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JUNE 22-28, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 25 Opinion 5 Blue Corn 7 A MODEST PROPOSAL
Duck season in the Bosque? Why not? News
LOANS FOR WHEELS
7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 BRIEFS 8
Griego subpoenas St. Cyr; Judge knocked for Facebook post BREATHING IN DANGER 9
Carcinogenic toxins come from oil, gas operations
Are you looking to purchase a car, take that dream vacation or remodel your home?
BLUE BUS EXPANDS ON THE SOUTHSIDE 11
La Cienega residents take advantage of transit trial Cover Story 12
SELFIE
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PRIDE SANTA FE
Looking back, looking ahead in celebrating all things LGBTQ
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SFR Picks 19 Jodie Herrera creates beauty from trauma The Calendar 21 Music 23 HEY, LADIES
DJs Oona and Melanie Moore dish the dirt A&C 25 ARTIVISM
Niomi Fawn wins grant to curate public art project Savage Love 26 Puppy play leads to questions about identity Food 29
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Downtown café delivers ethereally flaky croissant Movies 33 ENDLESS WAITING
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LETTERS GWYNETH DOLAND
Angel Insights: Inspiring Messages from and Ways to Connect with Your Spiritual Guardians
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FOOD, JUNE 8: “SAZÓN: YOU’RE BEAUTIFUL”
DELIGHTED DINERS We are two friends who just had lunch at Sazón. Both of us have lived in Santa Fe for 40 years. Sazón is a refreshing masterpiece of modern Mexican cuisine, actually, luminous Oaxaca flavors. The tacos are not just street tacos, they are divine little corners of one of the most exotic cities in the world. After reading the review of Sazón by Gwyneth Doland, we felt sorry that she was unable to fully appreciate the delightful lunch we experienced today. We feel so fortunate as locals to have such fabulous new flavors that are authentic, totally unique and like nothing we have in Santa Fe. This is for locals, like us, who love to be educated about food from other regions of our history. We look forward to the next experience at Sazón.
ater at best. Mayor Javier Gonzales started things off by saying he was the MC for the evening; he introduced speakers. This was not a party. Two faith leaders both used their time oddly: Adam Ortega y Ortiz brought up the reconquest of Santa Fe, and Talitha Arnold kept reminding us that her church likes gay people. Brian Egolf congratulated himself and other politicians on their progressiveness. Miranda Viscoli from New Mexicans to Prevent Gun Violence spoke the longest, mentioning that the attack was a hate crime against gay people as a brief point to bolster her pleas for more legislation on guns. Forty-five minutes into the event, people representing the LGBTQI+ community were finally allowed to speak. Not one of the three queer speakers brought up gun laws or regulations. They spoke about oppression, phobias and being together in these times. All three together took less time than that allotted Viscoli. There were no candles. No altar to leave flowers. This was not solidarity with Orlando or the LGBTQI+ community. This was hollow politics masquerading as acceptance and love. It was about something, but that something was not the LGBTQI+ community or its needs. The first role of ally-ship is to not make it about yourself. I demand more of my city and my leaders in times of crisis.
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NEWS, JUNE 15: “LOVE ONE ANOTHER”
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SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake: editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
The Santa Fe vigil for the victims of the Orlando shooting was crass political the-
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JUNE 22-28, 2016
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FATHER’S DAY HAPPENED Along with those social media mustache retrospectives.
STATE LAWMAKERS EGOLF AND WIRTH WANT METAL DETECTOR AT THE ROUNDHOUSE You’d still be able to carry a rifle to a committee hearing, though.
US SENATE HIDES BEHIND SECOND AMENDMENT
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The same people who want to ban abortion fiercely defend the right to own a machine gun.
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TOURIST PENS LETTER BLASTING NEW MEXICO $ FOR ITS FEMINISM AND ILLEGAL ALIENS
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If feminism is a problem for you, you might just be a jerk.
SECOND STREET BREWERY TO OPEN RUFINA STREET LOCATION Beer is booming.
IT’S LIKE A HEAT WAVE
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Which is making that Cerrillos Road construction even more annoying.
CAVS WIN THEIR FIRST NBA TITLE All. Hail. King. James.
Read it on SFReporter.com GET A LOAD OF THESE BASTARDS! Jon Snow versus Ramsay Bolton finally happened, and culture editor Alex De Vore gives an f-bombfilled account of the battle. Who came out on top? Take a big fat guess, and then read about it online!
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FORK YEAH! SFR’s intrepid food writer, Gwyneth Doland, brings you all the food news from the Santa Fe area that’s fit to print (or at least put online). Head on over to sfreporter.com/signup to start receiving our weekly newsletter, The Fork.
BLUE CORN funds that would have come our way to implement it. The commission clearly doesn’t trust the feds and doesn’t want their dirty old money. You shouldn’t be shocked by this. This is the state where just a few years ago, a gun shop held a coyotekilling contest and offered to use the pelts to make coats for the homeless. But enough of that. I have some very exciting personal news. As you’ve probably read, New Mexico has created a Department for Animal Cruelty, to pioneer new heights of inhumanity to God’s creatures. And guess what? I’ve been appointed to head the department!
A Modest Proposal What fowl deed is this?
L
BY ROBE RT B ASLE R
et’s play a game. You try to name the only state in the US that doesn’t have an approved plan to identify and protect soonto-be-endangered wildlife species. Give up? It’s New Mexico, the state that likes to figure out the least it can do for its animals, and then do even less. I know I’ve used that line before, but I do like to quote myself. Last year, the New Mexico State Game Commission held a public hearing to discuss an endangered wildlife plan for this state. I’ve seen the official transcript, and while I’d love to tell you what your fellow citizens had to say at the hearing, I can’t. Almost all of the citizen comments are marked “inaudible” or “indiscernible.” So much for the public having a voice. So much for the public record. The Land of Enchantment can’t afford a decent recording system? CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW? The commission wasn’t happy with the proposed plan, partly because the list included about 400 species. That really isn’t very many. Arizona has 810 species in its plan. One of our commissioners said, out loud, “I’m thinking, what’s our top 10 here and focus on those.” I’m not making this up. It’s in the transcript. I’ll bet the commission wishes it had been inaudible. It didn’t matter whether there were 455 species or 10, because eventually the commission rejected the whole plan, as well as the millions of dollars in federal
Yes, I finally sold out. I realized what the hunters and trappers have known all along: There’s a lot more money in cruelty than in kindness. I’ve made some preliminary proposals, so we can hit the ground running. My first is to turn the Albuquerque Zoo into a big-game hunting range. Imagine what trophy hunters will pay for one of those heads on their wall! Of course, the Cincinnati Zoo recently got out in front of us on that idea, what with killing that poor gorilla, but we’ll catch up. But here’s the revolutionary idea that won me the job. Are you ready? You know Bosque del Apache, New Mexico’s nationally revered wildlife preserve, where thousands of snow geese, cranes and other birds seek refuge in the marshes and then take predawn flight in a thunderous flapping of wings? Seeing it in person is an experience breathtaking beyond description. My idea? Two words: bird hunting. Brilliant, right? Close the place to those nutty bird-watchers and open it up to high-paying hunters! Even the most inept “sportsman” on earth is going to leave with something, because when those birds take off en masse, you just point your shotgun straight up, pull the trigger and hold out your hands. “Honey, fetch the charcoal, we’re eatin’ crane tonight!” I know, you’re asking, “Bob, how will you ever, ever top an idea like that?” Well, let’s just say I’m working on a few surprises for all those pesky homeless dogs and cats living in luxury in animal shelters around our state. Let’s just leave it at that, for the time being. Robert Basler’s humor column runs twice monthly in SFR. Email the author: bluecorn@sfreporter.com
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The New Mexico Supreme Court issued a warning to judges this week: Be careful what you post on social media lest you impugn the notion of impartiality. An opinion filed on Monday reversed a murder conviction, finding that a forensic analyst’s testimony over Skype violated the defendant’s right to confront an adverse witness. In the court’s ruling, Chief Justice Charles Daniels also took the time to admonish former judge Samuel Winder for posts he made to a Facebook page set up for a 2012 re-election campaign. At the time, Winder was running to keep his seat on the 2nd Judicial District bench. He eventually lost. “I am on the third day of presiding over my ‘first’ first-degree murder trial as a judge,” Winder wrote. In another post, written after the verdict, but before sentencing, Winder wrote, “In the trial I presided over, the jury returned guilty verdicts for firstdegree murder and kidnapping just
after lunch. Justice was served. Thank you for your prayers.” Through his attorneys, accused murderer Truett Thomas said Winder’s social media posts showed judicial bias. While the opinion does not rule on that assertion, the court took the opportunity to offer some best practices for judges who use Facebook and other social media platforms. “While we make no bright-line ban prohibiting judicial use of social media, we caution that ‘friending,’ online postings, and other activity can easily be misconstrued and create an appearance of impropriety,” Daniels wrote. Reached on the phone, Winder, who is now an Albuquerque-based private practice attorney, tells SFR, “No one questioned my impartiality during the trial or after. We’ve all learned from this new medium, and judges should never make any comments on Facebook.” (Steven Hsieh)
Taking a Stand After an investigative reporter for SFR did the work that state prosecutors could have done, now they want him to testify in a fraud case against a former state lawmaker. Ten months after he bolted from the Roundhouse and resigned his Senate seat, Phil Griego was charged by Attorney General Hector Balderas with bribery, solicitation, three counts of fraud, filing a false financial disclosure statement, tampering with government records and two counts of violating “ethical principles of public service” when he financially benefited from legislation that enabled the sale of a historic state property in Santa Fe. Griego, 67, has pleaded not guilty to the crimes, and in two weeks, his legal defense team, headed by Santa Fe attorney Thomas Cole, will try to convince District Judge Brett Loveless to determine there is no probable cause to proceed to trial. But first, the judge will hear motions on whether Peter St. Cyr, the
journalist who broke the story about the deal in a 2014 story, should be compelled to participate in the trial. It’s not a position a journalist ever wants to be in. Prosecutors are seeking to authenticate Griego’s voice on a recording St. Cyr made during a long telephone call just a few weeks before the story published. Colin Hunter, representing St. Cyr, is asking a judge to keep him off the stand. Statements Griego made during the course of his reporting, Hunter argues, are protected under the New Mexico News Media Confidential Source or Information Privilege, a rule that provides journalists a privilege to refuse to disclose their sources and any confidential information obtained in the course of pursuing a story. That hearing is scheduled for June 27. (SFR)
Breathing in Danger
ELIZABETH MILLER
NEWS
Research maps health risks of oil and gas development as campaigns continue for reduced emissions tion analyzed by the Center for American Progress for a report released Monday, the San Juan Basin in New Mexico ach day, as Don Schreiber goes out to work and Colorado took the lead in emissions on his ranch in Northern New Mexico, per well. where he experiments with sustainable cat“It’s just New Mexico topping anothtle grazing, he wishes he could just hold his er bad list,” says Liliana Castillo, combreath. Then he realizes that if he tried, he’d be gasp- munications director for Conservation ing for air before he passed the plume of air pollutants Voters New Mexico. Of the ranking, from the well sites on his land. Ranching on a classic Castillo, adds, “There’s value in knowsplit estate, where the federal government owns the ing where a lot of emissions are coming mineral rights and leases them right out from under from, but whether big or small, the imhis grazing allotments, Schreiber and his wife, Jane, pact to communities is still there, and didn’t have a choice about becoming two of the 12.4 that is still an important part, and it still million people in the country who live within half a needs to be addressed.” mile of an oil and gas well. Such people are considered The US Bureau of Land Manageat increased risk for cancer and life-threatening respi- ment and the US Environmental Proratory ailments. tection Agency have been working on “For Jane and I, it’s been over 16 years now of deal- a trio of rules to reduce emissions from ing with these leaks, vents and flares on a daily basis. oil and gas wells, specifically targeting We cannot avoid them in our daily work on the ranch,” methane, a potent greenhouse gas with he says. “You are shoved up against the pollution un- 87 times the warming effect in 20 years avoidably. There’s no way to occupy the land that you as carbon dioxide. Oil and gas wells emit methane and volatile organic compounds which have own or the land that you lease for your grazing permit “This is a being-a-better-neighbor negative effects on human health. without encountering leaks, vents and flares. We have rule,” says Camilla Feibelman, director that every time we step outside.” of the Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra And every time he steps outside, he says, “We just Club. “It allows oil and gas to do the good work that The commissioner predicted “large-scale abango on through that big, horrible smell they do for our communities, keep- donment” of wells along with “a wave of bankruptcies and hope we’re not causing ourselves ing the lights on and our vehicles from small oil and gas companies” if the proposed harm.” moving, but at the same time doing rules are implemented. Income to the state from shut The oil and gas industry emits thouit in a cleaner way that doesn’t affect wells and closed business, he argued, is easy to calcusands of tons of formaldehyde, benour communities as much.” late: zero. If you live zene, acetaldehyde and ethylbenzene From a public health perspective, Yet, the Western Values Project estimates lost each year. These pollutants have been methane itself is not the big problem; methane has cost the state $50 million in revenue within half a linked to health impacts including canit’s the volatile organic compounds over the last five years cer, anemia, brain damage, birth dethat come out of wells alongside it, “The message that we bring from a business standmile, you have fects, respiratory irritation, and blood says Dr. Robert Bernstein, a practic- point is that it is lost revenue, it’s lost royalties, and and neurological disorders. ing physician in Santa Fe since 1979 hopefully that’s the message that gets to the larger serious cause An map at oilandgasthreatmap.com, and president of the New Mexico population in New Mexico. Some people in New initiated by EarthWorks and completchapter of Physicians for Social Re- Mexico may not care, strangely enough, that there’s for concern. ed with the help of the Clean Air Task sponsibility. Volatile organic com- a methane cloud, but you may get their attention by Force and FracTracker, overlays oil and pounds react with the atmosphere saying, ‘You know what, that’s your money,’” says gas well locations, emissions informaand create ozone, and that’s what Glenn Schiffbauer, executive director of the Santa Fe tion from the EPA’s National Air Toxic fuels a host of chronic respiratory Green Chamber of Commerce. Risk Assessment and census data. They problems for people and has been “We can’t continue as if it were the 1960s,” Schfound a “threat radius” larger than the state of Cali- linked to increased risk for heart disease. Benzene also reiber says, referencing that pre-Clean Air Act, prefornia. comes from wells, and that’s been tied to cancer. Clean Water Act era. It’s like seatbelts, he explains. “It’s not a bright line; it doesn’t mean that inside “So why do we pick on methane? The strategies Manufacturers fought them as unnecessary and exhalf a mile, you’re doomed and outside half a mile, these companies use to reduce methane reduce the pensive and now, no one would think of stripping you’re safe,” says Alan Septoff, strategic communica- other toxins equally,” Bernstein says. them from cars. tions director with EarthWorks. “It means that inside New Mexico State Land Commissioner Aubrey “Jane said a couple nights ago, ‘This just has to half a mile is where there are the most strongly corre- Dunn has spoken out in opposition to the BLM rules. stop,’” Schreiber says. “The company, in our case lated health impacts to living within oil and gas devel“The correlation is quite simple: Regulations cost ConocoPhillips, is making a profit at the expense opment. If you live within half a mile, you have serious money. If there were a cost-effective way for oil and of all these insults from their operations, whether cause for concern, and you should be checking.” gas producers to capture every molecule of natural gas they’re health or environmental, in the climate, our In the state of New Mexico, 145,608 people are that is currently being vented or flared, I believe that loss of revenue, the taxpayer money wasted—all of considered threatened, and 9,000 square miles and 89 the industry would be doing it already,” Dunn wrote in those. They make a profit out of all of that, and it just schools affected. Of 15 regions for oil and gas produc- a commentary on nmpolitics.net. has to stop.”
