LOCAL NEWS
AND CULTURE
NOV 28-DEC 4, 2018
FOUR ARTISTS MAKE NEW MAPS OF SANTA FE
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NOVEMBER 21-27, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | Volume 45, Issue 48
NEWS Cover #1 by Heidi Brandow
OPINION 5 NEWS 7 DAYS, CLAYTOONZ AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 PRACTICING UNDOCUMENTED 9 New Mexico could become one of a few states to allow undocumented immigrants to practice law
I AM
.
Donald A. Gonzales | Century Bank Board of Directors, Vice Chairman
I have a deep connection to New Mexico’s land and heritage. As a bank director for over 35 years, I strive to build trust and stability in the communities we serve. I AM Century Bank.
Cover #2 by Mya Green
LOOMING PUBLIC PENSION BUST 11 Kiss that possible $2 billion budget surplus goodbye Cover #3 by Yvette Serrano
COVER STORY 12 MAPPING THE DIVIDE The Santa Fe Art Institute kicks off its Story Maps fellowship with a cohort of local artists of color working to change perspective through artistic and non-traditional cartography THE INTERFACE 19 SHOP ‘TIL THEY DROP Amazon’s effect on how we interact with buying stuff—and therefore, how we treat each other
MAPPING THE DIVIDE Find three different covers designed by Story Maps fellows across Santa Fe this week.
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER JULIE ANN GRIMM
CULTURE SFR PICKS 21 Minstrelsy and beasts, magical realism and trash THE CALENDAR 23
ART DIRECTOR ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN CULTURE EDITOR ALEX DE VORE STAFF WRITERS AARON CANTÚ MATT GRUBS
MUSIC 25 AND YOU CAN TOO Wherein our music writer travels to California to shred the gnar A&C 27 DIGITAL UNDERGROUND Digital Artifacts exhibit at Art House is pure fire 3 QUESTIONS 29
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November 28, 2018
Due Date: November 21, 2018 Send To: Anna Maggiore: anna@sfreporter.com
COPY EDITOR AND CALENDAR EDITOR CHARLOTTE JUSINSKI CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEFF PROCTOR CONTRIBUTING WRITERS MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN JORDAN EDDY JULIA GOLDBERG LUKE HENLEY EDITORIAL INTERN SARAH EDDY
WITH TIM REED
DIGITAL SERVICES MANAGER BRIANNA KIRKLAND
ACTING OUT 31
PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER AND GRAPHIC DESIGNER SUZANNE S KLAPMEIER
O MY ENEMY, DO I TERRIFY? Is it a play? Is it a movie? Is it both? SMALL BITES 33
SENIOR ACCOUNTS ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE JAYDE SWARTS
FOOD 35
ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE MARCUS DIFILIPPO CIRCULATION MANAGER ANDY BRAMBLE
NO GLUTEN, NO PROBLEMS Drink and dine when you don’t do gluten
OFFICE MANAGER AND CLASSIFIED AD SALES JILL ACKERMAN
MOVIES 39
PRINTER THE NEW MEXICAN
DRIVER X REVIEW
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Is the new Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center part of your plan? When we built the new Presbyterian Santa Fe Medical Center and our clinic on St. Michael’s Drive, we built them for all of Santa Fe. We wanted to accept nearly all health plans, but some insurers chose not to provide access to our facility for their health plan members through 2019. To receive services at the Santa Fe Medical Center and our St. Michael’s clinic, you might have to change your health plan during open enrollment. When you choose a plan that gives you access to Presbyterian, you get a hospital, an urgent care and a 24/7 ER all in one convenient location. Plus, you get access to our clinic for primary care and other appointments.
Make sure you have access to the choice you’ve been waiting for. Call 505-SantaFe (505-726-8233) for up-to-date information on which health plans contract with Presbyterian.
Call 505-SantaFe
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NOVEMBER 21-27, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
COURTESY SFPD
LETTERS
Mail letters to PO Box 2306, Santa Fe, NM 87504, deliver to 132 E Marcy St., or email them to editor@sfreporter.com. Letters (no more than 200 words) should refer to specific articles in the Reporter. Letters will be edited for space and clarity.
NEWS, NOVEMBER 21: “CITY PAYS $1.4 MILLION IN TWO YEARS FOR CLAIMS AGAINST COPS”
HOLD ‘EM ACCOUNTABLE Police departments must be focused on community safety and ethical conduct. My son, Kerry Lewis, was murdered in Albuquerque in 2009, and unfortunately it involved corrupt conduct by some APD, and cooperation by DA Brandenburg’s crew. ... The tragic shooting of Benavidez reactivated pain because of the casual negligence of St. Vincent’s and the violent overkill reaction of SFPD. ... In August of 2007 my son suffered a breakdown and it took me two attempts to get SFPD to admit him into the psych hold at St. Vincent’s. He was discharged after the hold without support and he broke down again two weeks later in Boulder, where the university helped me to get him proper care. ... So, the way Benavidez was mishandled hit me and the pain his family lives with, too. … Just as APD has had to, hopefully SFPD has improved their handling of mental problem situations. Please keep emphasis and a spotlight upon police accountability, as they are intended to keep community safer, not add to tragedies. …
Media coverage is crucial to ethical policing, and therefore it is threatened by pressures from agencies and even editors. My biggest disappointment and frustration has been the reluctance and refusal of local media to honestly report, so I am grateful for your integrity.
LARISSA LEWIS SANTA FE
EXTRA THOUGHTS WORLD AIDS DAY Consider the fact that 35 million people ... have lost their lives to the AIDS pandemic since 1984. We now have 35.7 million people on the planet living with HIV/AIDS ... including children. Staggering numbers to wrap your head around. The medical truth is that we now have treatments that sustain life for many years and after long periods with antiretroviral treatments prevent passing the virus. Please join us on Saturday Dec. 1 [at the Southwest CARE Aid & Comfort Gala at the Eldorado Hotel] as we honor the fallen with a candlelight commemoration and celebrate the life of those now able to thrive with this disease. You can help, and the Southwest CARE Citizen Advisory Board will help you find your place in the fight.
ANDY STRONG JORDAN CAB OF SOUTHWEST CARE
SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake: editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
SANTA FE EAVESDROPPER “I had to go to the oxygen bar. I had that latitude sickness.” —Overheard from a tourist at a private party “Do you know who that is? It’s Igor Stravinsky. He discovered gravity.” —Overheard from a 5-year-old climbing on Stravinsky’s bust at the opera Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com
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11/19/18 2:11 PM5 NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018
DAYS
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / FUN
STEVE PEARCE MIGHT RUN FOR STATE GOP PARTY CHAIRMAN There Will Be Oil.
CHRISTIAN MISSIONARY KILLED BY ISOLATED TRIBE ON REMOTE ISLAND There’s actually a law protecting the tribe and forbidding entry to the island, but hey … here I come.
TROOPS AUTHORIZED TO USE LETHAL FORCE AT US-MEXICO BORDER, TEAR GAS A BUNCH OF FAMILIES AND KIDS You ever just feel so ashamed of your coun country that you start telling people you’re Canadian?
THE FOOD DEPOT RANKED ONE OF THE NATION’S BEST No jokes—just awesome.
COMPANIES SAY MEDPOT PATIENTS DON’T GET FREE PASS ON DRUG TEST It’s a plant, man. Have some.
oke o sm ow t k . l l a r se P le a u d at wo b tor
-Do c
SANTA FE BREWING CO. LOOKING TO START PRODUCING CIDER SOON No word on whether employers might test for that alongside cannabis.
NASA’S INSIGHT LANDER REACHES MARS Begins mission to act as life raft for stranded astronaut 60 years from now.
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NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018
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SFREPORTER.COM
All are invited to
6401 Richards Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87508
DECEMBER
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Events are free unless otherwise noted.
THE PUEBLO OF POJOAQUE
FEAST DAY,
Empower Students, Strengthen Community. Empoderar a los Estudiantes, Fortalecer a la Comunidad.
2 3 4
5 6 8 10
SUN
MON TUES
Dance and Drama Showcase 7 to 8 p.m. El Museo (555 Camino de la Familia)
501-351-2662
Paramedic Program Graduation 1 to 4 p.m., Health & Science
505-428-1754
SFCC Governing Board Meeting Public welcome. 5:30 p.m., Board Room, Room 223 505-428-1148 Music Showcase 6 to 7 p.m., Jemez Rooms 501-351-2662 Join our end-of-semester concert performed by SFCC Chorus, Voice and Guitar students.
WED
Nurses Pinning Ceremony (Reception follows.) 4 to 6 p.m., Jemez Room 505-428-1323
THUR
Graduation: Spanish Certificate in Early Childhood Development 6 p.m., Jemez Rooms
SAT
MON
PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT PHOTOGRAPHY AND VIDEOGRAPHY ARE PROHIBITED. DEVICES MAY BE CONFISCATED.
505-428-1000
CE/Credit Italy Trip Info Session: Sicily and Beyond 10 a.m., Travel Bug (839 Paseo de Peralta) 505-428-1676 Holiday Arts & Crafts Fair 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Main Hallway 505-428-1675 Respiratory Care Pinning Ceremony 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Health & Science
December 12, 2018
505-428-1754
Fall 2018 Commencement Ceremony Saturday, Dec. 8 • 10 a.m. to noon • William C. Witter Fitness Education Center
T h e p u b lic is in v ite d to a W o r ld A ID S D a y C o m m e m o r a tio n b y C a n d le lig h t S a tu 5 - 6 3 2 1 E n te n e x t
rd a p m W e r th d o
y, D e c e m b e r 1 s t 2 0 1 8 s t S a n F r a n c is c o S tr e e t e c o u r t y a r d b e t w e e n I L V i c i n o & C a s a E s p a ~n a o r to th e E ld o r a d o H o te l
PLUS ... SFCC & HEC will be closed for Winter Break Sunday, Dec. 22, 2018 of the Registrar: 505-428-1264 through Wednesday, Jan.Office 2, 2019. The William C. Witter Fitness Education Center will be closed for upgrades Saturday, Dec. 8 through Sunday, Jan. 13. The basketball courts will be closed from Monday, Dec. 3 through Monday, Feb. 4. Thank you for supporting local bonds to help fund these renovations. Job Club, Résumé Review Days, Free Walk-In Clinics and More www.sfcc.edu/events-resources 505-428-1406 REGISTER FOR COURSES, FIND MORE EVENTS & DETAILS AT SFCC.EDU Individuals who need special accommodations should call the phone number listed for each event.
LEARN MORE. 505-428-1000 | sfcc.edu
W O RL D A I D S D A Y C O M M E M O RA T I O N B Y
CANDLELIGHT
S p e c ia l G u e s t: D r . T r e v o r H a w k i n s , F o u n d e r o f S o u t h w e s t C A RE , S a n t a F e T e s tim o n ia l G u e s t S p e a k e r s Re f r e s h m e n t s a n d c a n d l e s p r o v i d e d S p o n s o r e d b y t h e S o u t h w e s t C A RE C l i e n t A d v i s o r y B o a r d southwestcare.org
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NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018
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PEYOTE BIRD DESIGNS
L I G H T U P YO U R H O L I DAY S E A S O N
EST. 1974
SANTA FE
Cosmic Nights! LIVE MUSIC | FESTIVE BEVERAGES C H I L D R E N ’ S A C T I V I T I E S | M E E T S A N TA !
Holiday Light Display Open Nightly
December 14–31, 5–8pm C L O S E D C H R I S T M A S E V E & C H R I S T M A S DAY
El Foria SATURDAY DEC 15 The Gruve SUNDAY DEC 16 Trio Victoria MONDAY DEC 17 The Adobe Brothers TUESDAY DEC 18 Pete White & Karina Wilson WEDNESDAY DEC 19 B Squared THURSDAY DEC 20 Stephanie Hatfield with special guest Bill Palmer FRIDAY DEC 21 Randy & George SATURDAY DEC 22 Shiner’s Jazz Band SUNDAY DEC 23 The Parson Sisters MONDAY DEC 24 CLOSED TUESDAY DEC 25 CLOSED WEDNESDAY DEC 26 AlmaZazz! THURSDAY DEC 27 Nohe y Sus Santos FRIDAY DEC 28 Half Broke Horses SATURDAY DEC 29 Controlled Burn SUNDAY DEC 30 Bella Gigante with guitarist Mikey Baker MONDAY DEC 31 Children’s New Year’s Eve Party, celebrate midnight at 7pm with Andy Mason! FRIDAY DEC 14
JEWELRY SALES winter | 2018 Friday 11.30.18 Saturday 12.01.18
+
Friday 12.07.18 Saturday 12.08.18
$8 Member | $10 Non-Member Children 12 & under get in FREE Purchase Tickets at santafebotanicalgarden.org 715 Camino Lejo · 505.471.9103
santafebotanicalgarden.org
10 - 5 pm on day of event | 675 Harkle Road, Santa Fe, NM www.peyotebird.com
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NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018
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SPONSORED BY:
ROGER STUTZ & JACQUELINE KROHN • GEMINI ROSEMONT REALTY HUTTON BROADCASTING • BMW SANTA FE • NEW MEXICO ARTS COMMISSION NEDRA MATTEUCCI GALLERY • ENTERPRISE INTERNATIONAL • WHOLE BRAIN DESIGN
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS
Practicing Undocumented Proposed New Mexico rule change would officially allow immigrants to work as lawyers regardless of federal status BY J E F F P RO CTO R j e f f p r o c t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
I
nterpretation and enforcement of immigration laws seemingly change as fast as finicky weather patterns under President Donald Trump and his advisers, mostly a group self-styled “immigration hardliners.” In some cases, the courts have thwarted the administration’s attempts at unilaterally limiting who can enter the United States. Contrarily, Trump, without evidence, continues to tout progress on “The Wall” along the nation’s southern border and, most recently, deployed US military forces to stop what he sees as an “invasion” of migrants from the south. The uncertainty leads to big, philosophical questions on governance such as: How far does presidential power go when it comes to immigration policy? In New Mexico, the charged debate over immigration has raised a narrower question for the state’s legal community. Should people in the United States illegally—regardless of whether they are eligible to hold jobs— be allowed to practice law here as long as they’ve passed the state bar exam? The state Supreme Court is considering the question as a proposed rule change; it’s not clear when the justices will decide. If they adopt the change, New Mexico would join just a handful of states, including New York and California, to explicitly allow undocumented immigrants to practice law after passing a bar exam. A small group of lawyers, led by Albuquerque-based Maureen Sanders, proposed the change. Sanders declined to comment for this story, but Ed Chavez, who retired in March after 15 years as a state Supreme Court justice, was involved with the court’s admissions committee when the proposal came forward. He says the idea was born out of concern over Trump’s
more draconian and fiery immigration rhetoric and policies. “The immigration issue is so volatile these days,” Chavez says. “So these lawyers wanted to protect people in New Mexico who want to be lawyers themselves from whatever might happen at the federal level. … My personal, philosophical response is that we ought to have this. This is a multicultural, multilingual border state. Even for me, I am grateful
Being a lawyer is based on character and skill, not some piece of paper that says you are allowed to be in some place.
for the accident of having been born here. Being a lawyer is based on character and skill, not some piece of paper that says you are allowed to be in some place.” Current New Mexico Supreme Court rules allow US citizens and some people not born in the country—including legal permanent residents and people “otherwise authorized to work lawfully in the United States”—to practice law in New Mexico. The proposed new language is far more expansive, adding: “or an individual otherwise residing in the United States. The Supreme Court may admit an applicant who is not lawfully present in the United States who is otherwise eligible for admission to practice law under this rule subject to the condition that the applicant have a contingent plan in the event of an inability to practice law.” It’s not clear how many undocumented immigrants are practicing law in New Mexico already. The New Mexico Bar Association does not require prospective members to disclose immigration status. (“Undocumented immigrant” can mean
-Ed Chavez
EN A N SO N ST E V
S-BO
LLE
N
NEWS
anything from those who crossed the border illegally to the so-called “Dreamers,” who were brought to the US as children without documentation.) Two women, one of them a Dreamer, have spoken to New Mexico reporters to tell their stories of graduating law school as undocumented immigrants. At least one of them is working here as a defense lawyer, though it appears her status changed just before she was admitted to the bar. “One thing’s for sure: There will be an adversarial response to whatever the court decides on this,” Chavez says “There’s going to be anger either way.” Based on the public comments submitted to the court, Chavez is right. Published on the Supreme Court’s website, the proposed rule change brought more than 120 written comments from lawyers, advocacy groups, law students and others around the state during a comment period that closed in April. That dwarfs the number of comments on other proposed rule changes. And those who wrote in had strong feelings. Albuquerque attorney John Farrow opposes the change, writing that he is “sympathetic to those who are in this state illegally by no fault of their own,” but bethose people should become citizens be fore they’re allowed to practice law. “I do not see how anyone who has failed to become a citizen or legal resident of this country can truthfully or honestly take the attorney’s oath” as required by a different Supreme Court rule, Farrow writes. Stuart Bluestone, a retired Santa Fe proseculawyer who worked 34 years as a prosecu suptor and in other areas of law, writes in sup port of the change, reminding the justices that the principle of federalism allows them to expand rights for people in New Mexico beyond federal interpretations. Bluestone added that the proposed change could result in a more diverse perspective among attorneys and help remedy a “grave injustice” taking place in New Mexico’s federal courts: that some immigrants, including children, do not have adequate access to lawyers in deportation cases. “To the extent this new rule can help corprovide committed lawyers who can cor rect this injustice by serving as needed immilawyers for children and others in immi gration cases, the rule represents sound judgment and should be adopted,” he writes. This story was published in collaboration with New Mexico In Depth, a SFR partner.
