Eat Lik e
P.13 a m d n a r G
How a return to ancestral diets reconnects health and heart sovereignty in Native America BY GWY NE TH DOLAND
22
SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 6
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SFREPORTER.COM
COURTESY ROXANNE SWENZTELL
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 38 Opinion 5 News 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 REFUGE AND RESPITE 9
Santa Fe considers a new mental health crisis center BRANCHING INTO THE NEXT GENERATION 11
Programs encourage kids to consider science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields Cover Story 13 EAT LIKE GRANDMA
Native America gets back to its roots with an ancestral diet
Is your bank still a bank that you can bank on?
STEPHAN MARTINIERE
13
SFR Picks 19 Timberwick Studios says goodbye, yet another summer fest, get geeky and say ¡oralé! to lowriders all over again The Calendar 21 A&C
Let Century give you the banking experience you are looking for. MyCenturyBank.com
Santa Fe Albuquerque Rio Rancho Española Las Cruces
THE REALEAST 23
Juxtapoz Magazine founder comes to town FUTURISTIC 25
A sci-fi/fantasy artist aims to win our hearts and minds Savage Love 26 You probably shouldn’t bang former students (duh), get a vasectomy already and stop calling yourself straight, bro Food 29
25
CRISIS AT THE CO-OP
Don’t sign that petition! Movies 31 THE HOLLARS REVIEW: FAMILY MATTERS
Plus the Jerry Lewis-led drama, Max Rose
Cover image courtesy Roxanne Swenztell Design by Anson Stevens-Bollen artdirector@sfreporter.com
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Autumn is the perfect time of the year to cozy up and enjoy everything pumpkin! Indulge in an Autumn Massage from W’o P’in Spa Experience warming essential oils including ginger, nutmeg, clove and cinnamon, wonderful for repairing and moisturizing dry skin. Crisp Autumn air makes for the perfect Tee Time Towa Golf Club is offering Fall Fairways for $60 call for a Tee Time 505.455.9000 Cozy up for Harvest Happy Hour 3PM- 6PM daily in Red Sage call for reservations 505.819.2056
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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COMMUNITY DAY FUN, FOOD, AND FREE ADMISSION FOR ALL!
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 · 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
Museum of International Folk Art
Museum of Spanish Colonial Art
Santa Fe Botanical Garden
Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian 4
AUGUST 3-9, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
OMANNEY SHTOIRLIELS!
Five Museum Hill partners present day-long activities including: a traditional Matanza; a buffalo roast and native foods tasting; horno building; native dances and story-telling; community flamenco classes; and circus performers from Clan Tynker! Admission and all hand-on activities free for New Mexico residents and guests alike. More information at MuseumHill.net
9:00 AM National Park Service (NPS) Santa Fe Trail Tour Starts at Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian (WMAI) 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM Mural Painting on the Plaza · Indigenous Food Informational Booth Museum of Indian Arts and Culture (MIAC) 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM Native Bee House · Create Native Pollinator Habitat · Explore Flowers and Their Pollinators · Early Childhood Activities Santa Fe Botanical Garden (SFBG) 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM Treasure Hunt WMAI 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM Matanza (traditional pig roast) Museum of Spanish Colonial Arts (MOSCA) Join MOCSA for breakfast and lunch, $10 per person all-you-can-eat 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM Face Painting WMAI 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM Opening Blessing with John Garcia and Della Warrior (Otoe-Missouria) MIAC 11:30 AM Buffalo Dance with Justin Aguino (Ohkay Ohwingeh) Milner Plaza 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM Master Gardeners on site to answer all of your tough gardening questions SFBG 11:00 AM NPS Santa Fe Trail Tour Starts at WMAI 11:00 AM Community Flamenco Class with Entre Flamenco MOSCA Courtyard 12:00 – 4:00 PM Native American Food Sampling: buffalo roast, oven bread, and corn/squash MIAC 1:00 PM NPS Santa Fe Trail Tour Starts at WMAI 1:00 – 1:30 PM Stories of Food, Family and Culture with Emmett “Shkeme” Garcia (Santa Ana) MIAC 1:30 – 2:00 PM Native Comedian Drew Lacapa (Apache / Hopi / Tewa) MIAC 1:00 – 4:00 PM Clan Tynker Circus Spectacular presented in conjunction with The Morris Miniature Circus: Return of the Little Big Top Museum of International Folk Art (MOIFA) 1:30 – 2:00 PM Storyteller Joe Hayes WMAI 1:30 PM Collage Workshop with Sallyann Milam Paschall (Cherokee) WMAI 2:00 PM Community Flamenco Class with Entre Flamenco MOSCA Courtyard 2:00 – 2:30 PM Ohkay Ohwingeh Pueblo Buffalo Dancers with Justin Aguino (Ohkay Ohwingeh) Milner Plaza 2:00 – 2:30 PM Buffalo Hunt Stories with John Garcia (Santa Clara Pubelo) MIAC 2:30 – 3:00 PM Buffalo Hunt Stories with John Garcia (Santa Clara Pubelo) MIAC 3:00 PM NPS Santa Fe Trail Tour Starts at WMAI 3:00 – 3:30 PM Stories of Food, Family and Culture with Emmett “Shkeme” Garcia (Santa Ana) MIAC 3:15 – 3:45 PM Storyteller Joe Hayes WMAI 3:30 – 4:00 PM Native Comedian Drew Lacapa (Apache / Hopi / Tewa) MIAC 3:30 PM Collage Workshop with Sallyann Milam Paschall (Cherokee) WMAI 4:00 PM Horno Building Demonstration SFBG 4:15 – 4:45 PM Storyteller Joe Hayes WMAI MIAC events presented in partnership with the National Museum of the American Indian. PHOTOS, FROM TOP: Two young girls try their hand at grinding corn. Photo courtesy MIAC. Clan Tynker. Photo by Clarence Alford. The Matanza includes pork, cooked in various ways. Photo courtesy MOSCA. Learn about butterflies and other pollinators. Photo by AcrylicArtist at Morguefile.com. Sallyann Milam Paschall, Syllabary Song (detail). Courtesy of the artist.
ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
LETTERS
Have you had a negative dental experience? Michael Davis,
DDS
New Patients Welcome
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.
COVER, SEPTEMBER 14:
this science on their ranches have seen stellar results in the increases in vegetation cover, species diversification, water and mineral cycling—which all leads to healthier soil and the sequestering of more carbon in the soil which in turn leads to even more abundant plant growth. ... The marketing of grass feed beef in consumer-driven and not rancher-driven and it is truly a healthier product to eat and requires one-fifth of the carbon input as feedlot-raised beef.
“SOS!”
LAINA LEVY SFREPORTER.COM
LETTERS, SEPTEMBER 14: “BEEF WITH BEEF”
P R OV I D E R F O R D E LTA A N D U N I T E D C O N C O R D I A D E N TA L P L A N S • M O S T I N S U R A N C E S A C C E P T E D
Snuggle a baby, Support a Mom Ready to Volunteer?
MANY MOTHERS
NEWS, SEPTEMBER 14: “IF EVERY DROP COUNTS”
505.983.5984 ~ nancy@manymothers.org ~ www.manymothers.org
DON’T BE FOOLED This only gives the appearance of “sustainability,” another meaningless catch phrase. This is just one more marketing ploy. Ancient cottonwood trees that lived for centuries are gone now due to the rampant development and lack of planning. There is nothing “sustainable” about isolated tract houses and urban sprawl.
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EAT IN OR TAKE OUT – BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER Tuesday-Saturday 10 am-8 pm | Sunday 10 am-3 pm
MARIA PIERNAVIEJA VIA FACEBOOK
DEAR MARC BENDER [Marc Bender’s] opinion concerning the Quivira Coalition’s role in the education of grazing practices lacks the true understanding of what this organization has done to change the ranching industry in the West and the science behind this change. Allen Savory’s grazing system in not a theory as [stated], but a very sound and proven holistic-based science. Those who practice
Michael W. Davis, DDS 1751 Old Pecos Trail, Suite B (505) 988-4448 www.SmilesofSantaFe.com
STEVE CARSON EL RANCHO
BUREAUCRACY BS People already have to prove their identity and residency when they register to vote. It’s absurd to add an additional bureaucratic requirement of proving ID again at the polls, when there is no evidence that in-person voter fraud is a thing.
SMILES OF SANTA FE
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Located just a few miles south of Santa Fe on the picturesque Turquoise Trail
3810 HWY 14
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 “My relationship with my mother improved a lot after she died.” —Overheard at a local spa
“I have an app that records smell.”
SF, NM 87508
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Life is more
Beautiful When you
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HAIRDRESSER
—Woman overheard while video recording chile roasting Send your Overheard in Santa Fe tidbits to: eavesdropper@sfreporter.com
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
5
1 2
CANNABIS PLANT MAKES INAUGURAL APPEARANCE AT STATE FAIR EXHIBIT And is reportedly forcibly removed because … plants are scary?
“WE ARE THE SEEDS: AN INDIGENOUS ART CELEBRATION” TO DEBUT IN SANTA FE RAILYARD NEXT AUGUST Finally, the mutiny in the IFAM family goes public.
MIDTOWN WALMART TO SELL ALCOHOL
3
Thank goodness! You can’t get that stuff just anywhere, you know.
$
4 5 6
OWNERS OF LORETTO CHAPEL FACE EXPANSION$ DELAYS AGAIN Too bad, ‘cause “Miracle Staircase Mall” had a real nice ring to it.
OPIOID MANUFACTURERS LOBBY FOR LOOSER DRUG RULES The fox is in the henhouse and the chickens are addicted to smack.
GOVERNOR CONTINUES HER KICK TO BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY Look! Over there! Criminals!
7 Read it on SFReporter.com GAME ON REVIEWS BIOSHOCK: THE COLLECTION What do the deconstruction of Ayn Rand-ian objectivism, a psychotic psychologist and the perception of time as a flat circle have in common? Bioshock—that’s what.
6
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
WHAT WE’VE TAUGHT/ WHAT WE CAN LEARN Environmental activists from Borneo made a Santa Fe pit stop on their tour of the US to talk about what does and doesn’t work in conservation, what they’ve learned from us and what we can learn from them.
RAILYARD URGENT CARE
We put patients first and deliver excellent care in the heart of Santa Fe.
The Food Sovereignty Project
Reclaiming Native Health and Wellness Traditions
In partnership with the National Museum of the American Indian, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture presents a two-day symposium followed by a community-wide celebration on Museum Hill. Space is limited, please RSVP to (505) 476-1269. Sessions will also be available via Facebook Live.
Food, Family, and History Friday, September 23 · 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
Open 7 days a week, 8am – 7pm Railyard Urgent Care is Santa Fe’s only dedicated urgent care clinic operating on a solely walk-in basis, 7 days a week, to ensure excellent medical care with the shortest possible wait times.
X-rays onsite! railyardurgentcare.com + INJURIES & ILLNESS + X-RAYS + PHYSICALS + LAB TESTS + VACCINATIONS + DRUG TESTING + DOT EXAMS No appointment necessary Most insurance accepted Cash Discounted Rates Conveniently located Se habla español
WHERE TO FIND US 831 South St. Francis Drive, just north of the red caboose.
(505) 501.7791
10:00 am Early Memories of Food and Family · Tessie Naranjo (Santa Clara) 11:00 am Hunting in Our Home Communities · Allen Duran (Tesuque) and Tito Naranjo (Santa Clara) 12:00 pm Lunch Break
ONE y Weekend Only.
1:30 pm Traditional Farming and Ranching · Gailey Morgan (Tesuque) and Danny Sam (Diné) 3:00 pm Closing Remarks
Community Food Initiatives Saturday, September 24· 10:00 am – 3:00 pm 10:00 am Seed Bank Program · Gailey Morgan (Tesuque) and Roxanne Swentzell (Santa Clara)
Fall 2016 TRASH AMNESTY DAYS at BuRRT
September 24 & 25
11:00 am Native Youth and Traditional Foods · Marie Reyna (Taos)
As part of our ongoing Amnesty Day program, the Santa Fe Solid Waste Management Agency is encouraging City and County residents to drop off trash at the Buckman Road Recycling and Transfer Station (BuRRT), located at 2600 Buckman Road for free on Saturday, September 24, and Sunday, September 25, during normal operating hours, 8:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.
12:00 pm Lunch Break
Trash includes the following categories of items:
No self-dumping trailers. All loads must be secured and covered with a tarp.
1:30 pm Ranching Among New Mexico Tribes: Bison, Cattle and Sheep · Richard Archuleta (Taos) and Andrew Gonzales (Nambé)
• Garbage, rubbish, unwanted materials • Bulky items – large appliances, furniture, mattresses, box springs • Remodeling or building materials, carpet, tiles, concrete, bricks, metals
3:00 pm Closing Remarks
All other categories of materials accepted at BuRRT will be charged their normal fees. Residential trash ONLY. Commercial businesses will be charged for trash brought to the event.
All symposium programs free with museum admission. Youth 16 and under and museum members always free. www.museumfoundation.org/join Enjoy bistro dining with a view at Museum Hill Café.
Community Day Celebration Sunday, September 25 · 11:00 am – 4:00 pm Learn more about traditional foods programs in New Mexico: Buffalo Roast · Indigenous Food Tasting · Dance Performances and Storytelling · Interactive Stations and Demonstrations All Community Day events are free.
Curbside recyclables can be dropped off at the BuRRT recycling drop-off center FREE everyday! For more information please go to: www.SantaFeRecycling.org or call BuRRT at 424-1850 x 420 Any trash brought to one of the Santa Fe County citizen convenience centers will be assessed the appropriate punches. Help Keep Santa Fe Beautiful! Join KSFB for the 2016 Toss No Mas Cleanup happening on Saturday, September 24th! • • •
Register your cleanup at 1142 Siler Rd. between 7:00 a.m.-9:00 a.m. Cleanup supplies including bags, gloves and t-shirts will be provided to all participants. Cleanup your neighborhood until 12 noon and Environmental Services will pickup your bags. For more information go to www.keepsantafebeautiful.org or call 955-2215.
On Museum Hill in Santa Fe · (505) 476-1269 · IndianArtsAndCulture.org
SFREPORTER.COM
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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SFRep-primarycare-092116_Layout 1 9/19/16 2:32 PM Page 1
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Take the first step toward a lifetime of better health. Call today to schedule a wellness visit with a CHRISTUS St. Vincent family medicine or pediatric primary care provider near you.
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8
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
Federally Federally insured insuredbyby NCUA NCUA
NEWS
Refuge and Respite Voters in November will decide whether to contribute public dollars to a mental health crisis center BY STEVE N H SI E H steven@ s fre p o r te r.co m
W
hen first responders in Santa Fe County encounter someone in the throes of a mental health crisis, the choices for where to go next are severely limited. There’s the emergency room at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center, where workers treat more patients for mental illness than any condition. Or there’s the county jail, where approximately 67 percent of those incarcerated have mental illness. “Those are the two options,” says Juan Rios, spokesman for the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department. Neither is ideal. Emergency room visits are expensive, and taxpayers often end up footing the bill. Jails by definition aren’t designed for treating people with mental disorders. “That’s just not a good way to spend community dollars, having them end up in criminal justice settings or high-end medical centers,” says Pamela Hyde, former head of the national Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. For years, advocates have pushed for a third option: a place, known as a crisis triage center, for people with mental illness to center themselves before reentering their community. Such a place could offer refuge for an addict on the cusp of relapse, a schizophrenic experiencing a psychotic episode or anyone else with mental illness who needs time and space to settle down. Santa Fe County officials recently devised a plan to build a crisis triage center. Voters will decide in November whether to commit taxpayer funds to making that plan a reality. Two questions on the November election ballot address the possibility of establishing a crisis triage center in the area. One asks voters whether the county should borrow up to $5 million to fund community health facilities. (One of five bond questions on the ballot.) The other, this one non-binding, proposes increasing gross receipts taxes by .125 percent to create ongoing revenue for mental health services. “I feel that with misdemeanors—trespassing, sitting on a bench, urinating in an alley—those offenders would be better served going to this crisis triage center,” says Dr. Merritt Ayad, director of mental health at the county’s Adult Detention Center. In 1999, Ayad helped set up a mental health emergency services system in New Orleans. “That’s better than spending months here, because it could actually help prevent them from coming back in the future.” Inspired by facilities in Tucson, Arizona, San An-
tonio, Texas, and Marion County, Oregon, planners envision a center open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Service would be available to individuals for up to 23 hours at a time. Rooms would be furnished with recliners, as opposed to beds, to emphasize the shortterm nature of triage stays. Once a patient becomes stabilized, staff would assess what caused them to tick in the first place and attempt to connect that person to appropriate services. More severe mental health issues could send someone to the 12-bed mental health unit at Christus St. Vincent or maybe the Behavioral Health Institute in Las Vegas. (Behavioral health and mental health are interchangeable terms.) For ease of access, planners are looking for a spot near the hospital, according to Rachel O’Connor, county director of health and human services. Crisis triage centers for years have been part of the service array in communities across the country, but recently the facilities have become a “growing phenomenon,” according to Hyde. New Mexico cities started showing interest more than a decade ago, but actually getting a center up and running has proven challenging. Snagged by insufficient funding, a crisis center in Doña Ana County has remained unopened for years. Santa Fe County does not yet have a definitive timeline for its proposed center, O’Connor says. County health administrators are currently working on a business plan to look at potential funding streams for the center on top of tax revenue. State funding and grants from private foundations are possibilities, O’Connor says. “I’m glad that this is finally happening, but it still doesn’t cover everything,” says Mary Lou OrtegaShaw, president of the Santa Fe chapter of the National Alliance for Mental Illness. Ortega-Shaw says the 23-hour service period isn’t long enough for some crises and would like to see more long-term options. The triage center proposal adds to a growing list of mental health initiatives local governments have pushed in recent years. The city in 2013 enacted Law Enforcement Assisted
Diversion, a program that directs low-level drug offenders straight to treatment, rather than jail. And last year, the county launched a Mobile Crisis Response Team, a program run by Presbyterian Medical Services (not Presbyterian Healthcare Services, the primary care organization) that dispatches therapists straight to people in crisis. The proposal for a crisis triage center stems from a four-county mental health summit, hosted by Santa Fe County in May at the Eldorado Hotel. Professionals from a wide array of fields, including healthcare, law enforcement and corrections, all provided input that organizers funneled into six priorities for mental health in the region. Crisis triage center services topped that list. County commissioner Miguel Chavez, who organized the summit, says he took cues from a national movement called the Stepping Up Initiative, which aims to reduce the number of people with mental illnesses in jails. He says the 2013 behavioral health shakeup, in which the state’s biggest mental health providers shuttered amid unsubstantiated accusations of fraud, put the onus on counties to help fill new service gaps. For Chavez, it’s personal. Around the time he joined the commission in 2011, an immediate family member was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. The family member was recently incarcerated at the Adult Detention Center for missing a court date. Chavez says his family’s experience with mental illness helps him put the issue into perspective and make this initiative a priority before he steps down next year. He tells SFR, “As someone in that position, I felt like I couldn’t hide it anymore. I couldn’t sweep it under the rug, not just for myself, but the community.”