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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Round & Round
STEVEN HSIEH
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Will La Cienega bus service survive after a six-month trial? BY STEV E N H SI E H steven@s fre p o r te r.co m
T
omas Chacon glances at his wristwatch as he waits for a bus outside La Cienega’s community center. Roosters crow and trucks speed past on a dirt road. “You’ve got nine minutes, Lisa! I’m timing you,” he says, referring to the driver assigned to this route since it started running about three months ago. Chacon needed to pick up medication from the Albertsons near Santa Fe Place Mall. In 2004, while towing cars for scrap metal, a brown recluse spider bit him in the right leg, sending him to the hospital for a month and making him eligible for an $830 monthly disability check—now his sole source of income. He’s lived in a La Cienega trailer with his son, an auto mechanic, for three years. The 60-year-old man structures his morning around this trip, as he does two to three times a week. Once he gets to the mall, he’s stuck there until 11:47 am, when the first southbound bus departs. It’s a 15-minute walk (with a limp) from the drop-off point to his trailer. Before Blue Buses started running in his community, Chacon would hitch a ride with his neighbor to pick up his prescription. “But since this ride started, I figured a little exercise won’t hurt,” he says. “I think this is the best thing they could have ever done. There are a lot of poor people out here who cannot afford a taxi.” La Cienega, a predominately Hispanic community of about 4,000, has a per capita income of just over $17,000, according to the 2010 US Census. Most commuters using the taxpayer-funded North Central Regional Transit District public bus network are part of households that make less than that. The free six-month pilot route to La Cienega started rolling in March, making 14 weekday stops, including the Human Services Department office and Walmart Supercenter, before culminating at the Santa Fe Place
Tomas Chacon takes the new La Cienega Blue Bus two to three times per week.
Mall. The Route 260 buses will also serve Los Golondrinas for the Santa Fe Wine Festival on July 2 and 3 and the ¡Viva Mexico! Celebration on July 16 and 17. According to Jim Nagle, public information officer for the transit district, demand for the route came from Las Golondrinas museum reps hoping to draw more tourists, as well as from La Cienega Valley residents wanting easier access to medical services and shopping. The closest store, an Allsup’s off Highway 14, sits about five miles north of the community center. The route is the latest development in an effort to expand access to transportation in a service area encompassing Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Taos counties. Last fall, the district launched a seasonal service from the city to the Santa Fe ski basin, which ended service early April and begins again July 1 to shuttle hikers and bikers. While more than 4,000 riders shelled out the $5 to get up the Mountain Trail during ski season, La Cienega got off to a much slower start. Seven riders took the bus in March, according to a tally conducted by Lisa, the bus driver. April saw 27 riders. And in May, that number increased to 45. Anthony Mortillaro, transit district executive director, says there isn’t a threshold to determine whether the route keeps running after the six-month trial, but he adds
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that the growth “looks promising.” “If people have never had transit services, you have to work on attracting them to it, making it convenient, making sure it’s reliable,” Mortillaro says. “Hopefully, they’ll try it. And they’ll find it suitable for them.” For what it’s worth, Chacon has tried to do his part. When a neighbor expressed interest in the bus, Chacon invited him to tag along one morning. “But he is too lazy to walk,” Chacon says. “I tell him to get his ass up.” On Wednesday morning, the bus pulls up just after 8:09 am, the arrival time listed on the schedule. “Come on, Lisa. You’re running behind again!” he says to the driver as he boards the bus. “I’m going to have to tell you off again.” Lisa teases Chacon that he knows the time because she’s given him “10,000 copies” of the schedule since the route began. Ridership on the new line varies dramatically. Some days, Lisa picks up six people; some days, none. But it’s a scenic drive, with or without passengers. “I like to see all the animals. They have a lot of sheep and peacocks and goats and cows and horses,” she says, adding that she hands out lots of schedules for passengers’ friends and families. No one else gets on the bus that morning.
The Sibelius Academy and Acequia Madre House present End of workshop concert with advanced students from
Juilliard School of Music and Drama, Columbia University, Eastman School of Music, USC Thornton School of Music, Norwegian Music University, Conservatoire de Genève, Royal Academy of Music, McGill University, Royal Conservatoire of the Hague, New England Conservatory and University of the Arts—Sibelius Academy John Paul Jones
Music by workshop composers, John Paul Jones and Magnus Lindberg Performed by workshop composers and instrumentalists led by John Paul Jones, Anssi Karttunen and Magnus Lindberg
St. Francis Auditorium Tuesday June 28, 1 pm Free of Charge
www.SFRDating.com
Anssi Karttunen
Magnus Lindberg
With the cooperation of Friends of the Sibelius Academy And School for Advanced Research
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JUNE 22-28, 2016
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Scenesetter New book from local author recalls the glory days of gay arts and culture in Santa Fe
BY ALE X D E VO R E a l ex@s fre p o r ter.co m
W
alter Cooper once worked on Madison Avenue for internationally recognized ad agency, J Walter Thompson. He was a copywriter for major accounts while living in both New York City and Tokyo. Cooper fell into advertising, he says, because it allowed him the opportunity to pull a stable paycheck but still maintain some semblance of creativity. “Have you seen Mad Men?” he asks. “That show was actually pretty true to form when it comes to what it was like … there was a lot of pressure; there was a lot of drinking.” And it wasn’t that Cooper was unhappy, really; more like he had grown tired of his high-stakes lifestyle as it played out in the big city, and besides, he
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was harboring a secret that, back then, was pretty huge: Cooper is gay. “I wasn’t living openly then. I mean, a lot of people weren’t, but I realized that I wanted to live in a different kind of place, and I wanted to be somewhere I could experiment with my art,” he reminisces. “In those days, my uncle was the managing editor of the New Mexican; I came out to visit, just to see family for a week, and even though it was only a week, it was very apparent there were already a lot of gay and lesbian people here, and they were living their lives in a very open way.” This was in 1970, and by 1973, Cooper was living in Santa Fe full time. It was, he says, an exciting time, not just for the LGBTQ+ crowd (before those letters were event a thing), but also for artists who worked in all conceivable mediums. Without having to fear ire for being who he was at long last, Cooper was allowed to thrive alongside his contemporaries, many
COU RTE SY WALTER COO PER
pride of whom are respected and well-known local artists to this day. “Santa Fe was unique and accepting, and there were a lot of gay people here who were very serious artists, as opposed to Sunday painters,” Cooper says. “Many of them were like me: young people who were trying to figure out how to start out and find careers as artists or photographers or musicians or poets or potters. … Back then, the town was full of young people, maybe because it wasn’t as expensive as it is now—I was able to buy a house a block from the Capitol that first year for $17,000—but times have really changed, and it isn’t exactly cheap anymore.” Still, Cooper and his fellow gay artists did face hatred from time to time. Many would frequent a gay club on Galisteo Street called The Senate, and he recalls that they would sometimes be screamed at or have bottles thrown at them. “They’d call us ‘joto’ or ‘mariposa’’ and there was gay bashing or sometimes fights,” he says, “but overall, I have to say that Santa Fe remained a very welcoming place for gays, and that was incredibly helpful to young artists.” By the late 1970s and early 1980s, the gallery system we now know was on the rise, but it wasn’t unusual for artists to show their work with more ease than during today’s engorged Canyon Road nonsense. This allowed Cooper to show his paintings but also to dabble in various mediums such as silkscreen prints, ab-stract acrylic paintings and writing. He’d made art while working in advertising, but never had he enjoyed the freedom to create at his own pace and in his own styles. “My first show was at St. John’s College, and I was a part of Hill’s Gallery, which was the first exclusively contemporary gallery in town, and in those days, the openings would last,” he says. “The after-parties would go all night, and the community was small, whereas now galleries are just a business, and if you’re not selling, you’re not showing, but I made a living at this for nearly 25 years, until my sales began to fade.” He would turn to writing and has since released three books. His first was called Shards and reflected upon his years in advertising. Briefs: A Virile Display of Verse Witty and Gay would follow and feature poetry based upon his life. His newest book, Unbuttoned: Gay Life in the Santa Fe Arts Scene, examines his experiences over three decades. The self-published memoir, available at local bookstores and online, recounts almost everything from his first forays into Santa Fe gay and arts cultures to the tragic early ’80s days of HIV/AIDS, an epidemic that Cooper says “hit like a tidal wave and killed something like 40 guys I knew.” With sharp prose and clever wit, he brings the focus out of the dark days of AIDS and into the ’90s, as gay culture became more commonplace yet more scattered. One can almost feel Cooper’s longing for the past, but his portrayal of the community never wanders into selfpity; instead, we can appreciate his strong sense of nostalgia. Unbuttoned is a fascinating who’s-who of local talent and a thorough overview of Cooper’s place
Cooper’s fly mustache was perfect in this flier for his two-man art show with Douglas Atwill in 1981.
in laying the roots of the local arts scene, many of which are still in place today. A must-read for Santa Feans, not just in the gay community but for anyone who thinks they know local art, the book presents a picture of the years when Santa Fe was a glorious artistic paradise where those who had been afraid could find family and acceptance, and creativity was unaffected by commerce, thereby reaching an alltime high. These days, Cooper sticks to writing, but he still looks back fondly on the years he says shaped
our local arts scene. “I don’t want to be one of these people who says, ‘Oh, you should have seen it back then,’ because that’s just boring,” he says, showing the slyest of smiles. “This town is full of good stories to this day, and I guess that’s why I wrote the book; this is my town, this is my home, and though I can’t help but be nostalgic for my youth and for those years when the gay community had more of a presence, I love this place; I truly do.”
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Peer support alliance can be a safe place for queer teens
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D
iscovering who you are, thinking about who you want to be and determining how you want others to see you starts to take shape in your adolescent years. And then you search to find a place and a group of people for acceptance, support and encouragement. For Lilia Morris-Wright and other teens who don’t neatly fit into the gender binary or who have sexuality that’s difficult to define, the place is Santa Fe Mountain Center. The 16-year-old doesn’t want to be called he or she, but prefers to use the pronoun “they.” It’s a distinction that requires far less explanation than one may think and is among the reasons why the work of the center’s New Mexico Genders and Sexualities Alliance is so critical. “It gives you a network of people who you know support you in a very specific way,” says the soon-to-be11th grader at New Mexico School for the Arts. “As a young person, you are sort of just coming into the world and facing all of the craziness that comes with it, and when you are a queer or transgender, it can be very overwhelming; the alliance gives you a space where people understand that and have similar experiences to yours.” Morris-Wright was invited to become a member of the youth council at the alliance after attending an overnight camp. Youth support from their peers in the LGBTQ community is the best kind: “You may have counselors or parents or people who are reaching out to support you,
As a member of the youth council for the New Mexico Genders and Sexualities Alliance, Lilia MorrisWright wants other teens to find a network of understanding.
but they may not understand what you’re going through the way other youth understand,” Morris-Wright says. LuzMarina Serrano, a staff member at the Mountain Center who runs the alliance, says the group is especially important in times of tragedy, like the big blow from the Orlando nightclub shooting, she says. “I can’t imagine being 15 years old and seeing something like that and thinking, Wow, that could be me.” Sawyer Sverre-Harrell, 17, says he found the alliance at a time when “I was questioning my gender [and] wasn’t sure who to reach out to,” he tells SFR. “I found myself very at home,” says Sverre-Harrell, a theater program student at NMSA. “It felt right to be there.” That was two years ago, and he has been a part of the youth council ever since. “You can really find your true friends and family there, when you are kind of lacking that at home.” “In New Mexico, there aren’t a lot of resources for LGBTQ youth,” adds Chloe Fox, who begins her junior year at Santa Fe Prep in the fall. “It creates a safe space for people to cultivate and express themselves without worry of being discriminated against.”