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NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018
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NOVEMBER 21-27, 2018
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S FR E P O RTE R .CO M / N E WS
Looming Public Pension Bust
Fixing An $18 Billion Problem
B Y M AT T G R U B S m a t t g r u b s @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
The Problem
Retiree Health Care Authority
• Increase contributions from current employees and employers by 50 percent
$4.5 billion in unfunded liability Expenditures > revenues by 2022
The Solution
Fund depleted by 2037
The Problem
$7.5 billion in unfunded liability 70 years until fully funded
$22.7 million cost to state annually • Example: Employee making $40,000/year pays $200 more
Educational Retirement Board
• Increase employer contributions by 1 percent for three years $81 million cost to state annually
The Solution
• Raise minimum retirement age to 58 (55 now) • Request $248 million to settle pension lawsuit by union
Public Employees Retirement Association
The Problem
W
ith an estimated $1.2 billion available above this year’s budget—and off-the-cuff predictions of maybe $2 billion when a new estimate arrives next month—New Mexico lawmakers might expect their final planning meetings to be lighthearted as they consider an embarrassment of riches. That’s better than a sixth of the state budget, after all. Maybe as much as third. And it’s all ready to spend. One look at almost any public pension fund will cure that optimism. This week, the Investments and Pensions Oversight Committee stared into the gaping maw that is the $18 billion gap between the benefits that public pensions and other programs owe to more than 200,000 current workers and retirees and what they can currently cover. The Educational Retirement Board, the pension for former teachers and other educational professionals, won’t be fully funded for 70 years. For nearly all other public employees from cops to county clerks, their pension’s governing board hasn’t even decided what to do about the problem—one that’s grown by $1 billion just in the last fiscal year. When it comes to health care benefits for retirees, the state’s obligations are $4.5 billion more than its cash on hand. All the while, bond rating agencies— which effectively set the cost for the state to borrow hundreds of millions of dollars each year for firehouses, libraries, senior centers, schools and other one-time expenditures—are watching closely to see if the state can, in the words of a Moody’s ratings analyst, stop “treading water.” The agency downgraded the state’s rating this summer. The longer the state waits, experts say, the more it costs every one of the taxpayers who effectively back the bonds sold for all those projects. It’s not as though New Mexico hasn’t seen this coming, or hasn’t tried to fix it before. In 2010, the educators’ fund stiffened retirement requirements. In 2013, lawmakers and the governor passed a pension reform package that pushed
Retirement for new public employees won’t be as lucrative
• PERA board hasn’t settled on anything
$6 billion in unfunded liability No more than 75 percent funded for next 30 years
The Solution
Cost-of-living increases outpaced actual inflation
Could include: • Freeze cost-of-living increases for three years • $100 million lump sum injection to fund
SOURCE: RHCA, ERB, PERA
back insolvency. But because, at least in part, the reforms impact primarily new employees, it will likely be an estimated two decades before the funds start to see the benefit of the changes. That means the 2013 reform package is working, according to Wayne Propst, the executive director of the Public Employees Retirement Association. The problem, he told legislators, is “getting between here and there over the next 20 years.” Jan Goodwin, who leads the New Mexico Educational Retirement Board, told lawmakers that if the state can shore up the ERB’s fund with a series of changes
designed to get it fully funded in 30 years as opposed to 70, it can make a huge dent in the $50 billion it would cost to cover the gap between contributions and benefits paid out over that period of time. It’s a somewhat complicated equation, but in essence, the more money the state can throw at the problems now, the more time the power of compounded interest and investment earnings will have to shore up the funds. Right now, funds like the ERB aren’t taking in enough money to cover the benefits they’re paying out, as well as to chip away at the multi-billion-dollar deficits they have. So instead SFREPORTER.COM
NEWS
of the problem getting better, it’s getting worse. All the while, bond rating agencies are lurking like a bully around the corner, ready to sock the state’s costs to fund all those school projects and senior centers. To avoid the gut-punch, two of the three funds have proposed changes to retirement rules, with the PERA board expected to recommend fixes after an emergency meeting in December. That’s where all the extra money predicted for New Mexico next year comes in. The Retiree Health Care Authority wants to boost contributions to its fund from public agencies over the next two years. That would ultimately cost $22.7 million per year. While the state does that, it would also ask current employees to pay more to the fund starting in two years. The effect of that change would be enough, the authority predicts, to keep it solvent into the second half of this century. The Educational Retirement Board wants to make a series of changes to bring itself to full funding in 30 years. They include weighting pension benefits toward teachers who decide to stay in New Mexico longer, adding three years to the retirement age at which teachers can quit without losing benefits, and boosting what employers pay toward retirement by 3 percent over three years—thus adding $81 million to the state’s costs every year. The Public Employees Retirement Association is stuck. It still can’t decide what to do. The most likely scenario includes freezing cost-of-living increases to retirees for three years. The fund has been overpaying those adjustments for years, with retirees getting their monthly payments boosted by more than the rate of inflation. The board is also kicking around the idea of asking for a lump sum injection of around $100 million into the fund. Something has to be done, warned Sen. George Muñoz, D-Gallup, or the bond rating agencies will ding the state again. Often, Muñoz acknowledged, the most meaningful changes like reducing costof-living payments or trimming benefits for future public employees are wildly unpopular with workers. What’s more, New Mexico sees the right to a public pension as akin to property rights. A few years ago, the state diverted money designated for pension funds to help patch huge holes in the state budget. The public employees union AFSCME sued, arguing the state infringed on that retirement right. Now, as part of a settlement, the funds are asking for more than a quarter of a billion dollars to be injected back into the retirement accounts.
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T
he field of cartography— the study and practice of map-making—hovers in a murky zone between science and art. A map can record empirical data, from topography to population demographics, but plotting or reading that information is a wildly subjective process. When we examine a visual depiction of a familiar place, it’s inevitably laden with personal memories and communal histories. In other words, no two Santa Feans can read a map of their home in the same way. Early this year, four local artists embarked on a 10-month mapping experiment based on this premise. The project spans neighborhoods and artistic mediums, but it started on a plot of land at the city’s heart that may dramatically shape Santa Fe in the coming years. The property known as the midtown campus has been mapped many times since the Santa Fe University of Art and Design shut down last May. The City of Santa Fe still owns the 64-acre plot off St. Michael’s Drive, so the Office of Economic Development invited architects to develop ideas for what it could become. Five firms overlaid images of the zone with renderings of housing units, shopping malls, community centers, parks and even a new plaza. Meanwhile, Yvette Serrano was perhaps the last person using the campus for what it used to be. She had graduated from SFUAD’s graphic design program in the nick of time, and managed to keep the key to her studio on the southern edge of the property. When the locks were finally changed in response to looting on the shuttered campus, the Santa Fe Art Institute had offered her a fellowship. She got a new workspace right next door. Serrano is one of four participants in the new Story Maps fellowship established by SFAI, a nonprofit arts center with offices on the southwestern corner of the midtown campus. Story Maps invites local creatives—all people of color at an early stretch of their artistic careers—to collaborate with different City of Santa Fe departments and map their community in radical ways. Serrano was paired with the Office of Affordable Housing, so the future of the campus was top of mind when the fellowship began last February. “It’s this void,” Serrano says. She’s looking down at her own depiction of the midtown campus, which is nothing like the jamYvette Serrano packed proposals the city received. subtracted the Serrano’s is a grainy aerial photo of midtown campus from a map of Santa Santa Fe with a lopsided polygon Fe in an artwork excised from its center, leaving a titled “Blueprint.” gaping hole in place of the campus. The property’s “I was thinking about memory,” fate hangs in the balance. she continues. “If those buildings aren’t there tomorrow, we’re still
MAPPING E THE DIVID BY J O R DA N E D DY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
YVETTE SERRANO
FOUR ARTISTS MAKE NEW MAPS OF SANTAFE
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SFREPORTER.COM
Serrano, who worked with the Office of Affordable Housing for Story Maps, points out the central question of her sticky note map: “Home doesn’t have to be a place,” she says.
JORDAN EDDY
going to remember that we went to school over there somewhere.” By manually clearing the drawing board, Serrano calls attention to the politically charged nature of the development effort. The midtown campus isn’t empty land to be sculpted, but a geographically central and historically significant space that sits on a jagged divide of a racially segregated city. It is bordered by traditionally Latinx neighborhoods and a commercial district that’s a constant target for redevelopment efforts. In Serrano’s work, the potential development represents a civic reckoning for Santa Fe. “The main thing for me is that the community—the people who are impacted by all of these things—should have the input,” she says. “How do we get to the people, versus them getting to meetings and all of that? People are not just going to show up.” The Santa Fe Art Institute has emerged as a key player in this conversation: The institute collaborated with City of Santa Fe to solicit the proposals for the property. Executive Director Jamie Blosser and her team sought to elevate multifaceted stories like this as they conceptualized Story Maps. “We all have complex histories and identities, which intersect in places like the campus,” says Blosser. “Sometimes the narratives that we think are related to a place are completely inaccurate. How can [artists] identify the places we inhabit in different ways? How do those places transform us?” Blosser and her team developed the program over a year and a half, and se-
cured funding from the Ford Foundation’s Art of Change to initiate it. They gave each artist a $10,000 stipend and recruited a team of local, established artists to mentor the fellows through the process. The pilot round is nearly complete, and the participants present their projects in an exhibition and open studio this Friday at SFAI. The institute is already looking ahead to the program’s second year: An application for Story Maps 2019 is available at sfai.org, and due by Dec. 7. For this story, Serrano and the other inaugural Story Maps fellows—Mya Green, Terran Last Gun, and Heidi Brandow—designed covers and inserts that offer complex and revelatory visions of Santa Fe.
Economic Development
Just inside the door of the Santa Fe Art Institute’s Lumpkins Community Studio, the headquarters for the Story Maps fellowship, two large maps are tethered together by a river of colorful threads. One is a world map, the other shows the City of Santa Fe. “I asked people to mark where they were born, where they moved here from, and where they live in the city,” says Mya Green, pointing at thumbtacks on each map with strings stretched between them. “As you can see, there weren’t very many people who were from Santa Fe.” Green moved here two years ago from Baltimore, Maryland, so she’s part of that group. She conducted the dual map survey at a Story Maps open studio last summer, and noticed some clear trends in her data.
“Look at this concentration that came from the East Coast,” she says. “And most people who participated now live in midtown. I got almost no one from the Southside, not a lot from the downtown area. I think it speaks to who comes to events like this.” In many ways, Story Maps seems specifically designed for Green. She’s a poet and writer by trade with an MFA from Sarah Lawrence University, and has never lived in one place for more than five years. Her mother is a scholar and university administrator who moved the family across the world throughout Green’s childhood. Green knows how to land in a place, analyze its values and mores, and expose them in concrete poems that are literal and conceptual labyrinths. “With the maps, I’m focused on what will be visually impactful in a curious way,” she explains. “That’s also how I feel about my poems. They’re kind of puzzles.” Green has thus strategized about how to access different sectors of the community. She was paired with the Office of Economic Development, and attended a series of events during which the department solicited feedback from the community about the midtown campus proposals. “They held these things all across the city, and about 100 people showed up per day,” says Green. “Most of those people were over 65, wealthy and white. The city was saying they wanted to cater to 18- to 45-year-olds who will diversify and stimulate the economy, but the data set they put together didn’t represent that at all.”
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Two sides of Mya Green’s dual map survey. The results show where SFAI visitors came from, and where they now live in Santa Fe.
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In an attempt to flip the paradigm, Green initiated an event series designed to attract her own cohort. “What do millennials love? Food and drink,� she says. She planned two brunches under the title Desire Project, asking attendees to map out their hopes and dreams—and challenging them to examine how the rest of the community might be affected if those wishes were granted. “My thing was moving from the personal to the sociocultural to the community context,� Green explains. “Sure, you want your wildest dreams to come true, but what does that mean in the context of your community? If these things are
made available to me, how does that affect another person’s wildest dreams?� At the first brunch, Green ran into a participation problem again. Thirty people signed up for the experience; only 10 showed up. The second brunch had a similar turnout. “I was afraid of that,� she says, “because I didn’t want for the city to say, ‘Well, this is anecdotal and invalid.’� She created another map using the data from the events, marking different places in the community that represent the desires of the participants. The spread is much wider than that of Green’s double map survey, dotting every district of Santa Fe and circling its outskirts.
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Terran Last Gun examines sketches and serigraphs he created in the midst of a 10-month-long conversation with the Mobile Integrated Health Office.
“The people who did come to the brunches came away with a greater cultural understanding of each other,� she says. Green is preparing a dining room installation for this week’s exhibition, in the hope of inviting more people to the table.
Mobile Integrated Health Office
Terran Last Gun moved to Santa Fe in 2012 to study at the Institute of
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American Indian Arts. He graduated in 2016 with a BFA in museum studies and an associate’s degree in studio arts. Now he’s a full-time artist, and mounted his first solo exhibition at the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts earlier this year. He was born and raised in Browning, Montana, on the Blackfeet Reservation. At SFAI, Last Gun’s mapping process started with little clues on scraps of paper. For confidentiality reasons, his project partners at the Mobile Integrated Health Office can only share short passages of their incident reports. “I have to return them when I’m done so they can destroy them,� Last Gun says. He pulls a bundle of reports from his backpack. One reads, “Sister found her brother on the porch shaking after hearing loud thump outside. This caused a 10 mm full thickness laceration over the right eye.� MIHO, which started in 2016 as a pilot program by the Santa Fe Fire Department, takes a systemic approach to emergency response. Mental health practitioners are dispatched on emergency calls alongside firefighters, police and paramedics. Their primary mission, however, is to provide preventative care for citizens who frequently call 911. “Reading the narratives of what they do was totally overwhelming,� says Last Gun. “These stories were an eye-opener for me to learn about the community, and what problems we face that a lot of people don’t really know about.� He continues, “We definitely have similar issues to what MIHO works with,� speaking of his homeland in Montana. “I started learning the dispatch codes that they were using, which I assume are similar for people in my hometown dealing with substance abuse, homelessness and behavioral health issues.� The artist produces a piece of paper with four images printed on it and places it atop the stack of incident reports. The photographs are self portraits that show Last Gun wearing a geometric headpiece
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MAPPING THE DIVIDE
TERRAN LAST GUN
Terran Last Gun’s project used 2017 emergency data from the Santa Fe Fire Department and the Mobile Integrated Health Office (MIHO). The figures represent various codes.
inspired by Indigenous ceremonial dress and minimalist sculpture, and holding a sign with a dispatch code on it. They’re solemn reenactments of reports that resonated with him. A corresponding screen print lists the significance of each code, along with the number of calls the city received for that code in 2017. It looks like the key for a map. “There were 1,304 ‘man down’ calls and 885 ‘psych’ calls,” Last Gun says. “I compared those numbers to building fires, which was only 46.” Early in the fellowship, Last Gun spent
The artist strolls over to a series of drawings pinned to the studio wall. The works use symbols to map out different stages of the emergency dispatch Last Gun witnessed. Circles scattered across the paper represent the shifting positions of the boy, his mother, and the emergency personnel. Red and green lightning bolts that cut across the sketches chart the paths of different responders. Last Gun had never produced work related to social issues before Story Maps, but found a way to adapt his minimal style and create highly unconventional maps. “[MIHO] thinks it’s a great project, and I think it helped [them] see the work they do in a new way,” Last Gun says. “When I first started working with them, they wanted me to create a resource booklet for the department. I was like, ‘I’m not an intern here, I’m an artist fellow.’”
These stories were an eye-opener for me to learn about the community, and what problems we face that a lot of people don’t really know about.
Parks Division
One week before the Story Maps exhibition opening, Heidi Brandow has mostly created auditory maps. She usually works in painting and photography, but the fellowship inspired her to practice her interview skills. Brandow started her process by recording Parks Division employees and community members as they spoke broadly about their experiences in Santa Fe’s parks. (Full disclosure: Brandow shows her artwork at the gallery this writer directs, form&concept, though the work she produces for Story Maps will not appear there.) “Then I was talking to Jamie [Blosser], and she brought up the memorials housed within the parks system,” Brandow says. “I started researching all of these memorials, and broke them down by de-
-Terran Last Gun
10 to 15 hours a week at the MIHO office, but he only got to tag along for one emergency dispatch. “We were checking out the parks, which is where a lot of MIHO’s homeless clients stay, and a call came in,” Last Gun says. “It was a psych call about an 11-year-old boy. Recess had ended, and he was trying to hurt himself because he didn’t want it to end. “It was incredible to see how many resources came,” Last Gun continues. “There were two police vehicles, a firetruck, an ambulance and us. MIHO helped de-escalate the situation, and then we waited until his mom arrived.”
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YVETTE SERRANO
MAPPING THE DIVIDE
HEIDI BRANDOW
mographic information: ethnicity, era, medium, the genders of the artists who were commissioned to do the work.” She wasn’t particularly surprised to discover that a disproportionate number of men have been memorialized—and have created memorials—in the city’s parks. The data she compiled about Indigenous representation was more of a shock. “Of the 65 or 70 memorials that are on the city’s designated list, only four are actually dedicated to Native people,” Brandow says. “The obelisk on the Plaza is one of those four—it’s considered a Native monument. I was like, ‘This is not okay.’” The obelisk in question originally featured the inscription, “To the heroes who have fallen in the various battles with savage Indians in the Territory of New Mexico.” The monument was dedicated in 1868, and though someone chiseled the word “savage” off of the piece in 1974, it’s far from a tribute to Native culture. Brandow is Native Hawaiian and Diné. She spent her early childhood in Hawaii, and attended high school in Santa Fe. She’s lived here off and on for over two decades, but her work with Story Maps radically altered her view of the community. “I like to think that we’re a little more up on stuff than the rest of the country,” Brandow says. “At the end of the day, we’re not talking about it enough, even here. It’s
such a difficult conversation to have, especially if you’re part of a group that’s either the oppressor or the oppressed. How do you start that conversation, and how do you do it in a way that’s respectful and productive?” Brandow’s narrowed the topic of her interview series, asking Santa Feans of Indigenous descent to imagine memorials they’d like to see in city parks, and collected their responses as audio recordings, videos and written letters. One person suggested a memorial to Native captives who were sold in Santa Fe’s slave markets; another suggested a monument to the historic agricultural communities
ABOVE: A photo collage by Yvette Serrano presents a fragmented view of her childhood home, a Zafarano Road trailer park that has since been replaced by a Best Buy. BELOW: Moira Garcia, one of the subjects of Heidi Brandow’s interview series.
of Apodaca Hill. For Story Maps, Brandow is building a website that includes all of the testimonials. As a whole, they present a bold cultural perspective on who— and what—should be memorialized. “I had a gentleman talk about a living memorial to corn, beans and squash, which are plants that were the main source of sustenance for this whole region,” Brandow says. “It was interesting to be reminded that if Native people had more of a voice in this process, that memorials either wouldn’t be in existence, or if they were, they’d be more about place rather than an individual or event.”