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SFREPORTER.COM
•
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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Santa Fe Reporter: September 21 issue 1/4 page (4.75 x 5.625) Contact: Kim Jarigese UNM Extended Learning 505-277-6433 | kjar@unm.edu
Thursday, September 22, 2016, 5:30 p.m. La Fonda Hotel • 100 E. San Francisco Street
Seated Dinner • Fantastic Silent Auction • Wear your boldest RED outfit!
Just a few of our amazing auction items! Tuscany Culinary Escape for Two. 5 nights, private cooking class, wine cellar and olive mill tours/tastings
Two tickets to Hamilton PLUS pre-show dinner with cast members in NY!
”The Philosopher,” oil on panel by Rebecca Haines
Hors d’oeuvres for 20 with piano performance by Joe Ilick in your home
Dinner for 6 with author Anne Hillerman
$100 per person, or $175 for two (bring a friend!) For Tickets visit https://girlsincofsantafe.org/events/gala, or call Rhynda at 505-982-2042 10
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
Private KGB Distillery tour/ Mixology Class and Tour/ Dinner at Los Luceros for 6 with private limousine for the evening
Branching into the Next Generation
ELIZABETH MILLER
NEWS
National Science Foundation supports mentoring program out of Northern New Mexico College to foster STEM careers first-ever NSF INCLUDES grants, a nationwide initiative to increase the presence of underrepresented groups, including women, Native ot a lot of things motivate middle school- Americans, African Americans, ers on a Monday morning, but when people from rural areas and those Steve Cox puts a butter knife to a carrot, of low socioeconomic status. cuing a sound effect squeal from his lap“It’s such a hard problem betop, the kids light up. Cox is a Northern New Mexico cause of history, society and povCollege professor starting a science-focused mentor- erty,” Cox says. “It’s not someing program. Hands shoot into the air when he asks if thing that we’re going to solve in kids want to try playing his vegetable orchestra. A trio our little collective. It’s not someof carrots and a jalapeño tethered to his laptop with thing that’s going to get solved at electrical wires chime out the sounds of synthesizers Las Cruces. It’s going to take a colwhen touched with a finger, provided a wire cable is lective response.” in the other hand. A few weeks ago, after the Na“In the future, we’re not going to be interact- tional Science Foundation direcing with computers with keyboards,” he tells them. tor toured Sen. Martin Heinrich “We’re going to be interacting in much more creative through Española to discuss this ways—that you guys are going to come up with.” program, the senator emerged This is Cox’s second semester at the college in Es- with a pithy summation, Cox repañola, but it didn’t take long to spot a problem that’s ports: “STEM is the ticket to the hardly unique to New Mexico: a shortage of women middle class.” and Hispanics in science, technology, engineering The theory is to craft mentorProfessor Steve Cox is launching mentorships in Española area schools to spark and mathematics (STEM) programs. Cox’s quest ships that hit a “sweet spot”—a more interest in science. to chip away at this issue has landed him in middle gap just broad enough that there’s school classrooms to recruit students to a new sci- respect, but not so wide that trust ence club. The goal is twofold: to engage students in is compromised. says. “If we can introduce this at a young age, keep hands-on ways to excite them “I’m a white guy from Chica- that creativity really intact, really promote it from about careers in STEM fields, go—for them to use my life experi- seventh to 12th grade, maybe, just maybe, as soon as like using Makey Makey to turn ences as their role model, that’s a they graduate, when they look into their college carefrigerator detritus into a mufantasy. But if I bring in kids who reer to decide what they want to do, it is hopefully in sical instrument, and establish Poverty has led are alums of these schools, they’ve a STEM field.” a network of support that inThirty-one of her 170 students have expressed an had the same cultural and financial to low educational cludes mentors just a few years constraints these kids have,” Cox interest in joining the club—and will go through an older than them. says. “A natural mentor—someone application process that includes obtaining a letter aspirations and “Poverty has led to low edufrom the same community, same from a teacher and maintaining a 2.0 GPA. cational aspirations and expecEditions of this program will roll out at middle and socioeconomic conditions—has an expectations that tations that plague our entire easier time establishing trust, and high schools in Española, Pojoaque, McCurdy, El Rito community,” he wrote in his without trust then we’re just kind and Embudo will reach into two libraries, one museplague our entire proposal to the National Sciof peddling technology and saying, um, Los Alamos National Laboratory and four local ence Foundation. “As such, its youth organizations. ‘Get on the band wagon.’” community. disruption requires a collective Northern New Mexico College gets more inquiMentorships will match four or effort from our entire commu- Steve Cox five students per mentor and fo- ries for potential new hires than they have students nity.” cus on letting kids experiment and enrolled in those programs, Cox told the seventh The National Science Founinvestigate their own questions, graders, so he’s there to pique their curiosity. In those dation recently awarded him practice exercising the courage to last minutes before the bell rings, when fidgeting and almost $300,000 to support the program, its goals of create, as well as collaboration, critical thinking and packing away notebooks usually takes over, he pulls increasing the presence of local STEM mentors and resourcefulness. That means building 21st-century up one of the projects designed with the programits research questions around the effect that mentor- skills, says Camille Ulibarri, an eighth grade science ming software the club members will use. The image ship has both on the protégé and the mentor. teacher at Pojoaque Valley Middle School and co- of a killer whale swims on to the screen, spirals once, Even before that financial support materialized, sponsor of the club there. and then hovers. In just a few moments, the students he started taking college kids into classrooms in “That’s why it needs to start with such low-level notice the whale follows the mouse pointer. The murnearby schools, but wanted to craft something sus- learners and such young kids … because I believe that murs ramp up from vaguely amused to full-blown extained. This program joins 36 others selected for the creativity is stifled as they progress to 12th grade,” she citement. The hope is that it sticks. BY EL IZABE TH M I LLE R el i zab eth @ s fre p o r te r.co m
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How a return to ancestral diets reconnects health and heart sovereignty in Native America
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BY GW Y N E T H D O L A N D t h efo r k@ s f repo r ter.co m
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on’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.” That’s what Michael Pollan’s 2008 book, In Defense of Food, advised, delivering an indictment of modern industrial eating and a rousing endorsement of “real food.” Here in New Mexico and across the country, a growing number of Native Americans are taking that idea to a logical extreme, reaching back to the ingredients and dishes of their ancestors in order to fight health problems like diabetes, but also to reconnect with culture, tradition and spirituality. A few years ago, Roxanne Swentzell of Santa Clara Pueblo and a group of willing friends spent three months eating exclusively foods that would have been available in New Mexico before the arrival of the Spanish 500 years ago. They cut out sugar, wheat and dairy and turned to turkey, buffalo and rabbit, corn, squash, piñon and sunflower seeds. It was brutally hard at times, but they lost weight, their health improved—and they felt something inside, too. Swentzell turned their time-traveling edible adventure into a cookbook that’s being released this month, coinciding with a two-day symposium on Native food sovereignty at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture on Sept. 23 and 24. The Pueblo Food Experience Cookbook is a 100-page collection of recipes, history and storytelling written by Swentzell and Patricia Perea, a professor in the Chicana/o Studies Department at the University of New Mexico. It includes an essay the his-
tory of Pueblo food by Porter Swentzell, Roxanne’s son, a historian. “I’d been having conversations with my son about whether we could eat the way our ancestors could eat,” she recalls. “We didn’t know if it was even possible because we’re so used to going to a grocery store and eating what’s there, depending on what’s there. So to step out of that was frightening.” But Swentzell was better prepared than most to attempt such a diet. Although she is best known as a contemporary artist (she won Best of Sculpture at Indian Market in 1999), she also helped found the Flowering Tree Permaculture Institute at Santa Clara Pueblo in 1989. So she had been involved in sustainable agriculture, seed-saving, cultural preservation and traditional foods for a long time. “Eating connected to a place is going to be healthier no matter what, healthier than what we’ve been doing, transporting foods great distances out of season, packaged processed foods we have no relationship to except that we’re addicted to it,” Swentzell says. She described it as a personal, spiritual journey, but one that was also connected to a larger picture. After her group completed the experiment she started to hear about other tribes trying similar things and she felt assured that her timing was right. “It’s part of this whole movement that’s happening,” she says. “People are not satisfied with how things have been going and tribes are looking toward their traditions for a better way to live.” Others have looked to food for solutions to obesity and heart disease through the likes of the so-called Paleo diet, which advises eating things available to humans in the Paleolithic period from 10,000 to 2.5 million years ago. Many who now live glu-
ten-free point to their pre-agricultural ancestors for evidence that wheat should not be a part of the human diet. America’s health crisis is particularly acute among Native communities, where young people are 50 percent more likely to be overweight, while their parents are 50 percent more likely to be classified as obese. Native Americans are more than twice as likely to be diagnosed with diabetes and almost twice as likely to go on to die from diabetes. They’re more likely to have high blood pressure and twice as likely to have a stroke. Those sobering statistics have prompted tribal and government health organizations to work harder at promoting healthy eating, more and more through Native ingredients and traditional recipes. But Native people aren’t the only ones looking to make a connection with the past. Americans have become obsessed with their ancestry. Web sites like Ancestry.com and MyHeritage are booming, and commercials feature testimonials from people who seem super, super excited to have found they have Native American blood. Movie stars pore over their geneology on the PBS series Finding Your Roots, while the History Channel promoted its 2016 remake of Roots with a sweepstakes that offered the grand prize winner a 23andMe DNA kit and a journey for two to a geographic region revealed in their test results. Meanwhile, on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona, basket weaver and jeweler Iva Honyestewa had been on journey of her own. She was hired to work on a project surveying Hopi people about farming and agriculture, tasked with finding out how farmers grew their crops, how much they harvested, who they sold or gave the food to. She asked Hopi women where they got their corn, how they used it, how they stored it. The project sparked her interest and renewed her connection with the land and food. “My grandmother made a lot of traditional dishes. But after I went away to boarding school, a lot of this Western food started coming in, so slowly people got away from the traditional food and eating more of the bad food,” she says. When the local agricultural extension agent asked her to help him revise an old cookbook of traditional recipes, she happily CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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done that!’ but it’s tough,” she says. And it was even used rabbit for the meat and now we use mutton, tougher to travel through the reservation trying to which is a lot higher in cholesterol. And when we persuade others. “Imagine trying to get our whole make blue corn dishes people are so wanting salt community to shift back to the old ways. It takes a that they add Spam. Even the blue tamale that never lot of effort and a lot of education.” had sugar in it now has so much sugar because that’s She’s enthusiastic about the number of Hopi peo- what people are used to.” As anyone who has ever tried a restrictive diet ple she sees returning to traditional food, but she’s can attest, sticking to it is a test of willpower. But frustrated by the pace of progress. restricting yourself only to the ingredi“People are finally realizing we should never have gone away from ents available to your ancestors is even our traditional foods and a lot tougher. of them are starting to cook Even Swentzell doesn’t keep to them,” she says. “The probit all the time. “If I’m home I’m People are doing it 95 to 100 percent,” she lem is we’re putting differsays. “But if I’m traveling that’s ent ingredients in there to finally realizing we when it gets hard.” She brings make them. For example, homemade trail mix, jerky, in our hominy stew they should never have dried bean snacks and dried fruit with her and tries to shop gone away from our for local produce wherever she is. traditional foods. The Pueblo Food Experience - Iva Honyestewa as a diet can feel limiting for people who have developed a global palate. A lot of the ingredients that have come to North America in the last 500 years are things we really like: apples, oranges, pork, tofu, cinnamon, curry powder, soy sauce and balsamic vinegar. But there are experienced chefs who are taking local, pre-contact ingredients and applying culinary expertise to create what’s being called a “New Native Cuisine.” Last month The New York Times profiled Sean Sherman, an Oglala Lakota chef who runs a catering company called Sioux Chef and offers three-day cooking retreats during which people from all over the country come to watch him make magic out of unfamiliar, humble ingredients. Like Swentzell and Honyestewa, Sherman avoids wheat flour, sugar and dairy, but he uses his 30 years of experience as a restaurant chef to pull together things like smoked rabbit rolled in purple amaranth, braised rabbit with spruce tips and a parfait of apricot coulis with gooseberries and sunflower seed cream. Of course Santa Fe’s own Lois Ellen Frank has been doing the same thing since the 1980s (as she told The Times), including that she teaches reguThe pickup truck wasn’t available to their ancestors, but the corn was. lar Native American cuisine classes at the Santa Fe School of Cooking. Santa Fe has long been a place
COURTESY ROXANNE SWENZTELL
agreed. She cooked Hopi foods she’d never made before, like navawnova, a dish of lima beans, squash and other vegetables that she’d never tried. Now it’s become a favorite. (The revision of Healthy Hopi Recipes and Native Edible Plants was published with grant money and given away free to local participants in healthy eating programs.) At the same time, one of her sons was becoming more interested in health and fitness, disillusioned with modern ways. Together they watched Food, Inc., a documentary about industrial farming and food processing, and she became certain she had to give up modern processed food. But change was not easy. Her family had a tough time breaking old habits. They would crave what she calls “bad food,” fall off the wagon and then feel guilty. “We’d be like, ‘Oh! We shouldn’t have
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where chefs have looked to local, traditional ingredients and recipes for inspiration. All of these topics will be open for discussion at the Food Sovereignty symposium, which will bring Indigenous farmers, herders and hunters to the museum to talk about how they have maintained and revitalized traditional food production practices. For the museum, it’s about culture but also health. In a statement about the event, Museum Director Della Warrior made the connection clear, saying, “This event really foregrounds the critical work that individuals and tribal governments are doing to improve tribal communities through healthier diets and lifestyles.” Warrior had been planning a series of events on Native American sovereignty, and the Museum had worked with Swentzel on a summer reading program that brought 300 Roxanne Swentzell and friends pioneered the Pueblo Food Experience. Pueblo students in to hear her talk about the book, sample food and play traditional games. Many of the objects in the Museum’s collection food makes the museum’s collection come alive. At the symposium, Sunday is the day designed have to do with food: pots, baskets, knives and other utensils all represent meals that somebody’s ances- to draw a broader community audience for buffalo dances and storytelling. The meat and potatoes (or tors prepared. Swentzell was able to use some of those objects in piki bread) of the event are scheduled for Friday and her presentations with the students, helping them to Saturday. The sessions include presentations of several draw a clear line from the bean pots of their ancestraditional food revitalization projects happening tors to the lunch that was served that day. “One of our Indian Advisory Panel members was in New Mexico, including a seed bank program in talking to me recently about food as a center of cul- Tesuque, an effort to revitalize traditional piki bread ture, that relationship between food and culture,” (see recipe, page 16) and farming programs for young says deputy director Marla Redcorn-Miller. The people in Taos, Santo Domingo and Tesuque. Another panel includes elders from Santa Clara, conversation was a powerful reminder. “Sometimes when a piece of beautiful piece of pottery is sitting on Taos and Ohkay Owingeh talking about the food of a shelf for a long time with a label on it, it can shift their early years while historic photos are projectperspective of where it originally belonged,” she ed in the background to prompt their memories. says. Bringing people into the museum to talk about Ranchers will talk about economic development and
entrepreneurship opportunities in raising bison, sheep and cattle. And hunters from Tesuque, Santa Clara and San Ildefonso will talk about the historic connection between their communities and hunting, the threats to traditional hunting lands and the importance of feasting, sharing and dancing. On Saturday Lois Ellen Frank and her longtime collaborator Walter Whitewater will do a demonstration of contemporary Native cooking while participants are invited to help create a mural illustrating pre-contact foods. For many visitors it may be the first time they’ve thought hard about what the people who lived here 1,000 years ago would have been eating. For others it may be a fond remembrance of the way things used to be. For Swentzell, it’s all good. “Any part of connecting, really connecting to food, by growing it or seeing it grown, is a reconnecting with your past,” she says. “It’s a first step back to a better way of life.” People who can’t trace their heritage to the Pueblos or any other Native American group shouldn’t feel this doesn’t apply to them, she argues. “I have deep roots here but I have mixed blood, too. We’re all indigenous to somewhere and finding that connection to where you’re from is profoundly life-changing in a good way.” And it’s all about eating. “Eating connects you back to place like nothing I’ve ever experienced before.”
