-fun electronic rock 'n' roll. 7:30 pm, free

OPERA THE PEARL FISHERS Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 By French composer Georges Bizet. Set in Ceylon (modern-day Sri Lanka), the opera introduces best friends Nadir and Zurga, two young fishermen. Years ago they both fell in love with a beautiful priestess named Leila, but they reaffirm their friendship as stronger than that infatuation. That vow only lasts until Leila appears once again on the shore. 8 pm, $42-$320

WORKSHOP GROWING ROSES IN SANTA FE Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Bob Pennington from Agua Fria Nursery teaches you the basics of growing roses in Santa Fe, from selecting the best varieties to how to care for them and ensure growth. 3-5 pm, $25-$30 YOGA IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 A vinyasa flow class that is open to all levels, from beginner to expert. Mats available. 8-9 am, $10-$15 I DRAW SHAKESPEARE A Gallery Somewhere 3209 Calle Marie Santa Fe, NM, 87507, 466-3533 Drawing sessions feature two models in Elizabethan costume. Bring your own art supplies; dry media is preferred. If you want to use a water-based medium, bring a drop cloth to protect the floor beneath you. No toxic chemicals, please. 6:30-8:30 pm, $10

THURSDAY 8/15

BrewTapBoomBap A Hip Hop Monthly Hosted by Benzo & O.G. Willikers + A Pop Up Market FREE / 7 - 11 PM

FRIDAY 8/16

CHAPTER HOUSE PRESENTS WEEDRAT LAURA ORTMAN LILITH THE FLOSSIES THE DIMENSIONS FREE / 8:00 PM

WWW.SECONDSTREETBREWERY.COM RUFINA TAPROOM 2920 Rufina St, Santa Fe NM 87507

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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THE CALENDAR

Let us re-introduce ourselves.

FRI/9 ART OPENINGS

Visit Our New Website Behavioral Health Research Diabetes Management HIV/AIDS Hepatitis C Case Management Schedule Your Appointment Today

505.955.9454

ALCOVES 20/20.1 New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 The first in the series will feature artists from Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Roswell and Willard, New Mexico. 5:30-7 pm, free NAMPEYO FAMILY RETROSPECTIVE Steve Elmore Indian Art 839 Paseo de Peralta, 995-9677 Celebrating America’s first modern artist and 130 years of the Sityatki Revival Movement. 5 pm, free OBJECTS OF ART SANTA FE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 More than 70 gallery owners and other traders exhibit thousands of choice art objects handmade by master artists and designers in a range of media. 11 am-5 pm, $15-$25 PASSION & PEARLS Patina Gallery 131 W Palace Ave. 986-3432 Explore the sheer opulence of the beguiling gems of the deep sea in an exhibition by Peter Schmid of Atelier Zobel. 5 pm, free RICARDO CATÉ Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 See the work of the most prominent Native American cartoonist working today. 4 pm, free

DANCE

Come Walk with Us ! In town and on dirt trails Join us on free, hour-long walks and weekend hikes

May through October 2019 TEXT SFWALKS TO 77948 FOR WALK REMINDERS

Check out the complete schedule : https://sfct.org/vamonos/ Give us a call at 505.989.7019 with any questions

EMIARTE FLAMENCO The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, 992-5800 Master dancer and teacher La Emi with Manuel Tañe. 8 pm, $20-$50 ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero and his dance company. 7:30 pm, $25-$40 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Experience the National Institute of Flamenco's world-famous dinner show at the longest-running tablao in North America. Reservations required. 6:30-9 pm, $30 MAPS IN MOTION Railyard Performance Center 1611 Paseo de Peralta 982-8309 New York City choreographer and dancer Leslie Satin with a collection of choreographed and improvised dances. Five dancers join formalist exploration with movement invention. 8 pm, $10

ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

EVENTS THE ORIGINAL SANTA FE GHOST TOUR La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St. 982-5511 Peter Sinclaire leads the oldest and most popular tour of downtown Santa Fe’s ghostly haunts. 6 pm, $16 ENCHANTED SANTA FE EVENINGS Honeymoon Brewery Solana Center, 907 W Alameda St., Ste. B, 303-3139 Live music with the Tynkers and Sitara Schauer followed by a dance party and drum jam. 8-10 pm, $5 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. Listen to a book and participate in interactive nature activities. 10-11 am, $5 HIPICO SANTA FE SUMMER SERIES HIPICO Santa Fe 100 S Polo Drive, 474-0999 Santa Fe's best party for horse lovers of all ages. Get all the info at hipicosantafe.com. 8 am-5 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things. Get tickets starting at 10 am; kids 17 and under are free. Get more info at santafewalkingtour.org. 10:15 am, $15 WALL-E PARK CLEAN-UP Railyard Park Cerrillos Road and Guadalupe Street, 982-3373 Meet at the lawn. All tools and gloves provided. Afterwards, volunteers enjoy a VIP hot-dog picnic courtesy of AMP Concerts! The screening of Wall-E begins at sunset. 6:30-8:30 pm, free BEDTIME STORIES: MISS BEHAVE – A NEOBURLESQUE VARIETY SHOW Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Coming all the way from Las Vegas, Nevada, this “subversive, anarchic, social experiment is here to play.” The audience is divided into teams based on their mobile phone choices: iPhone v. Others. Competing for arbitrary points based on a no–rules system, they utilize their smart phones, pop culture and adrenalin. A realization that no one is in charge results in the audience working as one. 21+ 8-11 pm, $28

MUSIC 4SWING The Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 Swing jazz quartet. 6 pm, $2

BIRD THOMPSON & INSTANT KARMA The New Baking Company 504 W Cordova Road, 557-6435 Adult contemporary singer-songwriter. 10 am, free CS ROCKSHOW Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Classic rock 'n' roll with Don Curry, Pete Springer and Ron Crowder. 10 pm, $5 CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 31 Burro Alley, 992-0304 Piano and vocals from Charles Tichenor and friends. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free DJ D-MONIC Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Top 40 and dance music 10 pm-1:30 am, $5 DAVID BORREGO AND THE WIGGLERS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock and folk. 8:30 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, classical, pop and Broadway tunes: Doug starts, Greg takes over at 8 pm. 6 pm, free GEMMA DERAGON Santa Fe Oxygen and Healing Bar (Apothecary) 133 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 Jazz violin and standards from the '30s and '40s. 8:30 pm, free HALF BROKE HORSES Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Americana, honky-tonk 'n' swing. 6 pm, free JESUS BAS La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Amorous and romantic Spanish and flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free JIMMY STADLER La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rock, blues and R&B imported from Taos. 8 pm, free LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Ranchera, swing and a contemporary yet rooted take on Norteño favorites. 7 pm, free LOS PRIMOS MELODICOS Jimmy D's 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, 772-0223 Afro-Cuban, flamenco, romantic Latin, bossa nova and acoustic world fusion music. 6 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24

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BRANDON SODER

The Once and Future Queen Eliza Lutz stuns with new Future Scars full-length Harrow BY LUKE HENLEY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

T

here is no overstating how much Eliza Lutz has given to Santa Fe. Lutz has been a central figure to so many musicians’ lives as a tireless promoter, designer, booster and any other role you can think of—but above all else, she is an artist, and with the release of her highly visceral and powerful rock outfit Future Scar’s new album Harrow, she’s outdone herself in almost every way. Three years in the making, Harrow is an exploration and product of extreme dynamics, both personal and creative. Lyrically, Lutz explores trauma, the fracturing of the self and concepts of astral projection and, ultimately, healing. Set against a dual color palette (more on that later) and reinforced with Lutz’ visual art, the album is a complete multimedia experience that rewards listeners who opt for the physical format. Harrow‘s duality is based on Lutz’ use of a two-color scheme, which illustrates the two halves of the self. An off-lilac color represents the self we present to others, with pieces missing and, often, secrets of our pain and trauma. The other half, a

Visit Us at 1330 Rufina Circle Mon.-Sat. 10-6 P: 505.231.7775

Eliza Lutz (second from right) brings out the best with the new Future Scara album, Harrow.

burnt orange, is for the pieces we remove and from which we disconnect in times of intense pain; Lutz assigned different guitar tunings to each color as well. The story itself is extremely personal to Lutz and borne of her traumas and healing process. Following Future Scars’ debut EP, 2016’s Before, There Was Fear, Lutz says she was raped by one of her bandmates. The lineup dissolved, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to make music anymore. “I found myself at a crossroads,” Lutz says, “wanting to really give up on this thing that takes so much of you energetically and emotionally, financially and just everything.” She credits Paul Wagner, the band’s current bassist, for his role in motivating her to build new relationships with the musicians who play on Harrow. “There’s a kind of trust there that comes from having to be really open about those experiences and inviting people to play music about those experiences,” says Lutz. To rebuild Future Scars, Lutz spearheaded a more robust audition process and pieced together an outfit that not only works together creatively, but is

able to openly discuss topics such as abuse and misogyny within the world of music and society at large. The resulting group, she says, strikes a balance between technicality—all of the players are formally educated—and communication. “They were really great at me saying ‘I think this section should be more orange and sound like when you are leaving your body during astral projection in drum form,’” Lutz explains. From there, former drummer Marcus DiFilippo (who appears on the album but has since left the band and been replaced by Dylan McDowell and who, full disclosure, previously worked for SFR) would work together with Wagner and keyboardist Dylan Blanchard to bring their own styles and sounds into the mix. Lutz also cites producers Kabby Kabakoff and Will Dyar, who recorded and helped guide the recording of Harrow at Kabakoff’s Kabby Sound Studios. The results are stunning, even with songs that run upwards of five minutes, such as the epic showstopper “Whale Song.” Along with the other nine tracks, Lutz doesn’t waste a note. Even in times of lush arrangement, every sonic touch serves the core premise, and Lutz’ pow-

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erful, mercurial vocals reach far corners of emotion, from shivering sadness to full-blown roars of triumph. Her inimitable guitar is fully showcased as well with nimble-fingered arpeggios and crushing power chords. The band follows in fine form, with DiFilippo and Wagner’s complex rhythmic structures and Blanchard’s broad tonal palette and melodies. The story being told is one of pain, but it’s told in such a stirring way that it often feels full of light, even in Lutz’ more cutting lyrics, such as in the frank discussion of trauma in album highlight “Dog Star:” “Part of me leaves so all of me stays intact for later when I’m back in one piece,” Lutz sings as Blanchard’s progrock keys carry her voice along cosmic frequencies through the pain and onto a more ethereal plane. Such moments are clearly carefully considered and delivered powerfully, the creation of the music deftly mirroring the story within the album. From trauma and dissolution to the reformation of a whole, Future Scars has never sounded stronger or more capable. Pieces of Lutz’ past work find their way into Harrow, from the vocal-centric songwriting of GRYGRDNS to the complex and mathy instrumentation of As In We, but this step feels definitive in a way those projects didn’t—like the closing chapter of one book and the opening chapter of the next, a confident statement from a crucial voice that should and surely will reach well beyond the boundaries of Santa Fe. Find an exclusive early stream of Harrow at sfreporter.com/music starting Aug. 7—two days before the Aug. 9 release FUTURE SCARS ALBUM RELEASE WITH PRISM BITCH AND JESSIE DELUXE: 8pm. Friday August 9. Free. Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom), 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068

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PHOTO ©BARON WOLMAN

By the Time He Got to Woodstock

Rolling Stone’s first photographer remembers one wild weekend

B Y M O L LY B O Y L E a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m

I

t was just past 2 pm on Saturday, August 16, 1969, at Max Yasgur’s dairy farm outside Bethel, New York, and the grin on Baron Wolman’s face surpassed shit-eating. The Rolling Stone photographer was sprawled behind a towering amplifier and the largest crowd in the world, adding more cowbell to a swirling rendition of Santana’s “Evil Ways.” Beyond him

loomed Carlos Santana himself, riding a mescaline riptide, wielding his guitar before a sea of people the frontman would later describe as “all eyes and teeth.” Wolman’s radiant smile reflected his happy circumstance—he had an all-access pass to the most iconic happening of his generation. By the time he was clambering onto the Woodstock stage, Wolman had already photographed many members of the festival’s lineup for Rolling Stone. He’d been snapping rock bands

4000 Miles

by Amy Herzog Presented by the New Mexico Actors Lab at Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie

August 8-25 Thursdays–Saturdays at 7:30 pm; Sundays at 2 pm

For full details and to buy tickets:

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SAVE THE DATE!