Affordable Housing
Yvette Serrano is the only Story Maps fellow from Santa Fe. “When I first interviewed for the fellowship, I talked about all of these memories of different neighborhoods, especially Agua Fría and Siler,” Serrano says. Her mother is from Guatemala and her dad is from Mexico. They met at Jackalope on Cerrillos Road in the 1980s, where she sold her weavings and he dealt Mexican ceramics. When Serrano was a small child, the family lived in a trailer park off Zafarano Road. “It’s where the Best Buy is now,” Serrano says. She pulls out an enormous sheet of paper with family photos from the trailer park running across it. The images are cropped and stitched together, creating a choppy panorama. “There’s no photo of our actual trailer, but this was our neighbor’s,” Serrano says, pointing at one of the images. Like her map of the midtown campus, this piece features a central ele-
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ment that’s both present and missing. Because of her local roots, Serrano says teaming up with the Office of Affordable Housing felt natural. Early in the fellowship, she visited the domestic abuse agency Esperanza Shelter and created a flowchart of the factors forcing battered women and families onto the streets. Later, she began visiting the Interfaith Community Shelter at Pete’s Place on Cerrillos Road. “I’ve been going twice a week for about two months,” she tells SFR. “I go on resource days, which is when a lot of the people go to either shower, get a meal, or go to the closet. That’s where you’ll see everyone in one place.” Instead of producing audio recordings of her conversations in the shelter, she scribbled down quotes and made sure to preserve the anonymity of the speaker. Sometimes no one was willing to talk to her, so she’d sit and sketch people. The materials she gathered became a zine, which she’ll present at the Story Maps exhibition. “In the beginning I thought, ‘What’s the point of doing this? No one trusts anybody. How are we supposed to begin if we don’t even have that?’” Serrano says. “But then, the more I went, it’s gotten a little bit easier. I feel like things can change, and we have that opportunity. It’s just that getting everyone in the same room is so hard.” Perhaps all Santa Fe needs to come together is a good map. STORY MAPS 5:30 pm Friday Nov. 30. Free. Through Dec. 21. Santa Fe Art Institute, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 424-5050
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economic justice is a just transition to what will involve more technologically mediated labor markets and jobs.’ Can you expand on what you’re saying? That part of the project [through the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education] is part of a set of industry studies to get a handle on [what technologies] in the next five to 10 years are coming online, who might first adopters be, and then to try to work with big organizing groups on what kind of policies might help shape these technologies. One of the things the Amazon workers in Minnesota were trying to push back against were very high productivity requirements. If you have a computer setting the standards for how fast you should be picking any set of items, that’s clearly not going to work for every human body. … Bill Gates has proposed a robot tax for every robot that replaces a human. … That’s controversial, but it’s an idea. … If you have a workplace where workers structurally have a voice … you could engage the people who know the most about the work that’s being done. There are creative ways we should be thinking about this so that we’re not saying, ‘Oh my god, the robots are coming, we should get a universal basic income because no one is going to have a job.’ I’m not against universal basic income, but there are lots of other ways we could think about trying to make sure that workers, especially low-wage workers, don’t totally lose out. Sometimes people will say, ‘You’re just against technology.’ I’m not. A lot of us on the left are not against technology, but we’ve seen the ways that technology can wreak havoc for those who don’t have power and are vulnerable.
You were quoted in a disturbing Business Insider story last September that talked about the horrific conditions for the contracted drivers Amazon uses for one-day delivery. Amazon isn’t just becoming this monop-
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#CyberMonday may have passed, but the holiday season is in full force—and with it, the often-invisible impact on workers. Beth Gutelius is a Santa Fe-based senior research specialist at the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois. Her academic and consulting career focuses on urban economic development and the changing nature of employment, with a specific focus on warehouses. The following interview has been edited for clarity, concision and style.
You also were recently quoted in a New York Times story about Somali workers at an Amazon warehouse in Minnesota who successfully negotiated with the company because the negotiating group was so dense Amazon would have had trouble replacing them at peak season. Are there lessons to be learned from that particular situation? For some of the research I do, I talk to employers and people who run warehouses. Everyone says there is a labor shortage, a labor crisis. No warehouse can find all of the workers it needs right now, … so to replace 60 percent of your workforce or some major part of your workforce would be really difficult. In that case, Amazon’s desire to have particular kinds of workers, target particular kinds of workers, is backfiring a little bit. Warehouses in gen-
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BY JULIA GOLDBERG @votergirl
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Labor specialist discusses the unseen workers behind our online purchases
oly behemoth and taking over stores. The biggest work Amazon has done has been cultural. It has raised our expectations as consumers as to when we get stuff. If we’re not going to go and get immediate gratification in a store, then we want it quickly and we want it free. And that’s actually impossible: You have to pay the workers in the warehouse, you have to pay the people delivering stuff. The shift to e-commerce has made it this hidden process and it’s easy to forget that our choices as consumers impact lots of different kinds of workers.
eral have tried to tap pools of disenfranchised workers, whether it’s the former incarcerated, different immigrant populations in that Amazon case, workers with disabilities who have traditionally been iced out of gainful employment their entire lives. Amazon has this CamperForce program where they’re trying to tap into retirees who are going around the country in their RVs … and get them to work in warehouses. They’ve done a lot of ‘innovative’ things and, in this case, they maybe misjudged both the potential for organizing there. … In the end, there’s no
TECH
Great Cities Institute senior researcher Beth Gutelius specializes in urban economic development and warehouses.
silver bullet: The scales have been tipped against workers for a very long time [and] power has been moving toward the direction of employers and the rich for a very long time. You wrote a really interesting piece for Medium last summer on the future of work, including the growth of technology. You wrote: ‘The future of
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FANTASTIC BEASTS We know we just told you all about the Museum of Interactive Art at Shidoni in Tesuque—but this is important! Turns out founder/head art guy Aaron Harrington is keeping the ideas flowing with his Build-a-Beast workshops. Now through Saturday Dec. 22 (and maybe longer), visitors can use countless bits and pieces of forgotten toys to craft their own one-of-a-kind creations—and then, for a mere $2-$5, take them home to keep or gift or whatever. To sweeten the deal, Harrington is offering discounted admission to the museum for those who bring a bag of busted-up toys to be used in the workshops. See? Important. (ADV)
COURTESY CCA
COURTESY MUSEUM OF INTERACTIVE ART
WORKSHOP WED/28
Build-a-Beast Workshop: 9 am-5pm TuesdaysSaturdays through Dec. 22. $5 admission; $2-$5 to keep creature. Museum of Interactive Art at Shidoni, 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, Tesuque, 988-8001.
TOM CHAMBERS
ART OPENING FRI/30 TWO SCENES TWIRLED INTO ONE Magical realism is one of the most difficult literary devices to get right (thanks for setting that bar so high, Gabriel García Márquez)—and accordingly, photography that employs the idea can all too easily slip into the realm of crappy mashup jobs trying to inject fantasy into everyday life. Photographer Tom Chambers is here to show us how it’s done, creating unreal partial narratives in his epic photographs. Getting goats to read books or ravens to perch calmly on folks’ heads is most easily done via Photoshop, so, with great care taken to make sure each piece of his digital photo montages has the same lighting, he takes a month or more to piece them together onscreen. The results are haunting and often confusing— but in a good way. He also signs copies of his new monoprint at the reception. (Charlotte Jusinski) Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones: 5 pm Friday Nov. 30. Free. Through Jan. 5. photo-eye Gallery, 541 S Guadalupe St., 988-5152.
COURTESY RECYCLE SANTA FE ART FESTIVAL
EVENT FRI/30 TRASH TO TREASURE “Trashy” isn’t typically how you want your outfit described, but at the Trash Fashion Show and Costume Contest it’s sort of a given—past years have featured dazzling dresses made of old CDs, tires and Altoids tins. The show is only the start of one of the country’s largest and oldest recycled art market, where more than 100 artists display and sell work made from at least 75 percent recycled materials. Eco-conscious gift-givers can find everything from scrap metal sculptures to vintage tin can earrings. The fashion show starts at 7 pm Friday, and tickets for that are an additional $10-$15—but the art show’s free on Saturday and Sunday. (Sarah Eddy) Recycle Santa Fe Art Festival: 5 pm Friday Nov. 30. $5. 9 am-5 pm Saturday Dec. 1; 10 am-4 pm Sunday Dec. 2. Free. Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W Marcy St., 933-6590.
LECTURE SAT/1
A Sense of History Darryl Lorenzo Wellington on the history minstrelsy and its impact today When Childish Gambino’s video for the song “This is America” was released earlier this year, there was no small amount of dissection of its messaging, and everyone kept coming back to the same thing: Racism and anti-black rhetoric and actions are alive and well in America. And though there is so much to discuss and unpack on the topic, an upcoming interactive talk and reading with local writer, poet and thinker Darryl Lorenzo Wellington takes aim at one specific chapter of America’s history of racism: minstrelsy, an element cleverly portrayed in Gambino’s video. A tragically hurtful and evil form of entertainment developed in the early 19th century, minstrelsy sought, through the perpetuation of dangerous black stereotypes, blackface, misinformation and iconography, to discredit black Americans and otherwise portray them as idiots. It was meant, believe it or not, to be funny. “Minstrelsy by its very nature involves appropriation,” Wellington tells SFR. “They’ll often bring up this recent incident with Megyn Kelly, the journalist who claimed blackface was OK when she was younger—I think such claims are disSFREPORTER.COM
ingenuous; you may not know the exact history, but images have meaning, like a swastika has meaning. It’s obvious these images are very volatile, but we can work through that.” Wellington says he’ll provide events and context from the history of minstrelsy, and that he’ll also read from his poems and essays among some of the works currently on display in the CCA Tank Garage, including paper negatives by David Scheinbaum addressing black culture and racism. “In its own time, minstrelsy was a popular entertainment, and we live with the after-effects of it,” Wellington says. “People have this imagery of the past, that it must have only belonged to the KKK or the hardcore racists, but nothing could be less true. My goal is always the same goal: to have people better understand my perspective.” (Alex De Vore) DARRYL LORENZO WELLINGTON: RACE, STEREOTYPES AND MINSTRELSY 6 pm Saturday Dec. 1. $5-$10. CCA Tank Garage, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338
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WED/28 BOOKS/LECTURES ARTIST TALK: HOLLY WILSON IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Artist Wilson (Delaware Tribe of Western Oklahoma/ Cherokee) beams in via Skype to discuss her exhibition at IAIA MoCNA, which weaves threads of various narratives to create a tapestry that tells stories which are sacred, precious, personal, universal, powerful, and at times volatile. 10:30 am, free FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR TEENS: REALITY FAIR Santa Fe Public Library LaFarge Branch 1730 Llano St., 955-4860 Each teen receives a folder detailing his or her personal information specific to their (as of yet imaginary) career choice. After calculating their take-home pay, create a monthly spending plan and visit booths representing various expenses like food, clothing, housing, transportation, savings and credit. 4:30 pm, free LOO’K CLOSER: ART TALK AT LUNCHTIME Georgia O'Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 A member of the museum’s curatorial department leads an insightful 15-minute discussion of a work of art currently on exhibit. Free with museum admission. 12:30-1 pm, $11-$13
As part of the Baca Street Arts Tour this weekend (Friday from 4-7 pm, 10 am-5 pm Saturday and Sunday from 11 am-4 pm), Gray Matter at 926 Baca St. hosts 15 years of paintings by proprietor Miranda Gray. “Yoda in a Teacup” is one of our faves; the others are just as quirky, delightful and charming.
EVENTS THE ADDICTION GAME Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Apparently, you can learn to kick bad habits via a board game. If you’re intrigued, clinical counselor Craig Thomas McAdams leads a workshop. 5 pm, $10 CARLOS MEDINA'S ALL FIERCE COMEDY SHOW Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 An evening of music and comedy by the local funnyman. 8 pm, $5
CHILDREN’S CHESS CLUB Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Join other kids to play against. 5:45 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Pub quiz! 8 pm, free VINYASA FLOW Duel Brewing 1228 Parkway Drive, 474-5301 One hour of yoga is followed by one of Duel's core beers. 6:30 pm, $15
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free CALVIN HAZEN El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Flamenco and classical Spanish guitar. 7 pm, free ERYN BENT Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Country and folky Americana. 8 pm, free
FULL OWL Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Americana. 7 pm, free GERRY & DAN La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 A unique blend of Irish folk, Spanish tunes and country. 7:30 pm, free MARC SANDERS Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6 pm, free
WORKSHOP BUILD-A-BEAST TOY WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Put a pony head on a Barbie; turn a Hot-Wheels into a mini parade float; give a baby doll action-hero limbs. Once you assemble your creature, you can take it home for between $2 and $5. You can also bring unwanted toys and get admission discounts (see SFR Picks, page 21). 9 am-5 pm, $5 CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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703 Camino de la Familia UNIT 3102 (around back) Santa Fe, NM 87501 In the ArtYard building in Railyard
www. akashastudio .org
200-HOUR
AKASHA
YOGA
TEACHER TRAINING Friday Evenings,
Bi-Monthly Weekends JANUARY THRU JUNE 2019
Cultivating HeartCentered Courage. Committed to Self and Community. Yoga, Dance, Pilates, Ceremony & More.
INTRODUCTION TO ZEN Mountain Cloud Zen Center 7241 Old Santa Fe Trail, 988-4396 Everyone is welcome, newcomers and experienced practitioners alike, to a weekly class that explores the basics and finer points of good posture and finding a comfortable meditation position, plus a chance to go over questions and instruction in Zen meditation. 5 pm, free
THU/29 BOOKS/LECTURES BOOK CLUB FOR GROWN-UPS: A SECRET SISTERHOOD Bee Hive Kid's Books 328 Montezuma Ave, 780-8051 Discuss A Secret Sisterhood: The Literary Friendships of Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot and Virginia Wolf, by Emily Midorikawa and Emma Claire Sweeney. 7 pm, free DAVID ROHR: HOW THE PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS BECAME A MUSEUM New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Rohr, director of museum resources, discusses how the Palace of the Governors, the centuries-old seat of government in New Mexico, became a museum. Show up early at 1 pm to enjoy the History Museum's open house, which goes until 5 pm. 3 pm, free HAMPTON SIDES: ON DESPERATE GROUND Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The bestselling author's new book chronicles unlikely feats of heroism performed by Marines during the Korean War. 6:30 pm, free READINGS IN THE LIBRARY Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 The college library and its creative writing program host a series of readings featuring faculty and students. Today, catch readings from various faculty and staff at SFCC. 5 pm, free
DANCE COUNTRY-WESTERN AND TWO-STEP LESSONS Dance Station 947-B W Alameda St. Show off your best moves at your favorite honky-tonk. All levels welcome. 6:30 pm, $15
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Santa Fe Brewing Company 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Quiz results can win you drink tickets for next time. 7 pm, free
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GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Temple Beth Shalom 205 E Barcelona Road, 982-1376 The Jewish Care Program offers a grief and loss support group for anyone over 18. Register with Ya’el Chaikind at 303-3552. 1-2 pm, free O2 OPEN MIC Santa Fe Oxygen & Healing Bar (Kaverns) 137 W San Francisco St., 986-5037 What do you get when you combine a nice space, good people, creative expressions, a mic 'n' an amp, then throw in some oxygen elixirs? One hell of a mic, that's what. 8 pm, $5
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards, Broadway tunes and contemporary music on vocals and piano. 6:30 pm, free DJ 3D MANNY KARAOKE Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Get the mic. 10 pm, free DAVID GEIST Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards and Broadway faves. 6:30 pm, free DOUBLE O DJS KARAOKE Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Choose your song wisely and croon away. 8 pm, free GERRY & DAN La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Gerry Carthy, local Irish folk music luminary, teams up with his longtime friend Dan McDermott of Albuquerque for a unique blend of Irish folk, Spanish tunes and country music. 7:30 pm, free INNASTATE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Reggae and rock that also honors the band members' Indigenous heritage. 10 am, free JJ RASCHEL AND MYSTIC ROOTS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock, blues 'n' pop with an inspirational tone. 8 pm, free JONO MANSON Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Rootsy rock 'n' roll. 6 pm, free LATIN THURSDAY Café Mimosa 513 Camino de los Marquez, 365-2112 VDJ Dany spins salsa, merengue, bachata, cumbias y más—plus drink specials and bar bites. 9 pm, $5
THE LIVING THING: MEOW WOLF ORIGIN STORY RELEASE PARTY Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Chromeo, Doja Cat, Gilligan Moss and Nick Monaco. 9 pm, $20-$25 OUTBACH FESTIVAL OF [MOSTLY] AMERICAN MUSIC: THE BOSTON SIX PLUS TWO San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 The Concord Trio performs duos by American composers. 7 pm, $15-$25 PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Solo jazz guitar. 6 pm, free RIO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Bossa nova and Brazilian jazz. 7 pm, free
THEATER THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 In Oscar Wilde's popular play, subtitled A Trivial Comedy for Serious People, two young gentlemen create elaborate false lives in order to escape burdensome social obligations. 7:30 pm, $15 THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS SHOW (ABRIDGED) Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 It's the Annual Holiday Variety Show and Christmas Pageant at St. Everybody’s Non-Denominational Universalist Church, and only three folks showed up. Oops. 7 pm, $10-$25
WORKSHOP BUILD-A-BEAST TOY WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Put a pony head on a Barbie; turn a Hot-Wheels into a mini parade float; give a baby doll action-hero limbs. Once you assemble your creature, you can take it home for between $2 and $5 (see SFR Picks, page 21). 9 am-5 pm, $5
FRI/30 ART OPENINGS DAY OF THE DEAD COMMUNITY ART SHOW CLOSING RECEPTION Eye on the Mountain Art Gallery 614 Agua Fría St., 928-308-0319 Pick up personal items such as photos and offerings that you left at the gallery; even if you don't have a trinket to pick up, enjoy live music and refreshments (and art, of course). 5-9 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
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MUSIC LUCIANO MOR
S FR E P O RTE R .CO M /M US I C
Mark Ettingoff (left) locks the beat down while Ivan Antonio (right) shreds during The Bed Band’s set at Gnar Fest.