FOOD SOVEREIGNTY SYMPOSIUM 10 am-3 pm Friday and Saturday, Sept. 23 and 24. Free with museum admission. Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1269 FOOD SOVEREIGNTY COMMUNITY DAY CELEBRATION 11 am-4 pm Sunday, Sept. 25. Free. Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, 710 Camino Lejo 476-1269 BOOKSIGNING Roxanne Swentzell and Patricia Perea sign copies of The Pueblo Food Experience 6-7:30 pm Wednesday, Sept. 28. Free. Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226
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BLUE CORN PIÑON PANCAKES INGREDIENTS: ·· 1/2 cup quinoa flour ·· 1 cup blue cornmeal ·· 3 1/2 teaspoons baking powder ·· 1 teaspoon salt ·· 1 1/4 cups water ·· 1 egg ·· 3 tablespoons sunflower oil ·· 1 tablespoon berries, such as blueberries ·· 1/4 cup piñon nuts, shelled ·· Berries and shelled piñon nuts for topping (optional) DIRECTIONS: 1. In a large bowl, sift together quinoa flour, cornmeal, baking powder and salt. 2. Form a well in the center and pour in the water, egg and oil. Add piñon nuts and berries, then mix until smooth. 3. Heat a lightly oiled griddle or frying pan over medium-high heat. 4. Pour batter onto the griddle, using approximately 1/4 cup for each pancake. 5. Turn when bubbles appear. Brown on both sides and serve hot. 6. Top with berries and piñon nuts (as much as you like).
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BUWAH (PIKI BREAD) The making of buwah is a community event. This recipe is constructed with the assumption that two or three women (culturally, it is women who make this bread) participate in the cooking.
Cooking stones are usually flat pieces of basalt varying from 1 to 2 inches thick and range from 1 to 2 feet long. They are usually passed down from generation to generation. The brains can come from any pre-contact animal, such as antelope, buffalo, deer or mountain sheep. INGREDIENTS: ·· 1 tablespoon brains ·· 4 cups finely sifted cornmeal ·· Up to 10 cups water ·· 3 teaspoons ashes (preferably fourwing saltbush ashes and bean ashes) DIRECTIONS: 1. Mash brains to the consistency of softened butter and set aside. 2. Place cornmeal in a large mixing bowl and with a wooden spoon, slowly add boiling water as needed. Stir constantly until the cornmeal batter is thick and completely smooth. 3. Dissolve ashes in 2 cups of water. Slowly add ash water to batter until it reaches the consistency of thin pancake batter. 4. Heat a cooking stone using thinly chopped firewood. When the stone is hot, use a cloth to grease the surface with a thin layer of brains. 5. With a quick motion of your hand, spread a thin sheet of batter across the hot stone as evenly and quickly as possible. Most of the stone should be covered. 6. When the batter starts to peel up, carefully lift the sheet and place it gently on a side pan. Repeat for a second sheet. As soon as the second sheet starts to peel up, gently lay the first sheet on top of it. 7. Roll or fold both sheets together and place them on a side pan for eating. Repeat until all batter has been used.
SPICY CORN SOUP WITH ROASTED RED BELL PEPPER AND CHIPOTLE CHILE PURÉE INGREDIENTS: ·· 4 ears of corn, kernels scraped from the cob, or 3 cups corn kernels ·· 1 tablespoon olive oil ·· 1 yellow onion, diced ·· 1 teaspoon garlic, finely chopped ·· 1/2 teaspoon dried chipotle chile powder ·· 1 teaspoon New Mexico red chile powder ·· 1/2 teaspoon salt ·· 1/4 teaspoon black pepper ·· 6 cups vegetable stock or water ·· 1 red bell pepper, roasted, peeled, seeded and diced ·· 1/2 cup sour cream DIRECTIONS: 1. Prepare the corn by cutting the kernels from the cob. You should have approximately 3 cups of corn kernels from 4 cobs of corn. Save the corncobs and set aside. The cobs will add additional corn flavor to the soup.
6. While the corn soup is simmering, roast the red bell pepper over an open flame then peel, seed, and dice it. 7. Place the diced bell pepper into a blender with the chipotle chile powder, and the New Mexico red chile powder. Blend thoroughly for 1 minute. Pour through a fine sieve and discard the contents of the sieve. 8. In a medium sized mixing bowl, mix together the roasted red bell pepper with the sour cream. Pour the red bell pepper sauce into a plastic squirt bottle and set aside. 9. Remove the corn soup mixture from the heat, discard the corncobs and set aside. Place the corn soup mixture in a blender and puree for 3 minutes. Pour the mixture through a sieve and discard the contents of the sieve.
10. Return the mixture to a saucepan, and heat, over medium heat for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent burning. Pour into bowls, garnish with some of the red pepper sauce and serve immediately.
CHOCOLATE AND PIÑON TORTE Serves 12
This recipe is my adaptation of some of the tortes I sampled at different Pueblos and I serve it a lot in my catering company, Red Mesa Cuisine. I like to serve it with two sauces, a peach sauce from locally grown farmers market peaches from the Velarde Family’s farm and a hand-harvested prickly pear fruit syrup. You can decorate the entire torte and set it out with the sauces for a buffet or you can slice it and plate it individually for your guests. Either way, it’s a wonderful dessert.
COURTESY ROXANNE SWENZTELL
With permission from Lois Ellen Frank’s Foods of the Southwest Indian Nations:
DIRECTIONS: 1. Grease and flour a 9-inch round cake pan. 2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. 3. In a food processor, grind the piñon nuts to a very moist nut butter. Add the blue cornmeal and blend again for about 30 seconds, just long enough to combine. In a double boiler over medium-high heat, melt the butter and chocolate together, stirring occasionally so that they melt and blend together evenly. Add to the piñon mixture in the food processor and blend about 1 minute until smooth. 4. Beat the egg yolks, sugar, and vanilla together in a bowl, and add to the other ingredients in the food processor. Blend again until smooth. Always add the egg mixture last. Otherwise the eggs will curdle from the heated chocolate. 5. Pour the batter into the prepared greased pan and pat down with your fingers until evenly spread in the baking pan. This is a thick batter and you will be able to handle it.
2. In a medium sized saucepan over medium-high heat, add the olive oil and heat until hot but not smoking and then add the onions. Sauté the onions for 3 to 4 minutes until they are translucent, stirring occasionally to prevent burning.
6. Bake approximately 10 to 12 minutes, depending on your oven (convection works well for this torte) or until the cake springs back when the center is touched.
3. Add the garlic and chipòtle chile powder and sauté for 1 more minute. If you pan is too dry add ¼ cup of the vegetable stock. Add the corn kernels and sauté for another 3 minutes, stirring constantly.
7. Remove from the oven and place on a wire rack to cool before decorating. This is a dense torte and to me it resembles dense, very moist brownies. I like it very moist, which is why I only cook it for 10 to 12 minutes; if you desire a crisper torte you can cook it slightly longer.
4. Add the salt, black pepper and the stock and bring to a boil. (If you have cut your corn fresh from the cob, place the reserved cobs into the saucepan at this time). 5. Once the mixture has boiled, reduce the heat and simmer for 30 minutes. Stir occasionally to prevent the corn kernels from burning or sticking to the bottom of the pan.
INGREDIENTS: ·· 1 cup raw piñon nuts ·· 2 tablespoons blue cornmeal ·· 2 tablespoons unsalted butter ·· 9 ounces semi-sweet chocolate ·· 6 egg yolks ·· 3/4 cups granulated sugar ·· 1 teaspoon vanilla extract ·· 1/4-cup confectioners’ sugar and 2 tablespoons blue cornmeal, for decoration (optional)
Seeds, nuts and grains were the basis of the ancestral diet.
8. When the torte has cooled, after 20 to 30 minutes, remove it from the pan, and then be creative for the decorating process. You can do individual stencils on each slice or decorate the entire torte.
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COLLEGE COLLABORATION Tonedeaf Collective is “a mix of film and music students, and we produce events around town,” says member Chris Grigsby. They’re also the masterminds behind the City Different Festival, their biggest project to date set to go off at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design this weekend. Co-sponsored by SFUAD and the Institute of American Indian Arts, the fest is “a two day music arts, film, culture fest on the campus, and it’s something that we started out of the need to connect students with the community,” Grigsby tells SFR. (Maria Egolf-Romero)
COURTESY SFUAD
COURTESY THE ARTIST
MUSIC/FEST
The City Different Festival: 5-11 pm Friday Sept. 23, and 2 pm-midnight Saturday Sept. 24. Free. Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 473-6011.
COURTESY GEEKSWHODRINK.COM
EVENT ART
So Long Sweet Studio Ron Pokrasso is letting everyone take home a piece of the secrets of Timberwick Studios of series paintings, and some motifs echo through the decades—pillars, the shape of a baby grand piano, color swatches on paper and palette knives, blueprints from a former studio. They dabble in family history, major world events and icons of now-gone eras, brushing up against 9/11 and showcasing Santa Fe’s former breakdancers. “By getting rid of this old stuff, it’s an opportunity to cleanse and start anew,” he says. “We artists are always starting and starting and starting.” He’s not giving up teaching as he moves to a new space—which can’t even properly be called a downsize, he says, because the square footage is roughly the same. But he does want to shift his focus to his own work and time in the studio, and see what emerges from that crucible. “Once in it, to stay in it,” he says. “That’s where discoveries are made.” (Elizabeth Miller) FAREWELL TO TIMBERWICK: EMPTYING DRAWERS AND CLEARING RACKS 10 am-7 pm Saturday, Sept. 24. Free. Timberwick Studios, 24 Timberwick Road
Whatever you do, don’t refer to Geeks Who Drink as mere trivia—it’s a quiz, dammit! Covering anything from pop culture, science, literature, film to music and all points in between, the weekly gathering of nerdly teams get quizzin’ to win fabulous prizes and bar cash, but also because there’s the booze and the hosts—known as Quizmasters—who bring the ruckus with jokes, snark and sarcasm. “Geeks Who Drink provides an opportunity to meet new and interesting people,” Quizmaster Katherine Sharp tells SFR. “And who wouldn’t enjoy a job where you can enjoy a beer while working?” The Dragon Room hosts a quiz on Wednesdays, but Sharp takes over The Draft Station every Monday. (Alex De Vore) Geeks Who Drink: 5 pm Monday Sept. 26. Free. The Draft Station, 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443.
BOOKS/LECTURES THE LOW-DOWN We’re still obsessed with lowriders, and the New Mexico History Museum gets that. Thus, alongside its current exhibit on lowriders in tandem with the New Mexico Museum of Art, it’s released a new book titled ¡Orale! Lowrider: Custom Made in New Mexico, a massive compendium of photos and thoughts from longtime lowrider photographer Don Usner and the museum’s photo curator, Kate Ware. “Not everything in New Mexico is brown,” Ware tells us. “The new book is a fullcolor celebration of those artful, amazing and alarming peacocks of the desert.” Ware and Usner lead a panel discussion and book signing on the cars this Sunday. (ADV)
BOB ECKERT
After eight years running the artists’ haven known as Timberwick Studios, a combination printmaking classroom and artists residency program, Ron Pokrasso has decided it’s time for a change. As with all good times of transition, this one comes with a purge. Opening up drawer after drawer of artworks, some of which date back to his time in grad school in the early 1970s, Pokrasso says, they’re not doing him any good gathering dust. “It’s better that these works find their way onto people’s walls,” he says. “I’d rather give this work away than have it sit in drawers.” In the interest of moving quickly through the inventory and opening doors to some younger buyers who can’t usually shop on the shelves where Pokrasso’s work sits, he’s dropping a zero off the price during the one-day Farewell to Timberwick. Curious potential buyers are invited to tour the Timberwick Studios, a barnlike space off the east end of town amid a stretch of piñón, adjacent to a house that’s already become home to its next round of creative types, one last time before he relocates to a new space on Galisteo Street. The works sample from a career’s worth
GEEK OF THE WEEK
¡Orale! Lowrider: Custom Made in New Mexico: 2 pm Sunday Sept. 25. Free. New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100.
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WED/21 BOOKS/LECTURES DHARMA TALK: NATALIE GOLDBERG AND WENDY JOHNSON Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 This week’s talk titled Mind of Autumn is presented by Natalie Goldberg and Wendy Johnson. 5:30 pm, free JENNIFER DANN Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 467-9025 Dann, urban and community forestry program manager for New Mexico State Forestry, presents her lecture about the state's oldest forests titled “The Managment Challenges of New Mexico’s Historic Community Forests.” 6:30 pm, free RU FREEMAN WITH JOHN FREEMAN Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 Ru Freeman blogs on literature and politics for the Huffington Post and she is joined by John Freeman, editor of literary journal Freeman's. The two present a lecture as part of the Lannan Foundation’s Readings and Conversations. 7 pm, $6 STITCHING OUR STORIES: COMMUNITY DIALOGUE Community Gallery 201 W Marcy St., 982-0436 Residents are invited to sit down with the local immigrant community to have a conversation sharing their own stories of coming to America. It may foster understanding and compassion in conjunction with the Stitching Our Stories exhibit, which presents photographs of textile artworks created by Holocaust survivor Esther Nisenthal Krinitz. 6 pm, free TERRY WILSON Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 The local author and teacher reads from her novel Confessions of a Failed Saint. 6 pm, free
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Stephanie Ramirez and his company, Entreflamenco. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26 SWING DANCE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Put on your dancing shoes and best jiving outfit, it's time to take it back to a bygone era and boogie all night long. 8 pm, $5
COURTESY ART.I.FACTORY
THE CALENDAR
EVENTS COMMUNITY LABYRINTH WALK Frenchy's Field Osage Avenue and Agua Fría Street Robert Francis “Mudman” Johnson leads the community on meditative walks through the labyrinth. 9 am, free GEEKS WHO DRINK The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others'. Oh, and grab a drink. 5 pm, free TAPS AND TABLETOPS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 Do you love board games? This evening is for you. And it happens in George RR Martin's theater. Nerd out folks, nerd out. 6 pm, free
MUSIC ALTO ESTILO El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Acoustic soul roots music. 8:30 pm, free BRANDEN JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo covers everything from Bieber to Bach on cello. 7 pm, free DAVINA AND THE VAGABONDS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Jazz, blues and roots music by the traveling ensemble. 7:30 pm, $10 JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Gallegos performs passionate flamenco guitar. 7 pm, free
“Globalization” by Patti Levey is on view at ART.i.factory as part of Ressurecting Isis, opening Saturday.
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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I’ve emailed a number of my friends about the piece. It really is fantastic!
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All Too Human
THE CALENDAR COURESTY NÜART GALLERY
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I was so impressed with the play. The dialogue is great, and it was very smooth in terms of staging. It seemed to me you must have learned everything about Nietzsche, not a small feat.
Rosemary Zibart and directed by Talia Pura
a new play by
TWO WEEKENDS ONLY! Thurs.-Saturday, 7:30 and Sunday at 4 pm
ENDS OCTOBER 2
at Warehouse 21 Theater, 1614 Paseo de Peralta TICKETS AT:
alltoohuman.brownpapertickets.com
Mark Spencer’s “Blue Streak” is on view at Nüart Gallery in Healing the Divide, opening Friday. SWEET WEDNESDAY Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 An Americana-folk duo. 8 pm, free
THU/22 BOOKS/LECTURES KEVIN WOLF Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Wolf reads from his book Homeplace: A Mystery. 6 pm, free LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF SANTA FE COUNTY: 2016 CANDIDATE FORUMS Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 LWVSFC hosts a forum that explores the race for District Attorney where candidates Marco P Serna and Yvonne Chicoine, answer written questions from the audience. 5:30 pm, free MOVEMENT BASED STORYTIME Beehive Kid's Books 328 Montezuma Ave., 780-8051 These stories, told with interactive components, keep kiddos up and moving. 11:30 am, free RENESAN INSTITUTE LECTURE: ELECTORAL COLLEGE OR DIRECT PUBLIC VOTE St. John's United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, 982-9274 Is the Electoral College beneficial or harmful to our system of democracy? Hear from V Lance Tarrance Jr., who has a degree in election behavior. 1 pm, $10
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a flamenco performance with his company. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26
EVENTS GIRLS INC GALA La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Enjoy dinner and bid in a silent auction that donates all proceeds to the girls day camp. Don’t forget cash for the bar. 5:30 pm, $100 UNIFY FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 This all-inclusive festival offers music, yoga and sustainability talks for four days with more than 50 musical performances from artists like Trevor Hall and Mike Love. Noon-3 am, $20
MUSIC BLUE BOOGALOO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Latin and jazz fuse together and make this musical babe. 7 pm, free BRANDEN JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo covers everything from Bieber to Bach on the cello. 7 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes on the piano. 6 pm, $2 LATIN NIGHT WITH DJ DANY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Did you forget to turn on 97.3 FM today? Don’t fret, DJ Dany has you covered. 9 pm, $7 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Evangelo's 200 W San Francsico St., 982-9014 The local group covers a bit of comedy in their rock ’n’ roll. 9 pm, $5
MIKEY SWEET ROAD DOG Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Gospel. That's something you don't get to listen to very often in the desert. 8 pm, free SOL FIRE El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Expect Latin pop rock played with great attitude. 8:30 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 A performance inspired by the true events of a love triangle that involved philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. 7:30 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The story of Jeff, a luckless young security guard trying to get his life together after being thrown out of the Navy. 7:30 pm, $20
WORKSHOP BEGINNER PAINT MOMENT Santa Fe Art Classes 621 Old Santa Fe Trail, 575-404-1801 A guided painting class may awaken your inner artist. 6 pm, $55 GEORGIA O'KEEFFE WATERCOLOR PAINT MOMENT Santa Fe Art Classes 621 Old Santa Fe Trail, 575-404-1801 A painting class is inspired by Georgia O'Keeffe. 10 am, $65
FRI/23 ART OPENINGS BUNNY TOBIAS form & concept 435 Guadalupe Street, 982-8111 Tobias fabricates wearable gold and jewels. Hear her speak about her jewlery. 5-7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
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The Realest Robert Williams: A punk before his time BY MARIA EGOLF-ROMERO m a r i a @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
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Williams, by the way, happens to be a New Mexican, born and raised in Albuquerque. “I moved to LA in 1963 to go to Los Angeles City College to major in fine arts, and that’s when I learned how off-track I really was,” Williams says. “I was at odds. I really wanted to be a remarkable fine arts artist and be a realist.” Abstract expressionism ruled the art world at the time, and that made it particularly hard for him to find a niche that would allow him to do both. In the late 1960s, Williams worked as the art director for custom car legend Ed “Big Daddy” Roth. “Custom car shows were very big in the ’50s and ’60s, and they are very big now,” Williams tells SFR. “These were wild extravaganzas with wild creations of automobiles, and Ed Roth was the wildest.” Roth’s world was bohemian to say the least, and it introduced Williams to a slew of creative types. He met psychedelic poster artists, which opened the door to underground comics. “Anything goes as long as you have a wild imagination,” Williams says of non-mainstream comics.