Baron Wolman says discovering a country road allowed him to circumvent Woodstock traffic.

for the magazine since its launch in 1967, and was spending the summer of ’69 roaming the country with fellow shutterbug Jim Marshall, photographing music festivals for a forthcoming book. But as the now-82-year-old Wolman recently recalled at his home in Santa Fe, “When we went out on the road, we didn’t even know about Woodstock.”

Solobration – Festival of Solo Works Presented by Blue Raven Theatre at Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta August 9-11 Friday–Saturday at 7:30 pm; Sunday at 2 pm

The traffic choking the roads leading to Bethel was a spectacle in and of itself. The crowd made its own music on the way; Wolman photographed a man sitting on the trunk of a Chevy strumming a guitar, a sharp-eyed young woman lounging beside him. People abandoned their cars and walked; he snapped three of them strolling ahead, arms linked in a groovy assemblage as if to say, “We’ll get there when we get there, man.” But Wolman couldn’t dawdle. He had to arrive at Woodstock before the music started on Friday evening, so he consulted his trusty AAA map. “I noticed there was a county road parallel to the main road that went pretty much to the same destination,” he remembers. “So I took a left turn and went over to the county road. Nobody was on it! I got on it and sped past all those people.” Two hundred thousand people had settled in at Woodstock by the time he arrived, and the swarm of humanity piqued his photographic imagination. “I stood in the middle of the stage with the widest-angle lens I had at the time—it was a 24 millimeter lens for a 35 millimeter camera—and I could not get the entire crowd in the picture, even with a 24,” he says. “It was mind-blowing, it was amazing, it was astounding, it was every adjective you could imagine, really.” By 9 pm on Saturday, the band Mountain was improvising lyrics to a new song (“For Yasgur’s Farm”) that paid tribute to the harmonious masses: “Look at me/Can’t you see it’s true/You’re a part of me/I’m a part of you.” Wolman, a former Army intelligence officer who photographed the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, was feeling the love. “It had never happened before, a peaceful massive crowd,” he says. “The last time there was a crowd that big, it was probably the assault on Germany at Dunkirk or something like that. But this was all peaceful!” Camera in hand, he roamed Yasgur’s 600 acres.

Measure for Measure August 23-Sept. 8

Henry the Fourth, Part One August 22-Sept. 7 Presented by the International Shakespeare Center at the Swan Theater 1213B Parkway Drive Thursdays–Saturdays at 7:30 pm; Sundays at 2 pm

2019 Fiesta Melodrama Directed by Andrew Primm and Vaughn Irving at the Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E. De Vargas St. August 22-Sept. 15 Thursdays–Saturdays at 7:30 pm; Sundays at 2 pm

Santa Fe Theatre Walk is coming September 14 Saturday, Noon-5 pm In the Siler District


BILL GRAHAM/PHOTO ©BARON WOLMAN

A&C “We thought, wow, this is the beginning of a new age,” Wolman continues. “And then Woodstock was over, and that was that.” In her song “Woodstock,” about the gig she skipped in favor of appearing on The Dick Cavett Show, Joni Mitchell sang, “We are stardust, we are golden,” capturing a generation in amber. But from the chaotic vantage point of 2019, it seems the baby boomers, memorialized by Wolman in states of undress and beatification, never got themselves “back to the garden” where Mitchell prodded them to go. The maestro himself, mere feet from Carlos Santana The film Easy Rider, at Woodstock. also turning 50 this year, ends with Peter Fonda’s “It was like shooting fish in a Wyatt telling Dennis Hopper’s Billy, fishbowl,” he recalls. His snapshots, “We blew it.” Wolman agrees with that many of which he has collected on sentiment. Instagram (@woodstock69photos), “As humans, our DNA is programmed present zesty slices of festival life: to have our species self-destruct. And I don’t see any evidence to the contrary. • A herd of dairy cows lounge in front If you look around, you just see peoof a hippie tent city (the traumatized ple being bad to each other, doing bad cows reportedly refused to produce things,” he says. “There’s more guns than milk for a month afterward). humans, probably, on the planet right • A drug deal goes down in the woods, now. With every day, you look at the news where Wolman remembers “all the and you think, what’s the next bad thing that’s going to happen?” fun things were happening.” Wolman’s photographs of the fest • A member of Wavy Gravy’s hippie are exhibited alongside prints by fellow commune the Hog Farm, hired to conSanta Fean Lisa Law, his old pal Jim duct security but winding up serving Marshall and others in the exhibit Hail as an impromptu food depot, dishes Hail Rock ‘N’ Roll 2019: Happy 50th, out grains to a hungry concertgoer. Woodstock!, at Edition One Gallery • A man gives a hit off a marijuana pipe through September. He also discusses his to another. Woodstock memories on Saturday, Aug. • Bare-naked hippies bathe in a muddy 10, at El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe. pond.

To hear Wolman tell it, for three days of sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll, peace, love and understanding reigned—long before those triads became clichés. “That weekend was so important because it showed us in the counterculture that what we had been preaching was possible,” Wolman explains. “That people could get along, they could help one another, they could enjoy themselves without violence, right?” National Guard helicopters circled the farm, keeping the peace and transporting the sick. A throng of kids tore down a chain-link fence, making the festival free.

HAIL HAIL ROCK ‘N’ ROLL 2019: HAPPY 50TH WOODSTOCK!: 11 am-2 pm Thursday August 8, and by appointment. Free. Edition One Gallery, 728 Canyon Road, 570-5385 THROUGH A LENS BRIGHTLY: SHOOTING PAST WOODSTOCK: A LECTURE BY ROLLING STONE PHOTOGRAPHER BARON WOLMAN AND WOODSTOCK PRODUCTION MANAGER JOHN MORRIS: 1 pm Saturday Aug. 10. $15 with admission to Objects of Art Santa Fe Show. El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

23


La Emi AT THE BENITEZ CABARET AT THE LODGE AT SANTA FE

July 3 to Sept 1

FEATURING

MANUEL TAÑE

VICENTE GRIEGO WITH KAMBIZ PAKAN

SPECIAL GUEST APPEARANCES BY

AND NEVAREZ Y JOSÉ ENCINIAS IN SPECIAL COLLABORATION WITH

THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF FLAMENCO

8PM WED-SUN

DOORS 7:15PM | TICKETS FROM $20-$50 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

HHANDR.COM/FLAMENCO AT THE LENSIC BOX OFFICE 505-988-1234 | 505-660-9122

THE CALENDAR LUCY BARNA Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana. 5 pm, free MICHAEL HENRY COLLINS Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Alt-folk. 7 pm, free PAT MALONE AND JON GAGAN Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 A jazz duet with guitarist Malone and bassist Gagan. 6:30 pm, free RON CROWDER BAND El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Original rock & roll. 9-11 pm, $5 RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar. 7 pm, free SHANE WALLIN Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Soulful blues. 5:30 pm, free THE SILVER STRING BAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana 'n' bluegrass. 8 pm, free THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Swinging jazz. 7:30 pm, free TONIC QUARTET Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Cutting-edge jazz and originals. 9:30 pm, free

OPERA THE THIRTEENTH CHILD Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 The titular 13th child is Lyra. Her paranoid father has banished her 12 older brothers from his kingdom; Lyra sets out to find them. 8 pm, $47-$320

WORKSHOP ELIZABETHAN DANCE LESSON Shakespeare Reading Room 3209 Calle Marie 466-3533 Put on your pantofles and come step out Elizabethan style! Bring the family, a partner or two, or come alone. 7-9 pm, $10-$15 MIKEY RAE: THE ART OF THE DOODLE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Meow Wolf artist Mikey Rae leads exercises designed to activate your creativity and give you plenty of time to experiment with different artistic media. Materials provided. 3-5 pm, free

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ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

SAT/10 ART OPENINGS OBJECTS OF ART SANTA FE El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 More than 70 gallery owners and other traders exhibiting thousands of choice art objects handmade by master artists and designers in a range of media. 11 am-5 pm, $15-$25 RAG RUGS & FIBER ARTS SHOW PRESENTED BY ART THROUGH THE LOOM Montezuma Lodge 431 Paseo de Peralta, 670-3068 A showcase of New Mexico rug weavers and fiber artists. 10 am-5 pm, free WILLIAM ACHEFF: SMALL & SACRED Nedra Matteucci Galleries 1075 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4631 A show of still life paintings features over 30 small works. Quiet, meditative and captivating, Acheff’s work reflects various traditions, spirituality and life in another time. His career has spanned over 50 years, and he has painted artifacts from the Pueblo Indians since his move to Taos in 1973. 1-3 pm, free SHIPROCK SANTA FE'S ANNUAL OPENING Shiprock Santa Fe 53 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-8478 Focused on the gallery’s collection of historic and antique material, this event kicks off a series of individual artist openings the following week. 5-7 pm, free THE ORIGINAL SANTA FE GHOST TOUR Hotel St. Francis 210 Don Gaspar Ave. 983-5700 Peter Sinclaire leads the oldest and most popular tour of downtown Santa Fe’s ghostly haunts. 6 pm, $16

BOOKS/LECTURES STORYTELLING WITH JOE HAYES Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 704 Camino Lejo, 982-4636 Storyteller Hayes returns to the Wheelwright Museum with tales of the greater Southwest. Bring a chair or blanket for festival seating on the museum grounds. 7 pm, free

DANCE EMIARTE FLAMENCO The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, 992-5800 Flamenco by master dancer and teacher La Emi with Manuel Tañe and special appearances by Vicente Griego, Kambiz Pakan and Nevarez y José Encinias. 8 pm, $20-$50

ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero and his dance company. 7:30 pm, $25-$40 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Experience the National Institute of Flamenco's world-famous dinner show at the longest-running tablao in North America. Reservations required. 6:30-9 pm, $30

EVENTS HIPICO SANTA FE SUMMER SERIES HIPICO Santa Fe 100 S Polo Drive, 474-0999 Santa Fe's best party for horse lovers of all ages has everything from world-class hunter/jumper equestrian competition to food trucks, handcrafted beer and wine, fine art and special events like hoop dances and wiener dog races. Info at hipicosantafe.com. 8 am-5 pm, free HEALTH & WELLNESS FIESTA La Familia Medical Center 1035 Alto Street, 955-0302 Health and dental screenings, entertainment with Baile Espanol de Santa Fe, Marimba band, healthy cooking demos, activities for the kids, giveaways and more! 10 am-2 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with a guide. Get more info at santafewalkingtour.org 10:15 am, $15 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”). Toys, tools and equipment provided. 10 am-noon, free

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

For help, call Cole: 395-2906.