And You Can Too Yours truly tripped out to LA to find out just how achievable some dreams are BY LUKE HENLEY a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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want to break form for about 800 words this week and level with you. Making music is hard. A lot of times it’s not even fun. And it can be discouraging to put your energy, time and money into what a lot of people are going to tell you sounds like a fun hobby—generally before asking what you really want to do with your life. But a lot of you have been doing it anyway, and many of you have been doing it a lot longer than I have (about 17 years) and, also like many of you, I recently traveled outside the walls of our desert town to see what the far reaches of the United States had to say about my mettle as a traveling musician. In my case, this meant traveling to Los Angeles to play bass and sing backup in Ivan Antonio’s psychedelic pop outfit The Bed Band. The three of us making up Antonio’s live lineup (he performs all instruments and vocals on his recorded material) have individually followed the garage and rock scene(s) for years. Labels like Fullerton, California-based Burger Records and Memphis, Tennessee’s Goner Records, as well as artists like Laguna Beachbased garage rock statesman Ty Segall, have inspired each of us to keep pursuing
gigs that don’t pay and audiences that don’t show up—all with hopes that some day we might be able to set up home recording studios we can also sleep in. Such was the dream of Burger’s sibling label Gnar Tapes, whose founder Rikky Gage invited The Bed Band to play the label’s annual music festival, Gnar Fest. The event’s modest budget had already been fixed, so we would not be paid—and in fact, it would end up costing us money to play for 30 minutes alongside California crushers such as Gage’s party punk band White Fang and the dreamy slack pop act Tomorrow’s Tulips, who were headlining. What else could we do? We took the gig. How did a band from Santa Fe with just over 300 Facebook likes get this invitation? The “no worries, sounds cool” response to the lack of pay helped, but it was thanks mostly to Instagram and Gnar Tapes’ now-defunct weekly livestream Gnar Tapes Gnight Live, which invited weekly music video submissions and featured The Bed Band twice. The label’s social media presence lends a certain approachability, even as it grows and diversifies; Gnar Tapes even worked with Comedy Central recently on the hilarious web series Gnarnia. These musicians have managed to create their own record label and sustain themselves enough to tour extensively in the US and interna-
tionally with several projects, but even after all that, they still seemed to just kind of be guys in a band. That is exactly how it felt being at Gnar Fest. No one was getting famous at the well-attended (but not overcrowded) two-stage affair, but some acts I never thought I’d see live shared the space with me. It felt like a big party—even if tall cans of PBR were $13 each. The Bed Band played early in the evening to a side stage audience of about 20
exemplified the sort of crooning pop at once dripping with irony and stomping on your toes with its earnestness. The performance was generous even while antagonizing, complete with one of the most harrowing trust falls I have ever witnessed and clouds of baby powder coating band and audience alike. Californian singer-songwriter Brendan Sepe’s new band Venetian Blinds set a new bar for low-speed high-intensity lyricism. Sepe’s affecting baritone and commanding presence brought some much-needed pathos to the partying. White Fang closed the night with their recent bizzaro-rock single “Big Silly Baby,” a sort of Zappa-meets-Faith No More hybrid. As the crowd dispersed and we loaded gear into the rental car, I sought out Izak Arida from White Fang and pop ballad mercenaries The Memories (seriously, they’ll write and record a song for you for $100). Arida acted as our sort of rock camp counselor, making sure we were taken care of. As I gave him one last word of thanks, he gave me a brotherly hug, wished us well and asked us to come back sometime. So yeah, it’s hard making music and it can wind up feeling lonely. But you can make the world smaller than it seems. What you don’t accrue in riches you’ll more than make up for with the good things in life—good tunes and new buds.
How did a band from Santa Fe with just over 300 Facebook likes get this invitation? people, and we noticed halfway through our set that LA/San Diego’s Tomorrow’s Tulips were hanging out watching our set with what read to us as enthusiasm. After all, they could have just walked away, and I feel confident that no one playing the early slots at Coachella can expect Radiohead to come check them out. In other words, I will take the downscaling if it means one of my favorite bands hangs out while I play. Other highlights included a set from Chicago’s Jimmy Whispers that
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THE CALENDAR DIGITAL ARTIFACTS Art House 231 Delgado St., 995-0231 Five internationally renowned artists consider digital culture in a fresh way: from the perspective of future archaeologists uncovering its remnants. Through Nov. 30, 2019 (see AC, page 27). 5 pm, free ELLIE DOLGIN AND JAMES ANDREW McCONNELL Shidoni 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Expressive figurative bronze sculptures by Dolgin are paired with narrative and striking photographs from McConnell. 5 pm, free GENE KLOSS: NEW MEXICO ETCHED IN TIME LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta, 988-3250 Over the course of her 70-year career, Kloss (19031996) created oil paintings, watercolors and hundreds of etchings, though she is most known for her etchings of New Mexico. Through Jan. 1. 5 pm, free HARK! HARK! WHERE ART THOU? Cheri O'Brien Fine Art 618 Canyon Road, 425-308-2061 Thomas Dodge presents his photographs of the Santa Fe Plaza Christmas lighting, White Sands and more. Shop for small and large original masterpieces and quality prints for yourself or the collector on your holiday list. Through Dec. 31. 5 pm, free MACROCOSM form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 982-8111 For its first annual Macrocosm group exhibition, jewelers create oversized, wearable art to exhibit in form & concept’s atrium. Through Dec. 31. 5-7 pm, free MICROCOSM form & concept 435 S Guadalupe St., 982-8111 For its the second annual small works group exhibition, the gallery invited all-star artists and designers from its 2018 shows to make works measuring 8 by 10 inches or smaller, to reflect the variety of mediums and messages that graced the walls of the gallery this year. Through Dec. 31. 5-7 pm, free MIRANDA GRAY: NEW & OLD EGG TEMPERA PAINTINGS Gray Matter 926 Baca St., Ste. 6, 780-0316 Gray's paintings are small hyper-realistic portraits of objects and people who she loves. In this 15-year retrospective, held in conjunction with the 16th annual Baca Street Arts Tour, she presents a number of new paintings, along with an overview of the last decade and a half. 4-7 pm, free
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STORY MAPS FELLOWS COMMUNITY PROJECTS Santa Fe Art Institute 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 424-5050 Fellows present their ideas of what Santa Fe looks like in map form. Through Dec. 21 (see cover, page 12). 5:30 pm, free TOM CHAMBERS: HEARTS AND BONES photo-eye Gallery 541 S Guadalupe St., 988-5152 Using magical realism, photographer Chambers inserts fantastical elements into our everyday existence using imagery from the artist’s travels (see SFR Picks, page 21). Through Jan. 5. 5 pm, free
DANCE MARK MORRIS DANCE GROUP Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 The New York-based ensemble fuses brilliantly creative choreography from the vocabularies of modern dance and classical ballet with polished dancing and accompanying musical masterpieces. 7:30 pm, $14-$110
EVENTS BACA STREET ARTS TOUR Baca Street More than 20 artists, craftspeople and groovy shopkeepers showcase their wares and creations. The S'more Pit provides the sugar rush, Santa is available for photos and you can even adopt a pet. Glass-blowing classes and demonstrations go down while you shop. 4-7 pm, free GARDEN SPROUTS PRE-K ACTIVITIES Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Weather permitting, head to the garden's outdoor classroom for a hands-on program for 3-5 year olds and their caregivers. 10-11 am, $5 GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION K.O’NEAL Home Gallery 340 Read St., 214-748-5118 At a new spot to shop for eclectic home accessories, view Texas artist and designer O’Neal’s latest works of art and meet the artist and creator of a worldly collection of artisan textiles and home furnishings, made entirely in the USA—plus enjoy live music, merriment, and local flavor at today's cocktail reception. 4-8 pm, free HOLIDAY SALE Baca Street Pottery 730 Baca St., 204-6346 Shop local for functional and decorative ceramics, including landscape and yard art, raku wall pieces by Ginny Zipperer and functional pottery from gallery owner Andrew Sanders. 4-7 pm, free
JUNE ROSENTHAL: THE TURQUOISE LADY The ART.i.factory 930 Baca St., Ste. C, 982-5000 At an art reception and book signing, 94-year-old Rosenthal presents her memoir featuring illustrations by Santa Fe artist Kathy Hirshon. The evening also features empath and medium Coryelle Kramer, who may be able to help in discovering your spirit guides, past lives or life’s purpose through oracle and tarot cards. 4-7 pm, free RECYCLE SANTA FE ART FESTIVAL Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., 955-6590 It's ecological, it's practical, it's fun. General admission today is $5, and tonight's special reception features the Trash Fashion Show; that's $15-$20 (which includes general admission) at 7 pm (see SFR Picks, page 21). 5-9 pm, $5-$20 SANTA FE WOMAN'S CLUB GIFT FAIR Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 Jewelry, ceramics, textiles, recycled accessories, basketry and so much more. 10 am-5 pm, free TREE LIGHTING CEREMONY Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado 198 Hwy. 592, 956-5700 Check out the swank resort's holiday tree, and take in the Tesuque Elementary School Choir, plus a kid's activity station, festive food and beverages including s’mores, roasted chestnuts, mulled wine and hot chocolate. 6:15-8 pm, free
FILM THE TEACHINGS OF PARAMAHANSA YOGANANDA Santa Fe Meditation Circle 1807 Second St., Ste. 83, 988-4157 In this video recording, Brother Anandamoy (a direct disciple of Yogananda and a widely acclaimed international lecturer) focuses on the core guidance for meditation and spiritual living. The video is preceded by snacks and socializing. Get more info at SantaFeMeditationCircle.org. 6:30 pm, free
MUSIC 4SWING The Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 428-7777 Swinging jazz with Lou Levin on piano, Gayle Kenny on bass, Bob Lennon on drums and Jean McCray on alto sax. 6 pm, $2 BARACUTANGA Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 World music, Latin tunes and sultry South American beat. 10 pm, $5 CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
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Art House’s Digital Artifacts strikes sublime tone between past, present and future BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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was thinking about back when we began with the personal computer, and how it didn’t begin to affect my life personally at all until the 1990s,” says Kathleen Richards, exhibitions manager for Art House, the Carl and Marilynn Thoma Foundation’s gallery space. “That was the beginning of this massive change in our world, our history; we’re moving so quickly, and I’ve thrown away several computers—but should I have? They go from being a useful object to old and redundant to a potentially valuable artifact that might be used to power a work of art or some amazing creation.” This idea permeates Digital Artifacts, Art House’s newest installation from Curator of Digital Art Jason Foumberg, an exquisite merging of fine art and disparate technologies. Small in scope but endlessly exciting, Artifacts is a bit of a mashup of archaeology and anthropology with works making use of current and long-standing tech—think HDTVs, projectors, printing processes and even hand-stitching—for simple yet astounding statements. Take New York City-based artist Michal Rovner, who projects ghostly shadows onto a rock he discovered in his homeland of Israel in “Dahul.” At first glance, the piece looks like motionless and ancient cave drawings, but as the viewer scans its face longer, they’ll notice subtle movements from the figures. “Dahul” is presented within a glass case, a symbol of its importance as artifact, but ultimately playing on our expectations and notions of artistic values.
COURTESY ART HOUSE
Digital Underground
A&C
“There was a group of rescuers who would put water tanks for wanderers who were trying to cross the border, and the flag would let them Nearby, Los Angeles artist Casey know there was water to be found,” Reas’ “Today’s Ideology (28 August Richards says. “It’s like the tenuous2016)” makes use of a sideways hiness of life, and he printed on it a mudef monitor and countless photos sical score—it’s like an abstract piece, strewn distorted across its screen, and the music was created out of and appearing like rapidly evolving ribfor the instruments he’s created with bons of color and grayscale imagery. detritus from the Rio Grande.” “He took one day, one newspaAnd this is just one room, one show. per, The New York Times, and he Elsewhere in Art House are paintdownloaded every image [from the ings from the 1700s, a moving digital paper] that day,” Richards says. “He homage to Andrea Solari featuring took those images and wrote an alLady Gaga, tweaked LED screens, a gorithm that is ever-changing. It massive hybrid photo collage/map of becomes an artifact of who we were San Francisco and, perhaps the crown on that day, and we may recognize jewel of Art House, a small black box some of the images, you may catch theater featuring a wall of screens a glimpse of something you know— playing abridged versions of internabut, essentially, that day, everything tional art films. Users can control the that happened there, is gone.” experience with the provided tablet, Catty-corner across the room is and three minutes inside took us from “Untitled” by Brooklyn’s Josh Tonspolitical statement pieces to an anifeldt. He’s torn apart and rebuilt a himated dance party, from the interior def monitor, exposing the LED lights of a snow globe to what appeared to be within and adding simple sculpture a moving paean to Arcimboldo. in its guts along with a computer-anRichards agrees that it’s often chalimated loop of moments from his lenging to court young folks, but that day. These appear as jet black projecArt House’s quarterly rotations are tions on an otherwise, transparent probably some of the most enticing in screen, and they hit like magic every the city. The collection is astounding couple minutes. Brooklyn artist Josh Tonsfeldt stipped an HDTV monitor in scope and size, and pieces never “Instead of saying, ‘What thing and built up something beautiful for Digital Artifacts. repeat from show to show. Its parent, can I create from these objects?’, it’s the Thoma Foundation, has worked saying, ‘What can I create from ripthem anymore,” Richards tells SFR. “But alongside the Currents New Media ping these materials apart?’” Richin rescuing these little artifacts, she’s cre- Festival annually, and its founder, Carl ards posits. In the low-tech sphere, Los Angeles’ ated something entirely new and lyrically Thoma, is consistently searching out new works across the globe. Sabrina Gschwandtner’s 2014 “Expanding/ beautiful using traditional means.” Rounding out the show is Bay Area “The long game is to have a massive and Receding Squares” toys with our emotions and our perceptions by appearing as a artist and musician Guillermo Galindo’s beautiful and shareable collection,” Richsimple quilt from a distance, but revealing “American Dream Flag” from 2015. A ards says. We like the sound of that. itself to be hand-stitched filmstrips in native of Mexico, Galindo forages along various colors instead. Of all the pieces the Rio Grande river several times a year, DIGITAL ARTIFACTS in Digital Artifacts, Gschwandtner’s flips creating instruments from discarded materials and repurposing otherwise 5-7 pm Friday Nov. 30. Free. the script most surprising and satisfying Through Nov. 30, 2019. forgotten items into visual triumphs. This way. Art House, 231 Delgado St., “Slides are now completely redundant, particular piece—a fragile, fraying flag— 995-0231 and filmstrips like these, you don’t keep has a storied past.
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THE CALENDAR
You’ve got
goals, we’ve got classes
UPCOMING CLASSES:
Financial Fitness for Life
Homebuyer Education
Dec. 15, Spanish, in ABQ Jan. 5, English, in ABQ Feb. 2, Spanish, in Santa Fe Feb. 16, English, in Santa Fe
Dec. 1, Spanish, in Santa Fe Dec. 8, English, in Santa Fe Dec. 8, Spanish, in ABQ Jan. 8, English, in Santa Fe
LUCY BARNA AND TIM ARNOLD Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Americana tunes on the deck, complete with soaring vocals, guitar, banjo y más. 5 pm, free REGIONAL/LIQUID Shadeh Nightclub 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 819-2338 Get two clubs under one roof: Regional with VDJ Dany has your cumbia, huapangos, Norteñas and more; Liquid with DJ Poetics has hip-hop, top 40, dancehall, EDM, reggae, old-school, funk and more. 10 pm, free ROBERT MARCUM AND BRIAN DEAR Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Folk 'n' rock with solid Americana roots. 7 pm, free ROBIN HOLLOWAY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Piano standards. 6:30 pm, free RON CROWDER BAND El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Rock ‘n’ roll and funky covers with Crowder and his all-star buddies Jim Casey, Milo Jaramillo, Lee Taylor and Tomas White. 9 pm, $5 RONALD ROYBAL Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Native American flute and Spanish classical guitar by the six-time Native American Music Award nominee and two-time New Mexico Music Industry Award winner. 7 pm, free
SANTA FE MUSIC COLLECTIVE: JQ WHITCOMB QUARTET Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 Trumpeter Whitcomb plays some jazzy tunes with Brian Bennett (piano), Colin Deuble (bass) and John Trentacosta (drums). For reservations, call 946-7934. 7 pm, $20-$25 THE SANTA FE REVUE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Americana ‘n’ rock ‘n’ roll ‘n’ folks who know how to party. 8:30 pm, free SANTA FE YOUTH SYMPHONY: JAZZ Santa Fe Prep 1101 Camino Cruz Blanca, 982-1829 Celebrate Santa Fe's next musical stars with jazz standards, a tribute to Aretha Franklin, and a student composition by Caleb Schawel. 7 pm, $8-$15 SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Authentic Cuban street music. 8 pm, free SHINERS CLUB Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Ragtime 'n' vaudeville jazz. 6 pm, free SOMO Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 The lord of R&B and harvester of hearts is supported by Johnny Stimson. 8 pm, $20-$25 THE THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Swinging jazz. 7:30 pm, free
COURTESY LEWALLEN GALLERIES
Reach your financial and home buying goals with help from Homewise. We offer FREE Financial Fitness and Homebuyer Education workshops in both English and Spanish to help you proactively manage your money, plan for the future, and make smart home purchase decisions.
BIRD THOMPSON The New Baking Company 504 W Cordova Road, 557-6435 Adult contemporary singer-songwriter—now featuring songs from his new album, Prayer Wheel. 10 am, free BOB FINNIE Fenix at Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Standards, Broadway tunes and contemporary music on vocals and piano. 6:30 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. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free CONNIE LONG AND FAST PATSY Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Rockabilly, country and Western. 10 pm, $5 DYADO, PPOACHER PPOACHER AND TREVOR BAHNSON Ghost 2899 Trades West Road Melodic indie folk-rock 'n' almost-poppy roll from three unique acts, all of whom we are very fond of. Dyado comes down from Maine and the other two are proudly local. 8 pm, $5-$10 JESUS BAS La Boca (Taberna Location) 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Amorous Spanish and flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free
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Visit our website for a complete listing of classes.
Sign up today! Call 983.9473 or register online at homewise.org/register Any 20th-century female artist who went by the masculine version of her name to outsmart The Man is a friend of ours. Gene Kloss did just that. Her works are on view at LewAllen Galleries this month; see full listing on page 26. This is “Penitente Fires” (1939).