“They were one of the key factors in social change, and the premier underground comic was the very first one, started by Robert Crumb, Zap Comix, and I was fortunate enough to be one of seven artists in the comic and we all shared ownership.” The comics scene satiated Williams to a certain point but, he says, “In the ’70s and ’80s, I was still trying to find galleries that would take my wild paintings; paintings were supposed to be sedate and caring and color-conscious, and I was doing paintings that were screaming.” Luckily for Williams, his intense works would interact with the looming punk rock explosion of the ’70s and ’80s. “The punk rock movement was nothing like the hippie movement,” he says. “The punk rock movement was a revolutionary, energetic movement that hated society, and would do anything.” He began to show work at after-hours clubs in Los Angeles during the storied heat of the punk uprising, and his creations were well-received. “My paintings were a total success. I couldn’t paint them fast enough. Wild colors, gratuitous sex and violence and anything went. … For the first time in my life, I had a painting peer group.” And still, the art world at large shunned him. “Art Forum did some writing on me—not positive, but no one else did.” Williams reminisces. “Art in America wouldn’t deal with me, even though I had good friends writing for them, [and] they just turned their back on the fact that there was this enormous energy breaking through in the United States—so I started a magazine called Juxtapoz.” The magazine promotes alternative art forms, like graffiti, tattoos and gig posters, giving a legitimacy and voice to art not destined for museums. Born in 1994 as a quarterly publication, Williams says, “we decided to have the art be the thing that fills up the page.”
COURTESY CCA
tanding in front of Robert Williams’ art is reminiscent of an awe-inspiring rock show; bright and hardcore, his work is the visual equivalent a guitar riff’s crescendo. Williams’ canvases are aesthetic explosions and he’s created 60 of them for his upcoming show at the Center for Contemporary Arts (CCA), Slang Aesthetics. Originally, Williams created the work with another destination in mind—The Tony Shafrazi Gallery in New York City, the very same gallery that propelled geniuses like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Herring to super stardom. “Shafrazi is a very famous character, he was very good friends with Andy Warhol,” Williams says. When Shafrazi lost his lease, however, Williams decided to show (rather than sell) the work, and its first appearance at the Barnsdale Park Municipal Museum in 2015 set attendance records at the 60-year-old institutuion on the outskirts of Hollywood. The collection, now headed to CCA, utilizes new-school imagery with fairly old-school methodology, an intersection between Williams’ forward-thinking aesthetic and knowledgeable reverence for art history. “They are fine art oil paintings painted on good linen,” he says, “just like they did 400 years ago.” Think radical comic-book imagery painted with the skill and technique of a guy like Monet. Williams’ accomplishments are enough to make any human feel mortal, and his laurels rest in many branches of the art world: from cover art for Guns ’n’ Roses’ Appetite for Destruction to pushing an agenda of social evolution through his drawings at Zap Comix and, ultimately, the See Williams’ visual awesomeness like “Death by Exasperation” in Slang Aesthetics. founding of Juxtapoz Magazine, the number one selling art magazine in the world.
ROBERT WILLIAMS: SLANG AESTHETICS 6-8 pm Friday Sept. 23. Free. Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338
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THE CALENDAR FALL GROUP SHOW Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 558 Canyon Road, 992-0711 A display of the breadth and depth of the gallery artists includes works from Rick Bartow, Rose B Simpson, Penny Truitt and more. Through Oct. 22. 5 pm, free LEE MACLEOD Silver Sun 656 Canyon Road, 983-8743 Macleod, a long-time Santa Fe resident, brings his newest landscape paintings of mountain scenes from the Tetons to the Alps. 5 pm, free MARIAN SHIRIN: FLASH ALCHEMY Fine Art Framers 1415 W Alameda, 982-4397 Shirin depicts the five main alchemical processes of the soul's evolution in 35 oil paintings and 35 haiku. We don't know what that means but it sounds pretty cool. Through Sept. 25. 5:30 pm, free MARK SPENCER: HEALING THE DIVIDE Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road, 988-3888 Spencer's oil paintings are remarkably vivid in their skill and detail, as he weaves abstract elements into his figurative work. Through Oct. 9. 5 pm, free NEW IMAGISTS IN THE SOUTHWEST Spector-Ripps Project Space Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Featuring work by 13 artists based in New Mexico who create in the pop-surrealist style fostered by publications like Juxtapoz and High Fructose. Through Nov. 27. 6 pm, free R JOHN ICHTER: DREAMING OUT LOUD Gallery 901 708 Canyon Road, 559-304-7264 Ichter creates images using pastels he hand-rubs onto black suede archival boards. Through Oct. 13. 5 pm, free ROBERT WILLIAMS: SLANG AESTHETICS Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 A huge presentation of drawings and paintings created by the prolific cartoonist, activist and Juxtapoz founder (see A&C, page 23). 6 pm, free SARAH SILTALA Sage Creek Gallery 421 Canyon Road, 988-3444 An exhibition of still life paintings features birds and other living things. Through Oct. 6. 5 pm, free STEPHAN MARTINIERE: FUTURESCAPES Pop Gallery 125 Lincoln Ave., 820-0788 Martiniere is a sci-fi concept artist who contributed imagery to Rage, Fallout 4 and Star Wars. He’s seriously rad. Through Oct. 31 (see A&C, page 25). 5:30 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES
FILM
JUDITH HENNESSEY: FIRST RODEO Evoke Contemporary 550 S Guadalupe St., 995-9902 Hennessey debuts her first novel titled First Rodeo. 5 pm, free SANTA FE MEMORY CAFE: DR. GARY ROSENBERG Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-0439 The doctor speaks about Alzheimers and the treatments available at UNM Medical Center. 1 pm, free
SALUTE TO IMMIGRANTS WEEK KICK-OFF Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 George RR Martin personally begins the weeklong movie festival honoring immigrants. See Moscow on the Hudson, Sin Nombre, Avalon, The Lost City and Desierto. 7 pm, free
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Stephanie Ramirez and his company Entreflamenco. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Enjoy a tapas-inspired meal while the dancers wow you with their flamenco footwork. 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS CITY DIFFERENT FESTIVAL Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6011 The Institute of American Indian Arts sponsors music, art and film produced by Tonedeaf Collective. Open to the community, the festival presents sculptures and video art installations, as well as 15 live musical performances over the two-day event (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free ELLEWELL ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY OPEN HOUSE ElleWell 933 Baca St., 629-3116 The holistic integrative natural medicine center hosts a day of free events to celebrate its anniversary. 9 am, free GOVERNOR'S AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE IN THE ARTS CEREMONY St. Francis Auditorium 107 W Palace Ave., 982-1890 The 43rd annual awards celebrates the extensive role that artists play in New Mexico and honors over 20 artists. 5:15 pm, free UNIFY FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 An all-inclusive festival offers music, yoga and ceremony over four days of unification. Enjoy more than 50 musical performances in genres from electronic dance music to reggae. Noon-3 am, $20
MUSIC ALPHA CATS Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Playful swing that borrows a bit from jazz. 6 pm, free DAVE SEAMAN & DARIN EPSILON Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Seaman is a house music icon and he performs with rising star Epsilon for a night of electronica greatness. 8 pm, $20 DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery is the smoothest piano man around. 6:30 pm, free GEORGIA PARKER AND BO DEPENA Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Alt.country meets folk. 7 pm, free GREG BUTERA AND THE GUNSELS The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Butera and his local ensemble make Americana and country. 10 pm, $5 JOHN KURZWEG BAND Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Kurzweg's repertoire of country and rock 'n' roll tunes will have you tapping your foot. 8:30 pm, free KINETIC FRIDAYS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Get kinetic. Move that butt. 9 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Have a glass of wine and listen to the jazz guitar talents of Malone. 6 pm, free SEAN HEALEN BAND El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Healen plays Americana and rock 'n' roll covers and originals. 8:30 pm, $5 STELLA Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 A proto-jazz-funk band. 7 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
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COURTESY THE ARTIST
Futuristic 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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hether or not you realize it, you’re already intimately familiar with the work of French concept artist Stephan Martiniere. You’ve seen his creations in films like Star Wars and Suicide Squad, in the three-dimensional Imagineering work of Disney theme parks and in popular video games like John Woo’s Stanglehold and Fallout 4. Martiniere even served as the lead art director for 2011 game RAGE, a post-apocalyptic universe that looks absolutely stunning to this day thanks in part to developer id’s proprietary id Tech engine, but also Martiniere’s brilliantly creative ability to realize sweeping, beautiful works of art and world-building within the sci-fi and fantasy genres. If ever there were an argument for science fiction and/or video games as art, Stephan Martiniere’s portfolio is it. Martiniere grew up during a golden age of comic books and rapidly became obsessed with their inno-
A newly local artist changes our perception on sci-fi and fantasy vative style and creative processes. “During the ’60s, there was so much out there in comics that was unbelievable, and I was always attracted to drawing and always thought I would become a comic book artist,” he says. “It wasn’t until later, when I was in art school in Paris—and I was drawing comics then, just not professionally—that I jumped into animation, and I thought this seemed logical as they were just like comic books, only moving.” Martiniere was a natural when it came to animation, and it ultimately led to jobs in Japan and the United States that would change his life forever. He fully believes that, had he stayed in his home country, he would have fallen into comics by default, but small jobs led to larger and better opportunities and a diversification of mediums. The natural evolution of his career led to early 3D video game art design on the Myst series which, in turn, allowed him more creative freedom as he steadily built a name for himself. “When you hire an art director, you hire someone to come up with a vision from the smallest props to the largest environments, and I would approach
video games thinking, ‘How do I take a game like this and make it super-cool and super-interesting for everyone? How do I approach it like a film?’” Martiniere tells SFR. “They want you for your sensibility and what you can bring creatively; the only restriction is based in technology, and once you understand the limitation, you work within it. … I always tried to get involved with games where there was enough tech for me to make a difference artistically.” The luxury of artistic and creative freedom often leads to an artist’s best work, and in Martiniere’s case, it allowed for contributions to the aforementioned projects among countless others and the ability to be more choosy about his projects. This is how he came to work with id, Lucasfilm and others. These days, Martiniere (who recently moved to Santa Fe full-time) is more ensconced within the world of publishing and the designing of book covers, a field he says he loves because artists can maintain ownership of their original works. He also enjoys a challenge. “I’ve done over 150 books so far over the last 15 years,” he says. “It’s usually something with sci-fi, though sometimes I do covers that are more traditional, but I always approach it from a graphics standpoint. It’s almost like doing advertising, only it’s more abstract, because you’re creating an image that has to be very compelling … It’s like, here’s a story and you need one image that will attract a reader to open and read the book, and that can also convey an entire story just in that image.” Martiniere’s body of work can now be seen locally in his current show at Pop Gallery. Titled Beyond the Horizon, the collection provides an overview of the 15 plus years he’s spent as a professional artist and features numerous pieces from his years in publishing. And though his work has been unwittingly viewed by millions, this is the first time Martiniere’s creations will be front and center on their own, the focus of attention. Showing in a gallery has also allowed the artist to cut across a wider variety of mediums including canvas, plexi, aluminum and more. “I wanted to create different ways of printing and offering clients different options,” Martiniere continues. “These are things I don’t normally do when I offer my work as smaller prints.” Beyond the Horizon provides an exciting contrast to the usual Santa Fe art fare and simultaneously flips the script on genres that have historically been considered nerdy. It’s been up for several weeks already, but Martiniere will be on hand to discuss his efforts at a special reception this Friday. “There’s a wealth of beautiful art out there that isn’t necessarily connected to what people see when they think of ‘gallery’ art,” Martiniere points out. “I really appreciate Pop wanting to take the risk, and I think more people need to do that, because people change, curiosities change and there are new interests—there’s no reason why something with a sci-fi or fantasy subject cannot be relevant; there’s something to be said there that is important.” BEYOND THE HORIZON; FUTURESCAPES BY STEPHAN MARTINIERE 5 pm Friday Sept. 2. Free. Pop Gallery 125 Lincoln Ave., Ste. 111 820-0788
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THE CALENDAR
I’m a 27-year-old straight male and a high-school teacher held to a strict code. I left my fiancée in June and haven’t had sex since. Needless to say, I’m really horny. I’m also in that weird inbetween age where I’m not comfortable hanging out at college bars but I’m also a bit younger than most of the women in other bars. But when I scour dating apps, I see profiles of women ages 18 to 22—women who, for all I know, could have been students at my school. I would never fuck a former student, of course, but I’m worried that I could get my license revoked if my supervisors discovered I was online trolling for sex. So what am I supposed to do? My cock is making sad faces at me right now. -Teacher Evidently Needs Sexual Encounter If you live in a college town, TENSE, there’s at least one bar where grad students hang out— look for the bar where women are grading papers, not pounding shots, and hang out there. And with more than one in three new marriages beginning with an online meeting these days, and with Pew Research telling us that 60 percent of Americans approve of online dating, I don’t see how your supervisors could possibly object to staffers scouring dating apps and the interwebs for age-appropriate partners. Unless we’re talking about a Catholic school staffed entirely by nuns, which isn’t what we’re talking about. I’m female, 26, and in an open marriage with a wonderful man. I am having a recurring fear that he’ll get some other woman pregnant and she will refuse to abort. I trust him, but condoms break (or get holes poked in them). He inherited serious money from his father, and his father got “oops’d” into having three kids. I would immediately divorce my husband if this happened. (Yes, I’m an asshole, but my life plans have NEVER included children, step or otherwise.) My solution is for him to get a vasectomy. He says he’s for it, but it’s been a YEAR and he hasn’t made an appointment. I’m seriously considering yanking “open” until he’s sterile. Maybe he really wants children and he’s not telling me, but I keep asking and he keeps saying no. Am I being unreasonable asking for the snip? -Seriously Not Into Pregnancy Maybe your husband wants children, SNIP, maybe he doesn’t. Or maybe he’s one of those guys invested in/aroused by the power of spunk to make babies they don’t want; these guys would rather see their shots intercepted than go unattempted. So while a vasectomy is an eminently reasonable way for a married man who wishes to remain childless to prevent himself from impregnating someone who isn’t his wife, SNIP, arousal often defies reason. And ultimately this is his decision to make—his body, his choice. I’m a single gay male in my 40s. I have a good life and do good work. I’m not worried about finding the right guy to settle down with. I’m worried about what happens next. I’ve had three serious long-term relationships and several friends-with-benefits relationships. In every single one, a time has come, generally sooner rather than later, when I completely lose interest in my partner sexually. It’s not a matter of him being less attractive to me. It’s not a matter of us not being on good terms—often we become very close friends. It’s not a matter of my sex drive shutting down—I’m all kinds of turned on by other guys, just not the one I’m with. It’s reached a point where I’m deliberately holding myself back from getting into relationships because I’m tired of ruining good things. -Confirmed Bachelor
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You could get your ass into therapy, CB, and churn through several relationships while you work on this—relationships that could fail for this or some other reason—and not have anything to show for your effort 10 years from now. Or you could find a guy who has the same problem you do—your predicament is not uncommon—and instead of breaking up when you lose interest in each other sexually, you stay together, you love each other, you take care of each other, and you both fuck other guys. Mid-20s female here, ready to date after a period of difficulty in my personal life. I have started taking an antidepressant, which has allowed me to regain control over my life, but one side effect is difficulty having orgasms. People can be judgey when it comes to antidepressants, and it’s not something that’s easy to share. It’s frustrating because this medication allows me to be in a place mentally where I can pursue healthy adult relationships, but it affects sex, which for me is something that is key for a healthy relationship. How do I have a conversation about this with a potential partner? -Hopeful About Potential Partners, Yay You can put off the convo about your meds with a white lie, HAPPY, by telling your potential partner you never come the first few times you’re with someone new—no pressure on you to come (or come clean just yet), no pressure on them to make you come. Then level with them about the real reason you’re having difficultly coming—new to antidepressants, still adjusting, but grateful for the other benefits—after you’ve gotten to know them better. It’s a harmless, understandable white lie, not a major betrayal. If they react like it is one, HAPPY, then you’ll have to DTMFA. I’m male, 30, and newly single. I’ve been using my newfound freedom to sleep around, and last week I had sex with a married woman. Yes, she was cheating. Yes, I was aware. There won’t be any future sexual encounters with this woman, but here’s the thing I was wondering about: I don’t feel guilty, not one bit. This fuck was a strong contender for best fuck of my life. Does that make me a bad person? And if so, do I just accept the fact that I’m a bad person? -Basically A Dastardly Dick, Yes? Fucking someone you know to be cheating implicates you in an infidelity, of course, and that’s usually bad—but not always. In some cases, cheating is the least worst option for all involved (the cheater, the cheated, their dependents); in others, cheating saves marriages that needed saving; in still others, cheating ends marriages that needed ending. Absent more info about this woman’s particular circumstances, BADDY, I can’t make a definite ruling about her badness for cheating or your badness for aiding and abetting. Straight 64-year-old man wanting to try the gay side of life!!! Don’t have the bodybuilder’s body anymore!!! Average size!!! Would anyone get turned on to old-timer’s body!!! Need some advice where and how to meet other gay men!!! Also HIV is a concern!!! Any other advice would be appreciated!!! -When I’m Sixty-Four Check out daddyhunt.com, WISF, the “largest gay personals site for daddies, bears, and guys that love them”!!! Don’t be paralyzed by fear!!! Of HIV or anything else!!! But consider getting on PrEP!!! And use condoms!!! And remember::: Sex with a guy who thinks he’s negative but isn’t is way riskier than sex with a guy who knows he’s positive and takes his meds!!! And stop calling yourself straight!!!