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ENTER EVENTS AT SFREPORTER.COM/CAL

SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market Street at Alcaldesa Street, 310-8766 Find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, sculpture, furniture, textiles and more from a juried group of local artists. It's in the Railyard, just north of the Water Tower. 8 am-2 pm, free SUMMER ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR Fuller Lodge Art Center 2132 Central Ave., Los Alamos, 662-1635 About 100 artists from all over the Southwest display their arts and crafts. The fair features jewelry, photography, glass work, and more. Be sure to stop by after the parade for a wide array of art and a chance to speak directly with the artists. 9 am-4 pm, free WELLS PETROGLYPH PRESERVE PUBLIC TOURS Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project 1431 Hwy. 68, Velarde, 852-1351 Pre-register for a two-hour tour of part of the preserve, maintained by the Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project. The 181-acre site is located midway between Santa Fe and Taos and contains over 10,000 petroglyphs. Visit mesaprietapetroglyphs.org for info and to reserve a spot. 8:30-10:30 am, $35 ¡VÁMONOS! SANTA FE: FIND ANCIENT PETROGLYPHS La Cieneguilla Petroglyphs 662 Paseo Real, La Cienega, 87507 The Santa Fe Walking Collaborative, convened by the Santa Fe Conservation Trust, wants to help Santa Feans walk more; and what better motivation to walk than when you can talk to someone interesting while you do it? Take a moderate hike on rough terrain. For more info, check out sfct.org/ vamonos. 10-11 am, free

FOOD SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 One of the oldest farmer’s markets in the country, serving more than 150 farmers and producers in 15 Northern New Mexico counties. All of the vegetables, fruits and nursery plants available are grown right here in northern New Mexico. The same goes for at least 70% of the ingredients and materials used to make all processed and craft items. Furthermore, no reselling is permitted. Get a snack, hear some music, see some friends and stock up on locavore delights. 7 am-1 pm, free

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with Peter Sinclaire

Coe Center • FIRST FRIDAY of every month, 1-4 pm • Summer Saturdays July 13–Aug. 31, 1-4 pm (closed Aug. 17) Also, open Monday–Friday, Aug. 12–16 and Aug. 19–23, 1-4 pm

• Open House with the Growing Thunder Family and The Mvskoke Canoe Paddle Project, Aug 15, 1-4 pm

• FUNCTION with Cannupa Hanska Luger, Aug 15, 5:3o pm Ticket purchase required at EVENTBRITE.com

All Coe Center events are free unless otherwise mentioned. 1590 B Pacheco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505 • coeartscenter.org • 505.983.6372 COURTESY PETER SINCLAIRE

For 27 years, tour guide Peter Sinclaire has led curious locals and tourists alike on his Original Santa Fe Ghost Tour. Part history, part ghost story, all pretty fun, Sinclaire keeps it fresh by constantly evolving the 2-hour downtown tours, picking up new stories of ghostly activity whenever possible and always maintaining an open mind. Amateur ghost hunters can sign up for the 6 pm Friday and Saturday evening tours through Sinclaire’s website (theoriginalsantafeghosttour.weebly.com)—reservations are required—or calling 983-7774. We called to get the gist and also maybe to feel spooked out a little. (Alex De Vore) How and why does one get into something like ghost tours, and what makes yours the “original?” When I first moved out to New Mexico years ago, I worked for Bandelier, for the Parks Service. I was trained by them to give tours and answer questions about New Mexico, but when it got to be winter and there wasn’t any work, I [came to Santa Fe]. I’ve also trained at the New Mexico History Museum and over the years have developed all kinds of different tours. I call it the ‘Original Tour’ simply because I’ve done it the longest. How is it different [from other ghost tours]? I haven’t been on other tours, but I would guess I have more ghosts. Are you a believer, and why do you think Santa Fe is so dang haunted? There are a couple experiences I can’t explain, though I’m not as sensitive as some people who take the tour, and, as a ghost tour guide, I’ve had so many people have believable experiences. I definitely believe one can experience things beyond the five senses. A woman on the tour whose husband had died said that within a week of his death, and only once did she see him, she saw him on his favorite chair in their living room. Why are we haunted? We’re an old city. We’ve got sites where there were pueblos here, then the Spanish were here and ... in the late-1800s, there was more political violence in New Mexico than any other state, and we weren’t even a state yet.

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Ecological Dharma Wendy Johnson, Randle Charles, Matthew Kozan Palevsky, Keido Troy Fernandez This weekend of science-based investigation and meditation combines living systems theory and spiritual inquiry to transform our experience of the living world. SANTA FE, NM REGISTRAR@UPAYA.ORG

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Are any sites that are particularly more haunted or scary than others? I would say La Posada is the most active. However, in the last six to eight months, I heard stories from the Drury [Plaza Hotel]. Before that, I had heard stories from when it was the old hospital and then a nursing home. That’s a currently active place to some degree. How active? I don’t meet all the guests, but I heard from guests at the hotel that there’s a room on the third floor they usually don’t rent out anymore. They say they were in their room one night, and this was last November or January, and they were streaming a movie on their laptop computer, and three times it was interrupted with YouTube videos—and they didn’t have YouTube open—of people getting limbs amputated.

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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THE BARBEDWIRES Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Soulful blues. 7 pm, free CHANGO Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Only the best rock 'n' roll covers. 10 pm, free CHAT NOIR CABARET Los Magueyes Mexican Restaurant 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. 6 pm, free DON CURRY & PETE SPRINGER Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Acoustic rock. 5:30 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY AND GREG SCHLOTTHAUER Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, classical, pop and Broadway tunes. 6 pm, free FESTIVAL ECLECTICA Colfax County Airport 3570 Hwy. 434, Angel Fire Take a jaunt north for a day of music, sunshine, awesome food, beer ‘n’ wine, local art vendors and more in Angel Fire—then stick around and do some outdoorsy fun stuff on Sunday. This year’s festival features Samantha Fish (blues), Vivalda Dula (Angolan tunes), Red Light Cameras (indie garage pop), Nohe & Sus Santos (alt-rock en español) and the Lara Manzanares Trio (Norteña singer-songwriter). We went last year, and it was fun even in the rain—and this year they have a contingency plan for rain, so it will be even better. Proceeds support the Angel Fire Public Library. For deets, head to festivaleclectica.info. 12-11 pm, $35-$42 FRITZ AND THE BLUE JAYS El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock 'n' roll. 9-11 pm, $5 THE HIGH DESERT PLAYBOYS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Country on the deck. 3 pm, free HOTT BOX Beer Creek Brewing Company 3810 Hwy. 14, 471-9271 Americana 'n' folk 'n' country. 5 pm, free JIMMY STADLER La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rock, blues and R&B imported from Taos. 8 pm, free

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LOS PRIMOS MELØDICOS La Posada de Santa Fe 330 E Palace Ave., 986-0000 Afro-Cuban, romantic and traditional Latin music trio recreates the authentic sound of Latin America, Cuba and Puerto Rico, as well as flamenco, traditional and pop. With Fred Simpson (percussion and backing vocals), JJ Oviedo (bass, percussion and vocals), and guitarist Robert "Roberto" Gonzales. 6:30 pm, free NOSOTROS Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., 303-3808 Locally-beloved Latin jammers. 8 pm, $5 PAT MALONE TRIO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Sweet melodic jazz guitar from Malone, plus Jon Gagan on bass and Kanoa Kaluhiwa on tenor saxophone. 7:30 pm, free RON ROUGEAU The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Acoustic songs from the '60s, '70s and beyond. 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 SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL: FANDANGO! St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Paolo Bordignon performs Soler’s Fandango for Harpsichord as well as his Quintet No. 1 for Harpsichord & Strings, and Meng Su plays one of Boccherini’s “Fandango” Guitar Quintet. 5 pm, $10-$56 STONE MECCA Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 A nationally touring funk & blues-rock artist out of Dallas, Texas. Best known as RZA's (Wu-Tang Clan) guitarist and live band leader, he has also worked with Kanye West, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Westside Connection, George Clinton, and Earth, Wind & Fire. 10 pm-1:30 am, free THE JAKES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Southern rock 'n' roll. 8 pm, free TONIC QUARTET Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Cutting-edge jazz and originals from the house band. 9:30 pm, free UNDERGROUND CADENCE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 An eclectic group of musicians blends classic rock, blues, 'n' funk to keep you dancing. 8:30 pm, free

THEATER LONG DEAD BUT WELL READ: THE DUCHESS OF MALFI The Swan 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Written by John Webster in 1612, directed by Ariana Karp. This play is a revenge tragedy based on actual events. It begins as a love story and ends as a nightmare (have I heard this one before?). Even with all its violence and mayhem, it is considered one of the great tragedies of the age. 7-9:30 pm, $15 OPEN IMPROV JAM Santa Fe Improv Warehouse 21, 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 395-0580 For those who’ve never dipped a toe into improv waters but are curious and want to see what it’s all about, no experience is necessary. Teachers and advanced students teach improv games and exercises in an open and inclusive environment. No pressure, no expectations, just fun. For folks 17 and older please. 7 pm, $10

WORKSHOP BOKASHI CLASS Santa Fe County Fairgrounds 3229 Rodeo Road Learn the fundamentals of the Bokashi Fermentation Kitchen Waste Management System. 9 am-noon, $15 MISO MAKING WORKSHOP Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Learn how to make miso and how to incorporate it into your everyday diet. Enjoy sampling miso and go home with a pint that you made. 1:30-3 pm, $40-$45

SUN/11 ART OPENINGS ART & LEADERSHIP Georgia O'Keeffe Education Annex 123 Grant Ave., 946-1039 An exhibit of artwork created by the youth in the program to celebrate 21 years of the Art & Leadership program, with food and music. 3-5 pm, free BUNNY BOWEN: ASK THE TREES Wild Hearts Gallery 221 B Highway 165, Placitas, 867-2450 Cold wax and oil paint reflections on nature. 1-4 pm, free MORE BEAUTIFUL AND AMAZING Academy for the Love of Learning 133 Seton Village Road, 995-1860 A dozen contemporary artists show pieces in celebration of naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton’s 159th birthday. 2-4 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 28