pride
Let’s Get Visible
diversity and non-binary forms of gender were embraced and revered. We are the artists, the healers, the visionaries, the priests and shamans in many times and places, because we are creative in ways beyond the procreative, and we are joined outside the typical Nightclub violence continues narrative fueled by toxic masculinity familial bond. It has been said that because we are excluded from origin narratives and genealogies, queer people are left to write our own stories, and how we tell this particular story will be crucial. The first responders at the scene spoke of the eeBY ZAK YO U N G into rivers or left unclaimed in morgues by families rie sound of cellphones making noise as friends and who didn’t want them. The queer victims of the Holo@ sunface m a n caust, bearers of the pink triangle, for example, were families worriedly texted and called, desperately hops soon as I heard about the shooting in Or- the only victims who weren’t allowed to repatriate to ing their people were OK. That word “family” sticks lando, I braced myself for what would hap- their home countries. Many wandered Europe for the with me. How many of the 49 people lying dead had pen online. The cultural ritual of publicly rest of their lives, unable to work or find a place to call families who had rejected them or parents who had mourning mass shootings in America on home. Last year in Israel, a friend of mine witnessed a disowned them? social media has become routine, perhaps as a means stabbing at a Pride parade; that same week, a woman There are many ways to tell this story, but for now, of coping with the disturbing frequency of such events in this country killed her child, who she perceived as I am angry. Angry that a man with a known history of (there have been 998 shootings since Sandy Hook being gay. And 2015 was the worst year on record for hate speech was still allowed to acquire a militaryalone), yet somewhat disturbing in its own right as a violence against trans people. In the first five months grade assault rifle. I’m angry that Christian preachers distinct phenomenon of this era. No shade, straight of 2016, 10 trans people have already been murdered, call this an “act of God.” I’m angry that a Tennessee people, I get that your intentions are good when you the majority of them black (Editor’s note: Since this representative—I don’t need to tell you which party— #WeAreOrlando or repost a video or meme from your article was written, that number has jumped to 14). now plans to give away two AR-15s at a family pig roast, queer friends’ newsfeed. I get it. And there’s nothing This doesn’t account for those that weren’t report- the same weapon used in the massacre. The message particularly wrong with these responses, because ev- ed or investigated, or were completely misgendered is obvious: It’s fag huntin’ season. You’re probably not eryone processes grief in a different way, especially a by the authorities, their identities erased. It becomes the kind of person who would shoot somebody, but if grief so public, but much of what I saw on Facebook difficult to separate their stories from the bigger nar- you really want to help, forget about memes and ask in the Orlando aftermath seemed to center around rative of violence in this country when you consider yourself if you contribute to this culture. If you laugh dualistic conceptions: Bad people shoot people; good the problem of visibility. In the US alone, there may be when someone is called a fag, you’re a part of the people donate blood. more than 5,000 hate crimes against LGBTQ+ people problem; if you sit in a pew at a church that teaches Much of the initial media coverage desperately annually, on average (Google Marsha P Johnson. Go homophobia, you’re a part of the problem; if you say sought to align the shooter with Islamic extremism. ahead, I dare you). We’re glad you’ve finally woke to things like, “Love the sinner, hate the sin,” you are Later, attempts were made to historicize the event as it, straight people, because the truth is, to be visibly definitely a part of the problem. the biggest mass shooting in American history. This queer is to be vulnerable. There are myriad factors that contribute to a culignored instances where Natives and black people For all these atrocities, there are also incredibly ture where a man can walk into a bar and shoot over were the victims, and all of it is distracting, or worse— beautiful examples of cultures and times when sexual a hundred people. That’s why it came as no surprise scrambling to obscure what is really at hand: violent to me that the shooter used gay dathomophobia or, to be more specific, toxic masculinity ing apps like Grindr and A4A, frein American culture. quented the gay club and may have For queer people, this event is part of an ongoeven solicited sex there. Self-hatred ing narrative. Throughout history, we have been is hell. I spent my first three decades, stabbed, strangled, beaten, raped and wounded; give or take, mired in self-hatred, inour bodies were dropped in dumpsters, tossed ternalizing other people’s shitty ideThe message ologies from the things I had learned at church, at school, from my parents is obvious: It’s fag and from my peers. I wanted to die. huntin’ season. I wanted to kill myself every single day. At that time, I couldn’t understand it and didn’t have words for it, and even now, it feels like an ongoing process. But I was lucky. A handful of good people (straight people) held onto me, and I survived. This is why visibility, for me, is everything. I once heard a drag queen say that when it came to being physically harassed, the real pain is that next time you go out, you check yourself for fear that you will be seen for who you really are. I choose to no longer be afraid, but to present myself to the world as I am. Visibility means being honest about myself, despite the risk of harassment or even physical harm. To be visible is to reject normalcy and stand in solidarity with those who must hide, those who live in fear and those who couldn’t pass for normal if they tried. By being recognizably queer, I am trying to change the way we are perceived and hopefully make room for everyone to be authentically themselves.
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et ready for the rainbows, the glitter and the gyrating. Back downtown for the third year again after a foray to the Railyard, Santa Fe Pride’s 2016 celebrations this weekend are taking a few cues from bigger celebrations, with a five-part lineup on the Bandstand. SFR caught up with local organizer Richard Brethour-Bell, former board president for the Santa Fe Human Rights Alliance and also a regional director of InterPride, an international organization of Pride organizers that helped him visit Pride parties in other communities.
SFR: Some objected to our use of the word “humble” to describe Santa Fe Pride. What do you think about that? RBB: I don’t have any problem with that word at all. I think we can be quite sensitive at times, but I think there was nothing wrong with the word “humble.” That didn’t imply that it was insignificant. But when you compare it to LA Pride or New York Pride or San Francisco Pride, I think “humble” is a pretty nice way
of describing our Pride. … It’s a small town. I think we get a lot of people from California, from Texas, from New York, who move here. This is what they are used to, these bigger Prides. So when they come here and see a smaller one, it can be an adjustment for them. Last year I think was probably the most successful Pride that we’ve had in Santa Fe. Because our tickets to the festival are free, we really don’t know how many people were there, but the city told us that they would estimate a crowd of approximately 3,000 people. So for us, that’s pretty good. For 3,000 people to be on the Plaza in a four- to five-hour period, that is pretty good. I am hoping that we have that if not more this year. Pride began as a commemoration of the Stonewall riots, where people rose up against police actions targeting gays. Is today’s pride for the gay community or the community at large? I think what happens with marginalized communities is that when we are threatened in any way, we close ranks. And I understand that. We need to regroup and figure out what our next move is going to be. But we certainly don’t want to exclude our allies. Or
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FRIENDS OF DOROTHY 5 pm, free, Cava Lounge at the Eldorado Hotel & Spa, 309 W San Francisco St., 988-4454 Putting on Pride isn’t cheap. Join likeminded friends and neighbors for a night at the bar with no cover, just bring a donation (large or small, but preferrably large) for the Santa Fe Human Rights Alliance.
GLITTER 8 pm, $10, Skylight Santa Fe, 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Music by DJ Oona Bender and the Go-Go Girls (Sierra and Boi Tasha) and lighting by Luis Lopez come together to entertain during the Queer Women’s Dance Party.
Off the Plaza dance with my husband and hold my even people who are just interested. husband’s hand. There are clubs like ... We have to also keep in mind their Skylight who want to be inclusive and images of Pride are probably Prides welcoming, and I think that’s great, from San Francisco and New York, and I think they should exist. But for and those are not necessarily Prides some of us, we still feel a little bit more that you take small children to. So I comfortable in a gay-identified club. can understand some trepidation. With our Pride, it’s much Is Santa Fe a place where more family friendly, you are still going to family oriented. We cercatch some heat for holdtainly encourage straight ing your husband’s hand? people to come out to Their our Pride. Yes, it is. I think people There’s been a lot of talk about gay clubs as sanctuary [see Music, page 23, for more], and Santa Fe’s last gay club closed a year ago. Do you think that is particularly bad for our city?
images of Pride are probably Prides from San Francisco and New York.
I do think it’s a bad thing. I think the reason why we don’t have a gay club here has more to do with the apathy of the LGBT community. It goes back to feeling these things are not necessary because we have reached certain rights and privileges that we don’t need it anymore. But I have always found that a gay club is a sanctuary. It’s a place I can go and
are surprised to hear this, but I have mentioned before that at Prides in the past, I have been verbally assaulted. Here in Santa Fe, on the Plaza. Last year I wasn’t even holding my husband’s hand, and we were walking down the street, and someone yelled, “Fag” from a car. I have talked to young people who are attending school, and they are saying they are still being harassed, whether they are transgender or they are gay and open or simply being suspected of being gay because of their mannerisms. They are still receiving harassment. So even though Santa Fe is
JULIE ANN GRIMM
pride
Richard Brethour-Bell says that if the city’s LGBT community wants another Pride, they’re going to have to get more involved in the group that puts on the show.
quite liberal, the harassment aimed at members of the LGBT community is still present. It’s very real. What would you like to see the people of Santa Fe do to work on addressing this, to change that? I think we need a more united community, and this can’t just be a gay thing. The civil rights movement wasn’t successful simply because of black people. There are other groups that were involved. We can’t do this all alone, and so we need our straight allies to confront hate speech and hate teaching when they hear it, whether young or old, and say, “That’s not cool. That is unacceptable. It’s not funny, it’s not a
SANTA FE PRIDE ON THE PLAZA 1:30 pm, Plaza Bandstand Gather ‘round the obelisk right after the parade for headliners Fantine and Scarlett Santana, performing on the Bandstand back-to-back-to-back with Jessie Lawrence, of American Idol fame. Local entertainers include dancers from Studio Nia and a performance from Bella Gigante.
Santa Fe HRA has had struggles for some time back. What is effect of that? Quite honestly, we do not know the future of HRA and of Santa Fe Pride, and I have said that if the LGBT community wants this, they have to be involved. I know of other organizations that have folded because of lack of support from within their own community, from within the LGBT community, and that is a very real possibility for the Santa Fe HRA.
SUNDAY, JUNE 26
SATURDAY, JUNE 25 SANTA FE PRIDE PARADE 1 pm, the Roundhouse, down Old Santa Fe Trail, then north along Lincoln Avenue to Federal Place and into the Plaza Set up with the family along the parade route that starts at the Roundhouse and ends on the Plaza, with a party to follow. Support your community and show your love with the train of celebration, sure to feature sparkle and fun.
joke. It’s not anything to laugh at. This is dangerous behavior and dangerous talk, and we can’t have that here.” We have to speak up.
AFTER PARTY 9 pm-1:45 am, $20, Skylight Santa Fe, 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 The Pride party doesn’t stop, it just moves down the street to Skylight, where the 21+ dancing can continue into the wee hours with DJs Melanie Moore and Oona (see Music, page 23).
POOL PARTY 2-6 pm, $10, The Lodge, 750 N St. Francis Drive Santa Fe’s heat wave is likely to last through the weekend, so spend it near some cool water and a great party vibe. A limited number of tickets will be on sale Saturday at the HRA booth at Pride on the Plaza.
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MUSIC JAZZ BROS “We’ve played together for, oh, 18 years, and we’ll keep doing it until we do it right,” jazz pianist Bert Dalton jokes of his long partnership with bassist Milo Jaramillo. The pair plays an upcoming evening of Latin and Brazilian jazz at El Mesón. “It’s such an intimate space where the musicians and audiences can connect,” Dalton (sitting, at left) adds, “and we’ve been very fortunate that they provide a space for music.” Dalton says that Jaramillo will sing a few songs and adds that while the pair is professional, they’re not above a few novelty songs now and again. Sounds fun. (Alex De Vore) Bert Dalton and Milo Jaramillo: 7 pm Thursday, June 23. Free. El Mesón, 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756
COURTESY WILLIAM SIEGAL GALLERY
ART OPENING ART OPENING
Healing Powers
Local artist creates beauty from trauma had power over them,” she says. “We talk about their struggles, their past, their heritage—they are very much a part of the process.” She speaks about one piece in particular that features a Diné woman, the one who had cancer twice. “She used a lot of traditional medicine in her healing,” Herrera notes, “so there is a feather in her hand. Her sister gave it to her.” Over 20 women have been featured thus far, most of whom have been friends, or friends of friends, in their 20s and 30s. But as her project, now in its third year, has gained recognition, she has seen interest from a more diverse group of women; one of her future subjects, for example, is 65 years old. “Women are resilient and multidimensional beings,” the Herrera says. “I am trying to humanize the female and tell the story—it’s part of their beauty.” (Maria Egolf-Romero) THRICE OPENING RECEPTION: 5-8 pm Saturday, June 25. Free. Van Loon Gallery, 612 Agua Fría St. 670-6234
The smallest piece in weaver Polly Barton’s upcoming show, opening at the William Siegal Gallery on Friday, is about 30 inches wide and 40 inches long, and it took quite some time to complete. “I would say there is at least three months from design, to dyeing, to weaving,” Barton, who weaves on a traditional Japanese loom designed to make kimonos says. She dyes her silk personally and is best known for the ikat process she employs. With her latest weavings, Barton enters new material territory. “Three of the pieces have a new fiber that’s made in Japan that is silk wrapped around a metal or copper coil,” she says. (MER) Gardens: 5-7 pm Friday June 24. William Siegal Gallery, 540 S Guadalupe St., 820-3300
MUSIC INTIMATE SETTINGS Brock Scott, lead singer of Little Tybee, says the members of his folk-ish band have an easy time writing together. Hell, they’ve been doing it for 12 years. “It’s almost stream-of-consciousness writing,” Scott tells SFR. “It’s a style of music that never lets you get too comfortable, but it’s accessible.” The group played GiG two years ago, and Scott says they are excited to be back. “It’s more of a listening room,” he says of the small venue. The group usually plays to audiences of anywhere between 300 and 2,000 people, so, he says, “it’s a unique experience to see us in that setting.” (MER)
COURTESY LITTLETYBEE.COM
Therapeutic storytelling is the focus of Jodie Herrera’s work, and her paintings feature photorealistic women in the foreground, symbols and geometric shapes painted in petal and earth tones behind them. “All of the women who are a part of the project have a story that is carried through the painting,” Herrera says of Thrice, which opens at Van Loon Gallery on Saturday, June 25, at 5 pm. The artist creates the works on wood with oil paint and leaves much of the naked canvas exposed behind the women, whose bodies are depicted in black. The contrast pulls your eye to the women; it makes you feel their presence. Each of the women Herrera paints is a survivor. “They have gone through traumatic experiences,” she says, “from heroin addiction to a woman who has had cancer twice. All these things we may see as taboo or not want to talk about. I want to bring those up in these paintings.” The symbols crown and crest behind Herrera’s female figures and are directly related to their own paths to recovery. Herrera says the paintings become a part of that process for them, as well. “It gives them power over something that once
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Little Tybee: 7:30 pm Tuesday, June 28. $20. GiG Performance Space, 1808 Second St.