On the Lovecast, Dan chats with Mistress Matisse about the Sex Workers Outreach Project: savagelovecast.com
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STEPHEN PITTS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The locally based singersongwriter does his folky rock originals on the deck. 5 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 See a performance inspired by the true events concerning a love triangle between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. 7:30 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The story of Jeff, a luckless young security guard trying to get his life together after being thrown out of the Navy, written by Kenneth Lonergan. 7:30 pm, $20
WORKSHOP GEORGIA O'KEEFFE WATERCOLOR PAINT MOMENT Santa Fe Art Classes 621 Old Santa Fe Trail, 575-404-1801 A painting class inspired by Georgia O'Keeffe is great for beginners and makes a perfect friend date. 10 am, $65
SAT/24 ART OPENINGS PATTI LEVEY AND ANDREA VARGAS: RESURRECTING ISIS The ART.i.factory 930 Baca St., 982-5000 Long before terrorism, Isis was a powerful and compassionate Egyptian goddess. Levey and Vargas present drawings, photographs and hand-painted tapestries to reposition the legacy of Isis. Through Nov. 12. 4 pm, free RON POKRASSO: FAREWELL TO TIMBERWICK STUDIOS Timberwick Studios 24 Timberwick Road Pokrasso offers a rare opportunity to nab artwork from every period of his career in multimedia art. Timberwick has been the artist's creative home for the past eight years and as he builds a new space in downtown Santa Fe he opens the doors to his past (see SFR Picks, page 19). 10 am-7 pm, free SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave. Local artists present their newest works in a variety of mediums from painting to sculpture in the perfect outdoor autumn air. Nab the sunshine while you can. 10 am-4 pm, free
SLANG AESTHETICS WALK THROUGH WITH ROBERT WILLIAMS AND CURATOR MEG LINTON Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Experience the exhibit with its two creators—the prolific artist and the show's curator. Hear their two cents as you walk through a huge presentation of Williams' work. 2 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES JOHN NICHOLS Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Follow the lives of four friends and the changes they endure as Nichols reads from his newest novel, The Annual Big Arsenic Fishing Contest. 3 pm, free
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a flamenco performance with his company, Entreflamenco. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26 FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Order a drink from the bar to accompany the dancers’ fancy flamenco footwork. 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS CITY DIFFERENT FESTIVAL Santa Fe University of Art and Design 1600 St. Michael's Drive, 473-6011 The Institute of American Indian Art sponsors a festival of music, art and film produced by Tonedeaf Collective. Open to the community, the festival presents sculptures and video art installations and live musical performances (see SFR Picks, page 19). 2 pm, free RISING STARS IN THE SOUTHWEST FUNDRAISER Drury Plaza Hotel 828 Paseo de Peralta, 424-2175 Enjoy beautiful views of the city from the hotel’s rooftop while Rio performs bossa nova music and you peruse an impressive silent auction with all proceeds donated to the fund that helps local youth. 5:30 pm, $55 SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Plaza Guadalupe Street and Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 A great selection of local produce and meats. 7 am, free STEAMPUNK SPECTACULAR Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 A daylong festival with a scavenger hunt, steampunk panel discussions and live musical entertainment. Dress in your steampunk best to create a unique atmosphere! 2 pm, $20
UNIFY FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 The all-inclusive festival keeps it going for the third day of music, yoga and ceremony. Noon-3 am, $20
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Hearne and his band of brothers make Americana music all night long. 6 pm, free DAVID GEIST AND JULIE TRUJILLO Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes and is joined by Trujillo for a fancier-thanever performance. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery’s piano skills are the smoothest. 6:30 pm, free ELIZABETH COOK AND LEE HARVEY OSMAND Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 The country star, who is a regular performer at Nashville's Grand Ole Opry, plays selections from her newest album, Methadone Blues. 7:30 pm, $22 FUTURE FANTASY DELIGHT LAUNCH PARTY WITH PRINCESS NOKIA Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Future Fantasy Delight is a Santa Fe-based label founded by artist Nico Salazar specializing in illustration, fashion design and live art performance. Princess Nokia (Destiny Nicole Ortiz) puts on a crazy awesome live dance music performance at 9 pm. 7 pm, $18 GREG BUTERA AND THE GUNSELS Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Butera and his local ensemble do their country thing. 7 pm, free GREGG TURNER Burger Stand at Burro Alley 207 W San Francisco St., 989-3360 Turner first cut his musical teeth in a 1976 proto-punk band from LA called Vom (as in vomit) and he’s punk rockin’ these days too (see 3 Questions, page 27). 9 pm, free HALF-BROKE HORSES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 They do the Americanahonky-tonk thing damn well. 1 pm, free IRENE ADAMS Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 The singer-songwriter performs folk originals. 8 pm, free
THE CALENDAR
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 A performance inspired by the true events of a love triangle between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. 7:30 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The story of Jeff, a luckless young security guard trying to get his life together after being thrown out of the Navy, written by Kenneth Lonergan. 7:30 pm, $20
WORKSHOP CREATING SIDE BY SIDE: CANNUPA HANSKA LUGER, "SLIP-CAST SEED BOMBS" Ralph T Coe Foundation for the Arts 1590 B Pacheco St., 983-6372 The activist-artist leads a twoday workshop, in which he introduces participants to the process of creating slip cast objects and talks about clay as a medium for propelling social change. 12:30 pm, $35 SHAKESPEARE'S PROSPERO: POET OR SCIENTIST St. John's College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 Community Seminars are an opportunity to read and discuss seminar works in the unique St. John’s manner. At this event, delve into Shakespeare’s The Tempest. 1-3 pm, $17-$35
SUN/25 ART OPENINGS ANDREA BROYLES: EXTERNAL/INTERNAL Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The closing reception celebrates the show of contemporary figurative paintings by Broyles. 5 pm, free
with Gregg Turner
RONN SPENCER
JIM AND TIM Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Classic rock and country covers by two friends. 3 pm, free LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A little bit comedy, a little bit rock 'n' roll. All covers. 8:30 pm, $5 MÜSHI El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Groovy psychedelic jazz. 7:30 pm, free SCOTTY & THE ATOMICS The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 They play jazz, rock, reggae, funk and blues. So, everything. 10 pm, free
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 22nd • 10:00pm • NO COVER
KITCHEN SERVING UNTIL 1:30AM $3.00 RED STRIPE 16 OZ. CANS $3.00 HEINEKEN 16 OZ. CANS
In recent years we’ve given glowing reviews to both of the former Angry Samoans member’s solo albums, and the good news is the Gregg Turner shows no signs of slowing down. Turner’s paen to Roky Erickson-esque rock and doowop is not only fun and satirical, it’s well-executed and musically excellent. Turner performs at The Burger Stand Saturday Sept. 24.(8:30 pm, 207 W San Francisco St., 9893360). Be there or be square. (Alex De Vore)
FREE SHOW
Can you explain your music? Like, what’s your pitch? It’s hopefully Jonathan Richman meets Tom Lehrer with a little bit of Allan Sherman thrown in—y’know, “Hello Muddah Hello Faddah.” I have two backup singers and we do about 10 songs together and I do about five solo. I have a bunch of new stuff, too, in the vein of Phil Spektor ... It’s goofy and silly. Will people be able to get your new record, Chartbusters, at the show? Not yet. We were supposed to have it out already and we will soon. There’s this little record company in Boston called Feeding Tube Records and they’re putting it out on CD and vinyl. I didn’t know there was a market for that anymore, but it’s nice because we recorded it up in Taos with this guy David Costanza on older, analog equipment, so it has this nice, warm sound.
boxcarsantafe.com - 505-988-7222 - 530 S. Guadalupe St.
Does this show and the album and new stuff mean more Santa Fe shows soon? I can’t play a lot of places in town because people sit there and eat and talk over it, and I think for my music to go over, people really need to listen. When I see people play, I want to know something about them, not what they can recreate. It’s always hard to know what’s appealing to people or not, but I have criteria—is it different, is there something people will care about?
SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave. Works of made by local artists. 10 am-4 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ANNIE HOPPER Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat and Conference Center 50 Mount Carmel Road, 988-1975 The author gives a talk titled Trauma, the Brain & Chronic Ilness, which details stress responses and healing. 3 pm, free JESSICA HELEN LOPEZ AND JOHN MACKER Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Lopez and Macker are each well-known in the poetry world for different reasons. They read their newest poems. 5 pm, free
JOURNEYSANTAFE: SUSAN TARMAN Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Tarman is executive director of the local chapter group 122 of Amnesty International. She talks about supporting human rights and the efforts of her group concerning cultural variations, conflict resolution and alternatives to violence. 11 am, free MICHAEL SCOFIELD Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Scofield, an author who lives in Santa Fe, presents his newest book titled Dedicated Lives which tells the stories of residents of the City Different who devoted their entire lives to helping others. Philanthropic heroes get the spotlight. 3 pm, free
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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THE CALENDAR ¡ORALE! LOWRIDER: CUSTOM MADE IN NEW MEXICO New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 A panel discussion and book signing with Don Usner and Kate Ware debuts their beautiful photography book that pays homage to an enduring cultural tradition of lowriders (see SFR Picks, page 19). 2 pm, free
DANCE ENTREFLAMENCO El Flamenco de Santa Fe 135 W Palace Ave., 209-1302 Antonio Granjero presents a fiery flamenco performance with featured dancer Stephanie Ramirez and his company Entreflamenco. mances. ¡Olé! 7:30 pm, $26
EVENTS
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3538 Zafarano Dr. 473-3454 Mon-Sat: 6 am to 9 pm Sunday: 7 am to 8 pm
1514 Rodeo Rd. 820-7672 Mon-Sat: 6 am to 8 pm Sunday: 7 am to 6 pm
MUSEUM HILL FREE-FORALL COMMUNITY DAY CELEBRATION Museum Hill 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 A family activity bonanza gives you free access to all of the museums on Museum Hill. AND, there are special family workshops happening in each museum, like treasure hunting and learning about bee pollination habits. Enjoy live musical performances, circus demonstrations and three storytelling sessions with Joe Hayes. 9 am, free RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 The open-air market presents work by local artists. 10 am-4 pm, free UNIFY FESTIVAL El Rancho de las Golondrinas 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 The all-inclusive festival includes music, yoga and a slew of activities over four days of unification. Noon-3 am, $20
FILM SANTA FE JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL: MR. GAGA Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Enjoy dessert at a pre-reception with guest choreographer Amy Morrow for the film that opens the film festival's seventh season. It focuses on GAGA, a dance movement developed by Ohad Saharan, one of the pre-eminent modern dance choreographers. 7:30 pm, $15
MUSIC DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery plays the piano with the smoothest skills. 6:30 pm, free LONE PIÑON Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Northern New Mexico root music inspired by Latin tones. 7 pm, free
MIKE BROWN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Get a dose of folk from Brown. 1 pm, free SANTA FE SYMPHONY: BRAHMS, WAGNER AND DVORÁK Lensic Performing Arts Center 211 W San Francisco St., 988-1234 The symphony begins its 33rd season with Wagner's piece "Entry of the Gods into Valhalla," Brahms’ Violin Concerto and Dvorák's Symphony No 9, all conducted by Roderick Cox and featuring solo violinist Alexi Kenney. 4 pm, $22 THE LARK AND THE LOON Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The two songwriters perform their own works alongside a studied repertoire of traditional and timeless songs. Notably varied, their sets are often infused with Irish jigs, blues and ballads. 3 pm, free
THEATER ALL TOO HUMAN Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 See a performance inspired by the true events surrounding a a love triangle between philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, his best friend Paul Reé and the temptress they lust after, Lou Salomé. 4 pm, $22 LOBBY HERO Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 The story of Jeff, a luckless young security guard trying to get his life together after being thrown out of the Navy. Written by Kenneth Lonergan. 3 pm, $20
WORKSHOP CREATING SIDE BY SIDE: CANNUPA HANSKA LUGER, "SLIP-CAST SEED BOMBS" Ralph T Coe Foundation for the Arts 1590 B Pacheco St., 983-6372 The activist-artist completes his two-day workshop, which is the last in the foundation’s summer series. 12:30 pm, $35
MON/26
Want to see your event listed here? We’d love to hear from you Send notices via email to calendar@sfreporter.com. Make sure you include all the pertinent details such as location, time, price and so forth. It helps us out greatly. Submissions don’t guarantee inclusion.
For help, call Maria at 395-2910.
SUSTAINABILITY SERIES: RENEWABLE ENERGY AND EFFICIENCY IN COMMERCIAL BUILDING Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., 955-6590 Panelists Bill Eckman, Michael Boyer, Regina Wheeler and Rob Wing talk about economic incentives behind energy efficiency in large commercial properties. 6:30 pm, free GEEKS WHO DRINK The Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others’ and make sure to have a few beers because it’s really good for your recall (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free
MUSIC COWGIRL KARAOKE WITH MICHÉLE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michele Leidig, Queen of Santa Fe Karaoke, hosts this night of amateurish fun. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery is THE piano man. See him do his supersmooth thing. 6:30 pm, free
WIN
BOOKS/LECTURES
MICHAEL SHUMAN Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Attorney and author Shuman presents two books titled Local Dollars, Local Sense and The Local Economy Solution. 5:30 pm, free ROSE B SIMPSON: SOUTHWEST SEMINARS Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 The multi-disciplined artist presents the lecture “Creative Process in Context: Cross Cultural Healing Mechanism.” 6 pm, $12
TUE/27
BOOKS/LECTURES
OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES BROWN BAG TALKS: DEAN WILSON The Center for New Mexico Archaeology 7 Old Cochiti Road, 476-4448 Wilson is a retired OAS ceramicist. He presents a lecture about the pottery of Soccoro and common misconceptions concerning the art titled “Characteristics and Distribution of Socorro Blackon-White and Speculations About the Twelfth Century Reorganization of the Eastern Pueblo World.” Whew, what a mouthful. Noon, free
WIN WIN
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FOOD
Crisis at the Co-op
who can’t afford quality food,” she says. Seydel understands the group’s concerns but she does not support the petition. Petition organizers are also deeply suspicious of National Cooperative Grocers, a co-op of co-ops Take Back the Co-op Movment threatens progress at La Montañita that has negotiated a national contract with UNFI (United National Foods, Inc.), the company that distributes a lot of the stuff you buy: Organic Valley milk, BY GWYNETH DOLAND the broad values that have guided the membership Bob’s Red Mill grains, Annie’s Cheddar Bunnies, etc. t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m for decades. Demanding a return to democratic rule Membership in NCG also makes your food cheaper. means the co-op will be controlled by a small group of Members of this group have demanded the closure ou may have heard about a movement unelected people who will have great power only beof the co-op location that opened in 2013 on Albucalled “Take Back the Co-op” and you may cause they have a surplus of time. Removing the curquerque’s West side. It’s not making money, but the have been asked to sign a petition calling rent leadership structure means reversing the co-op’s for a special membership meeting for La progress on making groceries less expensive, which co-op’s primary driving force is not to turn a profit— Montañita Co-op. If you haven’t already signed it, I means rejecting access by anyone not rich enough to it’s to provide access to healthy food and the cooperative model as broadly as possible. The Rio Grande hope you’ll read this before you do. be able to spend whatever they want on food. store in Albuquerque didn’t turn a profit for three This is just my opinion, but I am the person this I interviewed Dorothy Finnigan and Django years after it opened and the Wild Sage Co-op in Galnewspaper pays to write an opinion column about Zeaman, two of the co-founders of “Take Back the food, something I’ve been doing for newspapers Co-op” and its designated spokespeople. They told lup wasn’t profitable for seven years. The West side since 1999. I’m also a member of the co-op who’s been me they were originally motivated when the co-op store still has time to turn around and co-op General shopping there for more than 20 years. So I want to added the “Clean 15,” 15 fruits and vegetables with Manager Dennis Hanley should be given more time to do it. see it succeed. the lowest pesticide levels. How La Montañita has been forIf 1,600 people sign the petition, the group will be many of you are able to find and aftunate to have hired managers able to call the meeting, at which they intend to vote ford exclusively organic produce? with professional experience in out the entire current board and elect their own slate Most of us buy some conventional running grocery stores. That’s a of candidates; fire the general manager, consultants produce because we have to—or good thing. who have worked with the co-op for decades and oth- we choose to. Ask yourself: “People don’t understand the er employees; and get rid of all conventional produce “Conventional produce gives incredible impact we’ve had for (except local, pesticide-free produce). They also want people more choices, a bigger asDo you see evidence over 200 producers through the to dilute the power of the board and require members sortment and a lower price point,” local distribution center—and it that the co-op has to vote on a wide array of decisions that have been says Robin Seydel, who has been was these outside general mandelegated to the board and general manager as the involved with La Montañita for agers who did that,” says Martha diverged so far co-op has grown from a group of friends to five stores, more than 30 years, first as a volWhitman, who started as a vol17,000 member families and a statewide distribution unteer and now as the newsletter from what it has unteer and then managed the network for local farmers. manager and membership coordiNob Hill store for a short time If this effort succeeds it will gut the co-op of its nator. “There are too many people always been? in 1987. Whitman has been ininstitutional memory and leadership and hand that volved with the co-op ever since, power over to a small group of members who have including spending 10 years on the luxury of time to spend on it. It will reverse more the board of directors. than 15 years of the co-op’s efforts to lower prices and With 30 years of dedication expand access to people of all socio-economic brackto the co-op, she’s the “outside consultant” this ets. It may very well destroy La Montañita and the group wants fired. important infrastructure it has built to support Finnigan and Zeaman, who moved to Santa access to affordable local, organic agriculture Fe four years ago, told me: “This is a story about across New Mexico. personal and corporate greed.” They believe that Ask yourself: Do you see evidence that Whitman and Hanley are making changes to the the co-op has diverged so far from what co-op for their own personal enrichment and it has always been and what you want that the current board is made up of people it to be that it should be completely who have been “duped and hoodwinked” by destroyed and rebuilt? outside corporate interests. The co-op is in the middle of a But there is no evidence for this. long period of adjustment to an enRobin Seydel, Martha Whitman and vironment in which it is no longer many others have kicked their own asses to unique in offering organic food. It make this co-op the success that it is. They is a national model for the distrihelped build this thing, they’ve kept it gobution of locally grown food. And ing and they’re willing to keep doing it so its doors have stayed open, despite you and I don’t have to. massive competition in the natural These are not people you need to take the foods market, because board memco-op back from. bers and general managers have takThe board needs to be more transparent and en a creative and careful approach to more communicative with members. And memgrowth and cutting costs. bers need to remember the cooperative part of And now, just as it celebrates its 40th co-op. If you really believe in affordable access birthday, the co-op is being attacked by a to high-quality local and organic food, then cosmall group of people who insist that the coop is the best friend you have. Work with it, not op be responsive to them as individuals and to against it. reflect their specific set of priorities instead of
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THE CALENDAR EVENTS
MUSIC
SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET SOUTHSIDE Santa Fe Place Mall 4250 Cerrillos Road, 473-4253 Grab farm-fresh fruits, vegetables, starter plants and snacks plus local meats, cheeses, breads. 3- 8 pm, free
CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A blues-jam session allows you to bring an instrument. 8:30 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The smoothest. 6:30 pm, free PAT MALONE TerraCotta Wine Bistro 304 Johnson St., 989-1166 Have a glass of wine and listen to the jazz guitar talents of Malone. 6 pm, free
FILM SANTA FE JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL: MR. GAGA Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 Enjoy lite-fare snacks after the show with guest choreographer Amy Morrow. 5:15 pm, $15
Want to see your event listed here? Email info to: calendar@sfreporter.com
a minimum of 2 weeks in advance
SAINT MOTEL Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 Alt.rockers from Orange County, California, play retrofuturistic pop on the arthouse stage just before the release of their anticipated album Saint Motelvision. Shiny hooks and loungey rhythms—vibe out. 8 pm, $26
COURTESY MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE
MUSEUMS
ADOPT ME, PLEASE!