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

¡Viva la Revolution! Santa Fe’s favorite gluten-free bakery returns

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

M

any people consider the whole gluten-free thing a fad, but for those who have endured the dreaded small intestine biopsy to confirm celiac disease, it is anything but. The same goes for those whose bodies can’t digest FODMAPs—sneaky little fermentable carbohydrates found in certain foods, including wheat and beans—that can cause extreme, and frequently embarrassing, discomfort. While celiac disease affects just 1% of our country’s population (a good three million people), estimates for those suffering from Irritable Bowel Syndrome, frequently caused by those FODMAP stinkers, range as high as 15%. That’s a lot of people who, in order to live painfree lives, have to avoid delicious staple foods of the American diet: bread, pasta, cookies, and so much more. It’s almost heartbreaking to consider as the rest of us unfurl that cinnamon roll, intent on devouring its warm, mushy, sticky, spicy, sweet, glutinous center. “I had no idea how grateful people were for my food, and that I was such a necessity to their eating,” says Revolution Bakery owner, Dionne Christian. “Before, I didn’t know what was going on outside the bakery. Now I understand the need to have good bread and how having it feels really good to that person; if you don’t eat well, you don’t feel good. I love being able to give them attention and now, again, something they love.” “Before” was Christian’s first iteration of the gluten-free bakery, which served

Friday

9

Saturday

AUGUST

10

devotees for four years before closing in 2016. Christian needed time off to deal with health issues, but also used the space to think about how she could improve the business, not just for customers, but for her creative spirit. Revolution Bakery (418 Cerrillos Road, is now back up and 346-2669) is running in the Siler Road area. “I love being open again,” Christian says. “It’s been so great to see all my friends coming back in and being excited. Like a gluten-free reunion!” Fresh off the soft opening of the bakery’s second coming, Christian says she is energized for the future. The hours and options at the new location “allow me to bake while I am here, not having to maneuver around things and bake all night,” explains Christian. “Instead of trying to make everything all of the time, which I used to do on a daily basis—and beat myself into the ground doing it—we’ll now have specific items on specific days.” As such, Revolution Bakery now offers a rotating menu of baked goods, from bread, muffins, cookies, cinnamon rolls, pies and scones (ranging from $1.50 for a cookie to $16 for a large pie) to breakfast tacos ($5.75), fried egg sandwiches ($5.75), and refreshing fresh drinks such as a tumeric-carrot-orange-lemonade ($3.75). Additionally, seasonal items

such as apricot fennel walnut boule are available along with take-home pancake batter (regular and vegan, available in buckwheat, buttermilk, lemon-ricotta and banana; all $6). “We’ll also be doing breakfast specials for those who work nearby, but we’re still figuring all that out,” Christian tells SFR. “Everything is flexible right now while we figure out the rhythm.”

Revolution Bakery—where it’s all gorgeous and totally gluten-free.

This includes making a point to check Revolution Bakery’s website (revolutionbakery.com) to see what’s fresh on any given day. “We may not have all of the things all of the time but we’re going to blow everyone’s minds when they come in,” says Christian. “We want to surprise our cus-

FOOD

tomers and get them to try new things.” Trying new things is in Christian’s DNA. “I dream in recipes and blending,” she explains with a laugh. “I don’t call myself a chef, I call myself a ‘blender.’ When I was a kid I went to survival camp and learned about things like food that grew in the woods. That was the beginning of the alchemy for me. I am more interested in alchemy than the cuisine part; blending something to make it taste excellent.” Thus, she says, “I am really looking at the grains I use and how they are milled. I want texture, layers of product—like broken buckwheat groats in a cake, for instance. The texture doesn’t always have to be super-fine. Think of the dense Scandina Scandinavian breads with sprouted grains that are so healthy.” Christian is also workwork ing on expanding the number of vegan items available, adding that “they are the first to sell out,” but “we offer 16 breads total, eight of which are gluten-free vegan, and a number of other items.” Other changes that will make gluten-free folks happy include accessibility. Revolution Bakery now offers subscription boxes, pick up from a drive-thru window ( just call ahead and order), and soon, wholesale. “The plan is to sell to the local co-op as well as area restaurants that want quality gluten-free products for their customers,” says Christian. Lastly, and likely the best change for Revolution Bakery? “My creative spirit is being kept alive in this new space,” Christian notes, smiling. “I am making food in the moment and it makes me feel better. And we should always demand better. I want to do the best I can for people.”

FREE LIVE MUSIC

AT THE ORIGINAL SECOND STREET

LONE PIÑON Son Huasteco, 7 -10 PM / FREE

THE BARB WIRES Blues, 7 -10 PM / FREE

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

s t r e p x Nail E Try a Shellac Manicure & Pedicure!

Best of Santa Fe WINNER from 2011-2019!

2438 Cerrillos Rd. • 505-474-6183

Closed Sunday • nailexpertssf.com

THE CALENDAR RAG RUGS & FIBER ARTS SHOW PRESENTED BY ART THROUGH THE LOOM Montezuma Lodge 431 Paseo de Peralta, 670-3068 A showcase of New Mexico rug weavers and fiber artists. 10 am-5 pm, free SAN ILDEFONSO POTTERY, 1600-1930: VOICES OF THE CLAY Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 A new exhibition features more than 150 objects and 15 paintings from the museum’s collections, many of which the public has never seen. 1-4 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES THE INVISIBLE ART: UNLOCKING THE SECRETS OF FILM EDITING Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 This week's talk is "Editing and the Ear," which covers how sound editing and design contribute to the meaning and poetry of the scene. 9:30 am-noon, $15 MEDITATION & MODERN BUDDHISM: TRAINING IN UNIVERSAL COMPASSION Zoetic 230 St. Francis Dr., 292-5293 Buddha’s practical methods to grow unconditional love and compassion brought alive and made relevant to our daily lives. 10:30 am-noon, $10

Adopt Me! 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.

28

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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www.santafewatershed.org

DANCE BEGINNING SWING Dance Station Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda Street, 989-9788 Take advantage of those swing nights that pop up around town! Drop in for $20, or pay $60 for four classes. 4 pm, $20 BEGINNING SALSA Dance Station Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda Street, 989-9788 Try your hand (or feet and body, as it were) at some salsa dancing. Drop in for $20, or pay $60 for four classes. 5 pm, $20 EMIARTE FLAMENCO The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, 992-5800 Captivating flamenco by master dancer and teacher La Emi with Manuel Tañe, with special appearances by Vicente Griego, Kambiz Pakan and Nevarez y José Encinias. In special collaboration with the National Institute of Flamenco. 8 pm, $20-$50 ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero and his renowned dance company present a dramatic new season. Doors open an hour early for tapas, wine and beer (sold separately). 2 pm, $25-$40

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ENTREFLAMENCO SUMMER SEASON El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero and his renowned dance company present a dramatic new season. Doors open an hour early for tapas, wine and beer (sold separately). 7:30 pm, $25-$40 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Experience the National Institute of Flamenco's world-famous dinner show at the longest-running tablao in North America. Reservations required. 6:30-9 pm, $30 KIDS' PARTNER DANCE Dance Station Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda St., 989-9788 Get your kids moving with friendly and professional lessons in ballroom, Latin and swing. It's $12 to drop in, or shell out $40 for four weeks. 10:45-11:30 am, $12 PARTNER DANCE FUNDAMENTALS Dance Station Solana Center, 947-B W Alameda St., 989-9788 Whether you want to be more coordinated on the dance floor or just want a little exercise, here's a low-impact (and free!) way to do it. 2:45-3:30 pm, free

EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Desert Dogs Brewery and Cidery 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 307, 983-0134 Do you basically know everything about everything? Put it to good use. Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free HIPICO SANTA FE SUMMER SERIES HIPICO Santa Fe 100 S Polo Drive, 474-0999 Santa Fe’s best party for horse lovers of all ages has everything from world-class hunter/ jumper equestrian competition to food trucks, handcrafted beer and wine, fine art and special events like hoop dances and wiener dog races. Get all the info and scheduling at hipicosantafe.com. Admission is free, but you can VIP it if you want. 8 am-5 pm, free HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with a guide from the New Mexico History Museum. Get tickets starting at 10 am from the museum gift shop. Kids under 17 are free with an adult; get more info at santafewalkingtour.org. 10:15 am, $15

PUEBLO INDEPENDENCE DAY CELEBRATION Jemez Historic Site 18160 Hwy. 4, Jemez Springs, 575-829-3530 This event commemorates when the Pueblo People of New Mexico and Arizona launched a successful rebellion against Spanish colonization. Commemorative activities will begin with a pilgrimage run from Walatowa plaza in Jemez Pueblo to Giusewa Pueblo kiva at Jemez Historic Site. The run begins at 7 am, and the public is welcome to participate. At 10 am, guest speakers will welcome all the runners and their sponsors to the site. There will also be authentic Native arts & crafts and Native food. 10 am, free RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 Meet a wide variety of New Mexico’s artists and craftspeople and get pottery, painting, jewelry, sculpture, fiber arts, photography, handblown glass, artisanal teas and body products right from the source. It’s 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

MUSIC BERT DALTON & FRIENDS Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Piano-led Latin jazz. 11:30 am-3 pm, free CW AYON Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 A one-man blues band on the deck. 3 pm, free DETROIT LIGHTNING Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St., 303-3808 One of the most creative Grateful Dead tributes you've seen anywhere, with Ben Wright (guitar), Paul Groetzinger (drums), Josh Martin (bass) and Kevin Zoernig (keys). 8 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, originals and pop with vocals too. 6:30 pm, free DR. DOG Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Indie rock group from Philly presents songs off their album Critical Equation. 21+ (See SFR Picks, page 17). 8:30-10:30 pm, $36 ELONZO WESLEY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Original indie folk. 8 pm, free


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JIM ALMAND Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Soulful blues and R&B on guitar and harmonica. 1 pm, free JOE WEST AND FRIENDS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Get to the patio for an alt. country brunch. noon, free MATTHEW ANDRAE La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Rhythmic covers and originals of a folky bent on guitalele. 6 pm, free NACHA MENDEZ La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Creative but rooted takes on Latin music from around the world with 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. 6 pm, free READ STREET SUNDAY SESSIONS: JOHN FRANCIS & THE POOR CLARES Santa Fe Spirits Downtown Tasting Room 308 Read St., 780-5906 Local spirits, craft cocktails and homemade songs take away the Sunday sadsies. 8 pm, free THE HAWKEYES AT BOXCAR Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 The Hawkeyes forge a sound that is both refreshing and familiar, featuring an iconic blend of thundering drums, snarling guitars and bleeding vocals. 8:30 pm-12 am, free

OPERA APPRENTICE SHOWCASE SCENES Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 Enjoy the Santa Fe Opera’s strong legacy of education and mentorship when this year’s apprentices present short scenes from various operas. 8 pm, $5-$15

WORKSHOP HOW TO PLAN A FALL VEGETABLE GARDEN WITH COOL-SEASON CROPS Santa Fe County Fairgrounds 3229 Rodeo Road It's still hot out, but it's time to start planning your autumn garden. Presented by the Santa Fe Extension Master Gardeners Association (sfemg.org) and led by Jannine Cabossel, Bob Zimmerman, Linda Fleming and Diane Pratt. 12-2 pm, free