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TONIC JAZZ SHOWCASE Tonic 103 E Water St., 982-1189 Get some late-night stylings with host Loren Bienvenu (drums), Robin Holloway (piano) and Jon Gagan (bass). 9:30 pm, free
THE CALENDAR with Tim Reed
THEATER THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 In Oscar Wilde’s popular play, subtitled A Trivial Comedy for Serious People, two young gentlemen in London each live a double life, creating elaborate deceptions in order to escape burdensome social obligations and maintain some balance. 7:30 pm, $20-$25 PHANTOM IN THE THIRD REICH Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road, Ste. B., 992-2588 Albuquerque-based actress and writer Katrina Muldoon, her co-producer Kiko Sanchez, and a large and dedicated cast present a staged version of Muldoon's original screenplay (see Acting Out, page 31). 7 pm, free THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS SHOW (ABRIDGED) Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Just like last year, this romp features the immensely talented Dylan Reilly Fitzpatrick, Mariah Olesen and Koppany Pusztai with music, improvisation and audience participation. 7 pm, $10-$25
WORKSHOP BUILD-A-BEAST TOY WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Why buy impersonal toys for your holiday gifts when you can assemble unique toys from a selection of heads, bodies and limbs? You can also bring used, busted, or otherwise unwanted toys so that they may gain new life in the hands of makers, offering museum discounts in return (see SFR Picks, page 21). 9 am-5 pm, $5
SAT/1 ART OPENINGS BUTTERFLIES, HUMMINGBIRDS AND DRAGONFLIES Singular Couture 66 E San Francisco St., 415-259-9742 To celebrate the season, honor the transformational qualities of hummingbirds, dragonflies and butterflies, all represented on hand-painted silk coats. 2-5 pm, free
COURTESY TIM REED
Painter Tim Reed is a bit of a hippie, but not in an obnoxious way. He’s a lover of nature, animals and psychedelia. Reed is an illustrator, sculptor and painter in tune with the heartbeat of the universe, and though it’s been a year or two since we’ve seen an exhibition from him, we knew we had to chat about his upcoming show Oxagwan alongside Chandler Wigton at Freeform Artspace (5 pm Saturday Dec. 1. Free. 1619 C de Baca Lane, 692-9249). Learn more about Reed and his work at deermit.com, or from the Qs below. (Alex De Vore) How do I pronounce the name of this show? It has a familiarity with octagon. Freeform asked me if I wanted to be in the show, and I’d never met Chandler, but we connected, we hit it off, and we started to come up with a show title, without any foundation for an idea. And I thought it might be cool since me and Chandler don’t have a relationship yet, to maybe use a word that didn’t have a meaning, a made-up word. And actually, I’m pretty sure my wife came up with it. I can’t really remember how it came up, I was just scribbling and doodling words, and she said it or something like it. I told Chandler, and he liked it, and we just rolled with it. Both of us are very comfortable in open processes. And because we didn’t have much time for the show, it made sense to just do stuff. We’re open to the chance happenings of process—things just happen and you go with it.
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Did that idea of openness influence the body of work you prepared for the show? Absolutely. But I don’t think either one of us knows what’s going to be in the show yet. Our plan is just to bring as much stuff as we can and do somewhat of a non-standard installation. We’re going to really freestyle; bring stuff, vibe out. It’s a really interesting cool space. There might be a really small amount of stuff that I’ve exhibited already, but there’s also going to be a lot of stuff that’s brand new. I’ll be painting right up until the opening. It’s going really well. I’ve grown. So when you say you’ve grown… It’s been a great success for me to work at a different pace. The process is all about growing in general. For instance, there are always plants in my studio and caring for plants is a big deal, a huge part of me making art. It’s been a long, long, decades-long process becoming a painter, or to produce paintings as I see myself producing paintings. And it’s not just a relationship with the materials, but with the world. I don’t know how to put it, it’s outside of the language I use—that’s why I put it in a painting and not a book. I hope you can walk up to one of my paintings and get lost, like an old castle in a foreign country where you’re allowed to just wander, and you keep seeing things you don’t recognize or that you never thought of until just then.
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THE CALENDAR HOLIDAY SMALL WORKS SHOW City of Mud 1114A Hickox St., 954-1705 Listen to electronic harp by composer Roark Barron while you shop a variety of smaller, affordable artworks. Through Dec 29. 1-5 pm, free LARRY LEICHLITER Chuck Jones Studio Gallery 126 W Water St, 983-5999 Along with showcasing artwork from Peanuts, this show features many rare original production cels and concept drawings done by Chuck Jones himself. Through Jan. 2. 3-7 pm, free MIRANDA GRAY: NEW & OLD EGG TEMPERA PAINTINGS Gray Matter 926 Baca St., Ste. 6, 780-0316 Gray's paintings are small hyper-realistic portraits of objects and people who she loves, ranging from dog portraits to portraits of Yoda in teacups to vintage tools. 10 am-5 pm, free OXAGWAN Freeform Artspace 1619 C de Baca Lane, 692-9249 Artists Chandler Wigton, who uses collage, painting and drawing to contemplate the intangible and the scientific, and Tim Reed, who's known for his borderline psychedelic abstractions, present their works (see 3Q, page 29). 5-7 pm, free
December 2018 EVENTS ALL EVENTS AT 6:30PM
UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED (SUBJECT TO CHANGE)
For the month of December, in the CW Gallery, renowned photographer Gene Peach will exhibit photos that appear in Los Luceros New Mexico’s Morning Star, authored by Michael Wallis
COLLECTED WORKS IS HERE FOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY GIFT NEEDS!
T U E S D AY, D E C E M B E R 4
66 on 66: A Photographer’s Journey by Terrence Moore W E D N E S D AY, D E C E M B E R 5
Homelands: Four Friends, Two Countries, and the Fate of the Great Mexican-American Migration by Alfredo Corchado in conversation with Report From Santa Fe television host, Lorene Mills SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9 @ 4-5:30 PM
YOUNG ADULT BOOK CLUB:
City of Saints & Thieves by Natalie Anderson MONDAY, DECEMBER 10
The Song My Enemies Sing by James Reich, introduction and Q&A with Santa Fe author and educator Julia Goldberg THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13 @ 6 PM
10TH ANNUAL HOLIDAY PLAYERS:
Ali MacGraw, Bob Martin, Carol & Jim McGiffin, and Jonathan Richards entertain us with this Holiday tradition, reading stories and poems written by Kenneth Grahame, Damon Runyon, Dylan Thomas, Dr. Seuss and more! SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22 @ 9:30 AM
OPERA BREAKFAST SERIES:
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Verdi’s La Traviata with lecturer Robert Glick
WINTER HOURS: MON-SUN 8AM-6PM 30
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BOOKS/LECTURES CUTTING THE WIRE: PHOTOGRAPHS AND POETRY FROM THE US-MEXICO BORDER Garcia Street Books 376 Garcia St., 986-0151 Photographer Bruce Berman and poets Ray Gonzalez and Lawrence Welsh offer a new view of our southern border. 5 pm, free DARRYL LORENZO WELLINGTON: RACE, STEREOTYPES AND MINSTRELSY Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Wellington shares excerpts from his work on minstrelsy, the social contexts that produced minstrel shows, and the ongoing impact of minstrelsy (see SFR Picks, page 21). 6 pm, $5-$10 JACLYN ROESSEL: CURATING CULTURE: DECOLONIZATION AND INDIGENOUS REPRESENTATION IN MUSEUMS SITE Santa Fe 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 An examination of the tensions present within the museum field and how, with further dedication to decolonized practices and inclusion of Indigenous voices, museums can see a future with meaningful participation by Indigenous excellence. 2 pm, $5-$10
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NOT EXACTLY EXQUISITE: POETRY GAMES AND PARLOR TRICKS Community Gallery 201 W Marcy St., 955-6705 Tired of Cards Against Humanity and charades? Snooker everyone into writing poetry with three easily mastered poetry games. Learn more from renowned local poet Jon Davis. 1-3 pm, free
DANCE NOCHE DE FLAMENCO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 EmiArte Flamenco presents a performance with dancer La Emi and members of her company. Reservations are needed for this puppy, so call in. Pay cash at the door; seating's at 5 pm. 7 pm, $20
EVENTS BACA STREET ARTS TOUR Baca Street More than 20 artists, craftspeople and groovy shopkeepers showcase their wares and creations for holiday shopping for the 18th annual event. Santa is available for photos, and glass-blowing classes and demonstrations go down while you shop for jewelry, paintings, gems, tools, cups, photos, beads and clothing. 10 am-5 pm, free BORDER PARTNERS HOLIDAY SALE St. Bede's Epicscopal Church 1601 St. Francis Drive, 982-1133 Gift items made of colorful oilcloth and denim (including aprons, tote and cosmetic bags, tablecloths, placemats, backpacks and laundry machine covers) created by women who live in the town of Palomas, Chihuahua, Mexico, benefit the makers directly. For more info, visit borderpartners.org. 1-5 pm, free CANINE CHRISTMAS Santa Fe Home 530 S Guadalupe St., 930-5956 Bring your (friendly and on-leash) dogs for dog-friendly holiday shopping and treats for all. Photo session gift certificates and pet-friendly home goods make for unforgettable holiday gift ideas. 10 am-2 pm, free EL MUSEO WINTER MARKET El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 Part fine arts market, part flea market, all full of treasures. 8 am-3 pm, free ELDORADO WINTER FEST Agora Center 7 Avenida Vista Grande, Eldorado Check out activities, food, an art show and live music with all your neighbors. 10 am-5 pm, free
HOLIDAY BAZAAR Zia United Methodist Church 3368 Governor Miles Road, 471-0997 Meet local arts and crafts vendors, get a cinnamon roll while they last, nosh on Frito pie starting at 11 am, and check out the White Elephant table too. 9 am-2 pm, free HOLIDAY SALE Baca Street Pottery 730 Baca St., 204-6346 Functional and decorative ceramics, including landscape and yard art, raku wall pieces by Ginny Zipperer and functional pottery from gallery owner Andrew Sanders. 10 am-5 pm, free MADIRD CHRISTMAS PARADE Hwy. 14, Madrid Celebrate the season in Christmas Town. Llamas, vintage cars, multiple Santas and music are sure to please. Arrive early to park, stay late for dinner and drinks. 4 pm, free PING PONG & PINTS Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 If you're an expert, find your peers to compete against—if you're not, there's also a casual/beginner group, and two days of matches. 10 am-5 pm, free RECYCLE SANTA FE ART FESTIVAL Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., 955-6590 Art born of other's trash—or a clever reuse of things that might otherwise be landfilled (see SFR Picks, page 21). 9 am-5 pm, free SANTA FE ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Market Street at Alcaldesa Street, 310-8766 Find pottery, paintings, photography, jewelry, sculpture, furniture, textiles and more. 8 am-2 pm, free SANTA FE WOMAN'S CLUB GIFT FAIR Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 Get your locally made goods. 10 am-5 pm, free WELLS PETROGLYPH PRESERVE PUBLIC TOUR Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project 1431 Hwy. 68, Velarde, 852-1351 Docents lead visitors through an insightful two-hour tour. Pre-register online at mesaprietapetroglyphs.org. 9:30-11:30 am, $35 YOUNG NATIVE ARTISTS WINTER SHOW & SALE New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Begin collecting art, jewelry, pottery and more from the next generation of Native American artists and craftspeople associated with the Palace of the Governors’ Portal Program. 10 am-3 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 32
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O My Enemy, Do I Terrify?
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BY C H A R LOT T E J U S I N S K I c o p y e d i t o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
in the film, but it doesn’t need to be two scenes onstage. Additionally, Muldoon mined the film acting community in Albuquerque for the large cast, and some of the performers were clearly not as used to performing onstage and lacked the volume necessary to fill the performance space. But ultimately, any reservations I had about the transition from screen to stage and back again were overshadowed by the engrossing story and remarkable dedication Muldoon, Sanchez and their huge team gave the project. As the story tumbled along, it perhaps jumped the shark a few times, but Muldoon assures me later it’s still in development and after every performance they tweak lines or shift bits of the story. (I can’t voice my biggest hang-ups without spoilers, so I’ll just let you guess them when you see it.) While the depictions of white-knuckle train rides in first-class cars with Nazi officers are engaging and flashy, perhaps most fascinating—both for Muldoon and for audiences—are the resulting musings on the things we do to save ourselves. The struggles against racism and oppression by other people make for the framework of this story, but the internal conflict Strauss encountered and the guilt she faced for the rest of her life, until her death in 1996, lend the character and her story even more depth. There’s an entirely separate review to be written here, of course, about Muldoon’s aforementioned Gentile background and the steps she and the cast took to respectfully depict a Jewish woman, as considwell as Muldoon’s own carefully consid ered reasons for devoting so much of her life to a story that, in many ways, is not hers to tell. (Notable, too, is Muldoon’s prominent use of lines from “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath, almost self-referential regarding the appropriation conflict.) The universal humanness of Marianne’s struggle is what drew Muldoon in, though, and what makes the production fascinating no matter who you are; the clipping combination of epic poem, feminist antimythology and grisly history lesson is worth all 200-plus minutes.
resident of Albuquerque via the versity, discovered Strauss’ story through stages of Los Angeles, relatively the hefty biography A Past in Hiding by recent New Mexico transplant Mark Roseman. The story consumed Katrina Muldoon presents what could be Muldoon’s life; while not of Jewish ancesone of the most ambitious performance try herself, she felt a deep connection to a undertakings in town this year: Phantom woman finding a way to survive in a world in the Third Reich is part staged reading, ruled by men, and the conflict Strauss felt part play, part screenplay, part multime- about her methods of survival. dia presentation, and entirely engrossing. Before the Strausses were deported, The story, which Muldoon referred Marianne’s wealthy businessman father to as “the film” throughout the evening, donated great sums of money to the Nazi is told via actors on the stage, a narrator party in hopes of leniency; her family even setting the scene and projected pages of inquired about joining the party so that a storyboard. Muldoon and co-produc- their lives would be spared. This saved er Kiko Sanchez have every intention of them until August 1943, but ultimately turning the piece into a finished feature Strauss was the only member of her famifilm, and these staged productions are a ly not placed on a transport to Auschwitz. result of Muldoon’s intense champing at She was able to escape her home as the the bit to get the story into the world. The performance is about two and a half hours, and with a talk-back afterward, the evening ran about four hours long—which meant, at a performance earlier this month at a church in Albuquerque, audiences didn’t leave until nearly 11 pm. The energetic story, however, made it bearable. A fictionalized account of a real life, Phantom shows how Marianne Strauss, a young woman from a well-known Jewish family in Essen, Germany, survived for two years during the Holocaust by charming and seducing the Nazis that were hunting her. Not only did she play her “woman card” and bat her eyelashes, but Strauss sometimes went so far as to suggest she was a spy who reported directly to Hitler, and she’d tell the Führer if his SS officers were behaving badly. Actress and writer Katrina Muldoon (right) presents Phantom in the Third Reich, the opus she considers her life’s Seven years ago, Muldoon, work, on stage for now—but get ready to see it on a big screen at some point, too. while a student at Stanford Uni-
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COURTESY KATRINA MULDOON
ACTING OUT
armed SS guards directing them to pack their belongings momentarily stepped out of the room. (Sounds like something Muldoon made up for the movie; is actually true.) Indeed, even I find myself calling it “the movie” or “the film” when I think about it. It was dressed in a play’s clothing, but was not a play. Sometimes it worked; the use of projected drawings of how the scene will appear onscreen was a nice illustrative element when paired with actors on a stark stage. Sometimes, however, it hovered in a weird place between staged reading and full production that left me scratching my head. When I asked Muldoon why she didn’t make a play a play and a movie a movie, she (perhaps defensively, but reasonably so) countered that she spent 13 months writing this version of the screenplay, and that surely turning it into a script could take the same amount of time over again, if not longer. That’s much more time than she wants to spend on what is perhaps just a transitional period for the story. And it wasn’t that it didn’t work; but certainly there were moments it could have been easier to watch and to perform. For example, near the beginning, the narrator reads, “The gestapo boys aim their guns”—and the two actors onstage (you guessed it) aim their guns. Or, when Marianne arrives at a neighbor’s door, and a few-second “scene” onstage of her standing at the door is followed by a blackout, then the next “scene” shows her sitting in the living room—why not just walk in and sit down? Yes, it will be two shots
THEATER
PHANTOM IN THE THIRD REICH 7 pm Friday and Saturday Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. Admission by donation. Wise Fool New Mexico, 1131 Siler Road; phantomthirdreich.eventbrite.com
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THE CALENDAR FOOD SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Not only the place to see and be seen in Santa Fe, this is one of the oldest, largest and most successful growers’ markets in the country. Fill up on locavore delights. 8 am-1 pm, free
MUSIC
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Family-friendly healthcare across the life span Accepting all insurance plans. Sliding-fee discount program available.