ESPANOLA VALLEY HUMANE SOCIETY 108 Hamm Parkway Espanola, NM 87532
505-753-8662
evalleyshelter.org • petango.com/espanola
CHAPPIE
Terrier Mix 14 pounds, 10 Month Old Male CHAPPIE has become our little miracle dog here at EVHS. He survived what most likely was an attack from a mountain lion that left him with several, severe lacerations across his back and body. It was a rough road to recovery but he hasn’t missed one step. He is about 10 months old and was brought in by Animal Control. He’s making leaps of progress every day and he’s ready to finish his recovery in a loving home. If you would like meet or adopt Chappie, please stop by our shelter, you can also make a donation to his treatment at evalleyshelter.org/giving/ SPONSORED BY
MOOKIE AND THE ROADGANG 30
SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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“Head Commander of the Spirit World Army” by Virgil Ortiz is on view at Museum of Indian Arts and Culture as part of Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art.
EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Far Wide Texas; Georgia O’Keeffe. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, (575) 758-9826 Mabel Dodge Luhan & Company: American Moderns and the West. Ken Price, Death Shrine I. Agnes Martin Gallery. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Rick Bartow: Things You Cannot Explain. Through Dec. 31. Lloyd Kiva New: Art. Through Dec. 31.
MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art. Landscape of an Artist: Living Treasure Dan Namingha. MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo,476-1200 Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico. Through Sept. 2017. Sacred Realm. The Morris Miniature Circus. Under pressure. Through Dec. 2017. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Chimayó: A Pilgrimage Through Two Centuries. The Beltran Kropp Collection. The Delgado Room. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 Agnes Martin and Me. Through Aug. 2017. Lowriders, Hoppers and Hot Rods: Car Culture of Northern
New Mexico. Through March 2017. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Anne Noggle, Assumed Identities. Alcoves 16/17. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Fractured Faiths: Spanish Judaism, The Inquisition and New World Identities. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 Ashley Browning, Perspective of Perception. The Past of the Govenors. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Eveli, Energy and Significance.
yay!
The Hollars Review: Family Matters by julie ann grimm editor@sfreporter.com
From the outside, the complexity of the way a single family operates as an organism is unintelligible. Diagramming its biology with a few laughs and a few tears, however, has long been a
Scary hospital stays and singing sons make for a keeper plan for movies with at least moderate commercial success, and so appears the fate of this one. The Hollars probably have something in common with your family. Though the film’s title might evoke images of swampy coastline or deep Appalachian valleys, the family is really just a melting pot white Midwestern
yay!
ok
meh
barf
see it now
it’s ok, ok?!
rainy days only
avoid at all costs
MAX ROSE
meh
“The only thing worth gleaning is that
yay!
“Oliver Stone doesn’t do short and
meh yay!
formidable 8-plus-months pregnant and full of insight about helping a fearful Krasinski figure out how to embrace his future and that of their new family. Since we all heard enough of it in Pitch Perfect, she holds off on the singing. The deadpan delivery of brain surgeon Dr. Fong (Randall Park, The Interview) is a notable success in its comedic effect without leaving the bounds of doctorly credibility. When the brothers grill him about the surgery he’ll perform and Ron wants to talk about karate, Park’s incredulous face says it all. Although it’s full of the circle-oflife predictability you’d expect from the emergency surgery plus the new one on the way, director Krasinski and writer Jim Strouse (New York, I Love You) manage to keep the story from feeling corny. If this is an example of the kind of storytelling we can expect from Krasinski’s future directorial efforts, we could be settling in for some good stuff.
THE HOLLARS Directed by John Krasinski With Krasinski, Martindale, Kendrick and Park Violet Crown, PG-13, 88 min.
SCREENER
SCORE CARD
yay!
tribe in a city that’s never mentioned along that vast highway that cuts the breadbasket of the nation, I-70. Meet Don, Ron, John and their mom (Sally). Dad’s business is failing; his rock of ages, Sally, is struggling with her weight; son No. 1 is back home in the den when he’s not stalking his ex-wife and Son No. 2 is bummed out even though he’s got it all going on far away in New York City. But chances are, one of the other commonalities you’ll find is the sudden, scary hospital stay. When Mrs. Hollar is diagnosed with a brain tumor and the menfolk gather round, their coping strategies run the gamut from a slap fight in a hospital room between the den-dwelling, off-kilter kid (Sharlto Copley, District 9) and the limp father (Richard Jenkins, Jack Reacher) to a touching three-part rendition of one of her favorite songs as she’s wheeled off to the operating room. Most of the tear-jerking moments end with laughter drying out their edge, but there’s enough unsettled to keep it real. The bond between mother and the good son, John (John Krasinski, The Office, who also directs) is endearing with a bedside honesty as Margo Martindale plays the woman who’s holding up many a man. Meanwhile, Anna Kendrick’s Becca brings her own brand of smart, strong and altogether lovely, weighing in at a
closure doesn’t actually exist.”
SNOWDEN
sweet. He does long and developed.” THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS
“It’s excellent to see how much they looked out for one another.”
HELL OR HIGH WATER
“It isn’t that Hell or High Water is bor-
ing, more like it feels as if it couldn’t realize its full potential.”
KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS “Smart, funny and thrilling throughout.”
MAX ROSE When the legendary Robin Williams went dramatic (like in 1982’s The World According to Garp or 1989’s Dead Poets Society), the results wound up stunning. When Jerry Lewis attempts to broaden his résume and do the same, however, it mostly winds up sad and wanting. Lewis aims for your tears in Max Rose, a film that debuted at Cannes in 2013 but never really made it wide until April of this year. He stars as the titular Rose, an aging jazz pianist who discovers shortly before his wife’s death that she may have had an affair in the late ’50s. As he grapples with feelings of loneliness and jealousy, his son (The Usual Suspects’ Kevin Pollak) and granddaughter (Kerry Bishé of the disastrous final season of sitcom Scrubs) try to lend a hand, but he ultimately winds up obsessed with his wife’s potential fling and rallies against their love constantly. It’s annoying. Lewis, who generally only appeals to those too young to understand why his comedy is terrible or to the French, tries his very best to create something memorable, but his character winds up bisected into lines delivered far too- hammily or a confused silence that masquerades as an almost passable performance. We’re never shown enough of Max’s backstory to build up an affinity for the character, and we only see hints of his son and granddaughter’s
own troubles that might have been better explained had one of them looked directly into the camera and told us, “Sometimes life is hard.” There is, perhaps, a moral about communication or the true nature of love in there somewhere, it’s just buried under so many tropes about how getting old sucks or how families aren’t perfect that we don’t bother to go looking. Lewis probably took this role in a last-ditch attempt to be remembered as anything other than the “Hey nice LADY!” guy, but as the thin plot unfolds and Rose’s search for answers limps along, the only thing worth gleaning is that closure doesn’t actually exist. (Alex De Vore) DeVargas, NR, 83 min.
SNOWDEN Oliver Stone doesn’t do short and sweet. He does long and developed. Most of the time, he’s even really good at doing important, tense, conflicted moments in US history. If there’s a confusing saga that’s worth this kind of unweaving and reassembly, that of domestic surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden seems to qualify; Stone conveys its importance in a story that feels expertly dramatic. By now, the furor surrounding Snowden’s remarkable 2013 actions has died down, and this biopic that hits the highlights of his forever-changed life revives a tale that
could fall into the virtual weeds of computer jargon. Instead, it grows into a furious flower under the storied director’s hand and with the solid foundation laid by an earlier award-winning documentary, Citizenfour, directed by Laura Poitras. Stone is certainly sympathetic to his cause, sticking to the theme that Snowden has continued to preach: He leaked classified documents that revealed extensive data collection methods by the United States government so that the people of the nation could debate their use and consequences. Government officials say Snowden is far from a hero, having committed treason on the modern battlefield, and their perspective clearly wears the black hat in Stone’s packed narrative. Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s (Inception) depiction of boyish Snowden has audiences swooning for a loveable love story while cringing at the difficult decisions he makes. When the camera shifts in the final frames to the real Ed, the transition is seamless enough to reinforce how believable the effort came off. (JAG) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 134 min.
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS Practically everyone is familiar with the story of The Beatles and their rise from the basement venues of Liverpool and Hamburg to unprecedented crowds of CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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MOVIES
C I N E M AT H E Q U E 1050 OLD PECOS TRAIL • 505.982.1338 • CCASANTAFE.ORG
SHOWTIMES SEP 21 – SEP 27, 2016
SPONSORED BY
Wed & Thu, Sep 21 & 22 1:15p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 1:30p Sound of Redemption* 3:15p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 3:45p Sound of Redemption* 5:30p Music of Strangers 5:45p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years* 7:30p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 8:00p Sound of Redemption*
Fri & Sat, Sep 23 & 24 10:30a Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* 11:00a Inspired Architecture: Antonio Gaudi 12:15p Landfill Harmonic* “Brings “Brings us us literally literally closer closer 1:00p Eight Days a Week PLUS to to Bosch’s Bosch’s images images than than Shea Stadium one one could could probably probably get get 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* Landfill Harmonic in in almost almost any any museum museum … … 3:30p 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: offers offers aa true true Touched by the Devil* immersion immersion in in his his 5:30p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years artistry.” artistry.” –Variety –Variety 6:15p Landfill Harmonic* 7:30p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 8:15p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* THE BEATLES’ APPLE CORPS LTD. AND HULU PRESENT
AS FEATURED ON CBS’ “60 MINUTES”
A
RON
HOWARD
FILM
Sunday, September 25 10:30a Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* 11:00a Inspired Architecture: Antonio Gaudi 12:15p Landfill Harmonic* 1:00p Robert Williams: Mr. Bitchin’ plus Q & A with filmmaker THE BAND YOU KNOW. THE STORY YOU DON’T. 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* INSPIRED ARCHITECTURE 3:30p Landfill Harmonic 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: five-week series celebrating Touched by the Devil* architecture’s magnificence 5:30p Eight Days a Week: 30 MINUTE CONCERT OF THE BEATLES’ PERFORMANCE FROM SHEA STADIUM 1965! The Touring Years HEAR THE BAND WITH DIGITALLY REMASTERED SOUND AND RESTORED 4K PICTUREGaudi Antonio 6:15p Landfill Harmonic* 985 1 ic s s 11a Fri-Sun // Sep 23–25 7:30p Santa Fe Jewish The cla entary 5:30p Monday // Sep 26 Film Festival: Mr. Gaga docum t in r p 5mm 8:15p Hieronymus Bosch: Rare 3 “A visual rhapsody” Touched by the Devil*
EIGHT DAYS A WEEK THE TOURING YEARS
LANDFILLHARMONIC MOVIE.COM THEBEATLESEIGHTDAYSAWEEK.COM
© 2016 Apple Corps Limited - All Rights Reserved. Photo © Bob Bonis Archive
EXCLUSIVE IN THEATRES ONLY!
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–NY Times
Monday, September 26 12:15p Landfill Harmonic* 1:00p Eight Days a Week PLUS Shea Stadium director director Nancye Nancye Ferguson Ferguson 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* 3:30p Landfill Harmonic 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* 5:30p Inspired Architecture: Antonio Gaudi 6:15p Landfill Harmonic* 7:30p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 8:15p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil*
Followed by by Q&A Q&A with with Robt. Williams: Followed artist Robt. Williams & artist Robt. Williams & Mr. Bitchin’ 1p SUN SEP 25
MR. GAGA “ riveting ” Variety
“ masterpiece ” Dagens Nyheter
Sun Sept 25, 7:30 PM Tues Sept 27, 5:15 PM Santa Fe Jewish Film Festival
FINAL S SHOW
Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Orchestra Sound of Redemption: Frank Morgan In the Gallery WOMEN & MONEY The Rise of Women in American Politics Fri, Sep 30 // 4p Tickets at wisc-amh.org
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SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016
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Tuesday, September 27 12:15p Landfill Harmonic* 1:00p Eight Days a Week PLUS Shea Stadium 2:15p Hunt for the Wilderpeople* 3:30p Landfill Harmonic 4:30p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* 5:15p Santa Fe Jewish Film Festival: Mr. Gaga 6:15p Landfill Harmonic* 7:30p Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years 8:15p Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil* *in The Studio
meh Don’t let this still fool you—Max Rose is kind of a drag, screaming fans. For those who weren’t there, however, what is left is a mere idea of what Beatle-Mania was truly like and an intellectual understanding of the insanity sans experience. Director Ron Howard (In the Heart of the Sea) provides an in-depth look into those early years of the band from 1963 to 1966, as well as their impact on the globe in The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-The Touring Years, a new documentary opening at the Center for Contemporary Arts a full two days before hitting its intended home at hulu.com. Through found footage, hundreds of photographs, television/radio coverage and decades of sound bites and interviews, Howard weaves together one of the most intimate portraits of the Fab Four’s younger days that we’ve ever seen, and it doles out the feels in both jubilant and heartbreaking fashion. It’s a story that outwardly showcases society’s sick obsession with fame or being famous, but that also examines the psychological toll taken on Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr in a riveting way. Certainly none of them were opposed to their fame at first, but as the years rolled by and the music creation began to play a secondary role to rabid curiosity and borderline psychotic fandom, we begin to understand why The Beatles eventually became studio hermits and ditched the live shows. Much of the real substance—or at least the consequence of fame—is saved for the final half hour, which is unfortunate despite the fun of watching four close friends take on the world. By the time we get to the famous Shea Stadium concert of ’66 (that’s the one that basically made ‘em quit), we can see exactly why they were burnt out, but Eight Days a Week doesn’t spend quite enough time focused on the actual impact their hectic existence had on their personal lives. It’s excellent to see how much they looked out for one another, and the soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold, but this one might not have major appeal to those who aren’t Beatle-maniacs or already know the tale. (ADV) CCA, 137 min., NR
HELL OR HIGH WATER This slow burn tells the tale of Texas brothers Tanner (Ben Foster) and Toby Howard (Chris Pine’s eyebrows), ranchers who turn to bank robbery in order to pay off bank debts and provide for Toby’s estranged family. All the while, Texas Ranger Marcus Hamilton (Jeff Bridges) is hot on their heels with his partner
Alberto (House of Cards’ Gil Birmingham). We’re told constantly that the plan is smart: Rob a specific bank’s various under-secured branches in small Texas towns and then launder the money through Native casinos located in Oklahoma. And though we can accept that this somehow makes Toby a genius, his unpredictable ex-con brother acts as wild card and begins to muck it all up as he operates outside their agreed-upon tactics. What could have been a tense catand-mouse story turns sour as Bridges and Birmingham’s relationship makes for something akin to comedic relief. Uh-oh! The old-timer cowboy cop is full of racist little quips for the stoic Native cop—but they’re buddies and love each other despite all the chopbusting! This doesn’t mix entirely well with Pine and Foster’s decidedly more serious scenes, and it’s hard to invest in either duo when the brothers are complete assholes and the cops are borderline bumbling. The Texas backdrop, however, is gorgeous and embodies place-as-character in a way not so enjoyable since the first season of True Detective’s terrifying Louisiana backcountry. Music from Nick Cave sets a tone of constant dread and ramps up the unspoken feeling that Pine’s character never wanted to resort to robbery. This could have (and should have) been explored more deeply, which leaves us with half of a fleshed-out character, a misstep that is all the more disappointing since the entire film otherwise progresses under the assumption that banks are evil, and while they most certainly have proven they are, it seems an ultimately flimsy motivation. Too bad, because Pine’s unease might have translated into a Robin Hood-like regard for the brothers’ actions; Tanner, unfortunately, is never redeemed. It isn’t that Hell or High Water is boring— more like it feels as if it couldn’t quite realize its full potential. Bridges is always worth watching, even when his lines are goofy, and Birmingham strikes a superb counterpoint to his gruff, old cowpoke demeanor (let’s get this guy more roles, huh?). Regardless, it still isn’t the Coen Brothers; rather, it’s a simple story told just well enough as to not bother anyone. (ADV) DeVargas, Violet Crown, R, 102 min.
KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS
Animation powerhouse Laika, which previously brought us Coraline and ParaNorman, is out to blow our minds all over again with Kubo and the Two Strings, a fable heavily influenced by
MOVIES
yay! “Are you going to leak government secrets, Edward Snowden?” asks this government worker. “Aw, shit!” Snowden says. “You totally got me!” Japanese mythology and one of the finest films of the year. A young boy with one eye named Kubo (Art Parkinson) spends much of his time caring for his ailing mother and the rest making money by busking with a magical samisen that can bring origami to life, a power he uses to tell stories to the townspeople. Mom constantly reminds our young hero that he must never stay out after dark or his grandfather, the evil Moon King (Ralph Fiennes), will come for him and take his other eye. Yikes. This system works for many years until Kubo accidentally stays out too late during the festival of Obon, a yearly occurrence wherein the souls of departed loved ones supposedly return to speak with the living. Turns out his mother’s warnings were true, and as soon as the moon hangs in the sky, Kubo is relentlessly pursued by the Moon King’s twin daughters, an evil pair voiced brilliantly by Rooney Mara (The Girl With the
Dragon Tattoo), who do indeed want his other eye. The twins are utterly terrifying but, with the help of his mother’s magic, Kubo is able to escape. Alone and scared, our hero is joined by a no-nonsense monkey (Charlize Theron), who is a martial arts expert, and a warrior (Matthew McConaughey) cursed to wander the earth without his memories and in anthropomorphized beetle form. The combination of stop-motion and computer animation is absolutely stunning, from the large-scale action sequences to seemingly unimportant details such as the way hair moves in the wind. From a technical standpoint, Kubo and the Two Strings doesn’t just raise the bar—it demolishes it entirely. In a medium that never seems to tire of fluff or talking down to kids, this is a brilliant alternative. Smart, funny and thrilling throughout, it very well may go down in film history as one of the greatest animation features of all time. (ADV) Violet Crown, Regal, PG, 101 min.
“Reminds us that
MR. LEWIS...can be
A FORMIDABLE DRAMATIC ACTOR. Moviegoers of a certain age will be ” unable to resist this unexpected glimpse of A TRUE-BLUE LEGEND! Jeannette Catsoulis, THE NEW YORK TIMES
THEATERS
NOWCCA SHOWING CINEMATHEQUE 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338
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3474 Zafarano Drive, (844)462-7342 CODE 1765
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23
SANTA FE UA De Vargas Mall 6 (844) 462-7342 #608
CHECK DIRECTORIES FOR SHOWTIMES NO PASSES ACCEPTED
ART AND RE ME MBRAN C E & RI P P L E C ATALYS T S T U D I O P RES E N T COMMUNITY CONVERSATION:
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VIOLET CROWN 1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678
For more reviews and showtimes, visit SFReporter.com
SANTA FE REPORTER WED 9/21 1/8 PG. (4.75" X 2.688") ALL.MXR.0921.SFR
STITCHING OUR STORIES
A Holocaust Survivor’s Stitched Art Inspires Present-Day Immigrants To Create Story Cloths, Share Their Stories and Strengthen Our Communities.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2016 @ 5:30 PM On World Peace Day and during National MR Welcoming Week, join us in getting to know one #1 another as we share the stories that connect us as neighbors and community members. EXHIBIT RUNS UNTIL
OCTOBER 20, 2016
The City Of Santa Fe Arts Commission Community Gallery 201 W. Marcy Street
www.StitchingOurStories.org
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WRITING CONTEST Your Great Adventure
SFR’S
2016
It’s time for the SFR Annual Writing Contest. Get to work on short fiction and nonfiction on this year’s theme, “Your Great Adventure.” Enter one or both categories for a chance to take home cash prizes worth up to $100 and gifts from local businesses, and best of all, be published in our Nov. 23 issue. THE RULES: 1. Entries must be made on the contest website (www.sfreporter.com/ writingcontest) before 11:59 pm on Nov. 1. A $10 fee applies for each entry. 2. Entries should not exceed 1,800 words, must be submitted digitally and previously unpublished. Paid contributors to SFR in the last year are not eligible. 3. Each work of fiction must include a form of each of the following words: reservoir, deplorable and swindle. Nonfiction entries do not need to contain these words.
Visit SFReporter.com/writingcontest for details. Entries must be received before 11:59 pm Nov. 1. Questions? Contact editor Julie Ann Grimm at 988-7530 34
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LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS/NAME CHANGE STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EPIMENIO VELARDE, DECEASED. Case No.: 2016-0132 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grant Ave, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Dated: August 25, 2016 Veronica Fernandez 505-901-1466 IN THE FIRST DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE NO. D-101-PB-2016-00122 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MARGARITO G. MAES, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this state are required to present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative, RAYMOND MARTINEZ, c/o PADILLA LAW FIRM, P.A., P.O. Box 2523, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2523, or filed in the First Judicial District Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, PO Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87505. DATE: August 31, 2016. RAYMOND MARTINEZ, Personal Representative of the Estate of Margarito G. Maes, Deceased PADILLA LAW FIRM, P.A. By: ERNEST L. PADILLA Attorney for the Personal Representative of the Estate of Margarito G. Maes, Deceased PO Box 2523 Santa Fe, NM 87504-2523 (505) 988-7577 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF HECTOR CRUZ Case No.: D-101-CV-2016-02132 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Hector Cruz will apply to the Honorable Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., in Santa Fe, New Mexico at 1:00 p.m. on the 14th dat of October, 2016 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Hector Cruz to Hector Simon Cruz.
Stephen T. Pacheco, District Court Clerk By: Victoria B. Neal, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Hector Cruz Petitioner, Pro Se
give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT one in writing and pay a jury fee. STATE OF NEW MEXICO 6. If you need an interpreter, you COUNTY OF SANTA FE must ask for one in writing. 7. You IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION may wish to consult a lawyer. You FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF may contact the State Bar of New ZACHARY WRIGHT REITZ-WELLS Mexico for help finding a lawyer at Case No.: D-101-CV-2016-01990 www.nmbar.org; 1-800-876-6227; NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME or 1-505-797-6066. The Name TAKE NOTICE that in accordance And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, the Petitioner Zachary Wright Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado Reitz-Wells will apply to the & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Honorable Sarah M. Singleton, Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona District Judge of the First Judicial 85282, Phone: 505-242-4198, Fax: District at the Santa fe Judicial 505-242-4169 This Summons Is Complex at Santa Fe, New Mexico Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 at 1:00 p.m. on the 11th day of NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules October, 2016 for an ORDER FOR Of Civil Procedure For District CHANGE OF NAME from Zachary Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Wright Reitz-Wells to Eugenia Mexico, this 22 day of January, Elizabeth Reitz-Wells.Stephen T. 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk Pacheco, District Court Clerk of Court By: /s/ Victoria B. Neal By: Gloria Landin, Deputy Court Deputy Clerk Submitted by: Zachary Wright Reitz-Wells Summons/D-101-CV-2016-00163 Petitioner, Pro Se David Ray Wilkerson State Of New Mexico County Of Santa Fe First Judicial District Court, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 455-8250 PUBLIC NOTICE - In accordance Case Number: with Sec.106 of the Programmatic D-101-CV-2016-00163 Agreement, T-Mobile West, Judge: Francis J. Mathew LLC plans to upgrade an existing Villas De Santa Fe Condominium telecommunications facility at Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. David 1615 Old Pecos TR., Santa Fe, NM Ray Wilkerson John Does I V, 87105. Please direct comments inclusive; Jane Does I-V, incluto Gavin L. at 818-898-4866 sive; Black Corporations I-V, regarding site NM01045C. 9/21, inclusive; White Partnerships I-V, 9/28/16 CNS-2925758# inclusive; Unknown Heirs and SANTA FE REPORTER Devisees of each of the aboveSummons/D-101-CV-2016-00154 named Defendants, if deceased, Defendant. Summons The State Of Charles Friend New Mexico To: David Ray State Of New Mexico Wilkerson, PO Box 6413, Sevierville, County Of Santa Fe Tennessee 37864. To The Above First Judicial District Court, Named Defendant(s): Take notice 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa that 1. A lawsuit has been filed Fe, NM 87501, against you. A copy of the lawsuit (505) 455-8250 is attached. The Court issued this Case Number: Summons. 2. You must respond D-101-CV-2016-00154 to this lawsuit in writing. You must Judge: Sarah Singleton file your written response with Villas De Santa Fe Condominium the Court no later than thirty (30) Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. days from the date you are served Charles Friend; Unknown Spouse with this Summons. (The date you of Maxine Huntington; John are considered served with the Does I V, inclusive; Jane Does I-V, Summons is determined by Rule inclusive; Black Corporations I-V, 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address inclusive; White Partnerships I-V, is listed above. 3. You must file (in inclusive; Unknown Heirs and person or by mail) your written Devisees of each of the aboveresponse with the Court. When named Defendants, if deceased, you file your response, you must Defendant. Summons The State Of New Mexico To: Charles Friend, give or mail a copy to the person PO Box 181, Daytona Beach, Florida who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the 32115; Charles Friend, 4600 East Court may enter judgment against Moody Boulevard, H19, Bunnell, you as requested in the lawsuit. Florida 32110. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask that 1. A lawsuit has been filed for a jury trial, you must request against you. A copy of the lawsuit one in writing and pay a jury fee. is attached. The Court issued this 6. If you need an interpreter, you Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) may contact the State Bar of New days from the date you are served Mexico for help finding a lawyer at with this Summons. (The date you www.nmbar.org; 1-800-876-6227; or 1-505-797-6066. The Name are considered served with the And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, is listed above. 3. You must file (in Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado person or by mail) your written & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern response with the Court. When Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona you file your response, you must
LEGAL NOTICES ALL OTHERS
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85282, Phone: 505-242-4198, Fax: 505-242-4169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 22 day of January, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ Victoria B. Neal Deputy
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given that the following property shall be sold at public auction on Wednesday the 28th of September 2016 at 2 PM at Airport Cerrillos Self Storage, 1385 Camino De Jacobo, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Tel #5054744330 in satisfaction of Lien in accordance with the new the New Mexico Self Storage Act. Unit 413 Sean and Frankie Ong, 63 Camino De Jacobo, Santa Fe NM 87507 Household Goods Unit 311 Marquise Jenkins, 4551 Paseo Del Sol Apt. 124, Santa Fe NM 87507 Household Goods Notice is hereby given that the following property shall be sold at public auction on Wednesday the 28th of September 2016 at 2 PM at Airport Bypass Self Storage, 7612 Baca Ln, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Tel #5054744450 in satisfaction of Lien in accordance with the new the New Mexico Self Storage Act. A005, David Larsen, PO Box 23552, Santa Fe, NM 87502 Household Goods A029, Frank G Mares, 49 Camino Capilla Vieja, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Household Goods A081, Vicky E Lopez, 3020 Jemez Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Household Goods A369, Robert G Moreno, 3454 Cerrillos Rd #203, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Household Goods A110, Marilyn B. Montoya, 127 Villa Alegre, Santa Fe, NM 87501 Household Goods A125 Linda A Anaya, 1447 Acequia Borrada West, Santa Fe, NM 87507 A136 Richard E Carlisle, 1076 Green Way, Santa Fe, NM 87507 Household Goods A140 Mary F. Crespin, PO Box 175, Santo Domingo Pueblo, NM 87052 Household Goods A158, Jason A Halverson, 1 Sandy Way, Santa Fe, NM 87506 Household goods A390, Ryan D. Parr, 551 West Cordova Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87505 Household Goods
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Say Yes We Can!
JONESIN’ CROSSWORD “It’s the Five-O!”—and I’m nowhere near Hawaii. by Matt Jones 1
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BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND! GIDGET was originally taken in by the Santa Fe Animal Shelter as part of a Trap, Neuter & Release (TNR) program, but was soon found to be quite sweet and friendly, so she was transferred to Felines & Friends to find GIDGET a forever home. TEMPERAMENT: Very sweet, playful and talkative, GIDGET also loves human touch and is very loving and affectionate. She is a beautiful girl with a short black coat and a white blaze on her chest. AGE: born approx. 4/20/15.
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ADOPTION HOURS: Petco: 1-4 pm Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun. Teca Tu is now at DeVargas Center. Prosperous Pets and Xanadu/Jackalope during business hours. Thank you Prosperous Pets. Cage Cleaners/Caretakers needed!
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22 Op. ___ (footnote abbr.) 24 Yellowfin, alternatively 25 Singer/TV personality Braxton 27 “Born From Jets” car company 28 Forearm component 29 Salesman’s selling style, way back when 31 Mineral deposit 33 Salary maximums 34 Awards presented by the Romance Writers of America DOWN 36 Patty or Selma, to Maggie 37 Government agents 1 Rum-soaked cake 39 Do-over shot 2 ___ Lee (singer with the 43 Make a prison break album “Mission Bell”) 45 Much-maligned director 3 “Get Smart” enemy org. ___ Boll 4 All together 46 File with software 5 Coleman of “Boardwalk instructions Empire” and “9 to 5” 47 2016 “America’s Got 6 Kicks 7 Words before “Spock” and Talent” winner VanderWaal 48 More ready to be picked “Not Spock,” in 50 Massively ripped autobiography titles 51 “Dexter” airer, for short 8 Tombstone inscription 53 Fourth piggy’s portion 9 Musk of Tesla Motors 10 What traditionalists may 55 ___ J (rapper/producer and brother of the late be averse to J Dilla) 11 Befit, like clothes 56 Like a pancake 12 “Star Trek” actor who 57 IDs with two hyphens came out in 2005 60 Fertility clinic specimens 13 Long-legged marsh bird 61 Hodges of baseball fame 18 12-time All-Star Mel 54 Hypothetical questions 58 Abbr. on military mail 59 Band with the 1998 #1 hit “Iris” 62 Co. big shot 63 Item dropped in Road Runner cartoons 64 Disney film set in China 65 Go awry 66 Author Zora ___ Hurston 67 French parts of the U.S.?
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family could no longer care for her. This sweet girl is now looking for a new forever home. SUGAR 2 was recently diagnosed with diabetes, but she is doing very well with daily insulin shots. TEMPERAMENT: Very sweet and loving, SUGAR 2 just needs a bit of care and will make a wonderful, mellow companion. She is a beautiful Maine Coon mix girl with a long coat and brown tabby markings with white patches on her face, undercarriage and back legs. AGE: born approx. 4/26/03
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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 mental- emotional healing follow. You are invited to experience the Divine Healing Energy of Johrei. On Saturday September 24th at 10:30 am we are holding our monthly Gratitude Service, please join us. 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. Drop-ins welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website santafejohreifellowship.com.
WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT GROUP This is a psychoeducational therapeutic support group for women 18+ who want to work on building self-esteem, self-confidence, setting boundaries, and being assertive. Come prepared to learn concrete techniques and make positive changes in your life with the support of other women. Group meets Mondays from 6:30-8:30, September 26-November 14 at Tierra Nueva Counseling Center. Facilitated by Michelle Lynn, LMHC and Traci McMinnJoubert, Student Therapist. $10/session, sliding scale. Call 471-8575 to register.
TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD. Get TESOL Certified & Teach English Anywhere. Earn an accredited TESOL Certificate and start teaching English in the USA and abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. Take this IS FOOD A PROBLEM FOR YOU? highly engaging & empowering course. Celebrating our 15th Do you eat when you’re not hungry? Do you binge or fast to year. Next Course: Jan 22 - April 15. Contact John such an extent that it’s having Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. negative effects on your life? info@tesoltrainers.com Overeaters Anonymous is a www.tesoltrainers.com food issues recovery group which involves no dues, no fees, no weigh-ins, and no diets. We BECOME AN ESL TUTOR. Literacy Volunteers of Santa meet every day of the year in Fe’s 3-day, 20-hour training Santa Fe from 8-9 a.m. at The workshops prepare volunteers Friendship Club, 1316 Apache to teach adults “English as a Avenue (505-982-9040). Second Language”. Fall 2016’s workshop is October 6, 7, 8: October 6, 4-6 p.m.; October SFRCLASSIFIEDS.COM 7 & 8: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, please call 428-1353, or visit www.lvsf.org.
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2002 KUBOTA B2910 TRACTOR 645 Hours, 4 Cylinder 30HP Diesel, 4x4, 3 Range Hydrostatic Trans.Call : 8784440647 $6,000 Custom Iron Work by Jeff Smith. Bird beds, tables and lamps. Floor lamp/mica shade $300. Call 505-455-2721
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SPACE SAVING furniture. Murphy panel beds, home offices & closet combinations. wallbedsbybergman.com or 505-286-0856.