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WED/22 BOOKS/LECTURES BEN WRIGHT: WHAT ARE SIBERIAN ELMS DOING IN NEW MEXICO? Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 467-9025 What are they doing here? We are pretty far from Siberia. 6:30 pm, free BOOKS AND BABIES Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 An ongoing weekly program that welcomes families with children ages 6 months to 2 years. Each week is organized around a theme that is appropriate for babies. 10:30-11 am, free KENDO TROY FERNANDEZ: DHARMA TALK Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 Keep Polishing the White Jewel by Fernandez opens with a 15-minute meditation. 5:30 pm, free
DANCE RUMBATERAPIA The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N St. Francis Drive, 992-5800 A fusion of Latin music styles from around the world including salsa, cumbia, mambo and chacha. 7-9 pm, $20 SWING DANCE! Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Oh, you better believe this event title has an exclamation point, and that swing is still a thing. Something about jumping and/or jiving, swingers (you know what we mean). 6:30 pm, free
TAPS AND TABLETOPS Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 It's a happy hour AND a tabletop game night, AND it happens at George RR Martin's theater? It's basically everything you could ever want from a nerdly gathering. 6 pm, free WORLD TAVERN POKER Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 It's poker, you guys. Every week. So if you’re hanging around like, “Man, I could sure go for some poker right about now,” just remember that there’s this poker thing. 6 pm, free
EVENTS
FOOD
67th ANNUAL RODEO DE SANTA FE Rodeo de Santa Fe 3237 Rodeo Road, 471-4300 Mutton bustin', roping and all kinds of riding and wild western events. Concessions and a carnival midway offer fun for everyone, especially fans of the Navajo taco, like us. Yee-haw! 5 pm, $17 AMMA Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, (877) 848-6337 Meet the lady many think of as a living goddess and get a hug from her. Who doesn't want a divine squeeze? 7 pm, free
PAELLA PARTY Santa Fe Culinary Academy 112 W San Francisco St., Ste. 300, 983-7445 Make and eat the seafoodand-rice party dish of Spain, which is really damn pretty in the pan. Price includes dinner and ingredients. 5:30 pm, $65
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Finnie follows in Vanessie’s grand tradition of piano geniuses by ticklin’ them ivories and usin’ them pipes. 7 pm, free
ELECTRIC JAM WITH NICK WYMETT AND ALBERT DIAZ Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 If you have an electric instrument and you like to jam, jam it up over at Tiny's. 8:30 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 The crazy talented flamenco guitarist plays his own signature blend of traditional styles merged with a newer sound. We’ve heard he loves Led Zeppelin, too. Gallegos makes the perfect musical pairing with the Spanish-inspired cuisine. 7:30 pm, $5 MUSIC ON THE HILL St. John's College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 The picnic-perfect afternoon event returns with Stephanie Hatfield, who plays blues, folk, soul and jazz and has this whole new horn section thing going on that we think it pretty cool. Do note that this year’s series will not provide a shuttle service from Museum Hill, so plan accordingly. 3 pm, free SIERRA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 A litte bit country and a little bit rock and maybe even a little bit everything else. 7:30 pm, free
TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Smooth piano action to accompany your fancy dinner. 6 pm, free WEDNESDAY NIGHT KARAOKE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 The reigning queen of all things karaoke, Michéle Leidig, hosts this weekly gathering of pro-am singers. 10 pm, free
THU/23 BOOKS/LECTURES BASSEM EID: PALESTINIAN INTERNAL POLITICS AND CONFLICTS Unitarian Universalist Congregation 107 W Barcelona Road, 982-0439 Eid is a political analyst based in Jerusalem who advocates peace between two war-torn countries, Israel and Palestine. 7 pm, free BOOKS AND BABIES Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 An ongoing weekly program that welcomes families with children ages 6 months to 2 years. Each week is organized around a theme that is babyfriendly. 10:30-11 am, free
LOREN STEPHENS Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The author speaks about his newest work, Paris Nights: My Year at the Moulin Rouge about his time in the underground, after-hours scene, which he co-wrote in the City of Light with famous actor Cliff Simon (Stargate). 6 pm, free SILKSCREENING Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 Make your very own designs for clothing or for art or pillowcases (we've seen them make some cool-ass pillowcases). 5 pm, $10-$20
EVENTS 67th ANNUAL RODEO DE SANTA FE Rodeo de Santa Fe 3237 Rodeo Road, 471-4300 Mutton bustin', roping and all kinds of riding and wild west events! It’s time to get excited, rodeo fans. Show goes on through June 25. 5 pm, $17
MUSIC BERT DALTON AND MILO JARAMILLO El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Dalton and Jaramillo bring Latin and Brazilian flair to their jazzy tunes (see SFR Picks, page 19). 7 pm, free
COURTESY NÜART GALLERY
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Collage, printmaking and painting collide at artist Nina Tichava’s Ever Since Happiness Heard Your Name, opening Friday at Nüart Gallery.
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FRANK X CORDERO
THE CALENDAR
The inimitable Brandi, a former Ms. Santa Fe Pride, repped the City Different at last year’s festivities in Albuquerque.
Workshop on Native Flutes, Storytelling and Dance
with Philip Haozous and Hyda Maria
Thursday, June 30, 2016 from 2-4 pm Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel, Santa Fe
Free & Open to the Public
Concert of Music for Native Flutes
Friday, July 1, 2016 at 7 pm
Ralph T. Coe Foundation for the Arts • 1590 B Pacheco Street, Santa Fe Seating is limited to 30 • Tickets $75 at www.nmperformingartssociety.org
Reception at the Allan Houser Sculpture Gardens •26 Haozous Road, Santa Fe Catered reception with an introduction and tour led by David Rettig, Curator of the Allan Houser Collection
Sunday, July 3, 2016 from 1-3 pm
Tickets $50 at www.nmperformingartssociety.org
Closing Concert of Santa Fe Flute Immersion
Sunday, July 3, 2016 at 5:30 pm Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel, Santa Fe 22
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BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano classics in Vanessie’s gorgeous environs. 7 pm, free D' SANTI El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Flamenco from the solo guitarist at the bar. 8:30 pm, free GARY VIGIL Inn and Spa at Loretto 211 Old Santa Fe Trail, 984-7997 Solo guitar and vocals. 6 pm, free JOE WEST TRIO Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Psychedelic country and Americana with the celebrated local songwriter. 6 pm, free LATIN NIGHT WITH VDJ DANY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 All the bachata, cumbia, reggaeton and Latin dance jams you can handle. And then there are even more of those things after that. 9 pm, $7 LILLY PAD LOUNGE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Rebel Frog brings you the best in old-school funk, hip-hop and soul. 10 pm, $7
LIMELIGHT KARAOKE WITH MICHÉLE The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Yes, you too can be in the spotlight for one brief moment and hear things from your friends like, "Wow, Sandra, you're like, a really good singer and should go pro!" It's these thoughts that will keep you warm at night. Have fun, y'all! 10 pm, free RAY MATTHEW Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 Varied styles of guitar and vocals. 6 pm, free RYAN HUTCHENS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The young singer-songwriter spends an average of 10 months a year taking his oneman show on the road. 4 pm, free SIERRA La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 A litte bit country and a little bit of everything from these guys. 7:30 pm, free STU HAMM ROCK EXPERIENCE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Known as “the bass man,” he reinvented the instrument he plays, and he plays it really damn well. Hamm delivers. 7 pm, $15
TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Smooth piano action to facilitate your pizza and pasta eating. 6 pm, fee
THEATER DRIVING MISS DAISY Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A modern classic story that follows an unlikely friendship that develops between a wealthy widow and her chauffeur over their 25 years together. A Pulitzer-winning play. 7:30 pm, $20 THE LAST FIVE YEARS Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 A musical love story that spans half a decade told from opposite timeline perspectives, with one lover starting at the beginning and the other at the end, to tell their tale. 7:30 pm, free
FRI/24 ART OPENINGS ALCOVES 16/17 New Mexico Museum of Art 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 A group show featuring works by local contemporary artists Christina Dallas, Tom Joyce, Eliza Naranjo Morse, Heidi Pollard and Cecilia Portal. 5 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
Hey, Local DJs talk Pride, music and Santa Fe’s gay community 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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COUR TESY MELA NIE MOOR E
may be in the minority here, but I’m one of the few gay people, I think, who doesn’t need a gay bar,” DJ Melanie Moore tells SFR. Moore and fellow local legend Oona Bender are slated to take the stage at the official Santa Fe Pride after-party at Skylight on June 25. “It’s just that I’ve never let that, nor would I want that to be my identifier,” Moore continues. “There are some people who that’s the first thing you learn about them, and that’s just not me; I’d rather it be about my character.” It’s a powerfully human statement from a prominent mainstay of the local electronic music scene, one who is also an openly gay musician, but it does raise the question, does Santa Fe’s lack of a dedicated gay bar have a negative impact on the LGBTQ+ community? Gay clubs like The Blue Rooster and its predecessor, Rouge Cat, are both long gone, and while Santa Fe is arguably an oasis of acceptance in a state with oddly disturbing religious and/or conservative undercurrents, it’s entirely possible that we’ve come to an enlightened new era that means a specifically gay club isn’t necessary. Of course, as a straight man, I wouldn’t dare to decide such a thing. For some, the idea of a gay club as safe space hearkens back to their earliest days of self-discovery, when such locations allowed them the means and support to find and be themselves without fear. Oona, who came up in the Bay
Area music scene and enjoyed a resident DJ slot at Rouge Cat with her long-running Trash Disco series, echoes Moore’s feeling that one’s sexual orientation shouldn’t be the first consideration, but believes that there is still much to be said for gay clubs. “I will say that there’s an entire culture that’s contained in a gay bar,” Oona says. “When I got here in
1981, I felt like I was home, but when you’re talking about people who grow up in places with environments that aren’t as progressive … the gay club can definitely be a sanctuary.” Both Moore and Oona agree that their specific experiences were perhaps not as harrowing as some of their contemporaries, and both agree that the overall good created by spaces dedicated to gay communities is in the feeling of acceptance and open-mindedness they can inspire. Moore and Oona, however, bring their own kind of inspiration to the table. Moore nails it down perfectly, saying that it isn’t about being gay or straight; when it comes to music, she has always wanted “something that’s good for my soul.” When the hardworking DJs take the booth following the Pride festivities on the Plaza, the music they play and the atmosphere they create will not be focused on any one group in particular—it will be the soundtrack of togetherness. They’ve worked as a team a number of times over the years, most notably at Moore’s annual Sex on Vinyl weekend (a totally amazing collaboration of DJs, by the way), and it’s safe to say they’ll know how to get the party started. “I’m dance floor-driven,” Oona says of her forays into pop, disco, R&B and beyond. It’s a clever means of merging hits that people know with the long-honored DJ tradition of introducing new songs through the clubs. “I can get more tribal, too, and I do like to play stuff that’s harder.” Moore jokingly calls her upcoming set “housey-house” and describes her own personal preference for dance music as wanting to hear songs she’s never heard before. “I’m not really a commercial DJ, never have been,” she says. “I’m really more about music that people think they know but they don’t know why.”
SANTA FE PRIDE AFTER-PARTY 9 pm Saturday June 25. $15-$20 Skylight, 139 W San Francisco St. 982-0775
SAn’oS PO a Zafar
June Breakfast
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to 12pm
PURCHASE A BREAKFAST BURRITO AND RECEIVE A 16OZ CUP OF SEATTLE’S BEST COFFEE (A PRODUCT OF STARBUCK’S)
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POSA’S ZAFARANO ONLY, 3538 Zafarano Drive 505-473-3454 SFREPORTER.COM
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JUNE 22-28, 2016
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THE CALENDAR Sabores Flamencos Gala benefitting
June 27, 2016 • 6:00 p.m. hosted by
Restaurant Martin Festivities will include a performance by EntreFlamenco, fabulous four-course meal, selected wine, live music, and a silent auction. Tickets $125 per person For Information & Tickets call 505. 660. 7841 526 Galisteo St, Santa Fe, NM 87501
ANDREI KIORESKU: SIMPLER TIMES Meyer Gallery 225 Canyon Road, 424-9463 Featuring vibrant landscapes and peaceful scenes, Kioresku presents his idea of simpler times. 5 pm, free FAUSTO FERNANDEZ, JAMIE BRUNSON AND ROBERT TOWNSEND: ROY G BIV Turner Carroll Gallery 725 Canyon Road, 986-9800 Before words, humanity had color to express ourselves. These three artists continue that tradition in the works on exhibit. 5 pm, free GWYNN MURRILL: NEARING NATURE Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta, 954-6700 This Los Angeles-based sculptor brings her fourth solo exhibition to the City Different. She works mostly in bronze, and this show features familiar desert predators, such as the noble coyote. 5 pm, free KATHLEEN HOPE AND LEIGH ANNE CHAMBERS: UNCOMMON GROUND GVG Contemporary 241 Delgado Street, 982-1494 Both artists utilize unusual materials to create their artworks. Linoleum, for example; and we’re talkin’ the kind you used to see in every ‘50s kitchenette. 5 pm, free NINA TICHAVA: EVER SINCE HAPPINESS HEARD YOUR NAME Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road, 988-3888 Dark layers and abstraction are this artist’s technical game. Tichava stresses the relationship between material and method and was influenced by her construction worker father. 5-7 pm, free POLLY BARTON: GARDENS William Siegal Gallery 540 S Guadalupe St., 820-3300 The textile artist presents beautiful new silk weavings. Barton trained in Japan in the ‘80s and weaves everything she makes on an ancient kimono loom (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free RICK STEVENS: TRANQUILITY IN MOTION Hunter Kirkland Contemporary 200 Canyon Road, 984-2111 The artist takes a metaphysical view on tranquility in his abstract new works. 5 pm, free
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SECURING OUR NATIONAL LEGACY: THE GRANDCHILDREN SPEAK La Fonda on the Plaza 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 FDR’s grandaughther speaks on the New Deal era, from 1933 to 1943, the work programs born in that time and how all of that relates to today (see 3 Questions, page 27). 9 am, $20
EVENTS 67th ANNUAL RODEO DE SANTA FE Rodeo de Santa Fe 3237 Rodeo Road, 471-4300 Get into your wild western self, wear your cowboy boots and join the annual cowboy showcasing event. Yee-haw! 5 pm, $17 COMMUNITY CLUCK La Tienda Performance Space 7 Caliente Road, Eldorado, 465-9214 Join Joe West, Joey Wilson and Laurianne Fiorentino for a fundraising event. Bring your best dish with you, because it’s potluck style. Cash bar and the Chickendales provide extra entertainment. 6 pm, $20 CRUISING THE ALAMEDA State Capitol Building 490 Old Santa Fe Trail An architectural walking tour led by David Rasch, who knows a thing or two about the subject. He is president of Architecture Santa Fe. 5:30 pm, free FRIENDS OF DOROTHY Cava Lounge at the Eldorado Hotel & Spa 309 W. San Francisco St., 988-4454 Make new friends and enjoy a cocktail. Wear a silly nametags to encourage mingling and bring a donation, because this is a fundraising event and a part of Pride. 5 pm, free GLITTER Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Music by DJ Oona Bender, dancing by go-go girls Sierra and Boi Tasha and lighting by Luis Lopez come together to entertain during the queer women's dance party (see Music, page 23). 8 pm, $10 SANTA FE OPERA BACKSTAGE TOURS Santa Fe Opera House 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900 See the inner workings of one of the most beautiful things in the City Different. 9 am, $10
MUSIC ALCHEMY WITH DJ POETICS Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Hip-hop, Top 40, dance jams, and plenty more. It's seriously a lot, all right? I mean, try DJing if you think it's easy. 9 pm, $7 ALTO STREET Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 This local trio melds a variety of styles together to create their own take on the locally celebrated genre of Americana. 6 pm, free BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Classic piano jams to serenade your meal. 8 pm, free
CHARLES BLANCHARD First Presbyterian Church SF 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 Blanchard plays classics from Chopin and Albeniz on the piano. 5:30 pm, free C.S. ROCKSHOW La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Get the party going and rock out with the talented trio. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST: GEIST CABARET Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Piano tunes from this experienced musician. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 A guy who rocks the keys like few can and makes it look kind of easy. 6 pm, free DUKE CITY RIOTS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The Albuquerque-based band were friends before they were bandmates and now they play rockabilly and alt. country together. 9 pm, free KATY P & THE BUSINESS The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Dance to some funky tunes and beats in the red light. 10 pm, $7 LORI CARSILLO Museum Hill Café 710 Camino Lejo, 984-8900 The Bay Area jazz vocalist brings her friends Arlen Asher, Jim Ahrend, Jon Gagan and John Trentacosta to make a full band and full sound at her evening show. She is known to coolly belt classics that will make you want to sing along, though she’s probably better than you. Yeah, you. 7 pm, $25 LORI OTTINO & ERIK SAWYER Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 The Madrid locals play Americana tunes on the deck. 5 pm, free RANE & CROW Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 426-1753 A guitar playing duo. 7 pm, free THE SANTA FE REVUE The High Note 132 W Water St., 919-8771 A sizable ensemble plays theatrical folk with a large sound that goes perfectly with a stiff cocktail. 8:30 pm, $10 SEAN HEALEN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Healen plays rock 'n’ roll classics and some of his own originals. 8:30 pm, $5 CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
SELFIE
Curator Niomi Fawn builds a platform for Santa Fe artists who are fighting to be heard BY J O R DA N E D DY @jordaneddyart
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ou are what you say you are. I’m a curator,” Niomi Fawn tells SFR. “To curate is more than just putting art on walls. It’s world bridging.” Over the last 18 months, Fawn has emerged as a curatorial force in art spaces and businesses around the city, often working with LGBTQ artists. She has a growing reputation as the city’s “queer curator,” but her projects are designed to empower a diverse cross section of individuals and communities. “When I think ‘queer,’ it means giving space to voices that need to be heard and are often just moved to the side,” Fawn says. “That can mean people who identify many different ways.” Fawn’s company, Curate, just won a $10,000 grant from the Santa Fe Arts Commission for a public art project called HITCH. The multiartist collaboration is her most ambitious venture yet and a culmination of a decade of activism in Santa Fe’s creative community. Growing up in Hawaii and California, Fawn’s first passion was surfing. She competed professionally during her teen and young adult years. Surf culture came hand-in-hand with the punk rock movement, and Fawn drew inspiration from Bikini Kill and other riot grrrl trailblazers in her own musical experiments. Between surfing competitions and band practice, she penned poetry-filled zines and dreamed up goth outfits à la Bauhaus to wear to the beach. Fawn was always in search of female surfing heroes, in reaction to the machismo of the 1990s surf community. “I remember being at a party in high school and having this guy back me into a corner and say, ‘Girls should be skinny and sit on the shore. They shouldn’t be in the water,’” Fawn says. “It was actually really scary. I was in a hypermasculine space in the surf world, so I found ways to reclaim safe space and my female body.” Fawn started teaching surf classes for women and painted portraits of Gidget and other iconic female surfers on old surfboards. “My best vengeance was that I beat that guy at the next surf heat,” she says. Fawn visited her mother’s family in New Mexico every summer throughout her childhood. Rolling tamales with her grandmother and learning her family’s migratory history, she developed a powerful connection with her Hispanic roots. Fawn has lived in Santa Fe intermittently for the past 10 years and has worked to carve out space for the city’s alternative arts scene. In the early 2000s, when she was studying interior design at Santa Fe Community College, she organized a series of salons that connected the music and visual art communities. “I was throwing giant shows for so long with all of these bands, so I was actually curating people,” she says. “You’re curating bands, you’re curating content.” She got more serious about her visual art prac-
Curate founder Niomi Fawn is all about that art life.