THE CALENDAR

Wheelwright Museum

704 CAMINO LEJO, SANTA FE, NM 87505

MON/12 ART OPENINGS ARTWORKS OF SAN ILDEFONSO PUEBLO Adobe Gallery 221 Canyon Road, 955-0550 Widely known for black-onblack pottery, Sn Ildefonso also produced the first known Puebloan paintings. 5-7 pm, free

BOOKS/LECTURES MONDAY STORY TIME Bee Hive Kid's Books 328 Montezuma Ave, 780-8051 Story time for all ages. 10:30 am, free

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—and if you'd just like to sit, watch and listen, there are also chairs for spectators (and they won't think it's weird!). 7 pm, $3-$8

EVENTS ART WALKING TOUR New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5063 Guided by museum volunteers, an hour-long tour highlights the art and architectural history of downtown Santa Fe. Meet at the gift shop. Children 18 and under are free; proceeds support education programs at the New Mexico Museum of Art. 10 am, $10 GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station Santa Fe Arcade, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Stellar quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 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 a walking tour led by guides from the New Mexico History Museum. Get tickets starting at 10 am from the museum gift shop, and stroll for two hours in the best classroom there is. Kids under 17 are free with an adult; get more info at santafewalkingtour.org or 505-476-5200. 10:15 am, $15 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. Newcomers are always welcome, so go fight the good fight. 7 pm, free

THE SANTA FE HARMONIZERS REHEARSAL Zia United Methodist Church 3368 Governor Miles Road, 471-0997 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). Directed by Maurice Sheppard. For more information, call Marv (6996922) or Bill (424-9042). 6:30 pm, free

MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana from a Santa Fe legend. 7:30 pm, free CALVIN HAZEN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Flamenco and classical Spanish guitar. 7 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michèle Leidig hosts Santa Fe's most famous night of karaoke. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, originals and pop with vocals too. 6:30 pm, free GERRY CARTHY Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 Irish traditional music, folk and more on tin whistles, fiddle, banjo, concertina, saxophone and guitars. 6 pm, free SAVOR DUO Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Authentic Cuban street music. 6 pm, free

OPERA LA BOHÈME Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 The story of starving artists trying to survive in 1800s Paris is often called the most beautiful opera in existence and was unofficially dubbed the best-selling opera ever at the Met in New York. Rather than feature a bunch of drunken male artists and their perfunctory girlfriends (as has prevailed for nearly 200 years), director Mary Birnbaum brings a fresh perspective to the show’s archetypes, symbolism and how they all interact. There is not a soul alive who won’t swoon during its most famous aria, “Che Gelida Manina,” and Rodolfo’s sublime appeal: “Who am I? I am a poet. What do I do? I write. How do I live? I live.” 8 pm, $42-$320

Join us for the last weekend!

7:00 PM – 8:00 PM

AUGUST 10 + 11

FREE EVENT • wheelwright.org

Over 35 interactive indoor and outdoor exhibits, including , our . portable planetarium

COME PLAY WITH US! 1050 Old Pecos Trail

www.santafechildrensmuseum.org

505.989.8359

Partially funded by the County of Santa Fe Lodgers’ Tax

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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THE CALENDAR Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you. Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly.

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WORKSHOP FAMILY NIGHT POTTERY CLASS Paseo Pottery 1424 Paseo de Peralta, 988-7687 Play in the mud with a local ceramic artist! The cost includes a two-hour class and all materials, clay, glazes and firing. All teachers are volunteers, and 100% of net proceeds go to nonprofit beneficiaries. 6:30-8:30 pm, $75

TUE/13 ART OPENINGS DIEGO ROMERO, CERAMICIST Shiprock Santa Fe 53 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-8478 New and breathtaking works from a Cochiti Pueblo artist. The artist will be in attendance (see SFR Picks, page 17). 2-4 pm, free

DANCE

$

20

By artist

Sienna Luna 30

AUGUST 7-13, 2019

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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 HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200 Locals and tourists alike can learn new things about Santa Fe with a walking tour led by guides from the New Mexico History Museum. Get tickets starting at 10 am from the museum gift shop, and stroll for two hours in the best classroom there is. Kids under 17 are free with an adult; get more info at santafewalkingtour.org. 10:15 am, $15

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METTA REFUGE COUNCIL Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 982-9261 A support group for sharing life experiences around illness and loss in a variety of its forms and in a setting of compassion and confidentiality. 10:30 am, 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 from a juried group of local artists. 8 am-2 pm, free SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET MERCADO DEL SUR Presbyterian Health Park 4801 Beckner Road, The market comes to you for the summer, Southsiders. Get all your favorite produce, local goods, live music, health screenings, family activities and friendship. 3-6 pm, 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. Divide and conquer! Newcomers are always welcome. 9 am, free THE ANTIQUE AMERICAN INDIAN ART SHOW SANTA FE OPENING NIGHT PARTY El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 Don your summer finery on opening night for wine, hors d'oeuvres and merriment. The lineup provides an eye-dazzling education into North American Indian art history learned through the lens of original handmade objects that reflect and express the daily life and culture of Native peoples. The show highlights the artistry, imagination and tribal traditions of historic, largely unknown American Indian artisans and the beauty, inspiration and material resources of the Native landscape. 6-9 pm, $75 ¡VÁMONOS! SANTA FE: LA FAMILIA’S TAKE A WALK ON THE SOUTHSIDE Santa Fe Public Library Southside 6599 Jaguar Drive, 955-2820 The Santa Fe Walking Collaborative, convened by the Santa Fe Conservation Trust, wants to help Santa Feans walk more and improve their bilinguality. Meet at the library and take a walk in the Arroyo Chamiso with a representative from La Familia Medical Center. 6-7 pm, free

FOOD SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 One of the oldest, largest and most successful growers’ markets in the country. Serving more than 150 farmers and producers in 15 Northern New Mexico counties, the Market brings fresh food, education and fun to our community and promotes small farms and sustainable agriculture in Northern New Mexico. Unlike most farmers markets in the US, the Santa Fe market assures that all products sold by its vendors are always locally grown by the people selling them. 100% of the vegetables, fruits and nursery plants available are grown right here in northern New Mexico. The same goes for at least 70% of the ingredients and materials used to make all processed and craft items. 7 am-1 pm, free

MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana from a Santa Fe legend. 7:30 pm, free 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 whose family descended from the inventors of the genre. 7 pm, free DAVID NUNEZ & DIMI DISANTI Tesuque Casino 7 Tesuque Road, 984-8414 Rock 'n' soul 'n' such. 6 pm, free DAVID WOOD Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards, Broadway tunes and classical faves. 6:30 pm, free GARY GORENCE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Classic rock and singer-songwriter jams. 8 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 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 into the wee hours. 9 pm, free


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THE CALENDAR

OPERA

WORKSHOP

COSÌ FAN TUTTE Santa Fe Opera 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 Mozart's 1789 comedy features Ferrando and Guglielmo, happily engaged to Dorabella and Fiordiligi, respectively. When the wily Don Alfonso hypothesizes that all women are disloyal, Ferrando and Gugliemo dress in disguise and set off to seduce each other's lovers. 8 pm, $42-$320

SUDS + MUD POTTERY CLASS Paseo Pottery 1424 Paseo de Peralta, 988-7687 Play in the mud with a local ceramic in a class complete with libations and all materials, clay, glazes, and firing. Teachers are volunteers, and 100% of net proceeds go to Paseo Pottery's nonprofit beneficiaries. 6-8 pm, $75

YOGA IN THE GARDEN Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Stretching, wellness and relaxation in the Garden’s carfully maintained and tranquil outdoor space. Go relieve stress and quiet your mind in a supportive atmosphere with a morning yoga class. The format is a vinyasa flow class that is open to all levels, from beginner to expert. Mats available. 8-9 am, $10-$15

NEW MEXICO

MUSEUMS

THIS SATURDAY!

August 10, 2019

STATE OF NEW YORK FOREST, FISH, AND GAME COMMISSION

CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Judy Tuwaletstiwa: The Dream Life of Objects. Through Sept. 15 GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Contemporary Voices: Ken Price. Through Oct. 23. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Judy Chicago: the Birth Project from New Mexico Collections. Through Nov. 10. IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 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 50 States, 200 Artists. Through Sept. 8. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 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 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

BALLOON FIESTA PARK Noon - 8pm · $5 parking · Entrance is FREE

NO MEDICAL CANNABIS CARD NEEDED! nmh nmhempfiesta.com a.com

Beaver by Ernest T Seton, who celebrates his 159th birthday this week.

Faiths in the New World. Through Oct. 20 NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 The Land that Enchants Me So: Picturing Popular Songs of New Mexico. Through Sept. 29. A Walk on the Moon. Through Oct. 20. The Massacre of Don Pedro Villasur. Through Feb. 21. Atomic Histories. Through Feb. 28. We the Rosies: Women at Work. Through March 1. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 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 Living history. 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. Nina Elder: What Endures. Through Sept. 15. 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.

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MOVIES

RATINGS

Light of My Life Review

BEST MOVIE EVER

10 9

How’s it’s hanging in post-apocalyptia? Tired.

5

8

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

7

Casey Affleck dons his director’s and writer’s caps with Light of My Life, a new film that borrows heavily from The Road … and Maggie … and Children of Men … and even 2013 video game The Last of Us. Affleck is known only as Dad, a man trying to survive during the aftermath of a virus that killed almost all the women on earth except for his daughter, whom he affectionately calls Rags (Anna Pniowsky of Pen15), and who is one of the last females on Earth. Together, they’re headed … someplace for survival reasons, but there are bad guys everywhere who want to kidnap Rags for … other reasons, and there’s only so long she can be passed off as a young boy; there’s a lot of camping and prepping and running away from nameless evil during the pilgrimage to … some place. Setting aside the tired premise of Light of My Life, there are moments of legitimate artistry and excitement. Affleck and Pniowsky do have an unmistakable chemistry, particularly during an

6 5 4 3 2 1 WORST MOVIE EVER

+ CINEMATOGRAPHY;

DECENT TURNS FROM AFFLECK AND PNIOWSKY - LONG-WINDED AND TEDIOUS; TIRED MATERIAL

early-film storytelling scene that near-perfectly encapsulates the parent/child dynamic and proves Affleck can really act from time to time. Elsewhere, tense fight scenes are challenging and ugly, but lop-sidedly exhilarating when they’re presented against the backdrop of long walks. You’ll also find needlessness and no small amount of self-indulgence, from Elisabeth Moss’ two or three barely-there and emotionally manipulative scenes to the many, many times we observe Dad slowly preparing for the worst or proving to Rags he’s a cool, progressive father who will happily answer her annoying youthful questions even as the omnipresent danger lurks nearby. Later, however, we start to wonder if there’s some kind of religious motive as late-film

characters philosophize on God’s plan. These scenes are, thankfully, short-lived before it’s back to the hopelessness, but, sadly, no amount of pretty wintertime panoramic establishing shots can curb the tedium. In the end, there is no particular message or moral, but perhaps Affleck is trying to tell us something about doing our best. He surely did in making in the movie, and while it sure looks nice in quieter moments, it’s not so easy to care. LIGHT OF MY LIFE Directed by Affleck With Affleck and Pniowsky Center for Contemporary Arts, R, 119 min.