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. Vive la révolution! 6 pm, free FIRE SATURDAYS Shadeh Nightclub 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 819-2338 VDJ Dany spins cumbia, reggaeton, bachata, salsa y más, while in the other room DJ 12 Tribe has your hip-hop, top 40, EDM, R&B and more. 10 pm, free THE HIGH DESERT PLAYBOYS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Original ‘n’ classic country ‘n’ Western. 8 pm, free J REYNOLDS AND THE HIGH VIBES Tumbleroot Brewery & Distillery 2791 Agua Fría St. Psychedelic funk rock. 8 pm, free JEFF MIX & THE SONGHEARTS The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 557-6182 Rootsy and thoroughly American rock 'n' roll. 6:30 pm, free JOE WEST Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Alt.country on the deck. 3 pm, free KARAOKE Golden Cantina Lounge 10-B Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3313 Ask the bartenders for the "Karaoke Kourage" drink special to get you started. 9 pm, free MARIACHI CHRISTMAS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Enjoy folklorico dancers and a holiday music program in English and Spanish at the concert that's become a Santa Fe tradition. This one tends to sell out, so get your tickets early—and, as ever it's presented by the National Latino Behavioral Health Association. 7 pm, $20-$40
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OUTBACH FESTIVAL OF [MOSTLY] AMERICAN MUSIC: THE CONCORD TRIO San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 Pianist Donna Coleman, violinist Endre Balogh and cellist Antony Cooke perform trios by American composers. 7 pm, $15-$25 PIGMENT AND PHERKAD Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Pigment is an eclectic group that explores a fusion of original rock and other music genres (jazz, Latin, country, reggae) through organized improvisation; they're joined by Pherkad, supplying even more stoner-rock. 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 YOUTH SYMPHONY: ELEMENTARY STRINGS AND PRELUDE STRING ORCHESTRA James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Celebrate Santa Fe's next musical stars. 3 pm, $8-$15 SAVOR La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Cuban street music. 8 pm, free SEVDA CHOIR St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 The 16-member choir performs winter songs of the Balkans and Eastern Europe, the Black Sea Region, and the Mediterranean, compelled by the close harmonies, vocal acrobatics, intricate rhythms and deep storytelling found in the music from these regions. 7 pm, $10-$20 THE SOUTH AUSTIN MOONLIGHTERS Kitchen Sink Recording Studio 528 Jose St., 699-4323 A who’s-who amalgam of Austin-based musicians delivers its own unique brand of Americana music, recorded live at this show. 7:30 pm, $20 ST. RANGE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock 'n' roll, outlaw-style. 8:30 pm, free STANLIE KEE AND STEP IN Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Blues 'n' rock. 1 pm, free
VAIVÉN GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St. Jazz and flamenco. 7:30 pm, $20
THEATER THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 In Oscar Wilde's popular play, two young gentlemen in London each live a double life, creating elaborate deceptions in order to escape burdensome social obligations and maintain some balance in their lives. Dress your best and arrive at 6:30 pm for an opening weekend reception in the lobby. 7:30 pm, $30 PHANTOM IN THE THIRD REICH Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road, Ste. B., 992-2588 The mostly true story of Marianne Strauss, a Jewish woman who survived the Holocaust by hiding in plain sight and seducing Nazis as she rode trains from safe house to safe house (see Acting Out, page 31). 7 pm, free THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS SHOW (ABRIDGED) Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 It's the Annual Holiday Variety Show and Christmas Pageant at St. Everybody’s Non-Denominational Universalist Church, and only three folks showed up. It's on them, then, to perform every holiday story they can think of to their best of their ability. 7 pm, $10-$25 YOUTH SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL SANTA FE Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Students from a number of local schools have been brushing up their Shakespeare; they present scenes from a number of plays throughout the installation. Free with admission. Noon-5 pm, $17-$25
WORKSHOP BUILD-A-BEAST TOY WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Why buy impersonal toys for your holiday gifts when you can assemble unique toys from a selection of heads, bodies and limbs? Also, bring your used, busted, or otherwise unwanted toys so that they may gain new life in the hands of makers, offering museum discounts in return. 9 am-5 pm, $5 HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN PLANT-BASED GIFTS Stewart Udall Center 725 Camino Lejo, 983-6155 A hands-on workshop gets you a salve, deodorant and lip balm. 10 am-noon, $35-$40 CONTINUED ON PAGE 34
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@THEFORKSFR
The little building on the corner of Guadalupe Street and Montezuma Avenue has been a lot of things over the years. But with Paloma, it has finally become the upscale neighborhood restaurant that feels like a home. Nothing is forced here, perhaps because it seems owner Marja Martin has considered everything. The Mexican restaurant is not too loud, nor is it whisper-quiet. You can hide in a corner of the bar or dine in the open with friends. There’s no part of the menu that gets short shrift. Cocktails are elegantly crafted, highlighted by the pisco sour ($9) and an old fashioned that uses vanilla cherry bark bitters instead of Angostura ($11). It’s creative, but not overbearing. So, too, with the three different ceviches ($14-16) and a trio of taco options (all $6) that come on hand-pressed tortillas. Vegetarian options appear at nearly every turn. Chef Nathan Mayes’ entrees begin with squash blossom enmoladas ($20), in which the tortillas are dragged through a tangy mole before being rolled. The braised short ribs ($24) come with an elote torte, while the terrifically flavored sea bass ($26) is offered Veracruz-style, with tomatoes, olives and mojo verde. It may be a bit painful for Santa Feans to know Martin and Mayes have roots in Texas, but they have long connections to New Mexico—and we don’t still care about that, do we? Take a spoonful of that ceviche before you answer. (Matt Grubs)
Jambo Café The warm welcome at this locals’ favorite starts with the greeting “jambo,” and does not end until the door swings shut on the way out. Find African and Caribbean fare with clean flavors and ample portions at the restaurant that rebounded strongly after a driver plowed through its front window last year. You’d never know, as the plates come as effortlessly from chef Ahmed Obo’s kitchen as they have since he opened in 2009. For starters, the cinnamon-dusted fried plantains come sizzling hot with a tangy curry pineapple dipping sauce ($5.95). Entrees run the gamut from simple to elegant, starting with goat stew and finishing with the likes of seasoned mahi-mahi grilled in a banana leaf and topped with chunky mango tamarind sauce ($16.95). The moist, mildly flavored fish dish comes with sauteed bok choy and wild black rice that’s tender and chewy. We appreciate Jambo’s attention to detail in the rice department. Whether it’s this version or the fragrant basmati rice that comes with many other dishes, it will be done right. The combination plate ($14.95) is a great place to start, since it arrives with the bone-in goat stew with its gamey richness and herbaceous notes, a portion of chicken curry in a coconut-based spicy sauce, and a pile of coconut lentils. Just try to leave room for Jamaican rum pie for dessert ($5.95). (Julie Ann Grimm)
Piccolino As we plunge chunks of bread into a bowl of marinara, it sinks in: This menu is actually a book. Our red table wine arrives in an old-school tumbler. It’s gone, and the bread and the sauce much diminished before we finally decide what to get. If your family can’t find something to choose among this bible of comfort food, it hasn’t got a prayer. You’d have to faithfully dine here each night for a year to try it all. Readers voted Piccolino the best Italian restaurant in the most recent Best of Santa Fe poll, and that’s for good reason. Any night of the week, you’re likely to find it bustling, and proprietor Olga Tarango-Jimenez is likely to be right in the middle of it. Unbeknownst to us, we ordered the dish on the menu that’s named after her. Olga’s favorite pasta hit the spot with a combination of large chunks of roasted eggplant and a generous mound of goat cheese ($11.50). We also had to get a plate of the sausage ravioli with spicy red cream sauce, knowing full well we were taking some home in the ubiquitous foil pan with a cardboard lid. Kid-friendly and multi-generational, the restaurant also has gluten-free pasta and pizzas, a drive-through window, and checkered tablecloths for the win. (JAG)
401 S Guadalupe St., 505-467-8624 Dinner daily palomasantafe.com
2890 Agua Fría St., 505-471-1480 Lunch and dinner, Monday-Saturday piccolinosantafe.com JOY GODFREY
These restaurants also appear in SFR’s recent 2018/19 Restaurant Guide. Find pickup locations at SFReporter.com/pickup.
DECEMBER FREE LIVE MUSIC
30 1 1
Saturday Friday
AT THE ORIGINAL
SHINERS CLUB Vaudeville & Ragtime / FREE
THE BARBWIRES Blues & Rock, 7 PM / FREE
AT RUFINA TAPROOM Saturday
2010 Cerrillos Road, 505-473-1269 Lunch and dinner, Monday-Saturday jambocafe.net
JOY GODFREY
JOY GODFREY
Paloma
SMALL BITES
PHERKAD / PIGMENT Rock, 7:30 PM / FREE SFREPORTER.COM
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THE CALENDAR NATURE AND IMAGINATION: MODERN STILL LIFES Georgia O'Keeffe Museum 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Georgia O’Keeffe felt it was important to look closely at the natural world; Jo Whaley’s photographs seek a similar response. Take an intimate look at these artists’ perspectives, then create your own collaged still life. 9:30 am-12:30 pm, $27-$40
SUN/2 ART OPENINGS MIRANDA GRAY: NEW & OLD EGG TEMPERA PAINTINGS Gray Matter 926 Baca St., Ste. 6, 780-0316 Gray's paintings are small hyper-realistic portraits of objects and people who she loves; in this 15-year retrospective, she presents a number of new paintings. 11 am-4 pm, free MOUNTAIN MAGIC Jemez Fine Art Gallery 17346 Jemez Springs Plaza, Jemez Springs, 575-829-3340 Head to the co-op gallery to find gift-priced paintings, prints, mixed media, sculpture and photography by local artists from the Jemez area. Through Jan. 31. 1-4 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES
Word. SFR’s Writing Contest Winners
READ their short stories and essays.
FREE | 6 PM | FRIDAY, DEC. 7 at Collected Works 202 Galisteo St, Santa Fe, NM 87501
JOURNEYSANTAFE: MIRANDA VISCOLI Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The leader of New Mexicans To Prevent Gun Violence is joined by student activists (high school seniors seniors Hannah Laga Abram, Sophie Lussiez and Julia Mazal) to give more info about gun violence prevention legislation. 11 am, free NANCY MARSH PRICE: RANCHO DE VALENTINO op.cit Books DeVargas Center, 157 Paseo de Peralta, 428-0321 Price offers her memoir on the struggles of a family moving from the safety of a Michigan lifestyle to the hardships of rural New Mexico. 2 pm, free
DANCE BEGINNING SALSA CLASS Dance Station 947-B W Alameda St. Drop in to try your hand (or feet and body, as it were) at some salsa dancing. 5 pm, $12 SUNDAY TANGO Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 Santa Fe Tango presents its last milonga ever at Rufina. Come at 1 pm for a class, then dancing starts at 2 pm. 1-5 pm, $4-$15
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EVENTS ARTIST DEMO: NINA SANDERS Museum of Indian Arts & Culture 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Get a last look at Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West (it closes at the end of this year) and check out a beading demonstration by Sanders (Crow). Free with museum admission, and admission is free today for New Mexicans. 1-4 pm, $6-$12 BACA STREET ARTS TOUR Baca Street Glass-blowing classes and demonstrations go down while you shop for jewelry, paintings, gems, tools, cups, photos, beads and clothing. 11 am-4 pm, free CHANUKAH ON THE PLAZA Santa Fe Plaza 100 Old Santa Fe Trail At the festive annual celebration for anyone and everyone, light the giant menorah with Mayor Alan Webber, enjoy live music with Los Klezmerados, check out a trapeze acrobatic show with the great Aerial Aura, and get your fill of latkes, Chanukah gelt and hot chocolate. 3-5 pm, free EL MUSEO WINTER MARKET El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe 555 Camino de la Familia, 992-0591 Part fine arts market, part flea market, all full of treasures. 9 am-5 pm, free ELDORADO WINTER FEST Agora Center 7 Avenida Vista Grande, Eldorado Check out activities, food, an art show and live music with all your neighbors. 10 am-5 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK Desert Dogs Brewery and Cidery 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 307, 983-0134 Pub quiz! 7 pm, free HOLIDAY SALE Baca Street Pottery 730 Baca St., 204-6346 Functional and decorative ceramics, including landscape and yard art, raku wall pieces by Ginny Zipperer and functional pottery from gallery owner Andrew Sanders. 11 am-4 pm, free LEARN TO MEDITATE Zoetic 230 St. Francis Drive, 292-5293 Explore the peace of meditation with teachings, contemplations and discussion, and by meditating on Lamrim. 10:30 am-noon, $10 PING PONG & PINTS Second Street Brewery (Rufina Taproom) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 If you're an expert, find your peers to compete against—if you're not, there's also a casual/beginner group too, and two days of matches. 10 am-5 pm, free
RECYCLE SANTA FE ART FESTIVAL Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., 955-6590 Art born of other's trash—or, if you rather, a clever reuse of things that might otherwise be sitting in a landfill someplace (see SFR Picks, page 21). 10 am-5 pm, free SANTA FE WOMAN'S CLUB GIFT FAIR Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 Jewelry, ceramics, textiles, recycled accessories, basketry and so much more. 10 am-5 pm, free SUNDAY RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 A unique opportunity to enjoy local art and music inside (no blustery breezes here). 10 am-4 pm, free YOUNG NATIVE ARTISTS WINTER SHOW & SALE New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Begin collecting art, jewelry, pottery and more from the next generation of Native American artists and craftspeople associated with the Palace of the Governors’ Portal Program. 10 am-3 pm, free
FILM KODACHROME Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Set during the final days of the admired photo development system known as Kodachrome, a father and son hit the road in order to reach the Kansas photo lab before it closes its doors for good. Screen the Netflix film in 35 millimeter, followed by a Q&A with director Mark Raso. 5 pm, $9-$11
MUSIC BAILE DOMINGUERO Golden Cantina Lounge 10-B Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3313 Get dancing to the best cumbia, Norteña, pasito satevo and reggaeton tunes with DJ Quico. 9 pm, free GARY GORENCE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Classic rock and singer-songwriter jams. 8 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Flamenco guitar. 6 pm, free LONE PIÑON Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Ranchera, cumbia and Norteño swing on the deck. 3 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 36
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@THEFORKSFR
No Gluten,
B&B stands for bread and butter, but don’t let the name fool you—this hidden gem of a bakery boasts plenty of gluten-free and vegan options. Owners Sky and Amanda Yang originally hail from Korea, and they bring a worldly, open-minded approach to their baked goods. These feature a uniquely East Asian stamp, frequently using ingredients like condensed milk, bean paste and rice flour. The latter is used to make the gluten-free and vegan
Y
For the gluten-challenged who crave a cold one, there’s no better place to scratch that itch than at Second Street Brewery’s Rufina Taproom. Among the regular taps are a spectrum of beers with gluten removed, a process that uses enzymes to extract any gluten particles from the beer after brewing. These are precipitated out along with the yeast cells used for fermentation. Every batch is lab-tested to ensure it These ginger banana contains less than one cardamom waffles from part per million of the Love Yourself Café are offending double protein gluten-free—and amazing. after processing. The resulting beer comes closer in taste to the real thing than any of the dupes out there brewed with alternative grains, and Second Street features around four gluten-removed options, available at $5 a pint. The Kolsch is a light, crisp style of beer with a touch of fruitiness that drinks like a lager, and the Rod’s Best Bitter is a stronger, pale ale style that packs more of a punch. But if you’re craving a more assertive-
But what to do if you have a gluten allergy and you feel like you can’t even look at another green juice or rice bowl without gagging—what about when you’re craving straight-up baby back ribs, or a big juicy burger? Enter the Ranch House, a Santa Fe staple that offers a selection of downand-dirty comfort food with a surprising soft spot for its more food-sensitive customers. The restaurant is owned by Joshua Baum, formerly of Josh’s BBQ, whose parents are gluten-intolerant, and he’s carefully crafted a wide range of options on the menu. Everything out of the smoker is gluten-free, as is the house barbecue sauce, and gluten-free buns are available upon request for the burgers. Smoked options include the brisket plate ($14) which is smoked for 18 hours and comes either moist or lean, the pulled pork plate ($12), the half chicken ($14) and plenty of combination options. Prices are eminently reasonable for Santa Fe-style dining, and portions are so large it’s almost impossible to eat it all in one sitting. There are even a few gluten-free desserts, such as the bourbon vanilla creme brulee ($5.95), a decadent treat of caramelized sugar topped with fresh berries. RE
The restaurant extension of Light Vessel spa is a total celiac-safe space. Everything the café serves is gluten-free, including the pastries baked in-house using a mixture of coconut, almond and rice flour. The menu is a veritable ode to food sensitivities, containing a range of vegan, vegetarian and paleo options. From the grainless hearty skillet ($11) of sweet potato, kale and sautéed vegetables, to the lemon pancakes ($12, available at brunch) topped with strawberries, banana and coconut, there’s plenty of hearty, coldweather-friendly comfort food to go around. For liquid refreshment, choose
THE RANCH HOUSE 2571 Cristo’s Road, 424-8900 11 am-9 pm Sunday-Thursday; 11 am-10 pm Friday and Saturday
DF
LOVE YOURSELF CAFÉ DeVargas Center, 199 Paseo de Peralta, 983-5683 8:30 am-7 pm daily
SECOND STREET BREWERY (RUFINA TAPROOM) 2920 Rufina St., 954-1068 11 am-midnight daily
B&B BAKERY 38 Burro Alley, 213-369-1604 8 am-5 pm Monday-Friday; 8 am-6 pm Saturday
GO
I
nclusivity is the great cultural zeitgeist of our time, whether it be in terms of politics, entertainment, art or even food. There are more dietary restrictions to cater to than ever before, and plenty of Santa Fe restaurants rise to the challenge. Being a picky eater in the City Different isn’t really so hard if you know where to look. In particular, the gluten-intolerant are blessed with an array of options to satisfy every urge, from the health-conscious to the indulgently decadent, from vegetable bowls to baby back ribs. Below is a cheat sheet of the top places to hit up when you’ve got a health condition of the celiac variety, or if you’re a dilettante looking to lay off the wheatbased treats for a while.
ly hoppy and citrusy flavor, try the 2920 IPA ($5.75 a pint) made from seven different varieties of hops. It’s highly aromatic, with plenty of bold fruit and bitter flavors, that won’t lead to any bloating or brain fog after drinking it—unless you have one too many, that is.
Y
BY MARY FRANCIS CHEESEMAN a u t h o r @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
from a range of smoothies, juices and elixirs designed to detoxify and cleanse. The food options were designed to work synergistically with the treatments offered at the accompanying spa, but given the convenient location, you don’t need to sit down for a full massage to pick up a cup of golden milk-infused bullet coffee ($8) while you’re on the go.
chiffon cakes, dense yet fluffy confections that come in flavors like red velvet, mocha and green tea, iced with a frosting made of almond and rice flour. The Yangs also make a gorgeous selection of jewel-toned macarons, which are a traditionally gluten-free treat made from almond four, one of many of a rotating selection of gluten-free cookies featured in the bakery. B&B is well worth navigating the trial of parking downtown to satiate a highly particular sweet tooth.