more liminal way, it’s my tice during a stint in North Carolina, job to be an ambassador. a national capital of furniture design. I have the responsibility Her interior design aspirations comto speak louder and say, bined with a growing passion for When I think ‘queer,’ ‘Your perceptions are not graphic design, and by the time she true. Let me educate you.’ it means giving space to returned to Santa Fe, she was ready The same goes for curating.” to take a deeper dive into the visual voices that need to be In September 2015, Fawn art scene. curated a group exhibition Fawn joined Meow Wolf in heard and are often just of local LGBTQ artists called 2009, as part of the second wave Chronicles of the Future at of artists to work with the collecmoved to the side. Warehouse 21. It was a breaktive. It was two years before the through moment: She appeared group’s seminal installation, on KBAC’s The Big Show with The Due Return, at the Center Honey Harris, and Mayor Javier for Contemporary Arts. “Curating became more serious when I was in Meow Wolf, Gonzales attended the opening reception. Her new because you’re creating space,” says Fawn. “When project, HITCH, is another step forward in creating a someone gives you the space and the walls to say platform for voices that are often silenced. Fawn will something, it’s your job to take it seriously.” She left work with 10 local artists to retrofit parking meters Meow Wolf to found Curate in early 2015, just as plans with sculptural sleeves that support secure bicycle for The House of Eternal Return were taking off. For parking. Sandra Wang and Crockett Bodelson of SCUher last official project with the collective, she curated BA, Eliza Lutz and Frank Buffalo-Hyde are among the a group show called Everything, Everything at Iconik participating artists. “The bike was a really important moment in the Coffee Roasters. history of women, as far as their own ability to move Since that first exhibition at Iconik, Fawn has embraced her role as official curator of the café. She’s themselves through the world,” Fawn says. “It’s a clasmounted 13 shows in all, using the space to break sic feminist symbol.” Similar to her curatorial work at down barriers between the fine art world and the ev- Iconik, Fawn sees HITCH as a way to bring art—and eryday lives of Iconik’s patrons. Fawn also founded new narratives—directly to the community. It’s also, Hydra Collective, a three-person feminist art collab- quite simply, a response to the city’s need for more orative with Santa Fe artists Alicia Piller and Andrea bike racks. “There’s an initiative for this city to beVargas-Mendoza. The group has showcased femme come more bike friendly. Let’s get on it, then,” Fawn and lesbian artists at the AHA Festival of Progressive says. HITCH will debut at various locations in downArts and other events. “Femme as radical is such an underappreciated part of our community,” Fawn says. town Santa Fe and the Railyard Park beginning “Because I can move through the hetero world in a Aug. 4.
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THE CALENDAR
There is a guy at my work who is into puppy play. I know this because I have some friends in the gay puppy community. I don’t give two shits what anyone I work with does to get off. All well and good, except… he wants us to call him Spike, his puppy name. Isn’t this a case of him involving everyone at work in his sex life, whether we want to be involved or not? -Disturbed Over Gratuitous Gratifications Of Naming Experience “It’s important to note, firstly, that pup play isn’t a sexual activity so much as it is a head space,” said Amp, a puppy, a gamer, a porn performer, and the cohost of Watts the Safeword, a kink-friendly sex-education YouTube channel. “For DOGGONE’s coworker, pup play may be a comfort thing, or a social thing, or even a way for him to redefine who he is as a person so that he can take control.” Amp, who is 26 and lives in Seattle, got into pup play about five years ago. “A daddy and his pup joined a group of friends on a gay camping trip,” said Amp. “Their bond just seemed to glow, and their relationship stuck with me as something I wanted in my life. For me, yes, pup play can get sexual with my Daddy, but Amp is just who I am when I’m out and about.” Like your coworker, DOGGONE, Amp goes by his puppy name socially and professionally. So I put this question to him: Does he get a secret thrill and/or a visible boner when a coworker, barista, casual friend, or rando calls him by his pup name? “God no!” said Amp. “If someone calls me ‘pup’ in a really sexual way or an aggressive way, maybe, but not when someone is simply using your name. A pup name is essentially a nickname, and people use nicknames socially and professionally. So long as the kinkier aspects of pup play—tail wagging, barking, ball chasing—are kept out of the workplace, DOGGONE’s coworker using his puppy name at work doesn’t involve the office in his sex life.” A quick thought experiment, DOGGONE: Let’s say a female coworker married a man—a really hot man—and later confided in you that she married him because the sex was great. And let’s say she took her new husband’s last name. Would using her new last name “involve” you in her sex life? Being married partly defines who she is, it led her to take a new name, and sex is an important part of her marriage. But her new name isn’t just about sex—it’s about identity, intimacy, connection, and sex. Pup play isn’t as serious a business as marriage, of course, but you should be able to extend the same courtesy to Spike that you wouldn’t hesitate to extend to your hypothetical straight female coworker—that is, use the names you’ve been asked to use without obsessing over their respective sex lives. “DOGGONE should always respect how someone identifies and asks to be named,” said Amp, “and regard the sexual or kink aspects of someone’s name choice as a separate detail.” You can—and should—follow Amp on Twitter @Pup_Amp. I recently synced my phone contacts to my Twitter account. When I was scrolling through the list of people who turned up from my contacts, I saw a username that looked out of place. It was the account of a low-key traditional-guy friend of mine. To my surprise, on the account he was dressed as a woman in a few of the pictures and was with another Twitter user who is a popular
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dominatrix in the area where he lives. I’m sexpositive and support people who are gender nonconforming, of course. I also work for a porn company, so I don’t judge anyone who participates in BDSM. My concern is that I don’t know if this person is aware that his account can be found via a regular old social media and phone sync. I don’t want him to get outed for being a fetishist or possibly being gender questioning or transgender if he does not want to be out. Should I give him a heads up? Should I keep my mouth shut? I want to be respectful. -Knowing Isn’t Necessarily Knowledge, Yes? Send that traditional guy a note, KINKY, but “bury the lead,” as they say in the news biz. Instead of opening with those particular photos being easily accessible to all, open with the relevant facts about yourself: “You know I work in porn, and I’m not fazed by BDSM or sex work or any sort of gender-related sex play, and I’m a big supporter of gender-nonconforming people as well as the trans community.” Then let him know what you found, how you stumbled across it, and how to adjust his privacy settings. My name is Peter and I’m a longtime fan. I’ve also been very involved with the Human Rights Campaign and their work in getting the Equality Act passed. I’m 21 and only recently out of the closet. I opened up about my sexuality after the passage of marriage equality last June and have since been a proud gay man. It seemed that since marriage equality, our community was only going up. Even the passage of HB2 didn’t make me cynical about the future. But this recent shooting has changed my world completely. Fighting for equality in housing, education, and employment seems like a joke after this massive act of violence in Orlando. I’m looking to someone in the community for guidance. -Peter They don’t win—the haters don’t win—when they chase us, beat us, or kill us. They win when we stop fighting. Please don’t stop fighting. And please don’t despair. Hundreds of thousands of us died in the 1980s and ’90s when hate, fear, greed, racism, and negligence intersected with a deadly virus. A lot of us felt then the way you do now—that it was over, that it was hopeless, that the coming out and the organizing and the fighting had been for nothing, and that everything we had won up to that point was meaningless. And then we got up off our butts and we showed them— we showed those motherfuckers—that the fight in us was greater than the hate in them. We showed them that we were stronger and smarter than they were, we showed that fucking virus that we were stronger and smarter than it was, and we made it clear to them that we were not going to shut up and die quietly or go back into the closet and die alone. And we had only each other for a while there—for a long while. For years we fought alone. Look at who is on our side today—all good and decent people everywhere. The president of the United States and the next president of the United States. Look at the rallies, look at the vigils, look at the outpouring of love, sympathy, and support. Don’t look at the killer. Don’t look at the haters. Don’t look at the vile comments left by shit people on Twitter and Facebook. Look at the good. Look at the love. Look at the good and loving people inside and outside the LGBT community and take strength from their love and support. Then get out there and fight. On the Lovecast, all hail superhero drag queen Panti Bliss: savagelovecast.com mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter
THREE FACES OF JAZZ El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Did you know there’s really only a finite number of faces when it comes to jazz? Yup, true story. And they’re all here; all three of ‘em. 7:30 pm, free TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Oh Tucker, you’re so fine, you’re so fine you ... play piano reall well. We know that joke sucks, but it’s true! 6 pm, free
THEATER DRIVING MISS DAISY Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 A modern classic story that follows an unlikely friendship that develops between a wealthy widow and her chauffeur over their 25 years together. A Pulitzer-winning play. 7:30 pm, $20 THE LAST FIVE YEARS Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 A musical love story that spans half a decade told from opposite timeline perspectives. That’s a visual palindrome, y’all! 7:30 pm, free
SAT/25 ART OPENINGS CHERYL ANN THOMAS: PERCHANCE William Siegal Gallery 540 S Guadalupe St., 820-3300 Porcelain sculpture utilizing old-school methods. 5 pm, free GRACE BERGE Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave., 926-1497 Cool colors are Berge's forte and she manipulates them into textures and layers in her newest works. 10 am-5 pm, free THOMAS HAAG, JODIE HERRERA AND ROLAND VAN LOON: THRICE Van Loon Gallery 612 Agua Fría St., 670-6234 Haag uses reclaimed house paint and other recycled materials, Herrera paints in semi-photorealism and Van Loon presents emotional oil paintings (see SFR Picks, page 19). 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES BILL WEST: BIRDS OF COPPER CANYON AND SONORA Travel Bug Coffee Shop 839 Paseo de Peralta, 992-0418 The area this bird man talks about has five canyons deeper than the Grand Canyon and allows for diverse bird life. West talks about all the species in the unique area. 5 pm, free
EVENTS
67th ANNUAL RODEO DE SANTA FE Rodeo de Santa Fe 3237 Rodeo Road, 471-4300 Mutton bustin', roping and all kinds of riding and wild western events. Concessions and a carnival midway offer fun for everyone. Yee-haw! 5 pm, $17 PRIDE 2016 Santa Fe Plaza 100 Old Santa Fe Trail Celebrate people and their right to be themselves in an afternoon drinking, dancing and eating some delicious food on the Plaza with people who really know how to p-a-r-t-y. The festivities start right after the parade. 2 pm, free SANTA FE PRIDE PARADE State Capitol Building 490 Old Santa Fe Trail See the train of celebration and pride, sure to feature sparkle and fun. Starts at the State Capitol and ends on the Plaza, with a party to follow. Support your community and show your love. 1 pm, free PRIDE AFTER-PARTY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 The Pride party doesn’t stop, it just moves down the street to Skylight where the dancing can continue all night long. 9 pm, $20 SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave., 926-1497 The market, which showcases works by locals, celebrates its 35th anniversary this year. 8 am, free SANTA FE SALUTES PRINCE Railyard Plaza 1607 Paseo De Peralta Self-proclaimed Prince Geeks Mikey Baker, Ross Hamlin and Andy Primm host an evening of music to celebrate the life of the music legend. Performances by Alex Maryol, Felicia Ford, Hakim Bellamy, Matthew Andrae, Cole Wilson and more. This is for everyone from old fans to new and all points in between. 7 pm, free SUMMER TRAIN SHOW Santa Fe County Fairgrounds 3229 Rodeo Road Are you sitting down? You should be. OK. Deep breaths, and here we go: Santa Fe Model Railroad Club shows off the best of their models at this annual event. Kids will love this. 9 am-5 pm, free
FILM THE AUTEURS: BLACK GIRL Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338 CCA’s series of films from universally celebrated directors continues with the story of a spiritual journey directed by Ousmane Sembéne. 7:30 pm, free
MUSIC BOB FINNIE Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Finnie enterains with his masterful piano skills. 8 pm, free BO DEPENA, HARTLEY HALL AND GREG BUTERA Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Butera is a Santa Fe area musician staple that you don't want to miss and his friends bring talents which amplify his own. 7 pm, free C.S. ROCKSHOW La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Get the party going and rock out with this talented trio of classic rock aficionados and their long-running Hotel La Fonda gig. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST: GEIST CABARET Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Piano tunes from this experienced musician who can jump from show tunes to standards to ballads and beyond with ease. Do you have any idea how impressive that actually is? It’s super-impressive. 6 pm, $2 DELPHIA Scottish Rite Center 463 Paseo de Peralta, 982-4414 A soul-inspired pop singer and composer based in Santa Fe, who worked with producer Brent Kolatalo (Lana Del Ray, John Legend, Alicia Keys) on her latest single, “Let You Go.” 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The piano master brings tunes to your dining experience and, as we’ve seen a number of times, all kinds of surprise guests. 6 pm, free HIGH ALTITUDE BAND Second Street Brewery (Original) 1814 Second St., 982-3030 Classic rock jams for all y’all fans of such a style. Cross those fingers for Scorpions. 6 pm, free HOGAN & MOSS Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Folk tunes all the way from Marfa, Texas, where, by the way, art was invented. Boom Marfa jokes. 3 pm, free THE JAKES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Do you think they’re all named Jake? We doubt it. Actually, we don’t really know. We do know that this band does the whole country meets folk thing, and we’ve heard they’re pretty good. Take a trip out to Madrid and find out for yourselves. 7 pm, free
JEFF SAND TRIO Montecito 500 Rodeo Road, 426-1753 Swing and jazz with a veritable cornucopia of talented local heroes. 7 pm, free REPLENISH Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 AudioBuddha and Graeme Byous play an evening of dancing, love, joy and freedom. Good vibes and auditory replenishment. 10 pm, free RYAN FINN QUARTET El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Finn plays the trombone in his self-titled and jazzy quartet that will jazz you up. 7:30 pm, free SHOWCASE KARAOKE Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 Hosts Cyndi and Nanci preside over the long-running karaoke event. You know the drill when it comes to the empty orchestra. 8:30 pm, free SO SOPHISTICATED WITH DJ 12 TRIBE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Hip-hop, mainstream and EDM that’s, like, SO sophisticated, you guys. Dress nice, drink nice, party on. 9 pm, $7 THE SPRINTS El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Show tunes, oldies and dance music from a band that once featured local politician Bill Dimas. Not kidding. 8:30 pm, $5 TODD TIJERINA The High Note 132 W Water St., 919-8771 Tijerina is one of those guitarmaster blues shredder kind of musicians. You can call him Shreddy Kruger, basically. In fact, we really think you should do that. 8:30 pm, $7 TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Smooth piano action that’s so smooth you’re probably going to say things like, “Damn, that’s smooth.” 6 pm, free UNDERGROUND CADENCE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Rock ’n’ roll for those who like to roll underground. 9:30 pm-1 am, free VANILLA POP The Palace 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690 Wacky mash-ups from a pair who live for revitalized and somehow more dance-y versions of all your favorite hits from the ‘80s. 10 pm, $10