EMPLOYMENT WINTER INTERN You won’t earn a salary, but internships at the Reporter are a proven method to learning about journalism, photojournalism, news and culture reporting, web development and social media management. We’re happy to work with college students for course credit. Be sure to include the time period that you are interested in and would be available. Send a cover letter, writing samples and three story ideas before our Sept. 30 deadline. Six weeks minimum commitment required. Julie Ann Grimm, Editor editor@sfreporter.com Santa Fe Reporter 132 E. Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 No phone calls please.
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COME TO THE 2016 HERBAL CHIMNEY MEDICINE SHOW AND OUTDOOR DEMONSTRATION SWEEPING on Saturday September 24th from 11 am - 2 pm at Milagro Herbs in Santa Fe. Our 2016 herb students will display their herb products and talk about their experiences learning about applications of herbal therapies. Handcrafted products will be available for sale by the students. Also, Dr. Tomas Enos will demonstrate the Distillation of Pinon Pine Essential Oil on site. Bring the family and friends, the event is free and parking is free. Come and learn more about our course offerings. Milagro Herbs is located on Paseo de Peralta across from the Gerald Peters Gallery and next to Kakawa Chocolate House. Call 820-6321 or info@milagroherbs.com Safety, Value, Professionalism. We are Santa Fe’s certified UPAYA IS A COMMUNITY chimney and dryer vent RESOURCE FOSTERING experts. New Mexico’s best MINDFULNESS. Come value in chimney service; for DAILY MEDITATION; get a free video Chim-Scan Wednesday DHARMA TALKS with each fireplace cleaning. 5:30-6:30pm; 10/14-16 Baileyschimney.com. Call HONGZHI’S BOUNDLESS Bailey’s today 505-988-2771 FIELD AND VISION OF COMPASSIONATE NATURE: An Inspiring Vision of the Natural World as a Realm of Awakening with Dan Leighton; 10/22 BODHIDHARMA: A Daylong Silent Meditation Retreat with Joshin Brian Byrnes and Genzan Quennell ; 10/25-30 SESSHIN: Silent Illumination: An Intensive Multi-day Zen Meditation Retreat. Details, calendar, and more: www.upaya.org. WHAT IS YOUR LIFE'S PURPOSE? -2016 ESSAY CONTEST $1,000 Grand Prize sponsored by The Wonder Institute Deadline: November 1, 2016. For more CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY Information and to Submit SWEEPS is committed online visit to protecting your home. www.wonderessaycontest.com Creosote build-up in your The Wonder Institute invites all writers to participate in an fireplace or lint build-up international competition by in your dryer vent reduces submitting a personal essay on efficiency and can pose a the topic of: "What Is Your fire hazard. Be prepared. Call 989-5775 Life's Purpose?" YOGA AND RECOVERY Monday Night Group 6:45 pm-8:15pm Mondays beginning September CLEANING 19th Led by Darren Littlejohn, best- SERVICES selling author of The 12-Step Buddhist (2009) and the new book, How to Gain Nothing from Buddhist Practice. The group is open to anyone, but is specifically designed to address issues around recovery from all types of addiction. Processes and practices will teach members how to integrate Buddhist principles with those of 12-Step, as well as “European Trained” other modalities. Cleaning Services Format: 30 mins yoga; 5 minute break, 20 minutes • Residential/ Commercial silent meditation; Dharma Talk • Bonded & Insured on a topic related to Dharma • Exceptional custom tailored and Recovery; Discussion; cleaning services Dedication. You may attend just the yoga portion, just the • Pet Friendly meditation/discussion portion, • Extremely Dependable or the whole group. Thubten • Reasonable Rates Norbu Ling 1807 2nd Street #35. Donations accepted and • Serving Santa Fe & Surrounding areas • Free estimates appreciated. For more information email info@tnlsf.org or 505 660-4505 darrenblittlejohn@gmail.com
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SANTA FE COYOTE FENCING Specializing in Coyote Fencing. License # 16-001199-74. No job too small or large. We do it all. Richard, 505-690-6272
632 Agua Fría Santa Fe Jorge Luis Bernal Encaustic Monotype Workshop Day 1: Equipment and tools Day 2: Emphasis on creativity
HANDYPERSON
Sept 17-18, Oct 15-16 10am to 4pm CARPENTRY to LANDSCAPING All supplies and tax included Home maintenance, remodels, Cost: One day $250.00 additions, interior & exterior, Two Days $460.00 irrigation, stucco repair, jobs small & large. Reasonable rates, Reliable. Discounts avail. to seniors, veterans, Registration at handicap. Jonathan, 670-8827 mehrens@eainm.com www.handymannm.com 505 989-3283 jorgeluisbernal@gmail.com THE HANDYMAN YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED. Dependable and creative problem solver. With PLASTERING & Handyman Van, one call fixes it all. Special discounts for STUCCO seniors and referrals. Excellent references. 505-231-8849 www.handymanvan.biz
LANDSCAPING LANDSCAPES BY DENNIS Landscape Design, Xeriscapes, Drip Systems, Natural Ponds, Low Voltage Lighting & Maintenance. I create a custom lush garden w/ minimal use of precious H20. 505-699-2900
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Damaged parapets and cracked stucco can lead to multiple ASSISTED LIVING damage issues costing more money later~call for free ASSISTED LIVING estimate on repair before the Overnight Live-In Caregiver wet weather begins Introducing trained to meet all Senior new TOTAL WALL color for Daily Living Needs! stucco projects. Guarantee Assist with meal prep, lowest price using same bathing, grooming, Re-hab exercises, and thorough house products. Affordable, fast and cleaning. Rate is half the cost efficient. Call 505-204-4555. of an agency. (505) 5575793 leggo32003@yahoo.com
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PHILIP CRUMP, Mediator Resolve issues quickly, affordably, privately, respectfully: • Divorce, Custody, Parenting plan • Parent-Teen, Family, Neighbor • Business, Partnership, Construction Mediate-Don’t Litigate! FREE CONSULTATION philip@pcmediate.com 505-989-8558 SFREPORTER.COM
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MIND BODY SPIRIT ARTFUL SOUL CENTER Rob Brezsny
Week of September 21st
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Even if you are a wild-eyed adventure-seeker with extremist views and melodramatic yearnings, you’ll benefit from taking a moderate approach to life in the coming weeks. In fact, you’re most likely to attract the help and inspiration you need if you adopt the strategy used by Goldilocks in the fairy tale “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”: neither excessive nor underdone, neither extravagant nor restrained, neither bawdy, loud, and in-your-face nor demure, quiet, and passive—but rather just right.
they will damage you. If you do awaken and develop the potential talents that lie within you, they will heal you.” Whether you actually awaken and develop those talents or not depends on two things: your ability to identify them clearly and your determination to bring them to life with the graceful force of your willpower. I call this to your attention, Libra, because the coming months will be a highly favorable time to expedite the ripening of your talents. And it all starts NOW.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Some of my readers love me but also hate me. They are drawn to my horoscopes in the hope that I will help relieve them of their habitual pain, but then get mad at me when I do just that. In retrospect, they feel lost without the familiar companionship of their habitual pain. It had been a centerpiece of their identity, a source of stability, and when it’s gone, they don’t know who they are any more. Are you like these people, Taurus? If so, you might want to avoid my horoscopes for a while. I will be engaged in a subtle crusade to dissolve your angst and agitation. And it all starts now with this magic spell: Your wound is a blessing. Discover why.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You can’t completely eliminate unhelpful influences and trivial saboteurs and debilitating distractions from your life. But you’re entering a phase of your astrological cycle when you have more power than usual to diminish their effects. To get started in this gritty yet lofty endeavor, try this: Decrease your connection with anything that tends to demean your spirit, shrink your lust for life, limit your freedom, ignore your soul, compromise your integrity, dishonor your reverence, inhibit your selfexpressiveness, or alienate you from what you love.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Work too much and push yourself too hard, Sagittarius. Eat corn chips for GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In my dream last night, bad breakfast, ice cream for lunch, and French fries for guys wearing white hats constrained you in a canvas dinner—every day, if possible. And please please please straitjacket, then further wrapped you up with heavy get no more than four hours’ sleep per night. If you have steel chain secured by three padlocks. They drove you any extra time, do arduous favors for friends and intensify to a weedy field behind an abandoned warehouse and your workout routine. JUST KIDDING! Don’t you dare left you there in the pitch dark. But you were heed any of that ridiculous advice. In fact, I suggest you indomitable. By dawn, you had miraculously wriggled do just the opposite. Dream up brilliant excuses not to your way out of your confinement. Then you walked work too much or push too hard. Treat yourself to the back home, free and undaunted. Here’s my finest meals and best sleep ever. Take your mastery of the interpretation of the dream: You now have special skills art of relaxation to new heights. Right now, the most as an escape artist. No cage can hold you. No riddle can effective way to serve your long-term dreams is by having stump you. No tangle can confuse you. (P.S.: For best as much fun, joy, and release as possible. results, trust yourself even more than you usually do.) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) I propose that you and I CANCER (June 21-July 22) The next four weeks will make a deal. Here’s how it would work: For the next be a favorable time to come all the way home. Here three weeks, I will say three prayers for you every day. I are nine prompts for how to accomplish that: will ask God, Fate, and Life to send you more of the 1. Nourish your roots. 2. Strengthen your foundations. recognition and appreciation you deserve. I will coax 3. Meditate about where you truly belong. 4. Upgrade and convince them to give you rich experiences of the way you attend to your self-care. 5. Honor your being seen for who you really are. Now here’s what I living traditions. 6. Make a pilgrimage to the land ask of you in return: You will rigorously resolve to act where your ancestors lived. 7. Deepen your intimacy on your core beliefs, express your noblest desires, and with the earth. 8. Be ingenious about expressing your say only what you truly mean. You will be alert for tenderness. 9. Reinvigorate your commitment to the those times when you start to stray from the path with influences that nurture and support you. heart, and you will immediately get yourself back on that path. You will be yourself three times stronger and LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) What tools will work best for the clearer than you have ever been before. tasks you’ll be invited to perform in the coming weeks? A sledgehammer or tweezers? Pruning shears or a AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) If you loosen yourself up by sewing machine? A monkey wrench or a screwdriver? drinking an alcoholic beverage, don’t drive a forklift or ride Here’s my guess: Always have your entire toolbox on a unicycle. If you have a hunch that your luck at gambling hand. You may need to change tools in mid-task—or is peaking, don’t buy lottery tickets or play the slot even use several tools for the same task. I can envision machines. If you’re drawn to explore the frontiers of at least one situation that would benefit from you intimacy, be armed with the ancient Latin maxim, Primum alternating between a sledgehammer and tweezers. non nocere, or “First, do no harm.” And if you really do believe it would be fun to play with fire, bring a fire VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) I’m confident that I will never extinguisher with you. In presenting this cautionary advice, again need to moonlight as a janitor or dishwasher in I’m not saying that you should never push the limits or order to pay my bills. My gig as a horoscope columnist bend the rules. But I want to be sure that as you dare to provides me with enough money to eat well, so it’s no experiment, you remain savvy and ethical and responsible. longer necessary to shoplift bread or scavenge for dented cans of beets in grocery store dumpsters. What accounts PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) I invite you to explore the for my growing financial luck? I mean besides the fact healing power of sex. The coming weeks will be a that I have been steadily improving my skills as an oracle favorable time to do so. You are also likely to generate and writer? I suspect it may in part have to do with my good fortune for yourself if you try to fix any aspect of determination to cultivate generosity. As I’ve become your erotic life that feels wounded or awkward. For better at expressing compassion and bestowing blessings, best results, suspend all your theories about the way money has flowed to me in greater abundance. Would physical intimacy should work in your life. Adopting a this strategy work for you? The coming weeks and beginner’s mind could lead you to subtly spectacular months will be a good time to experiment. breakthroughs. (P.S. You don’t necessarily need a partner to take full advantage of this big opening.) LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Here’s my translation of a passage from the ancient Gospel of Thomas, a gnostic Homework: Name the one thing you could change text about the teachings of Jesus: “If you do not awaken about yourself that would improve your love life. and develop the potential talents that lie within you, Testify at Freewillastrology.com.
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 6 R O B B R E Z S N Y 38
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MASSAGE THERAPY
ARTFUL SOUL CENTER TANTRA MASSAGE & Barry Cooney, Director TEACHING SENSORY AWARENESS PLAYDAY Call Julianne Parkinson, SAT. SEPT. 24TH/ 9-4 PM/ $75. 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional EXPERIENCE FREE FORM Massage Therapist, & MOVEMENT, JOURNALING, Life Coach LIC #2788 GUIDED IMAGERY, SMALL GROUP DISCUSSION; EXPAND SENSORY AWARENESS AND MIND BODY SPIRIT PSYCHICS CONNECTION. PHONE 505220-6657 FOR DETAILS AND REGISTRATION. JOY AND INTUITIVE WISDOM AWAIT!!!
CHRISTIAN YOGA
CHRISTIAN YOGA: THE LOST TEACHINGS Dana discovered the lost teachings of Christian Yoga in a library at Yale University. He discovered more in a medieval monastery in Belgium and in a private collection in France. Come and enjoy a remarkable, multimedia presentation at the Santa Fe Community Yoga Center. October 7, 7 - 9 p.m. (505) 316-6986 danananda@gmail.com
REFLEXOLOGY
ASTROLOGY
ASTROLOGY Santa Fe astrologer & author Steve McFadden. Consult your stars. Life insight. Soul keys. Skillful means & timing. Good Medicine. Check me out. Set an appointment. www.chiron-communications.com
LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information go to www.alexofavalon.com or call 505-982-8327. Also serving the LGBT community.
SANTA FE REFLEXOLOGY...... Sooth your feet, quiet your mind, and rejuvenate your body. Personalized care, by appointment only, 7 days a week. Located off of St. Michaels near the hospital. Specializing in Reflexology: Julie Glassmoyer, CR (2006) (505) 414-8140 julie@sfreflexology.com
ENERGY WORK
ENERGY MEDICINE Transformational healing can clear deep underlying patterns in your energy field. Dissolve subconscious somatic pathways in the nervous system from old habits or traumas, which show up again and again as painful disease, relationship trouble, blocks in your life, anger, fear. Jane Barthelemy, Kinesiologist fiveseasonsmedicine.com 505-216-1750
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SAM SHAFFER, PHD TEXTILE REPAIR TUESDAYS W/ TIAS & SURYA 2-5pm 982-7434 • www.shafferphd.com 418 Cerrillos Rd LU’S CHINESE 505.629.7007 THE OCEAN OF THE HEART 9/27 Black on White 8¢ THE TIDES OF THE FLUID BODY 10/18 GOT TECH HEALING MASSAGE LLC 988-3456/982-1777 PRAJNAYOGA.COM | 988-5248 NATIONAL QUESTIONS? 1540 Cerrillos Road • 986-1110 EARTH-KIND® BEING HELD Krav Maga Self COMPUTERS, TABLETS, SMARTPHONES For 1 hr • sliding scale • MASSAGE BY JULIE ROSE TRAIL GARDEN. www.duijaros.com Defense Class NETWORKS, SECURITY, Saturday October 1, Swedish/Deep Tissue. NMKRAVMAGA.COM 10:00am-Noon SMARTHOME Same Day Appts Welcome. QIGONG & TAICHI County Fairgrounds$50/hr 19 yrs experience 310-508-7827 SWARTZTECH Rose Trial Garden Lic. 3384 670-8789 CLASSES 3229 Rodeo Rd. Photography Photoshop Lightroom 505-310-6890 Professional 1on1 505-670-1495 WHAT A GREAT IDEA! Learn about our gorgeous, 4 CLASSES PER WEEK: Beginners healthy sustainably A WEDNESDAY EVENING welcome! FARMERS MARKET MAc/iphone HELP XCELLENT landscaped rose garden. MON, WED, FRI, SAT Get your Mac /iPhone/iPad / Santa Fe Farmers Market Come and learn how we’ve MACINTOSH SUPPORT WEDDING OFFICIANT iCloud and Email working Wednesdays 4pm-8pm created this gorgeous, CALL JANE 20+yrs professional, for you. Home & O f fice . Non-denominational / Apple certified. healthy rose garden using LGBT weddings. JA SON @ 57 7. 8036 / NEW EVENING MAT Earth-Kind® Environmentally (505) 216-1750 xcellentmacsupport.com • Randy • 670-0585 Sustainable Landscaping www.FiveSeasonsMedicine.com Call Robbie at (505) 231-0855 ME DIA SLINGE R .COM CLASSES!! Principles. We’ve added supplemental water an average Nicholas Brown 10-Class Pass for $90 of only four times a year 2013 226 BOX LOCATIONS used no pesticides or MA LPCC PILATES SANTA FE -2016, fertilizer and reduced yard Psychotherapy / Ecotherapy waste going to the landfill. 795-5529 nicholas11tigers.com 995-9700 SFR IS ALWAYS AVAILABLE AT: SANTA FE MASTER Voted Best Pilates Studio! AMATA GARDENER ASSOCIATION Mon-Fri 7am-7pm | Sat 8am-2pm WHOLE FOODS SMITH’S 2110 S Pacheco Street 753 Cerrillos Road CHIROPRACTIC N.M. HOMESTEAD LAW Recovery Art Medical Intuition TRADER JOE’S CHAVEZ CENTER Show 530 W Cordova Road 3221 Rodeo Road Gentle Chiropractic State Law Protects Only $30K Of Your Real and Personal Property From Court Seizure WESTTEXASTRUST.COM
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