JO
A cheat sheet for where to go for the gluten-intolerant
No Problems
FOOD
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THE CALENDAR THE PALM IN THE CYPRESS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Old-timey country music from the Appalachians and the blues from the Delta. Noon, free SANTA FE YOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Celebrate Santa Fe's next musical stars with Mozart, Tchaikovsky and Verdi, Lennon-McCartney and Copland. They’re joined by dancers from the New Mexico School for the Arts. 3:30 pm, $8-$15 SANTA FE YOUTH SYMPHONY: INTERMEZZO STRING AND YOUTH PHILHARMONIC James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 Even more tunes from the young virtuosos. 1 pm, $8-$15 SANTA FE YOUTH SYMPHONY: MARIACHI ENSEMBLE James A Little Theatre 1060 Cerrillos Road, 476-6429 ¡Y más! 6 pm, $8-$15
THEATER THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 In Oscar Wilde's popular play, subtitled A Trivial Comedy for Serious People, two young gentlemen in London each live a double life. 2 pm, $20-$25 SANTA FE IMPROV: THE PROGRESSION Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 As with all improv shows, there’s a 50 percent chance this show will be good, a 25 percent chance it will be great, and a 25 percent chance it will be total crap. This one’s for folks 18 and up. 6 pm, $10-$15 THE ULTIMATE CHRISTMAS SHOW (ABRIDGED) Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 Parkway Drive, 629-8688 It's the Annual Holiday Variety Show and Christmas Pageant at St. Everybody’s Non-Denominational Universalist Church, and only three folks showed up; featuring the talented Dylan Reilly Fitzpatrick, Mariah Olesen and Koppany Pusztai. 3 pm, $10-$25
WORKSHOP MAKING HISTORY: BLOCK PRINTING New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Learn about block printing and print out your own patterned wrapping paper. Free with museum admission, and admission's free for New Mexico residents today. 1:30-3:30 pm, $6-$12
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MON/3 BOOKS/LECTURES JUST BREATHE: TALKS AND MEDITATIONS ON BREATH Eldorado Community Center 1 Hacienda Loop, Eldorado, 466-4248 Learn about the awareness of the breath and how conscious breathing can be a tool. 11 am, free SOUTHWEST SEMINARS: SMITTEN BY STONE: HOW WE CAME TO KNOW AND LOVE THE GRAND CANYON Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Wayne Ranney, geology educator at the Grand Canyon Field Institute, lectures as part of Southwest Seminars' Mother Earth and Father Sky lecture series. 6 pm, $15
EVENTS SANTA FE INDIVISIBLE MEETING Center for Progress and Justice 1420 Cerrillos Road, 467-8514 Join the politically progressive group for occasional guest speakers, discussing your concerns and group activism. 7 pm, free
FILM VICTORIA Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 New Mexico PBS presents a screening of the first episode of season three of Victoria. 7 pm, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana. 7:30 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Do some Queen. 9 pm, free JAMIE RUSSELL Chili Line Brewing Company 204 N Guadalupe St., 982-8474 Americana, pop and rock. 7 pm, free
TUE/4 BOOKS/LECTURES TERRENCE MOORE: 66 ON 66: A PHOTOGRAPHER'S JOURNEY Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Terrence Moore has photographed Route 66 for more than 40 years; his new book highlights 66 of his best images of the iconic road. 6:30 pm, free
THEATRE LOVERS CLUB: THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Director Barbara Hatch and several cast members discuss the rehearsal process, the style of the play, costumes, sets, and what this play has to say to us now. 6 pm, free
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Put on your best tango shoes and join in (or just watch). 7:30 pm, $5
EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 This pub quiz can win you drink tickets for next time. 8 pm, free NEW VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION Stewart Udall Center 725 Camino Lejo, 983-6155 Interested in volunteering at the garden? Get started at a monthly introductory training for prospective volunteers. 10 am-noon, free PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY OF SANTA FE MEETING St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-5397 Join your fellow photophiles for discussion on craft and practice. Bring up to five images for peer review. 6:30 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. Newcomers always welcome. 8:30 am, free SANTA FE NOW MONTHLY MEETING Del Charro 101 W Alameda St., 954-0320 Head to the back room of the bar for the local chapter of the National Organization for Women’s monthly meeting. 6:30 pm, free
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Honky-tonk and Americana. 7:30 pm, free BLUEGRASS JAM Social Kitchen & Bar 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 Yup. It's a bluegrass jam. 6 pm, free THE BUTTERTONES Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Music-school misfits present tunes made for swampland or for the eternal night city of garbage men and werewolves. 7 pm, $13-$15
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CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Sign up to sing or play. 8 pm, $5 DAN LAVOIE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Acoustic rock 'n' roll. 8 pm, free SOUND FREAKS Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 Students from the community college perform original electronic music created using music software programs. 7 pm, free
THE CALENDAR
THE TEN TENORS Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 One of Australia’s most famous musical exports returns to the United States— and they're donating a chunk of proceeds from their new album, Our Christmas Wish, to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. The personable performers playfully blend rock, pop and opera for numbers both traditional and unique. 7:30 pm, $39-$65
WORKSHOP BUILD-A-BEAST TOY WORKSHOP Museum of Interactive Art 1508 Bishops Lodge Road, 988-8001 Why buy impersonal toys for your holiday gifts when you can assemble unique toys from a selection of heads, bodies and limbs? Put a pony head on a Barbie; turn a Hot-Wheels into a mini parade float; give a baby doll action-hero limbs. You can take your creature home for between $2 and $5. 9 am-5 pm, $5
Adopt Me please! Santa Fe Animal Shelter 100 Caja Del Rio Road, Santa Fe, NM 87507
505-983-4309
sfhumanesociety.org
Thich
Spot
COURTESY MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE
MUSEUMS Thich is a one-year old domestic short haired Siamese cat. He came to our shelter because his owner could no longer care for him. Thich weighs about 9 pounds, which we think is an excellent weight for him. He has been undergoing daily socializing, as he has had a rough time getting comfortable in his new environment. Come in and meet with him today! Thich’s adoption fee is $70 and he is already neutered, has a microchip and age appropriate vaccinations. He also comes with 30 days of pet health insurance and a free bag of cat food. SPONSORED BY
Beadwork artist Nina Sanders (Apsáalooke) demonstrates her craft at the Museum of Indian Arts and culture this weekend as part of the last month of Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West. (These Mescalero Apache moccasins aren’t her work, but they’re in the exhibit.) See full listing on page 34. CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Three Image Makers. Shelley Horton-Trippe: A Greater Sublime: 8 Poets / 8 Paintings. The Wanderer: The Final Drawings of John Connell. All through Jan. 6. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Jo Whaley: Echoes. Through Feb. 24. The Candid Camera. Through April 22. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, 575-758-9826 Peter Chinni: Inside/Out. Pop Chalee: Blue Flower Rooted. Through Jan. 13. The Legacy of Helene Wurlitzer: Works from the Harwood Collection. Through May 5. IAIA MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ARTS 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Holly Wilson: On Turtle’s Back; Rolande Souliere: Form and Content. Both through Jan. 27. Darren Vigil Gray: Expanding Horizons; Meeting the Clouds Halfway. Both Through Feb. 16. Action/ Abstraction Redefined. Through July 7.
MUSEUM OF ENCAUSTIC ART 632 Agua Fría St., 989-3283 National and international wax artists. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Stepping Out: 10,000 Years of Walking the West. Through Dec. 30. Maria Samora: Master of Elegance. Through Feb. 28. What’s New in New: Selections from the Carol Warren Collection. Through April 7. Lifeways of the Southern Athabaskans. Through July 7. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Beadwork Adorns the World. Through Feb. 3, 2019. Crafting Memory: The Art of Community in Peru. Through March 10. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 GenNext: Future So Bright. Through March 29. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 The Land That Enchants Me So: Picturing Popular Songs of New Mexico. Through Feb. 28. Atomic Histories. Through May 26. On Exhibit: Designs That Defined the Museum of New Mexico. Through July 28. The First World War.
Through Nov. 11, 2019. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Good Company: Five Artists Communities in New Mexico. Through March 10. Shots in the Dark. Through March 31. Wait Until Dark; Night Life Imagination Station. Both through April 21. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Closed for renovations. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 In T’owa Vi Sae’we. EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 Closed for the season; to reopen June 1, 2019. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Dan Ostermiller: Gardens Gone Wild! Through May 11. SITE SANTA FE 1606 Paseo de Peralta, 989-1199 Casa Tomada (House Taken Over). Through Jan. 6. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 LIT: The Work of Rose B Simpson. Through Oct. 6.
Meet Spot! He is a handsome pooch who weighs 49 pounds and is about 8 months old. Spot came to the shelter because his owner could no longer care for him — now he is ready for a new family to call his own! An ideal day for Spot would include a walk on a trail or in a park—or even playing through the sprinklers as this guy loves to be in water! If you have another dog at home you’re more than welcome to bring them in for a Meet n’ Greet. Spot’s adoption fee is $130. He has been neutered, microchipped, has age appropriate vaccinations and comes with 30 days of complimentary pet insurance.
Mookie and the Road Gang
You’ll love your smile when you leave City Different Dentistry
General Dentistry | Dental Prosthetics | Cosmetic Dentistry Please call us at (505) 989-8749 to schedule your dental appointment.
444 St. Michaels Dr., Suite B Santa Fe, NM 87505 www.citydifferentdentistry.com SFREPORTER.COM
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RATINGS BEST MOVIE EVER
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
WORST MOVIE EVER
Driver X Review The future is uber-depressing
10
1
MOVIES
BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
Driver X from writer/director Henry Barrial (The House That Jack Built) is almost as much about the past as it is the future. Or, to be more precise, it’s maybe about being dragged into the future kicking and screaming; at least into whatever version of “the future” in which we currently live. The film stars Patrick Fabian (Better Call Saul) as Leonard, a middle-aged father and husband who once owned a gloriously popular record store and now struggles to keep up with the internet age and the awful people it’s spawned. Unemployed and mired in domesticity, Leonard deals poorly as his wife (Tanya Clarke) waxes poetic about a potential cleanse she’ll take on, how her job is tough, how Leonard isn’t pulling his weight. So, when traditional channels of employment fall by the wayside, Leonard applies with Driver X, a riff on rideshare apps like Uber and Lyft. Without so much as ever speaking to a single living human, he’s driving the night shift in Los Angeles. Shit gets weird. Barrial based the film on his own experiences as an Uber driver between projects, and the writing for various fares hit so close to home
6 + CLEVER
CONCEPT; THE FARES; THE SATIRE - FABIAN IS SO-SO; SUPPORTING CHARACTERS FEEL POINTLESS
it’s borderline terrifying. From the curt and the too-friendly to the sexual and spooky, Barrial clearly was taking notes during his time driving. Fabian, however, feels out of his element, and not in a good way. His portrayal of behindthe-times is often crammed into moments that make him seem more like an idiot than an aging human person, though we do admit we laughed out loud during a scene wherein he stands up for himself at long last; even better is the Driver X office, a scary yet hysterical scene that feels almost more like sci-fi than satire. The cast is rounded out with brief performances from some pretty well-known TV actors, like Brooklyn 99’s Melissa Fumero, Scrubs alum Travis Schuldt, The Office’s Oscar Nunez and
Desmin Borges, easily the best character in the FX series You’re the Worst. And while these appearances are fun, the no-name actors are what lends Driver X authenticity and, more often, soul. Still, we never really learn what comes of the job or whether Leonard works it out with his wife, and while we get plenty of hints that he might be a bastard, his development never comes full-circle. Instead, our fears about ourselves and these rideshare apps become startlingly real. And we laugh as much as we hurt, though we’re not entirely sure that was the point—or if there was one. DRIVER X Directed by Barrial With Fabian and all those TV people Jean Cocteau Cinema, NR, 98 min.
QUICKY REVIEWS
7
THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS
4
FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE CRIMES OF GRINDELWALD
8
BOY ERASED
7
OVERLORD
THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS
7
BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
Special mentions abound, however, to the likes of Tim Blake Nelson as the titular Buster Scruggs, as funny and layered a performance as we’ve ever seen from the O Brother, Where Art Thou? vet. Kudos go as well to Harry Melling, whose turn as a limbless actor tethered to a Liam Neeson-run traveling theater act far surpasses what we know of the Harry Potter alum. Neeson, as always, is pretty damn good in the quieter moments. But it’s not all good news, especially in the case of Big Sick actor/writer Zoë Kazan’s toolong and too-slow installment wherein a woman traveling by covered wagon caravan loses everything to the unforgiving era and region. Still, by the time we reach the final entry and are thrust into the capable hands of talented actors like Brendan Gleeson, Tyne Daly and Saul Rubinek, all is mostly forgiven. It would be strange to take in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs in a theater, though its sweeping panoramic vistas and stunning cinematography surely help defuse its more stilted moments. All the same, it’s better to view on the couch at home where one might have a chance to pause and reflect if they so chose. The premise is interesting and the writing is solid—it’s just not quite what we’re used to, for better or for worse. (Alex De Vore) Netflix, R, 132 min.
+ DARK AND WELL-CRAFTED - SOME EPISODES LAG; SOME
PERFORMANCES DISAPPOINT
While the anthology film is nothing particularly new, it’s most often relegated to horror— think Creepshow. We’ve almost definitely never seen one so intricately crafted and large in scope as with the Coen Brothers’ new Netflix (and in select theaters) production, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs. Six disparate tales of the Wild West are told from various genre standpoints, from the dark comedy of a sing-songy gunslinger or the robber ever-destined for the gallows to the sparse and ultimately triumphant tale of the aged prospector and the subtle scares of a mysteriously populated stagecoach bound for who-knows-where. The episodes, as it were, are at turns quite funny or heartbreaking or, in one case, almost Tolstoyan—though without a singular narrative thread interwoven throughout, it’s challenging to carry the events or lessons of one tale with us into the next. This is by design, and Scruggs almost never stumbles in its pacing, but it can cause a sort of disconnect or cognitive dissonance when we’re presented with such emotionally differing material in such a rapid-fire manner.
5
Yes, Tom Waits does look old in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
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MOVIES
FOR SHOWTIMES AND MORE REVIEWS, VISIT SFREPORTER.COM
FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE CRIMES OF GRINDELWALD
4
a complicated cultural situation into a shallow Hollywood stew. That’s not to say it’s unworthy of being seen. Bearing witness isn’t just for the Baptists. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, R, 115 min.
+ TREASURE PLATYPUS FOREVER! - JOHNNY DEPP; ALL THAT OTHER STUPID STUFF
OVERLORD
Have you watched the first Fantastic Beasts movie lately? You probably should if you’re planning to see the follow-up, because even as someone who saw that movie, I felt pretty lost coming into The Crimes of Grindelwald. As I recalled, when we last left the beastmaster himself, Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne), he and his friends—some wizards, some muggles, the treasure platypus—had discovered that Colin Farrell’s character (whose name I forget) was actually the evil Grindelwald (Johnny Depp, an actor who can apparently beat up women and smuggle dogs into Australia with nary a professional consequence) and this was bad for … some reason. We discover in the latest film that it’s bad because Grindelwald is basically Voldemort 1-point-oh, and he’s totally escaped wizard custody to start doing wizard crimes and make the wizard world better for wizards. To do this, he’ll need help from this guy Credence (Ezra Miller), a non-muggle who is just now realizing his outrageously strong powers, and any number of other evil baddies. Newt, who amounts to a magical zookeeper, is somehow thrust into the fight once more, and he does the fantastic beast dance with some pretty OK CGI monsters while doing cute sidelong glances and being all adorable-awkward with his haircut and everything. Along the way we get pained connective threads to the overarching Harry Potter universe in the form of Voldemort’s snake’s origin tale (which feels pointlessly tacked on), a hint at young Dumbledore’s sexuality as portrayed by Jude Law, and a little more baby murder than you’d probably expect. But we also get bored by too much crammed in, a confusing retelling of the past and one or two too many characters thrown in. JK Rowling herself penned the script, which definitely could have used a bit of polish, particularly for scene transitions that don’t land well at best or are straight up mind-boggling at worst. Everything else is just melodrama. Especially Depp, who is serviceable as Grindelwald, but also a rather blankly evil character whom we know is evil simply because we’re told as much. Jude Law feels like nothing at all, and supporting performances from Dan Fogler, Kathryn Waterston and Zoë Kravitz mostly just slow things down. Thank goodness for that treasure platypus, then—he’s the real star of the show. And of course the ending sets up a sequel, and of course it’s fun to visit Hogwarts during
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“Suitcase-i-cus bottom-less-i-cus!” screams Newt Scamander in the newest Fantasic Beasts flick. Jay-kay, but that’s not actually so far from what really happens. the 1920s (shit, we’ve been hangin’ with Mr. Potter for 20 years now), but dumb jokes and the realization that most magic spells in this world are about opening doors or starting fires make The Crimes of Grindelwald feel like a slog more often than not. Sorry, Potterheads—it’s just not the same. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 134 min.
BOY ERASED + IMPORTANT STORY
8
COURAGEOUSLY TOLD
- SORT OF SHALLOW CHARACTERS
If ever a mainstream movie called for more trigger warnings for a recovering child of the religious right than Boy Erased, we haven’t seen it. Viewers won’t likely find something uplifting and hopeful, but they will get a fairly accurate glimpse into what it’s like for queer people born into families of particular dogmatic persuasions. Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman play Marshall and Nancy Eamons, the parents of a teenage son who displays little of the rebellion of his age, and instead an earnestness and devotion to them and their faith tradition that classifies homosexuality a sinful choice. The kitchen coming-out speech from a skilled and reserved
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Lucas Hedges (Manchester by the Sea) in his role as Jared is short and features an apology. He willingly complies with his parents’ plan to “help him” at a counseling center, then he’s horrified and demoralized by what happens there. Is his only choice really between losing God and losing himself? The script for Boy Erased is based on the 2016 memoir of the same title by Garrad Conley, and it’s laced with the kind of insider knowledge that comes from lived experience—one that not everyone sent to so-called gay conversion therapy actually lives through. The characters have been renamed, but photos just before the credits reaffirm that they’re modeled on Conley and his real family. While Kidman’s character inexplicably moves from a blind obedience to the Baptist church to courageous protection of her son (and we want to praise her when this moment arrives at long last), there’s more to her emotional journey that we missed learning about. Likewise with Dad. Crowe’s depiction of the preacher and car salesman is well-executed and doesn’t slip into stereotype, yet what’s really in his heart, even as it seems to change ever so slightly, is closed to the audience. It’s Jared’s strength and fight for survival that redeems the telling. Its flaw is the almost unavoidable trap of boiling
+ EXCITING BLEND OF STYLES - BLAND CHARACTERS; SOMETIMES ABSURD
We’ve seen plenty of media that recreates D-Day from the perspective of the storming of Normandy, but in Overlord, from director Julius Avery (Son of a Gun) and producer JJ Abrams, we follow soldiers behind enemy lines who are tasked with taking out a radio tower deep within a small village in the French countryside. The setup is simple enough, but how the film plays out is anything but. While we may have grown accustomed to brutally realistic depictions of World War II in film and video games, Overlord ups the ante considerably by phasing between authentic period drama, thrill-a-minute action flick and zombies—yeah, zombies! See, when American soldiers Boyce (Fences’ Jovan Adepo) and Ford (Wyatt Russell, Ingrid Goes West) wind up separated from their battalion and in the company of a young French woman (Mathilde Ollivier), they soon learn the Nazis have been using a nearby church not only for communications, but as an experimental lab dabbling in a serum that gifts super strength, immortality and even revival from death to unwitting guinea pigs. Side effects include mild to extreme zombification, however, and as anyone who has picked up a Call of Duty or Wolfenstein video game in the last few years can tell you, there’s not a lot worse than Nazi zombies. Gore ensues in a very major way. Like, there’s so much gore, but Avery manages to tap into his disparate genres in such a seamless way that we wonder why we haven’t seen such a hybrid film before. Oh sure, some of the soldiers are a bit cookie-cutter, from the Italian-American who cracks wise and tough to the young Jewish man with a particular vested interest in taking down Hitler; the evil Nazi doctor looks and acts exactly as you might imagine were you to picture an evil Nazi doctor. But these tropes wind up forgivable and fade into the background in place of the horror-style elements. Throw in a particularly sadistic SS officer for a villain, an adorable French kid to raise the stakes and any number of tense chase scenes in catacomb tunnels, atmospheric jump-scares and one of the most well-paced and surprising narratives of the year, and Overlord gracefully sidesteps ridiculousness for just plain fun. CONTINUED ON PAGE 43
KUNM 89.9 FM kunm.org
WEDNESDAY, NOV 28 1:00p The Happy Prince* 2:00p Border 3:15p Prospect* 4:30p Border 5:15p The Happy Prince* 7:00p Border 7:30p Prospect* THURSDAY, NOV 29 1:00p The Happy Prince* 2:00p Border 3:15p Prospect* 4:30p Border 6:00p The King and I 7:00p Border FRI - SUN, NOV 30 - DEC 2 12:15p Wildlife* 12:30p Border 2:30p Mirai* 3:00p The Mercy 4:45p Border* 5:15p Mirai 7:15p Border* 7:30p The Mercy MONDAY, DEC 3 12:15p Mirai* 12:30p Border 2:30p Wildlife* 3:00p The Mercy 4:45p Border* 5:15p Mirai 7:15p Border* 7:30p The Mercy
Much more than RADIO educational
TUESDAY, DEC 4 12:15p Mirai* 12:30p Border 2:30p Wildlife* 3:00p The Mercy 4:45p Border* 6:00p The Kind and I 7:15p Border*
tary ard-winning documen aw t an rt po im is th EW VI and join the discussion
*in The Studio
Wednesday, December 5 | 7pM VENUE: The Screen, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive
WEDNESDAY, NOV 26 12:30p The Rider 2:45p The Old Man and the Gun 4:45p The Rider 7:00p The House That Jack Built: Director’s Cut THURSDAY, NOV 29 12:30p The Rider 2:45p The Old Man and the Gun 4:45p The Rider 7:00p The Old Man and the Gun FRIDAY, NOV 30 1:00p The Old Man and the Gun 3:00p The Old Man and the Gun 5:00p The Great Buster 7:00p Buster Keaton Weekend: Sherlock Jr w/ The Goat SATURDAY, DEC 1 1:00p Buster Keaton Weekend: Seven Chances & Cops 3:15p The Great Buster 5:30p The Old Man and the Gun 7:30p The Great Buster SUNDAY, DEC 2 1:00p Buster Keaton Weekend: The General 3:15p The Great Buster 5:30p The Old Man and the Gun 7:30p The Great Buster MON - TUES, DEC 3 - 4 2:45p The Great Buster 5:00p The Old Man and the Gun 7:00p The Great Buster
JOIN US AFTER THE SCREENING FOR A DISCUSSION with elected officials, medical cannabis advocates, and drug policy experts
CANNABIS HAS BEEN OFF-LIMITS TO DOCTORS AND RESEARCHERS IN THE US FOR THE PAST 80 YEARS, BUT RECENTLY SCIENTISTS HAVE DISCOVERED ITS ANTI-CANCER PROPERTIES. WEED THE PEOPLE follows five families who are looking for alternatives to treat their children's cancer. Desperate parents take their children’s survival into their own hands and obtain cannabis oil from underground sources to save their children. At the heart of the film is the question: If weed is truly saving lives, why doesn't the government want people to access it?