COURTESY TUCSON LOCAL MEDIA
THE CALENDAR
with Nina Roosevelt Gibson
Nina Roosevelt Gibson is the granddaughter of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, not to mention a distant relative of Teddy. Beneath a humble demeanor, Gibson embodies the Roosevelt spirit of compassion. As a psychologist, she spends much of her time fighting for the rights of abused children, drug addicts and others who don’t have a voice. Gibson comes to La Fonda (100 E San Francisco St., 9825511) on June 24 as a guest of the National New Deal Preservation Association, to discuss the enduring impact of FDR’s groundbreaking social initiatives. (Andrew Koss) How do you carry on the legacy of your grandparents? For my personal life, I have tried to give back to my country, my community … just as a regular person, as a citizen of my community, not necessarily as a Roosevelt. Every now and then, I do something that does get national press or something like that and I will get phone s ale Maker calls. “Nina, you never told me that you wereico’related s #1 Tam ew Mex denied 55. 19 to Roosevelt.” [In 2010] the state of NArizona ce in S ll Made es Are Sti Medicaid transplant operations to 98 people who Tamalhad d. ... By Han ay W l na been told they could get an organ transplant, Origi then The and the Arizona legislature denied them that operation, which was a death sentence. We banded together and we forced the Arizona legislature to rescind that law. It was very sad, because one person did die before we got it changed. In those instances, yes, people do know who I am and I have allowed the relationship to be made public because it’s important. But otherwise, I have just kind of gone about my business. How did you take the lessons of your grandmother into your professional work? She was probably one of the most important people in my life, because she was such a warm, wonderful person and I feel she’s relevant today. I do speak with various groups about her with the hopes that some of her ideas and some of her views on life, people will remember them and incorporate [them] into their own lives. The biggest lesson was, you don’t know all the answers. If I listen to other people, I can always learn. And I can always hear something that I haven’t heard before. There is almost no experience in life where I can’t learn. How can the spirit of the New Deal be applied to the social issues of today? The New Deal was a time of people coming together to solve a very serious economic emergency, with the philosophy and the values of social justice for all. A lot of that needs to be upgraded, certainly in healthcare and various other things. We really need to keep going forward and not let the naysayers turn it around, because we have huge economic and social justice problems that we’re still facing. It’s not the New Deal in and of itself, those programs, because they may not work today, but it’s the values and the philosophy of working together that I would love to see be implemented in our political climate today.
THEATER DRIVING MISS DAISY Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 You know this play. 7:30 pm, $20
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PSG14
THE CALENDAR
SUN/26 ART OPENINGS SANTA FE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS MARKET Santa Fe Society of Artists 122 W Palace Ave., 926-1497 We think this could make a cool comic book about a secret society of artists. Either way, you can buy art from local artists at this event. 8 am, free SUNDAY RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Santa Fe Railyard Plaza Guadalupe Street and Paseo de Peralta, 983-4098 Scoop up all the art your little heart desires. 10 am, free
BOOKS/LECTURES JAMES McGRATH AND ELIZABETH RABY Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 McGrath is a Santa Fe living treasure who teaches and inspires poets and artists alike. Raby has published four anthologies to date. 11 am, free STEPHEN DINAN Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way, 989-4423 The CEO of The Shift Network speaks and signs copies of his newest book. 1:30 pm, $20 VANESSA PALOMA ELBAZ: FROM YOUR MOUTH TO THE HEAVENS New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 In conjunction with the Fractured Faiths exhibition, Elba talks about the oral tradition of Sephardic women and its importance to cultural identity. 11 am, free WILL BARNES: THE LEDGERBOOK Collected Works Bookstore 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 The poet focuses on the West and the reconciliation of beauty and violence. 4 pm, free
EVENTS FIRE & WATER FEST Santa Fe Brewing Co. 35 Fire Place, 424-3333 Hosted by the Santa Fe Watershed association and the Santa Fe County Fire Department to raise funds that promote education and advocacy. Music by Innastate and DJ LaZer. 5 pm, $10 SANTA FE PRIDE POOL PARTY The Lodge at Santa Fe 750 N. St Francis Dr., 982-5800 Spend a hot day near some cool water and a great party vibe to wrap up the fun of 2016 Pride. 2 pm, $10 SUMMER TRAIN SHOW Santa Fe County Fairgrounds 3229 Rodeo Road Santa Fe Model Railroad Club shows off the best of their models at this annual event. Kids of all ages, you’ve been warned. 9 am-5 pm, free
VOLUNTEER RIVER CLEANUP Bicentennial Alto Park 1121 Alto St. Lend a hand to keep our rivers clean and beautiful. Bring gloves, waterproof shoes and water bottles. 10 am, free
MUSIC THE BLUES REVUE: GOSPEL BRUNCH Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Eat some toast and hear the band jam. Okay, that wasn't a great one; swallow it with a mimosa. Noon, free CHRIS ABEYTA El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Veteran singer-songwriter live at the bar. 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The piano-master serenades you over dinner. 6:30 pm, free JOSH MARTIN & THE NEON MOTELS Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Rock ’n’ such. 1 pm, free KEY FRANCES Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Blues tunes on the deck. 3 pm, free MIKE MONTIEL HOSTS THE GOOD, THE BAD & THE UGLY OPEN MIC Tiny's Restaurant & Lounge 1005 S St. Francis Drive, 983-9817 All kinds of mic rocking opportunities for the amateur songwriter set. 3-6 pm, free NACHA MENDEZ Taberna La Boca 125 Lincoln Ave., 988-7102 Nacha brings her pals for Latin/world music fusion. 7 pm, free RAMON BERMUDEZ JR. La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Here’s a guy who knows guitars. 6 pm, free SHANE WALLIN Mine Shaft Tavern 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 473-0743 Singer-songwriter action. 2 pm, free
THEATER DRIVING MISS DAISY Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 It won a dang Pulitzer, OK? 2 pm, $20 I NEVER SANG FOR MY FATHER Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Maura Studi directs this story about what happens to a guy named Gene after his mother dies. 6 pm, $10
THE LAST FIVE YEARS Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 A musical love story that spans half a decade, told from beginning to end by one lover and end to beginning by the other. We get that’s confusing, but we also get that it sounds way cool. 2 pm, free
MON/27 BOOKS/LECTURES ELIZABETH A OSTER: VOICES FROM THE PAST Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta, 982-1200 Oster is the principal investigator at the Jemez Mountain Research Center. She will talk about the 1540 Mixton war and the colonization of New Mexico. 6 pm, $12
DANCE EMIARTEFLAMENCO SUMMER RUN Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Featuring internationally acclaimed artists like Jorge Robledo, Vicente Griego, La Emi and more alongside Institute for Spanish Arts students. 7-10 pm, $15
MUSIC BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Country jam-a-lams. 7:30 pm, free COWGIRL KARAOKE WITH MICHÉLE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Professional singers need not apply. 9 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Piano jams, bro. 6:30 pm, free
TUE/28 BOOKS/LECTURES DAYNDA JONES Jean Cocteau Cinema 418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528 The author reads from and signs copies of her latest fantasy novel. 7 pm, $10 TAXES AND THE ARTIST Community Gallery 201 W Marcy St., 982-0436 New Mexico Lawyers for the Arts and Santa Fe Arts Commission host an evening of advice. 5:30 pm, free
DANCE ARGENTINE TANGO MILONGA El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 For tango fans. 7:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 31
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JUNE 22-28, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
Come to Mamou
GWYNETH DOLAND
FOOD
A French café that delivers classics done well BY GWYNETH DOLAND t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
I
t is a hard reality that the simplest breakfast is often the most difficult to find. Think: a cup of coffee and a piece of bread. When food is very simple, it has to be very well executed, which is only one reason why this little French café is such a treat. Chez Mamou (217 E Palace Ave., 216-1845) occupies a little storefront directly across from the Drury Inn; one wall is open to a store selling beads and jewelry (you have to pass through there to get to the bathroom). The dining room is charming, with a few funky old tables and chairs arranged in front of the pastry case, which Pepe-Le-Pews you forward, following the intoxicating aroma of freshly baked croissants. Look, when is a croissant ever bad? Ha! Kind of a lot. Remember the last time you went to a meeting where they brought in sandwiches for lunch, and yours came on a cold, hard, tasteless “croissant”? Shudder. We’ve become numb to the terribleness of the vast majority of bread items in this country (before you have an aneurysm, Santa Fe actually has some great bakeries; we are very lucky), so it’s nice to occasionally bask in the glory of a uniquely delightful treat like a hand-rolled fresh tortilla—or an ethereally flaky croissant. If you only stopped in to Chez Mamou to grab a pastry and a cup of coffee, you’d be doing right by your morning. The generously sized latte is thick and rich, while the regular coffee is pleasantly deep, dark and frequently refilled. But the little front patio and the surprisingly large side/back patio are shady and comfortable enough to encourage lingering over a fuller meal, and so, on a recent Sunday, two ladies (slightly the worse for wear after a day/night of eating/drinking for business/pleasure) spent a lazy hour or so deeply ensconced in plush cushions and protected from the hateful sun by gently drooping foliage.
The crispy halves of red breakfast potatoes make this simple French fare even more comforting.
A delightful plain croissant ($2.95) and a piece of pear tart ($7.95!) kick-started brunch. The pear tart was beautiful, with slices of pale fruit surrounded by pastry and shellacked with a glistening glaze, but it wasn’t as fresh or flaky as expected. The bottom of the tart was doughy and undercooked, while the glaze (apricot, maybe?) overpowered the delicate pear flavor. The croissant was a steal at $2.95, but to be worth $7.95, the pear tart needs to impress more. The spinach crepe ($11.95) was very good, the tender crepe wrapped around fresh spinach just kissed by heat, covered with a delicate béchamel and melted cheese. If you asked them to go easy on the cheese, you could probably even persuade yourself it’s a healthy breakfast. And just think of all the Vitamin A in that spinach! The friand saucisse ($12.50), not so much. How can you resist sausage wrapped in pastry? Even, um, after a pear tart? It is very difficult. The thing is the size of your abuelita’s chancla (if your nana were, say, a size 5), and if you threw one at me, I’d catch it with my mouth. But I probably wouldn’t eat the whole thing because, as it turns out, there maybe is a limit to how much buttery pastry and ground pork a person can eat (even if they had 13 or 30 taste-pours of wine the night before). It’s good, but it’s very rich, so con-
sider splitting one and doubling the amount of nicely dressed baby greens that come on the side. The rest of the brunch menu includes egg dishes (Benedict with smoked salmon, quiche Lorraine), French toast and an enticing beef hash with caramelized onions. All of the offerings come with golden, crispy little halves of red breakfast potatoes. But my next visit to this 4-year-old café will definitely be for dinner. The twinkle lights draped over the outdoor patio hint at a very high-romance rating, while the dinner menu tempts with mussels in garlic and white wine, duck confit, steak frites and other French comfort foods. It would also be an excellent place to visit just for dessert from the pastry case and a cup of decaf espresso. Chez Mamou isn’t the kind of place where you’ll discover dishes you’ve never heard of; its menu is based on things Americans have loved since Julia Child introduced us to them. But it’s a very pretty, very comfortable little French café with good food, friendly service and outstanding ambiance. AT A GLANCE: Open: 7:30 am– 9 pm daily Best Bet: Croissant and coffee Don’t Miss: Dinner on the tranquil patio
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JUNE 22-28, 2016
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POW WOW Saturday, June 25th, 1 PM
Traditional
Drum, singing, dancing & food Public invited to participate in dancing
MERCANTILE • GALLERY • MOVEMENT STUDIO • DAY SPA
15B First Street, Cerrillos, NM 87010 • 505-474-9326 www.cerrillosstation.com
#
Tap into Santa Fe’s rich literary culture by joining the SFR Bookmarks Reading Club
#3 club offering THE HOUR OF LAND A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks by Terry Tempest Williams
#
AMERICAN & TRADITIONAL NEW MEXICAN FOOD
1851 ST. Michaels DR. 505-820-0643
DINE IN — CARRY OUT — CATERING
FR
EE COFF WITH EE BREA K W ITH T
EXPIR
ES JU
FA HIS A ST D
NE 30
, 2016
From the Grand Tetons in Wyoming to Acadia in Maine to Big Bend in Texas and more, Terry Tempest Williams creates a series of lyrical portraits that illuminate the unique grandeur of each place while delving into what it means to shape a landscape with its own evolutionary history into something of our own making. Part memoir, part natural history, and part social critique, The Hour of Land is a meditation and a manifesto on why wild lands matter to the soul of America. FOR MORE INFORMATION AND THE BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP:
# 30
JUNE 22-28, 2016
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Spirit of Life summer
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fe
THE CALENDAR EMIARTEFLAMENCO SUMMER RUN Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 La Emi, Vivcente Griego and so many others. Also dinner 7-10 pm, $15
MUSIC BEN WRIGHT: OPEN SONGS NIGHT Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Open mic action. Huzzah! 7 pm, free BILL HEARNE TRIO La Fiesta Lounge 100 E San Francisco St., 982-5511 Country. Legend. Period. 7:30 pm, free CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Join the bluesiest blues band around and jam with 'em ... y'know, assuming you know what you're doing. 8:30 pm, free
DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Classics from a Santa Fe classic, Montgomery really rocks the keys. 6:30 pm, free THE GUNSELS Evangelo's 200 W. San Francisco St., 982-9014 Honky-tonk tunes as led by local hero Greg Butera. 8 pm, free LITTLE TYBEE GiG Performance Space 1808 Second St., 989-8442 This folky act originated in a Georgia basement and takes their show on the road (see SFR Picks, page 19). 7:30 am, $20 TUCKER BINKLEY Osteria D'Assisi 58 S Federal Place, 986-5858 Smooth piano action to facilitate your pizza and pasta eating. 6 pm, free
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CANCEL The Appointed Time For Terror
W
hat role does Terrorism play in scripture? Are today’s current events a fulfillment of Bible Prophecy? What is America’s fate?