QUICKY REVIEWS

6

ONCE UPON A TIME ... IN HOLLYWOOD

7

MAIDEN

8

CRAWL

6

I LOVE YOU, NOW DIE: THE COMMONWEALTH V. MICHELLE CARTER

ONCE UPON A TIME ... IN HOLLYWOOD

6

+ IMMERSIVE SETS AND SEQUENCES - QUENTIN’S EGO INFLATING THROUGH THE SCREEN

You’ve seen the exhaustive ads, right? “Quentin Tarantino’s Ninth Film is finally here!” Period flick Once Upon A Time … in Hollywood barges into the cinemas with loads of panache and style on the surface, but little more underneath. As the swinging ’60s in Hollywood come to a close, actor Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his sidekick, stuntman Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt), contemplate their futures in an ever changing industry—and the business of Rick’s new neighbors, Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate. The film’s brilliance, if it has any, lies with its two leads. Every one of DiCaprio’s scenes are commanding; he chews scenery, upstages elders and literally incinerates people. Pitt is surely in top form as well, moving cooly and confidently from problem to problem. Al Pacino also stands out as an influencer for Rick’s decision to jump on the Spaghetti Western train, but Mike Moh (Street Fighter: Resurrection) as Bruce Lee finds Lee’s accomplishments diminished in service of Tarantino’s creative license. Unfortunately, Margot Robbie’s (Suicide Squad) Sharon Tate suffers from weaker writing than the dude characters, and almost

Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood: You’ve probably called it “brilliant” without really thinking about why despite it being little more than fine. It’s perfectly fine.

4

SPIDER-MAN: FAR FROM HOME

every one of her scenes has her dancing, giving toothy grins, or—ahem—flexing her feet. And nothing else. It’s awkward watching a murdered actress be sexualized, and with the exception of Julia Butters (of TV’s American Housewife) as a fiery young starlet, almost every other woman comes off as an annoyance or an accessory. Tarantino’s themes are consistent, regardless of how you feel about his material. What makes Hollywood’s last act so disappointing, though, is how Rick and Cliff finish their journeys. The explosive climax feels like the result of an “Oh boy am I great!” moment Tarantino had while writing rather than a meaningful conclusion. When Tate or, to a lesser extent, the Manson family are onscreen, they feel like a distraction from the narrative, making the almost three-hour runtime feel tedious; it’s more fun to cruise around the extinct 1960s environment with Cliff, or watch hungover Rick handle another villainous roll on a TV pilot. As usual, Tarantino’s actors give 110%, and that effort can be seen and heard in every single frame. The cinematography is calm and engaging while the hip costumes and production design are loud and meticulous. Even musical selections draw smiles from jams that are as unique as Rick Dalton himself. A great element of Tarantino’s style is how he celebrates the imCONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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MOVIES

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portance of food and drink; it’s fascinating to see distinctions set in Rick and Cliff’s potent potables and snacks once in their own homes. And then, Tarantino is one of the few directors left whose film debuts are still cinematic events. You’ve seen at least one of his nine movies, and can probably list off scenes from another five. But as far as the ’60’s are concerned, truth is still stranger than his fiction. (Matthew K Gutierrez)

Regal (both locations), Violet Crown, R, 161 min.

MAIDEN

7

+ SATISFYING; AMAZING FOOTAGE - SOMETIMES BORING; SOMETIMES RAGE-INDUCING

In yet another in a long line of media offerings that prove how men can be complete trash, filmmaker Alex Holmes’ (House of Saddam) 2018 documentary Maiden comes to the Center for Contemporary Arts this week in all of its inspirational, moving and satisfying glory. Essentially a tale of triumph, Maiden focuses on skipper Tracy Edwards, a British ne’er-dowell who, in the 1980s, fell in love with sailing and set out to prove a crew comprised entirely of women—a first at the time—could compete and thrive in the sailing world, while proving to herself that life is indeed worth living. Facing seemingly insurmountable odds at every turn, Edwards transformed a junker of a boat and an

inexperienced crew into a nautical powerhouse unshackled by society’s notions of proper sailing. And it feels so, so good. Through unbelievably pristine footage from the 1990 Whitbread Round the World Race (that’s 33,000 miles, btw), family photos, interviews with Edwards and her crew, plus news footage, journalistic retellings and eyewitness accounts, a picture slowly unfolds; of a woman who found her passion and blew down the doors of a sport dominated by men—a yacht race clinging to played-out tradition for far too long. The crew of the Maiden wound up inspiring countless fans and proving a little something about how capable women truly are to an entire generation of kids, the affects of which are still felt to this day. At times, Maiden is so uplifting it’s borderline absurd, and the tears come rolling easily as Edwards navigates treacherous waters, flaky funders and her nemeses on the French sailing team. When she becomes the first-ever woman to win Whitbread’s Seaman of the Year awards, the emotion is palpable, both back then and still today. At other times, however, it’s as boring as the doldrums that put Edwards and her crew at a disadvantage during one of the race’s legs all those years ago. But in the end, the sailing itself takes a backseat to the intrepid and unflappable spirit of the women who made history and ensured yachting would never be the same again. (ADV)

CCA, Violet Crown, PG, 97 min.

Boating ain’t easy in Maiden, a 2018 doc finally playing in Santa Fe.

CRAWL

8

I LOVE YOU, NOW DIE: THE COMMONWEALTH V. MICHELLE CARTER + PERFORMANCES; TENSION - DIDN’T SAVE ANYTHING FOR THE END

Thanks to Steven Spielberg, it’s commonplace to find an aquatic horror flick in the summer rotation. Compared to Jaws, however, most are laughable substitutes that wind up shredded by critics and bombing at the box office. Crawl, though, wades through the floating garbage to reveal itself as a worthy exercise in tension and minimalism. Simply put, a college athlete ventures out to save her injured father during a Category 5 hurricane—then realizes a pack of alligators have sized her up for their next meal. Kaya Scodelario (Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales) and Barry Pepper (of Saving Private Ryan) are effectively cast as father and daughter/ childhood coach and swimmer, respectively, and both shine in moments without dialogue thanks to their physicality. Excessive grunting aside, inner monologues are expressed through gestures and eye movements, allowing us to empathize with their pain and anxiety as they’re relentlessly hunted. Stereotypical snarky banter written by horror buffs Michael and Shawn Rasmussen (The Inhabitants) accentuates their presence as capable physical performers by adding chemistry and tenderness. Director Alexandre Aja (that Hills Have Eyes remake and Piranha 3D) shocks anyone familiar with his unimpressive work thus far. It’s hard to imagine this side of him existed this whole time, and he doesn’t waste screen time. Visual clues serve as subplots and climax as Scodelario and Pepper solve debilitating problem after problem. It also seems like Aja preternaturally understands the sacred beatitudes of pacing and shadow—best friends of any capable horror director. But then, instead of exploding, Crawl sputters out in its last 10 minutes, even as seasoned cinematographer Maxime Alexandre (The Nun) effortlessly trails the two leads through flooding crawlspaces, threatening outdoors, unstable houses and even a swimming pool. His unique eye makes it easy to keep track of the action, especially while squirming in your seat. Editor Elliot Greenberg also deserves special recognition, splicing sequences for a rhythm that finesses the terror rather than forcing it, and in a way that offers few respites; be assured that even during a rest there’s no real safety. Sadly, though, the cards are stacked against Crawl thanks to past contributions—and yeah, Aja’s resume is partially to blame. But before considering competitors involving haunted dolls, or worse, Northern European cults, take a chance on this little summer horror flick. It’s so worth it. (MKG)

Regal 14, Violet Crown, R, 87 min.

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AUGUST 7-13, 2019

SFREPORTER.COM

6

+ INTRIGUING; INFORMATIVE - PARTS DON’T WORK WELL

INDEPENDENTLY OF EACH OTHER

In July of 2014, Massachusetts teen Conrad Roy III was found dead by suicide in his truck outside a K-Mart parking lot. This might not sound terribly familiar at first—until we get into the investigation, whereupon detectives uncovered thousands of texts between Roy and his girlfriend Michelle Carter, 17 at the time, who pressured Roy into going through with the act despite his insistence of terror. “Get back in,” Carter texted him after he texted that he’d left his vehicle. He never emerged. What followed was a media storm and a complicated mess of ethics, technology and the secret lives of modern teens. Carter made insidious “Worst People” lists across the internet, parents feared for their own children, and most of America made up their minds with very little information. But it may not be as simple as we’ve been led to believe. In I Love You, Now Die, out now via HBO, filmmaker Erin Lee Carr (Mommy Dead and Dearest) explores the dynamics of the case across two 90-ish-minute episodes. The first focuses on Carter’s actions: How she met Roy, how they quickly developed a deeply intimate relationship via text messaging despite only having met in real life a handful of times, how quickly and horrifyingly they began to feed into each other’s psychoses—and how eerily common that is among today’s youths. We learn the Commonwealth of Massachusetts set out to prove Carter orchestrated Roy’s death as a means to garner attention. It’s compelling evidence and makes sense, particularly through onscreen images of the actual texts between the two, interviews with Roy’s family, cops, journalists who covered the case and courtroom footage. By the end of part one, we’re convinced a manipulative young woman pushed a troubled young man to an early grave to net sympathy friends. Then part two kicks in, and Carr gives us the other side of the story, leading us to question our own conditioned knee-jerk misogyny and the idea that young women are somehow always accessing the depths of cruelty for their own nefarious gains. Roy’s vacillating between love and cruelty via text and his search for someone with the right amount of desperation to support him in his desire to die become startlingly apparent. Carter was, of course, ill-equipped to handle such emotional abuse, and the more pieces that come together, the more we find a young woman clearly in need of help she wasn’t getting and a self-aware young man who found the


FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM

MOVIES

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 2:15p Pavarotti 3:00p Sea of Shadows* 4:45p Pavarotti 5:15p Toni Morrison* 7:15p Sword of Trust 7:45p Sea of Shadows* THURSDAY, AUGUST 8 2:15p Pavarotti 3:00p Sea of Shadows* 5:15p Toni Morrison* 5:00p Who Will Write Our History w/ Judy Tuwaletstiwa & Dyanna Taylor in person 7:45p Sea of Shadows*

The thrill is gone. perfect foil to a plan he’d made long ago. It’s a tough watch to be sure, but I Love You, Now Die keeps us guessing and constantly questioning our allegiances. It becomes hard to know which side to take, though the sad truth is that there really isn’t one. There are no winners and no satisfying answers. And the moral, if there is one, is bleak: It’s harder to be a teen now than ever before. Particularly of note are the interviews with journalist Jesse Barron, who covered the case at the time for Esquire. Still, there’s a certain sensationalism at play that undermines the film’s insistence that the media can twist a story’s facts. When the realties of the situation sink in again after the tone shifts, we’re still left with a dead teen and a very sick young woman who felt so miserably alone, she didn’t know how to speak up when it mattered most. (ADV) HBO, TV-MA, 240 min.