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GEORGE R.R MARTIN’S Boy Erased is a hearbreaking but important look at how much homophobia still affects America. Make no mistake, Overlord is as video-gamey as it gets, but given the medium’s growing status as economic juggernaut—and its evolution into genuine art form—that’s not such a bad thing. It’s exhilarating, actually, and throws audiences directly into the fray for some of the most well-choreographed fight scenes and gut-wrenching scares we’ve seen in some time, not to mention the undead. Don’t take your kids (we really mean it), but don’t write it off; Overlord is wild fun throughout. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, R, 109 min.
BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
5
+ MALEK IS GREAT; THE MUSIC, - REDUCTIVE AND SIMPLIFIED; DUMB MIKE MYERS JOKE
After years in limbo, Bohemian Rhapsody, the story of Queen, has finally hit theaters after the loss of Sacha Baron Cohen as Freddie Mercury and the famous firing of director Bryan Singer. And it’s fine as biopics go, though absolutely problematic the more you peel back the veneer. The probably mostly already-known story of Queen follows the legendary rock band from meager beginnings to parade of hits, label interference, interpersonal strife and love and family issues—right up to the much-beloved 1985 LiveAid concert, dubbed by many as one of the finest performances by a rock act of all time; some photos and text-crawling fills in a handful of gaps thereafter. Rami Malek is fantastic as Mercury, however, all bluster and melodrama hiding a palpable self-loathing and sexual confusion. It’s unfortunate, then, that his embodiment of Mercury helps tell only a half-tale. Because while we’re busy tapping our toes and elbowing our pals in the theater because we totally know that song, Rhapsody inconveniently reduces Mercury, his queerness and his Parsi roots down to a couple throwaway scenes or oversimplified dialog in favor of proving how close the band was, how innovative they were in the studio, how ahead of their time they were and how much everyone loved them. But we already knew that, didn’t we? Yes, we get a line about Mercury’s bisexuality here or the evidence of his well-known hedonism there, but these moments are few and fleeting. We’re told Mercury was lonely even in crowds; we’re front and center for his coming-out to lifelong friend Mary Austin (Lucy Boynton); we see the pressures of fame piling on though unsurprisingly not solving problems—but we never truly get into their consequences, nor
do we pick up any particularly new information about Mercury’s Parsi ethnicity or how he must have struggled coming to grips with his queerness. How about that scene in the rain with “Under Pressure” piping in from the background, though? Feels good! Right up until it doesn’t. But the end of the feel-goods doesn’t come from the knowledge that Mercury contracted AIDS and died, never really reconnected with his family, that the reunion of the band was businesslike or that he never felt OK when he wasn’t onstage; it comes instead from realizing that a mainstream film had a chance to really dial up the representation and attempt to get us into the head of the finest voice in rock ‘n’ roll history, but chose musical montage or silly Mike Meyers jokes (seriously) time and time again instead. This is disappointing in a way that even Malek’s tremendous performance— and perfectly fine turns from most of the rest of the cast—can’t quite make up for. We must instead take solace in how Bohemian Rhapsody might introduce a new generation to Queen’s music, because it really was fantastic—no matter how much it can’t represent the real core of the story. (ADV) Regal, Violet Crown, PG-13, 134 min.
CINEMA
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JONESIN’ CROSSWORD
BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND!
“Talk Like the Critters”—”pet names” popularized by memes. by Matt Jones
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS
City of Santa Fe Permit #18-004
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24 “Little ___ Fauntleroy” 25 Google’s was in Aug. 2004 1 Prosciutto, for example 27 Cookie introduced to India in 2011 4 Arizona plants 28 Horse with mottled coloring 9 Beginning 29 Mode in “The Incredibles” 14 Suffix after pay or Motor 31 No longer linked 15 Verbally 32 1 or 0, but not 10 16 “Today” weatherman Al 33 ___ Reade (NYC drugstore chain) 17 Oscar Wilde’s forte 36 Pattern 18 1990 Mel Gibson movie, 37 Tomato variety according to the Internet? 38 Driver who plays Kylo Ren 20 “Metamorphosis” poet 39 2017 Pixar film 22 Bottled water brand 41 Pants maker Strauss owned by Coca-Cola 43 Sales talk 23 Mount McKinley’s national park DOWN 44 Guevara on T-shirts 26 Pay no attention to 46 What opportunity does, 1 “Strange ...” 30 Easy swimming style, hopefully 2 Hyphenated word in according to the Internet? 47 “___ & Greg” “Cockles and Mussels” 34 “Night Gallery” host Serling (1990s-2000s sitcom) 3 Kind of call or season 35 Architect and Bauhaus 48 Scratches the surface? 4 One way to get around town School founder Walter 49 “Check this out!” 5 “Green Book” star 36 University official 51 “Family Matters” neighbor Steve Mahershala 37 Competed at Daytona 54 Former “American Idol” 6 Electrical cable 40 Istanbul title judge DioGuardi 7 Brass band instrument 41 “Better in Time” singer ___ Lewis 55 “Waiting For My Rocket to 8 Altar vows 42 Olfactory stimulus Come” singer Jason 9 Color of Philadelphia Flyers 43 William and Harry, e.g. 56 Give forth mascot Gritty 45 Fleetwood ___ 58 “I can’t believe this,” in 10 Like hopeless situations 46 Pet-related YouTube clip, online slang 11 Take to the slopes according to the Internet? 59 Scottish “no” 12 Ending for mountain or auction 50 Receipt figure 60 12th letter of the alphabet, 13 Three, in Torino 52 Half a quarter when spelled out 19 They should be nowhere 53 Falco’s request to 61 Language suffix near a chalkboard Amadeus, in a 1980s hit 62 DVR remote button 21 Macbeth’s imagined weapon 57 Salt, chemically
www.FandFnm.org ADOPTION HOURS:
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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BUDDY BOY was surrendered by his owner who could no longer provide a stable home for him due to frequent travel. TEMPERAMENT: BUDDY BOY is a mellow cat who would thrive in a quiet home with someone who equally mellow. He gets along with other gentle cats, but would probably also be happy to be your one and only. BUDDY BOY is a handsome guy with striking blue eyes. He has chocolate points in a ‘van’ pattern. AGE: born approx. 10/1/15.
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ROSARITA was found wandering in a local cemetery searching for food. She was rescued by a kind person who transferred her to F&F. She was neither microchipped or spayed. TEMPERAMENT: ROSARITA is very sweet and social, and loves attention from her foster dad. She is a beautiful Turkish Angora mix girl with a medium-length white coat. AGE: born approx. 11/13/17.
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. JOHREI IS BASED ON THE FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. When clouds in the spiritual body and in consciousness are dissolved, there is a return to true health. This is according to the Divine Law of Order; after spiritual clearing, physical and mentalemotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. All are Welcome! The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Dropins welcome! Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 2-5pm. Friday 2-4pm. Saturday, 10am-1pm. Closed Sunday and Monday. There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com
DEFEND WOMEN WHO FIGHT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Women are human rights leaders everywhere. They are being attacked for this work. Letters are effective in defending justice warriors. Let’s meet on Human Rights Day, Monday the 10 th of December, and write for human rights. 6 p.m. in the Community Room, Oliver La Farge branch library, 1730 Llano Street, Santa Fe 87505. Free (but donations for postage welcome). Affiliated with Amnesty International USA. IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you go on eating binges or fasts without medical approval? Is your weight affecting your life? Contact Overeaters Anonymous! We offer support, no strings attached! No dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, no diets. We meet every day from 8-9 am at The Friendship Club, 1316 Apache Avenue, Santa Fe. www.nnmoa.com
TRENDS 2019 TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND Join Jose and Lena Stevens of the Power Path School of Shamanism THE WORLD. in Santa Fe for their most popular Get TESOL Certified & Teach event of the year exploring English Anywhere. Earn an the energies, major themes, accredited TESOL Certificate opportunities and challenges of and start teaching English in 2019. A practical alternative to USA & abroad. Over 20,000 the more traditional astrological new jobs every month. horoscope. Thursday, December Take this highly engaging & empowering course. Hundreds 6, 7:00PM. $25 at the door have graduated from our Santa or $20 prepaid. Join us before the talk starting at 6:00 for our Fe program. Next Course: January 26 - April 13, 2019 annual Indigenous Crafts Sale. weekend course. Contact John New location! The Lodge at Santa Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. Fe, 744 Calle Mejia, Santa Fe NM www.tesoltrainers.com 87501. Questions call 982-8732
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
“CATCH ME DOING SOMETHING RIGHT” Wabniaq-k9 is presenting a free one-hour presentation on the topic, “Catch Me Doing Something Right,” with expert, practical, and do-able tips on training your dog on Wednesday, December 5, 2018 at LaFarge Library, 1730 Llano Street, Santa Fe, 6:30 pm. (Please, only service dogs allowed in the library.) We are also pleased to announce new group classes offered on Mondays and Fridays at 10:30 am. Group classes are great for new dog owners, spot-check for certain behaviors with your dog and folks on a budget. This group class is drop in so you don’t need a reservation, but check the website or call the number below for specific information. The location is 2911 Cerrillos Road, behind Raby Home Solutions. Wabniaq-k9 specializes in helping folks with aggressive and anxious dogs. Private instruction and agility training for confidence are also offered, because “life is good when your dog is good.” Website: www.Wabniaq-k9.com Phone: 505/577-2310
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ACUPUNCTURE Rob Brezsny
Week of November 28th
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Every year the bird known as the Arctic tern experiences two summers and enjoys more daylight than any other animal. That’s because it regularly makes a long-distance journey from the Arctic to the Antarctic and back again. Let’s designate this hardy traveler as your inspirational creature for the next eleven months. May it help animate you to experiment with brave jaunts that broaden and deepen your views of the world. I don’t necessarily mean you should literally do the equivalent of circumnavigating the planet. Your expansive adventures might take place mostly in inner realms or closer to home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Venice, Italy consists of 118 small islands that rise from a shallow lagoon. A network of 443 bridges keeps them all connected. But Venice isn’t the world champion of bridges. The American city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania holds that title, with 446. I nominate these two places to be your inspirational symbols in the coming weeks. It’s time for you build new metaphorical bridges and take good care of your existing metaphorical bridges.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): To aid and support your navigation through this pragmatic phase of your astrological cycle, I have gathered counsel from three productive pragmatists. First is author Helen Keller. She said TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When the American Civil she wanted to accomplish great and noble things, but War began in 1861, the United States fractured. Four her “chief duty” was “to accomplish small tasks as if years later, the union was technically restored when the they were great and noble.” Second, author George northern states defeated the southern states. At that Orwell believed that “to see what is in front of one’s time, African American slavery became illegal everynose” requires never-ending diligence. Finally, author where for the first time since the country’s birth decades Pearl S. Buck testified that she didn’t wait around until earlier. But there was a catch. The southern states soon she was in the right mood before beginning her work. enacted laws that mandated racial segregation and Instead, she invoked her willpower to summon the necensured that African Americans continued to suffer sys- essary motivation. tematic disadvantages. Is there a comparable issue in SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Blackjack is a card your personal life? Did you at sometime in the past try game popular in gambling casinos. In the eternal strugto fix an untenable situation only to have it sneak back gle to improve the odds of winning big money, some in a less severe but still debilitating form? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to finish the reforms; to blackjack players work in teams. One teammate secretly counts the cards as they’re dealt and assesses what enforce a thorough and permanent correction. cards are likely to come up next. Another teammate GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Does an elusive giant crea- gets subtle signals from his card-counting buddy and ture with a long neck inhabit the waters of Loch Ness in makes the bets. A casino in Windsor, Ontario pressed northern Scotland? Alleged sightings have been report- charges against one blackjack team, complaining that ed since 1933. Most scientists dismiss the possibility this tactic was deceptive and dishonest. But the court that “Nessie” actually exists, but there are photos, films, decided in the team’s favor, ruling that the players and videos that provide tantalizing evidence. A govern- weren’t cheating but simply using smart strategy. In the ment-funded Scottish organization has prepared contin- spirit of these blackjack teams, Sagittarius, and in accorgency plans just in case the beast does make an unam- dance with astrological omens, I urge you to better your biguous appearance. In that spirit, and in accordance odds in a “game” of your choice by using strategy that is with astrological omens, I recommend that you prepare almost as good as cheating but isn’t actually cheating. yourself for the arrival in your life of intriguing anomalies and fun mysteries. Like Nessie, they’re nothing to worry CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What has become of the metaphorical seeds you planted during the weeks about, but you’ll be better able to deal gracefully with after your last birthday? Have your intentions flourthem if you’re not totally taken by surprise. ished? Have your dreams blossomed? Have your talents CANCER (June 21-July 22): Does moss really “eat” matured? Have your naive questions evolved into more rocks, as Cancerian author Elizabeth Gilbert attests in penetrating questions? Be honest and kind as you her novel The Signature of All Things? Marine chemist answer these inquiries. Be thoughtful and big-hearted as Martin Johnson says yes. Moss really does break down you take inventory of your ability to follow through on and release elements in solid stone. Gilbert adds, “Given your promises to yourself. If people are quizzical about enough time, a colony of moss can turn a cliff into grav- how much attention you’re giving yourself as you take el, and turn that gravel into topsoil.” Furthermore, this stock, inform them that your astrologer has told you that hardy plant can grow virtually everywhere: in the tropics December is Love Yourself Better Month. and frozen wastes, on tree bark and roofing slate, on AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): If you want to play the sloth fur and snail shells. I propose that we make moss drinking game called Possum, you and your friends climb your personal symbol of power for now, Cancerian. Be up into a tree with a case of beer and start drinking. As as indomitable, resourceful, and resilient as moss. time goes by, people get so hammered they fall out of the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Let’s shout out a big “THANKS!” tree. The winner is the last one left in the tree. I hope you and “HALLELUJAH!” to the enzymes in our bodies. won’t engage in this form of recreation anytime soon— These catalytic proteins do an amazing job of converting nor in any other activity that even vaguely resembles it. the food we eat into available energy. Without them, our The coming weeks should be a time of calling on favors, cells would take forever to turn any particular meal into claiming your rewards, collecting your blessings, and the power we need to walk, talk, and think. I bring this graduating to the next level. I trust your policy will be: no marvel to your attention, Leo, because now is a favortrivial pursuits, no wasted efforts, no silly stunts. able time to look for and locate metaphorical equivalents of enzymes: influences and resources that will aid PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In his song “Happy Talk,” and expedite your ability to live the life you want to live. Academy Award-winning lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II offered this advice: “You gotta have a dream. If you don’t VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “Every dreamer knows that have a dream, how you gonna have a dream come true?” it is entirely possible to be homesick for a place you’ve Where do you stand in this regard, Pisces? Do you in never been to, perhaps more homesick than for familiar fact have a vivid, clearly defined dream? And have you ground,” writes author Judith Thurman. I’m guessing developed a strategy for making that dream come true? you will experience this feeling in the coming weeks. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to home in What does it mean if you do? It may be your deep on what you really want and hone your scheme for manpsyche’s way of nudging you to find an energizing new ifesting it. (P.S. Keep in mind Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s sanctuary. Or perhaps it means you should search for idea: “A goal without a plan is just a wish.”) fresh ways to feel peaceful and well-grounded. Maybe it’s a prod to push you outside your existing comfort Homework: Hug yourself as you tell yourself your zone so you can expand your comfort zone. biggest secret.
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 8 R O B B R E Z S N Y at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. 46
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