These are the topics — and more — as one woman shares her story of the miraculous. Does God exist and still hear and answer prayer? Do Miracles Still Happen and is Heaven just a State of Mind — or an actual place? Enjoy great gospel music by Jose Vasquez, Margaret Houghton and others, and be inspired by powerful testimony of medically certified healing and encounters with the Living God.
FRIDAY, JUNE 24 at the Rail Yard Park The corner of Paseo de Peralta and Guadalupe starting at 6:30 PM
ROYBAL T JR
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY!
TERESA
till jesus returns
MUSEUMS JORGE PÉREZ DE LARA
www.teresaroybal.com/spiritoflife/
for more information
NEED A MIRACLE? COME! HE IS THE GOD OF THE MIRACULOUS!
These shackles, from the Inquisition prison in Mexico City, are part Fractured Faiths: Spanish Judaism, The Inquisition, and New World Identities.
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. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Lloyd Kiva New: Art, Design and Influence. Through July 31. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Charles Lindbergh, Oblique
Views. The Life of Innovative Native American Artist and Designer Lloyd Kiva New. Lanscape of an Artist: Living Treasure Dan Namingha. MUSEUM OF INT’L FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo, 476-1200 Multiple Visions: A Common Bond. Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico. Both through Sept. 11. Sacred Realm. The Morris Miniature Circus. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Chimayo: A Pilgrimage Through Two Centuries. The Beltrán-Kropp Art Collection from Peru. The Delgado Room. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 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 Identites. Lowriders, Hoppers and Hot Rods: Car Culture of Northern New Mexico. 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.
SANTA FE COLLECTIVE presents
REGALIA
a jewelry trunk show featuring Bunny Tobias, Bonnie Joseph, Debra Baxter/Crystal Bomb, Jennifer Joseph, Lori Swartz, Dezbah Stumpff Opening Friday June 24, 6-8pm Saturday-Sunday, June 25-26th, 12-6pm Santa Fe Collective 1114 Hickox Street www.santafecollective.com image: Debra Baxter
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calendar.sfreporter.com r a d n e l a c t s e b The e F a t n . in Sa R E T T
E B T O G T S U J
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MOR
s. s e c c a ile b o m E MOR
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L’attesa Review: Endless Waiting The perfect film for people who love to be bored by alex de vore alex@sfreporter.com
It could be that attention spans have dwindled thanks to home streaming services, constant phone usage and a film industry that churns out crappy movies that mostly fill time between explosions, but it could also be that sometimes a movie is just outrageous-
ly boring. This is the dilemma at hand when it comes to L’attesa (The Wait), the newest film from director Pietro Messina (you don’t know him, we assure you). We want to like the film, we really do, but despite some standout performances and a gorgeous setting, it just never gets to the point that makes audiences forget they’re watching a
SCORE CARD
ok
meh
barf
see it now
not too bad
rainy days only
avoid at all costs
ok
about to lose her shit and have a breakdown. Jeanne is understandably confused by all of this, but it is absurd to believe anyone would just hang around for days on end with someone’s weird mother when they could just as easily find a hotel or leave or something. Binoche does manage to cobble together an emotionally believable performance as the first woman in Sicily to get divorced (or so they say), and there are even moments of genuinely fine acting peppered throughout, but if Jeanne is supposed to be our hero, or even just our cipher, she fails. Eventually, as we watch the seasoned Binoche flounder under boring dialogue and her young counterpoint descend further into clingy and unstable, we just kind of check out and pray for L’attesa to come to an end. And then it does, with practically no satisfying conclusion or point of any kind. The best we can say is that character-driven films about actual people have become rare, but there is certainly no reason to believe this one is worth a trip to the big screen. L’ATTESA Directed by Piero Messina With Binoche and Laage The Screen NR, 100 min.
SCREENER
yay!
yay!
movie. When a young French woman named Jeanne (Lou de Laage) is invited to Sicily to visit her boyfriend, Giuseppe, she instead finds his mother, Anna (Juliette Binoche of The English Patient fame), who is reeling from the recent loss of a family member. Anna frowns constantly, repeatedly refuses to answer simple questions and, perhaps most importantly, seems to have no idea as to her son’s whereabouts. What follows is an unbearable series of silent moments, uncomfortable exchanges and some of the most selfindulgent and drawn-out establishing shots in the history of film. L’attesa would have you believe that Anna and Jeanne (or even the mysteriously absent Giuseppe) are harboring dark secrets, but the fact of the matter is that whatever they may be, we soon cease to care. Like, immediately. Jeanne wanders the grounds of the admittedly gorgeous Sicilian villa, leaving repeated and increasingly frustrated phone messages for her lover, all of which are intercepted by Anna for, uh, some reason. And rather than slowly coming to terms with the young woman’s feelings, we begin to think of her as a petulant child angry that her boyfriend ditched her with his mom. Anna is no better, and every moment she’s onscreen, we fear she’s
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
“A unique take on one of the canon’s
most enchanted comedies”
NOW YOU SEE ME 2
“No one is allowed any room to do much outside of exist”
ME BEFORE YOU
barf
“Avoid this movie at all costs—you’ve
yay!
“Up-close scenes of a campaign in
ok
“An almost nihilism-lite version of the
been warned”
WEINER
disarray”
THE LOBSTER
absurdist comedies of Wes Anderson”
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Endless billows of chiffon, surreal lighting and flexible bamboo stilts—no, it’s not Cirque du Soleil, it’s acclaimed director Julie Taymor’s (The Tempest) interpretation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The work is known as a comedic fairy tale already, but Taymor adds her own special style, bringing the story to a higher, more ethereal level. Dream opens in darkness, with a lone light shining on a comfy bed. A mime-like Puck appears and lies down on the bed, which is then mechanically lifted up toward the top of the stage. Now we see Taymor’s genius: Four construction workers appear onstage, and a chainsaw separates the real world from fantasy. And so it starts, as if the viewer has been split between worlds. “Fantasy” hardly describes this production, as Taymor revamps the presentation using theatrical techniques such as puppetry, mime, dance and music, along with aerial work. Taymor is well-known for her original concepts in film, and here she stages the blissful comedy about love and its many obstacles in both earthly and spirit worlds. In doing so, she creates an illusion of light and dark, with all that each side encompasses. The audience is offered originality at its finest, and Taymor’s imagination is
over the top; she uses bamboo poles to represent the simple backdrop of the dark forest where the disenchanted lovers take flight. She reminds us of the hurdles that love must sometimes endure. After all, “the course of true love never did run smooth,” especially in the Bard’s plays. Taymor stretches the imagination and presents a unique take on one of the canon’s most enchanted comedies. As she presents Shakespeare’s fantasy of immortal and mortal lovers who become lost in the woods, Taymor mesmerizes the audience and invokes visions that can only be found in the safety of sleep. After all is done, it is Taymor who is the true star of the movie. She puts everything into this production, but with some restraint to the message of love and the hoops that have to be jumped through to achieve it. (Rose Antonelli-Fatton) CCA, NR, 164 min.
NOW YOU SEE ME 2 In Now You See Me 2, much of the original cast is reunited (save Isla Fisher, who is replaced here by the always enjoyable Lizzy Caplan of Mean Girls) to once again use magic as a means of exacting social justice on millionaires and tech moguls who have no respect for anything more than their bottom line. Our heroes are The Horsemen, a four-magician squad, led from the shadows
by Mark Ruffalo, whose team is way good at big-spectacle tricks and stealing things to expose jerks. The Horsemen have been in hiding, waiting for orders from The Eye, some kind of clandestine society of magicians that operates in secrecy and from whom Ruffalo siphons out magic-related missions. It’s fairly absurd, but God help us, it sure is fun. Each of the magicians has their own special ability. Jack Wilder (Dave Franco of the illfated and just awful wind-down of Scrubs), for example, is awesome at card tricks while Merritt McKinney (Woody Harrelson) can hypnotize just about anyone. Danny Atlas (Jesse Eisenberg) is more of an all-around trickster and is sort of the first mate of the crew, and newcomer Lula (Caplan) … actually, she mostly just acts boy-crazy and says minimally feminist things like, “Did you ask the guys if they could ride a motorcycle, or was it just me?” It isn’t that the performances are bad per se, rather that so many little twists and turns are packed into Now You See Me 2 that no one is allowed any room to do much outside of exist. Still, the movie wants us to root for The Horsemen, so we do, and by the time we hit the prestige, we had a fairly enjoyable ride and saw a couple neat magic tricks along the way. (ADV) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 129 min. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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MOVIES
yay! This is the single most Shakespearian thing we’ve ever seen, obviously.
ME BEFORE YOU Emilia Clarke (Game of Thrones) and her eyebrows join super-hunk Sam Claflin (The Hunger Games series) in Me Before You, an emotionally manipulative pile of dreck that tries so very hard to make us feel anything, but generally winds up feeling more like the longest hour and 50 minutes of your entire life. Clarke plays Louisa, a cute-as-a-button 20-something who just can’t seem to keep a job despite how many weirdly over-expressive eyebrow maneuvers she utilizes or spunky/bizarre outfits she wears. This is a huge drag, because she’s kind of trapped in a shitty life; her family is way poor, and she’s supposed to help out, so when a temp job as a caretaker for a paraplegic comes her way, she’s super desperate and takes it immediately. The wheelchair-bound Will Traynor (Claflin) somehow comes from royalty—though they never mention the specifics outside of his family owns a castle in their sleepy British town—and is a complete jerk. The more time they spend together, the more they fall in love, a ridiculous turn of events that surprises absolutely no one save Lou’s boyfriend (a totally enjoyable Matthew Lewis who played Neville Longbottom in the Harry Potter films), who we’re supposed to not like, and just when Lou is becoming comfortable enough with her job to sit on Will’s lap and creep everyone out by blurring the lines of professionalism, we learn that Will wants to Kevorkian himself, and Me Before You transforms from quirky, albeit ludicrous, rom-com to heavy-handed sad-fest. Tears are shed, brows are furrowed, an absurd number of emotionally scored montages occur and the audience is left to roll their eyes and check their watches. Lou must grapple between the excitement of a budding romance and doing what’s right, although the moral and societal implications of assisted suicide take a backseat to hormonal angst, and the overall lesson—you’ve got to live, dammit!—is nothing even slightly new. Avoid this movie at all costs—you’ve been warned. (ADV) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 110 min.
WEINER Throughout Weiner, the eponymous documentary that chronicles a disgraced politician’s ill-fated run for redemption, Anthony Weiner repeatedly refers to “the thing” that ended his career. The thing, of course, was a sexting scan-
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dal. His planned comeback: a bid for New York City mayor. Filmmakers Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg secured incredible access to the candidate, his team, and most critically, Huma Abedin, the wife who also happens to be a close-confidant of Hillary Clinton. At first, the documentary seems like a runof-the-mill campaign story. Weiner gallivants during a gay-pride parade, waving a rainbow flag. Abedin introduces her husband at a fundraiser. But then a bombshell drops, and the documentarians’ gamble pays off big time. News breaks that Weiner couldn’t quit his habit of sending x-rated photos to women who are not his wife, this even after he appeared on the cover of People Magazine with the headline “I Feel Like a Different Person.” Kriegman and Steinberg capture the immediate fallout of the scandal’s second act like they have a backstage pass to a political campaign in panic mode. “Are we going to go fucking nuclear, like this is not true?” asks Amit Bagga, a policy director. In another room, Weiner and Abedin are on speakerphone, trying to do damage control. Weiner explains to his interlocutor that he has his wife’s full support, as she listens with a mix of disgust and incredulity wrinkled in her face. They hang up, and the two sit in silence for what seems like an eternity, unable to look at each other, before Weiner kicks the filmmakers out. Moments later, the couple walks out to cameras and reporters, Abedin smiling. “This is between us in our marriage,” she explains. “I love him. I’ve forgiven him.” Up-close scenes of a campaign in disarray are interspersed with clips of the media in scandal mode, dissecting every public moment of Weiner and Abedin’s life. Why does she stick by his side? How many women were there? What is wrong with him? We know politics is theater, but actually witnessing the principal actors switch in and out of character, as we do in Weiner, is truly astonishing. The rest of the film is filled with sequences like this: In one moment, staffers go around in a circle expressing frustrations with their boss. In the next, Abedin reminds Weiner’s campaign manager to look happy as she exits the building. “Just a quick optics thing,” she says. (Steven Hsieh) CCA, R, 96 min.
MOVIES
ok “We just came to meet Harry Potter,” says the cast of Now You See Me 2.