SPIDER-MAN: FAR FROM HOME

4

+ ILLUSION SCENES; PRETTY - NOWHERE NEAR AS FUN AS THE LAST ONE

Whereas 2017’s Spider-Man: Homecoming finally captured the light-hearted aspects of the popular webslinger, Spidey’s newest foray into theaters feels flat, directionless and more like an expected next step rather than a meaningful conclusion to the first big phase of the Marvel cinematic universe. We pick up directly after the events of Avengers: Endgame, and things are finally getting back to normal for Peter Parker (Tom Holland) and his buds. Yes, they explain away the five-year time jump from Endgame as the so-called “blip,” and jokes about how some people aged while others didn’t abound. Meanwhile, Peter and his classmates are off to Europe for a poorly explained “science trip.” Once there, he plans to profess his feelings to MJ (Zendaya, who is just killing in on HBO’s Euphoria right now) atop the Eiffel Tower. Ooh, la la. But whoops–Nick Fury (Samuel L Jackson) and Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders from How I Met Your Mother, in case you just thought “Who the hell is that?”) need Spider-Man to stop a cadre of trans-dimensional elemental beasts who just so happen to also be in Europe, and this one dude Quentin Beck/Mysterio (Jake Gyllenhaal) is there to help out—or is he? And are they? And will he? They? Her? Monsters? Jeeze. Cue explosions and telegraphed plot points far too obvious to even the most casual fan of comics, and within minutes, all the goodwill drummed up by the first film’s better story and the fantastic Michael Keaton is squandered on exhausting comic relief from Freaks & Geeks alum Martin Starr and Curb Your Enthusiasm’s JB Smoove (usually a comic genius, here not as much). On the surface, we’re force-fed that tired old superhero axiom

about how the friends and family of these heroes are always in danger, though why this means Marisa Tomei (a national treasure, and here Peter’s aunt) had to be underused or why we had to sit through Jon Favreau’s “humor” is anyone’s guess. Holland is a fine choice for Spider-Man, all small and dorky, though maybe a little handsome to play nerd. Either way, he’s surely superior to whatever 37-year-old men were playing a teen in earlier films. Still, he doesn’t have much to work with as the script seems aimed solely at 13-yearolds who probably won’t be thrilled about Far From Home’s reductive insistence that they’re a bunch of phone-obsessed assholes who submit readily to co-dependence on their best days and treat each other like shit on their worst. Gyllenhaal does his best, though despite his performance from Nightcrawler a few years back proving he can play terrifying, never comes across as menacing so much as silly and whiny. The thrill is gone, the magic faded and no matter how many times we see Holland’s eyes tear up because, like, he loves so hard and has so much at stake and oh, God, does he miss Tony Stark, it’s simply not possible to summon the feelings needed to enjoy this film. (ADV) Regal (both locations), Violet Crown, PG-13, 129 min.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9 12:30p Toni Morrison 2:45p Light of My Life* 3:00p Pavarotti 5:15p Toni Morrison* 5:30p The Spy Behind Home Plate 7:30p Light of My Life 7:45p Sword of Trust* SAT - SUN, AUGUST 10 - 11 12:30p Toni Morrison 12:45p The Spy Behind Home Plate* 2:45p Light of My Life* 3:00p Pavarotti 5:15p Toni Morrison* 5:30p The Spy Behind Home Plate 7:30p Light of My Life 7:45p Sword of Trust* MONDAY, AUGUST 12 1:45p Light of My Life 3:00p The Spy Behind Home Plate* 4:15p The Spy Behind Home Plate 5:00p Toni Morrison* 7:30p Sword of Trust* TUESDAY, AUGUST 13 2:45p Light of My Life 3:00p The Spy Behind Home Plate* 5:00p Toni Morrison* 5:15p The Spy Behind Home Plate 7:15p Light of My Life 7:30p Sword of Trust*

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

VIOLET CROWN 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678

For showtimes and more reviews, visit SFReporter.com

WED - THURS, AUGUST 5 - 8 1:15p Maiden 3:15p Maiden 5:15p Maiden 7:15p Maiden FRI - SAT, AUGUST 9 - 10 12:00p Maiden 2:00p That Part Feeling: The Universe of Arvo Part 3:45p Maiden 5:45p Maiden 7:45p Maiden SUNDAY, AUGUST 11 9:30a Talk: The Invisible Art: Editing and The Ear 12:00p Maiden 2:00p That Part Feeling: The Universe of Arvo Part 3:45p Maiden 5:45p Maiden 7:45p Maiden MON - TUES, AUGUST 12 - 13 1:15p Maiden 3:15p Maiden 5:15p Maiden 7:15p Maiden

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SFR CLASSIFIEDS EMAIL: classy@SFReporter.com

JONESIN’ CROSSWORD

BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND!

“Kickin’ It Around”—visualize your goals. by Matt Jones

CALL FELINES & FRIENDS

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All four of them can be seen inside our Adoption Center at Petco in Santa Fe. We also have many more kittens available for adoption. Please visit www.fandfnm.org to read all about them.

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52 Positive vote 53 “Barry” network 1 Door piece 56 Canadian beer orders 5 “Good Eats” host Brown 60 Word after trade or credit 10 Geometric art style 62 Pro sports org. with teams 14 Miscellany whose names begin the four 15 Jordan heard in “Toy Story 4” theme entries 16 Island WNW of Molokai 64 Annual June celebration 17 Speedometer locations 66 Leave suddenly 19 Sandpaper grade 67 Like almost all music 20 Song starter 68 ___ noire (fearsome thing) 21 Oktoberfest snack 69 Overly ornate 23 Language suffix 70 “Thong Song” performer 24 2006 Nintendo debut 71 Georgia used to be part of it 26 High-priced Japanese beef 29 Part of the French DOWN Revolution noted for guillotines 34 Brad’s “Once Upon a Time 1 “Hotel Artemis” star Foster 2 Alda and Arkin, for two in Hollywood” costar 35 New Zealander, informally 3 Title that’s usually abbreviated 4 1922 physics Nobelist Niels 36 Workout unit 5 GI’s address 37 Corner office occupant 6 “___ lizards!” (comment 40 Pageant wear from Annie) 42 Kiddo 7 Oreg., formerly 43 Waze, for one 8 “Ye” follower, sometimes 44 ___ Bizkit 45 Intelligence-gathering org. 9 Fit like Russian dolls 10 Folded-over page corner 47 Cheerleader’s equivalent 11 Tea flavored with bergamot to “jazz hands” 12 Life force 51 Willamette University locale 13 On loan

18 Ziggy Stardust’s alter ego 22 Two, to Tom Tykwer 25 Outfielder’s yell 27 Part of NYSE 28 Instinctive impulse 30 Golfer Ernie 31 Giraffe-like creature 32 Christmas tree type 33 Like some country songs 37 Les Claypool’s instrument 38 “___ Gangnam style ...” 39 Tells a secret 41 Global currency org. 42 Steamrolled stuff 44 Life partner? 46 No-___ (gnat) 48 “Are you kidding me?” 49 Where Microsoft trades 50 Polishes 54 Bertie ___ Every Flavour Beans (“Harry Potter” candy) 55 “___ Majesty’s Secret Service” 57 Units with nos. 58 “Star Trek” counselor Deanna 59 Sardine containers 61 Celebrity chef Matsuhisa, or his restaurant 62 Pelicans’ gp. 63 Kids’ card game for two 65 “Xanadu” group, initially

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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ZION and ZANDER were born in foster care along with siblings ZEPHR and ZENAIDA. These adorable kittens are very playful, well socialized and loving. They are three ZANDER ZION months old and need to be adopted in pairs, or adopted with another kitten for companionship. They also could be adopted alone into a home that already has a young cat at home for a playmate.

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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS UPAYA ZEN CENTER: MEDITATION, DHARMA TALKS, SEPTEMBER ECOLOGICAL RETREAT Upaya invites the community for DAILY MEDITATION (schedule online) and Wednesday DHARMA TALKS 5:30-6:30p.m. 8/7 Sensei Alan Senauke and Petra Hubbeling topic “Recipes for Community.” 8/14 Dekila Chungyalpa topic “Restoring Resilience: In Nature, Community & Ourselves.” September 13-15 THE PRACTICES AND PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGICAL DHARMA: Living Systems Theory and spiritual inquiry combine to address these times of ecological challenge. Registrar@upaya.org, Upaya.org/programs,505-986-8518. 1404 Cerro Gordo, SFNM.

MEN’S GROUP: This is a therapeutic support group for helping anyone who identifies as male in working with masculinity, anger, and other issues. Group meets Thursdays from Aug. 8 - Sept. 26, 6:30 - 8:30 pm at Tierra Nueva Counseling Center. Facilitated by student-therapist Carlin Sundell. $10/ session sliding scale. Call 505-471-8575 to register.

Meditation & Modern Buddhism TRAINING IN UNIVERSAL COMPASSION “We need to transform whatever circumstances we meet, whether good or bad, into the spiritual path by channeling all our actions in a virtuous direction. This practice is extremely important. Whoever engages Wellness Mini Conference and in it successfully will never Dinner with Essential Oils have to experience anxiety LIVE YOUR PASSION! or discouragement but will HEAL THYSELF! be able to remain calm and Dear Santa Feans as the peaceful in all circumstances” executive director of Global - Geshe Kelsang Gyatso Rinpoche Relief Resources Inc. We see a Meditative techniques tried and crisis of health. In response we tested for centuries are brought are offering FREE educational alive, made relevant to our mini conferences called “The everyday experience having a Secrets of Self Healing”. remarkable impact on our life. Center for Spiritual Living Receive practical, uplifting 505 Camino De Los Marquez instructions to transform your Santa Fe, NM 87505 Join Young Living Essential Oils, Santa Fe Distributors in sharing the LIVE YOUR PASSION celebration of 25 years of Young Living Essential Oils healing wisdom! Healing Dinner ($13) RSVP: https:// eoilparty.eventbrite.com/

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day-to-day difficulties - including ARTS the most demanding situations into personal and spiritual growth. The heart of Buddha’s teachings is unconditional love and compassion. These classes reveal powerful and far-reaching methods for us to develop these altruistic states. It’s clear now that spending our GreeneFineArts.com lives trying to attain lasting hap206.605.2191 piness by improving external $28K conditions is increasing sufferBronze #1/12 ing, and happiness is decreas2’H x 52”L x 12”W ing. So we need to find a true Bruce LaFountain method that fulfills our wishes. Problems and suffering come from an uncontrolled mind that causes non-virtuous actions. By Training the Mind in Compassion HANDYPERSON we pacify negative thoughts. Nobody wishes for suffering or remains content. We are all the same in wanting happiness. Supreme Dharma is an unsurpassed method that reveals the path to enlightenment. Held at the Zoetic Center 230 St. Francis Dr. Sundays, August 11 - September 8 10:30am - 12:00 $10 Drop-in class JONATHAN THE Sponsored by Kadampa HANDYMAN OF SANTA FE Meditation Center New Mexico Carpentry • Home Maintenance (505) 292 5293 Windows & Doors • Portales Painting: Interior & Exterior Landscaping & Fencing Tile Work • Stucco Repair Reasonable rates, Reliable. Discounts available to seniors, veterans, handicap. Call or Text - 670-8827 www.handymannm.com

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ACUPUNCTURE Rob Brezsny

Week of August 7th

ARIES (March 21-April 19): When it came time to write your horoscope, I was feeling unusually lazy. I could barely summon enough energy to draw up the planetary charts. I said a weak prayer to the astrological muses, pleading, “Please don’t make me work too hard to discover the message that Aries people need to hear; just make the message appear in my mind.” As if in response, a voice in my head said, “Try bibliomancy.” So I strolled to my bookcase, shut my eyes, pulled out the first book I felt, and went to a random page. Here’s what I saw when I opened my eyes: “The Taoist concept of wu-wei is the notion that our creative active forces are dependent on and nourished by inactivity; and that doing absolutely nothing may be a good way to get something done.”

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Old rules and traditions about how best to conduct intimate relationship are breaking down. New rules are still incubating. Right now, the details about how people express their needs to give and receive love seem to be riddles for which there are no correct answers. So what do you do? How do you proceed with the necessary blend of confidence and receptivity? Can you figure out flexible strategies for being true both to your need for independence and your need for interdependence? I bring these ruminations to your attention, Libra, just in time for the “Transforming Togetherness” phase of your cycle.

DR. JOANNA CORTI, DOM, Powerful Medicine, Powerful Results. Homeopathy, Acupuncture. Micro-current SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): It’s time for your once- (Acupuncture without neea-year shout-out to your most audacious possibilidles.) Parasite, Liver/cleansties. Ready? Go ahead and say, “Hallelujah! es. Nitric Oxide. Pain Relief. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In accordance with the Hosanna! Happiness! Hooray for my brilliant Transmedium Energy Healing. astrological omens, I invite you to slow down and cre- future!” Next, go ahead and say, “I have more than enough power to create my world in the image of my Worker’s Compensation and ate a wealth of spacious serenity. Use an unhurried, wisest dreams.” Now do a dance of triumph and Auto Accidents Insurance step-by-step approach to soothe yourself. With a whisper to yourself, “I’m going to make very sure I glint in your eye and a lilt in your voice, say sweet accepted 505-501-0439 things to yourself. In a spirit of play and amusement, pet and pamper yourself as you would a beloved animal. Can you handle that much self-love, Taurus? I think you can. It’s high time for you to be a genius of relaxation, attending tenderly to all the little details that make you feel at ease and in love with the world.

always know exactly what my wisest dreams are.”

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): During the next three weeks, I advise you to load up on copious amounts of caffeine from Monday at 8 a.m. until Friday at 6 p.m. Then drastically cut back on the coffee and consume large amounts of alcohol and/or marijuana from 6:01 p.m. on Friday through 6 p.m. on GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Below are unheralded gifts possessed by many Geminis but not commonly Sunday. This is the ideal recipe for success. JUST KIDDING! I lied. Here’s the truth, Sagittarius: identified by traditional astrologers: 1. a skill for Astrological indicators suggest you would benefit deprogramming yourself: for unlearning defunct from making the coming weeks be the most teachings that might otherwise interfere with your undrugged, alcohol-free time ever. Your potential for ability to develop your highest potentials; 2. a sixth achieving natural highs will be extraordinary, as will sense about recognizing artificial motivations, then your potential to generate crucial breakthroughs shedding them; 3. a tendency to attract epiphanies that show you why and how to break taboos that may while enjoying those natural highs. Take advantage! once have been necessary but aren’t any longer; 4. an CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I don’t presume you ability to avoid becoming overwhelmed and conshould or will gleefully embrace the assignment I’ll trolled by situations you manage or supervise. propose. The task may indeed be too daunting for CANCER (June 21-July 22): In 1993, I began writing a you to manage right now. If that’s the case, don’t book titled The Televisionary Oracle. By 1995, I had gen- worry. You’ll get another chance in a few months. But if you are indeed ready for a breathtaking challenge, erated over 2,000 pages of material that I didn’t like. here it is: Be a benevolent force of wild nature; be a Although I was driven by a yearning to express tender dispenser of creative destruction; be a bold insights that had been welling up in me for a long servant of your soulful dreams—as you demolish outtime, nothing about the work felt right. I was stuck. moded beliefs and structures that have been keeping But finally I discovered an approach that broke me a crucial part of your vitality shackled and latent. free: I started to articulate difficult truths about aspects of my life about which I was embarrassed, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I have cast a feisty puzzled, and ashamed. Then everything fell into place. love spell that will be triggered in anyone who reads The process that had been agonizing and fruitless the first line of this horoscope. And since you have became fluidic and joyful. I recommend that you try done that, you are now becoming even smarter than this strategy to dissolve any mental blocks you may be you already were about getting the most out of your suffering from: dive into and explore what makes you intimate alliances. You’re primed to experiment with feel ashamed, puzzling, or embarrassed. I bet it will the delights of feeling with your head and thinking lead to triumph and fulfillment, as happened for me. with your heart. Soon you’ll be visited by revelations LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I am overjoyed that you’re not about any unconscious glitches that might be subtly competing for easy rewards or comparing yourself to undermining your togetherness, and you’ll get good the mediocre crowd. Some people in your sphere may ideas about how to correct those glitches. Astrological rhythms will be flowing in your relationnot be overjoyed, though. To those whose sense of ships’ favor for the next seven weeks! self isn’t strong, you may be like an itchy allergen; they may accuse you of showing off or acting puffed up. But freaks like me appreciate creative egotists like you when you treat your personality as a work of art. In my view, you’re a stirring example of how to be true to one’s smartest passions. Keep up the good work! Continue to have too much fun! I’m guessing that for now you can get away with doing just about anything you want as long as it doesn’t hurt anyone.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I estimate that about 25 percent of your fear results from your hesitation to love as deeply and openly and bravely as you could. Another 13 percent originates in an inclination to mistake some of your teachers for adversaries, and 21 percent from your reluctance to negotiate with the misunderstood monsters in your closet. But I suspect that fully 37 percent of your fear comes from the free-floating angst that you telepathically absorb VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Let’s enjoy a moment of from the other 7.69 billion humans on our planet. So poignant silence in honor of your expired illusions. what about the remaining four percent? Is that based They were soulful mirages: full of misplaced idealism on real risks and worth paying attention to? Yes! And and sweet ignorance and innocent misunderstandthe coming weeks will be an excellent time to make ings. Generous in ways you may not yet realize, they progress in diminishing its hold on you. exuded an agitated beauty that aroused both courage and resourcefulness. Now, as those illusions dis- Homework: Make a playful effort to change solve, they will begin to serve you anew, turning into something you’ve always assumed you could never change. FreeWillAstrology.com fertile compost for your next big production.

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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LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information call 505-982-8327 or go to www.alexofavalon.com. Also serving the LGBT community.

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SPIRITUAL COUNSELING •ANANDA MAYI• Divine Mother energy Available for appointments *AGING* Soul retrieval - M i s e r y a n d J oy Spiritual healing Bring Purpose and Creativity to Spiritual awakening the late phase of your life! Transpersonal therapy Shanti E. Bannwart - Licensed Holistic health Psychotherapist L.P.C.C and Medical intuitive arts Life-Coach (505) 466-2705 The laying on of hands LivingAsLove.org • 505-501-0501

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Ayurveda looks into bringing balance to the body so that no disease can take over. Astrology gives us your DNA and can easily Diagnose the disease or imbalance. Together the 2 ancient arts can help treat all ailments including CANCER, DIABETES Etc. Power readings 20 min for $15. Please call 505 819 7220 for your appointments. 103 Saint Francis Dr, SF, NM

TANTRA MASSAGE & TEACHING Call Julianne Parkinson, 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional Massage Therapist, & Life Coach

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FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO No. D-101-PB-2019-00144 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF LINDA SUSAN SANTEE LONSDALE, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this Notice if this Notice is given by publication as provided in Subsection A of Section 45-3-801 NMSA 1978, or within sixty (60) days after the mailing or delivery of this Notice for creditors who are given actual notice as provided by Section B of Section 45-3801 NMSA 1978, whichever is later, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at 320 Osuna Rd NE, Unit G-4, Albuquerque, NM 87107, or filed with the Santa Fe County District Court. DATED: July 16, 2019 Robin Sue Hammer Robin Sue Hammer, Personal Representative of the Estate of Linda Susan Santee Lonsdale, Deceased 4004 Ivy Lawn Court NW Albuquerque, NM 87107 (505) 220-8322 KENNETH C. LEACH & ASSOCIATES, P.C. By Sara M. Bonnell Sara M. Bonnell Attorney for Robin Sue Hammer, Personal Representative of the Estate of Linda Susan Santee Lonsdale, Deceased 320 Osuna Road NE, Unit G-4 Albuquerque, NM 87107 (505) 883-2702

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Honorable Raymond Z. Ortiz, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complez, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at 10:00 a.m. on the 6th day of September, 2019 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Rosa Gloria Solano to Rosa Gloria Solano. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Francine Lobato Deputy Court Clerk Submitted By: Rosa Gloria Solano Petitioner, Pro Se

S

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A STATE OF NEW MEXICO PETITION FOR CHANGE OF IN THE PROBATE COURT NAME OF LISA MARIE BUTLER SANTA FE COUNTY Case No.: D-101-CV-2019-01906 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF KENNETH JAMES NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME BICKFORD JR., AKA K. JAMES TAKE NOTICE that in accorBICKFORD, AKA KENNETH dance with the provisions J. BICKFORD, AKA K. JAMES of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. BICKFORD JR., DECEASED 40-8-3 NMSA 1978. et seq. AMENDED the Petitioner Lisa Marie Butler NOTICE TO CREDITORS will apply to the Honorable NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Raymond Z. Ortiz, District that the undersigned has been Judge of the First Judicial appointed personal repreDistrict at the Santa Fe Judicial sentative of the estate of the Complex, 225 Montezuma decedent. All persons having Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico, claims against the estate of at 10:00 a.m. on the 6th day of the decedent are required to September, 2019 for an ORDER present their claims within four (4) months after the date FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Lisa Marie Butler to of the first publication of any Newt Russell. published notice to creditors STEPHEN T. PACHECO, or sixty (60) days after the District Court Clerk date of mailing or other delivBy: Tamara Snee ery of this notice, whichever Deputy Court Clerk is later, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must Submitted by: be presented either to the Lisa Marie Butler undersigned personal reprePetitioner, Pro Se sentative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate STATE OF NEW MEXICO Court of Santa Fe County, New COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grant Avenue, COURT IN THE MATTER OF Santa Fe NM 87501 A PETITION FOR CHANGE Dated: July 24th, 2019 OF NAME OF ROSA GLORIA Sharon C. Bynum SOLANO Signature of personal Case No.: D-101-CV-2019-01899 representative NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME Sharon C. Bynum TAKE NOTICE that in accorPrinted Name dance with the provisions 1189 Old Oak Drive of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. San Jose, CA 95120 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. 408-268-1977 the Petitioner, Rosa Gloria scbynum@comcast.net Solano will apply to the

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