THE LOBSTER Colin Farrell plays David, a newly single man who lives in a sort of dystopia wherein those without a partner are sent to a purgatorial hotel and given a month and a half to find a mate, or they’ll be turned into the animal of their choosing. It’s an interesting take on societal pressures that dictate we must be paired off if we ever wish to be truly happy, and Rachel Weisz, who assumes the role of disembodied narrator for nearly two-thirds of the film, echoes the frustrating weirdness of the setup in a way that suggests she might be David’s conscience (if only he had one). Of course, that’s part of the bum deal humanity has received in The Lobster, and daily hunting for those who shirk the idea that partnership-equals-good (known here as “loners”) consistently keeps everyone on edge; there is no hope for trust between anyone. It’s an almost nihilism-lite version of the absurdist comedies of Wes Anderson. In fact, anyone who has seen The Grand Budapest
Hotel will find a twisted familiarity to the halls and grounds of the sprawling country estate, but whereas Anderson knows how to create consistent characters who we still root for, even at their most obnoxious, The Lobster strays too far into dark comedy’s uncomfortable moments rather than those that are so bad they’re good. And then, just when we have acclimated to the idea of this bizarre arrangement, everything changes, and we practically jump into another movie altogether. Farrell is excellent, however, even if the other characters have a problem with all being written the same and not being explored to any meaningful depth. It’s a bit odd at first to hear how everyone speaks in the same stilted manner, but the more we observe the performances, the more it seems the characters have stripped down to basic human motivators, like sex and fear, and that is at least a worthwhile attempt at examining mankind on a less romantic level. (ADV) DeVargas, R, 119 min.
THEATERS
NOWCCA SHOWING CINEMATHEQUE 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 982-1338
THE SCREEN SFUAD, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, 473-6494
JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA
REGAL STADIUM 14
418 Montezuma Ave., 466-5528
3474 Zafarano Drive, (844)462-7342 CODE 1765
UA DeVARGAS 6
VIOLET CROWN
DeVargas Center, N Guadalupe St. and Paseo de Peralta, 988-2775
1606 Alcaldesa St., 216-5678
For more reviews and showtimes, visit SFReporter.com
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
LEGALS
GOT PAIN? WANT OPTIONS? Are you down and depressed because you are in pain? Find out if Egoscue Posture Therapy might work for you to heal the root cause of your spine or joint pain. FREE monthly hour-long introductory workshops. What would your life look like if you were out of pain in 6 months? Call Pain Free Santa Fe for schedule, 474-4164. www.painfreesantafe.net.
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UPAYA ZEN CENTER: MEDITATION, TALKS, ARTISTIC RETREATS, RESIDENCY Upaya is a community resource that fosters greater mindfulness. Come for DAILY MEDITATION; Wednesday DHARMA TALKS 5:306:30pm; July 6-10 ROLLING WITH UNCERTAINTY: Koans and Writingwith Natalie Goldberg and Steven Heine; July 15-17 INK DARK MOON: Tanka poetry with Jane Hirshfield; July 19-24 SESSHIN: Intensive Meditation Retreat. RESIDENT PROGRAM: Live in practice, study, and service - Apply now. Calendar, Podcasts, and more: www.upaya.org. 505-986- 8518. Santa Fe, NM.
GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP - for those experiencing grief in their lives age 18 and over. Tierra Nueva Counseling Center, 3952 San Felipe Road (next door to Southwestern College), 471-8575, Saturdays 10:00-11:30, ongoing, with facilitators M.J. Waldrip and Dru Phoenix, MA. It is offered by TNCC and Golden Willow with sponsorship by Rivera Family Funeral Home. Drop-ins are welcome.
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MARKETPLACE STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CORINNE F. DURAN, DECEASED. NO: 2016-0087 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: 13 June, 2016 Jim R. Johnston Signature of personal representative
STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MAURICE, AKA, MAURICIO TAPIA, DECEASED. NO:2015-0203 NOTICE TO TO KNOWN CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representaAMPERSAND SUSTAINABLE tive of this estate. All persons LEARNING CENTER EMBODIED FEMININE: having claims against this Arid Land Restoration Sexuality and Self-Esteem estate are required to presJune 26 10am - 4pm Therapy Group: An inteent their claims within two Heal degraded landscapes grative group focused on (2) months after the date of through mulching, seeding, sexual wholeness and cultithe first publication of any and creating erosion control published notice to creditors vating embodied self-esteem. and water harvesting structures or the date of mailing or other Women 18 +, small group. VALLECITOS MOUNTAIN that create microclimates delivery of this notice , whichRETREAT CENTER. July 5th - August 16th, ever is later, or the claims will for moisture and vegetative 20% OFF On The Heart of Tuesday nights, 6:30 pm Mindfulness Meditation growth. We’ll tour the ecological be forever barred. Claims must - 8:00 pm at Tierra Nueva be presented either to the Retreat, July 16-21 with Grove restoration projects on Counseling Center. Call to undersigned personal repreBurnett and Erin Treat. Ampersand’s site, discuss the register 505-471-8575. FREE Retreats for Healthcare sentative at the address listed reasons for each design, and $10 per session, sliding Professionals and NM Woman observe success rates. RSVP to below or filed with the probate scale. Group Leaders: Traci of Color in Public Service court of Santa Fe County New McMinn-Joubert and Lauren Apply for a Scholarship and amanda@ampersandproject.org Mexico located at the follow505 780-0535 Martell, student therapists. Register today at Vallecitos. ing address: 102 Grant Ave., org. Set deep in the majesSanta Fe, New Mexico, 87501 STATE OF NEW MEXICO MANAGING ANXIETY: Exploring tic Tusas Mountains outside HEALING THROUGH THE ART Dated: May 6, 2016 OF TRADITIONAL NATIVE IN THE PROBATE COURT what triggers your anxiety, of Taos NM is the stunning Terri B Tapia AMERICAN POTTERY. Open what keeps it alive, and how SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE wilderness landscape of group for men and women to tame it. Adults 18+, small Vallecitos. MATTER OF THE ESTATE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 21 and up where we will group experience, June OF CELINE M. GABALDON, IN THE PROBATE COURT incorporate the traditional 20-July 25, 2016. Monday DECEASED . SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE nights 6-8pm at Tierra Nueva ADVERTISE AN pottery teachings and NO. 2016-0078 MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Counseling Center. Call to history into a collaborational MARK PERLEBERG, DECEASED. EVENT, WORKSHOP NOTICE TO CREDITORS register 505.471.8575. therapeutic model. Price NO: 2016-0086 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN OR LECTURE HERE $10 per session sliding per session: sliding scale NOTICE TO CREDITORS that the undersigned has scale. Group leader: Dawn $0-10. Group meets on NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that IN THE COMMUNITY been appointed personal Abriel, DO, student theraFridays from 5-7 pm, July the undersigned has been pist. It’s okay to join the representative of this estate. 1- July 29. Group led ANNOUCMENTS appointed personal representagroup on June 27! by student therapist and tive of this estate. All persons All persons having claims against this estate are required traditional Native American having claims against this potter Sanda Sandoval to present their claims within estate are required to presand co-facilitated by Emily two (2) months after the ent their claims within two Boeschenstein. Call (2) months after the date of date of the first publication 471-8575 to register. the first publication of this of this notice, or the claims notice, or the claims will be will be forever barred. Claims forever barred. Claims must be must be presented either to presented either to the under- the undersigned personal signed personal representative at the address listed below, or representative at the address listed below, or filed with the filed with the Probate Court ROOMMATE Probate Court of Santa Fe, of Santa Fe, County, New SERVICES Mexico. Located at the follow- County, New Mexico, located ing address 102 Grant Ave. ALL AREAS ROOMMATES.COM. Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. at the following address: 142 Grant Ave. S, Lonely? Bored? Broke? Find Dated June 13, 2016. Santa Fe, NM. the perfect roommate to com- Neil Perleberg and Dated: 07 June, 2016 plement your personality and Miranda Shaw Cecilia G. Trujillo lifestyle at Roommates.com! Signature of personal Personal Representative (AAN CAN) representatives
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ROOMS FOR RENT OUT OF AREA Spacious home in Cochiti Lake. Very Large room with private bath Share laundry, kitchen, garage. Furnished. Beautiful views. Owner is a submerging artist with painting studio. $350/ Monthly (605) 484-5300
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SALE Saturday & Sunday June 25 & 26 from 10 to 3. 3237 Calle Celestial: 6000 sqft moving sale. See photos on MemoryMovers505.com
ALBUQUERQUE, 207 DARTMOUTH DRIVE NE, ALB, NM 87106 207 Dartmouth Drive NE, ALB, NM 87106, Jun. 24: 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM/Jun. 25: 10:00 AM 5:00 PM Estate sale for the Artist Fermin Hernandez, Serigraphs,prints and jewelry at his former studio. Friday June 24 11 AM to 6 PM/ Sat. June 25 10 AM to 5 PM Original work, prints, other artists work, furniture, drawing table, supplies, frames, Located just east of UNM, in Monte Vista neighborhood. Estate
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Super-nice solid hardwood maple BUTCHER BLOCK TABLE. It was made by my grandfather, who crafted them for almost fifty years. Never really been used, so in like-new condition. Top dimension is 16 3/4” x 23.5” x 5” thick, 31” high. Top is 5” of SOLID MAPLE – not like the crappy ones sold today! Top is separate from the stand, so could be used on countertop. $150. Mark: 505-249-3570
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Brand new TRUCK CAMPER — 2016 PALOMINO SS 1200, gray, fully loaded. Added stairs and awning. Torklift tiedowns included. $9850.00 Mark: 505-249-3570
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MIND BODY SPIRIT
Rob Brezsny
Week of June 22nd
ARIES (March 21-April 19) “The past lives on in art and memory,” writes author Margaret Drabble, “but it is not static: it shifts and changes as the present throws its shadow backwards.” That’s a fertile thought for you to meditate on during the coming weeks, Aries. Why? Because your history will be in a state of dramatic fermentation. The old days and the old ways will be mutating every which way. I hope you will be motivated, as a result, to rework the story of your life with flair and verve.
in sweet alignment with your astrological omens for the next 13 months. Take it away, Dianna. 1. Focus on the solution, not the problem. 2. Complaining is a garbage magnet. 3. What you focus on expands. 4. Do what you have always done, and you will get what you have always gotten. 5. Don’t compare your insides to other people’s outsides. 6. Success is simple, but not easy. 7. Don’t listen to your drunk monkey. 8. Clarity is power. 9. Don’t mistake movement for achievement. 10. Spontaneity is a conditioned reflex. 11. People will grow into the conversations you create around them. 12. How you participate here is how you participate everywhere. 13. Live your life by design, not by default.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) “Critics of text-messaging are wrong to think it’s a regressive form of communication,” writes poet Lily Akerman. “It demands so much concision, subtlety, psychological art—in fact, it’s more like pulling puppet strings than writing.” I bring this thought to your attention, Taurus, because in my opinion the coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to apply the metaphor of text-messaging to pretty much everything you do. You will create interesting ripples of success as you practice the crafts of concision, subtlety, and psychological art.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) No pressure, no diamond. No grit, no pearl. No cocoon, no butterfly. All these clichés will be featured themes for you during the next 12 months. But I hope you will also come up with fresher ways to think about the power and value that can be generated by tough assignments. If you face your exotic dilemmas and unprecedented riddles armed with nothing GEMINI (May 21-June 20) During my careers as a writ- more than your culture’s platitudes, you won’t be able to er and musician, many “experts” have advised me not to tap into the untamed creativity necessary to turn probbe so damn faithful to my muse. Having artistic integrity lems into opportunities. Here’s an example of the kind of original thinking you’ll thrive on: The more the growing is a foolish indulgence that would ensure my eternal chamomile plant is trodden upon, the faster it grows. poverty, they have warned. If I want to be successful, I’ve got to sell out; I must water down my unique mesSAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) The royal courts of sage and pay homage to the generic formulas favored by Renaissance England often employed professional fools celebrity artists. Luckily for me, I have ignored the whose job it was to speak raw or controversial truths experts. As a result, my soul has thrived and I eventually with comedic effect. According to the Royal Shakespeare earned enough money from my art to avoid starvation. Company, Queen Elizabeth once castigated her fool for But does my path apply to you? Maybe; maybe not. being “insufficiently severe with her.” The modern-day What if, in your case, it would be better to sell out a litombudsman has some similarities to the fool’s function. tle and be, say, just 75 percent faithful to your muse? He or she is hired by an organization to investigate comThe next 12 months will be an excellent time for you to plaints lodged by the public against the organization. figure this out once and for all. Now would be an excellent time for you to have a fool or CANCER (June 21-July 22) My meditations have gener- ombudsman in your own sphere, Sagittarius. You’ve got ated six metaphorical scenarios that will symbolize the a lot of good inklings, but some of them need to be editcontours of your life story during the next 15 months: 1. ed, critiqued, or perhaps even satirized. a claustrophobic tunnel that leads to a sparkling spa; 2. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Capricorn journalist a 19th-century Victorian vase filled with 13 fresh wild Katie Couric is a best-selling author who has interorchids; 3. an immigrant who, after tenacious effort, viewed five American presidents and had prominent receives a green card from her new home country; 4. an jobs at three major TV networks. What’s her secret to eleven-year-old child capably playing a 315-year-old success? She has testified that her goal is to be as Stradivarius violin; 5. a menopausal empty-nester who falls in love with the work of an ecstatic poet; 6. a hum- ingratiating and charming as she can be without causble seeker who works hard to get the help necessary to ing herself to throw up. I don’t often recommend this strategy for you, but I do now. The coming weeks will defeat an old curse. be prime time for you to expand your web of connecLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Joan Wasser is a Leo singertions and energize your relationships with existing songwriter who is known by her stage name Joan As allies by being almost too nice. To get what you want, Police Woman. In her song “The Magic,” she repeats use politeness as your secret weapon. one of the lyric lines fourteen times: “I’m looking for AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) “The water cannot talk the magic.” For two reasons, I propose that we make without the rocks,” says aphorist James Richardson. that your mantra in the coming weeks. First, practical Does that sound like a metaphor you’d like to celebrate business-as-usual will not provide the uncanny transformative power you need. Nor will rational analysis or in the coming weeks? I hope so. From what I can tell, you will be like a clean, clear stream rippling over a habitual formulas. You will have to conjure, dig up, or rocky patch of river bed. The not-really-all-that-bad track down some real magic. My second reason for suggesting “I’m looking for the magic” as your mantra news is that your flow may feel erratic and jerky. The is this: You’re not yet ripe enough to secure the magic, really good news is that you will be inspired to speak freely, articulately, and with creative zing. but you can become ripe enough by being dogged in your pursuit of it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Every now and then you VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Renowned martial artist Bruce Lee described the opponent he was most wary of: “I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times.” In my astrological opinion, you should regard that as one of your keystone principles during the next 12 months. Your power and glory will come from honing one specific skill, not experimenting restlessly with many different skills. And the coming weeks will be en excellent time to set your intention.
may benefit from being a bit juvenile, even childlike. You can release your dormant creativity by losing your adult composure and indulging in free-form play. In my astrological opinion, this is one of those phases for you. It’s high time to lose your cool in the best possible ways. You have a duty to explore the frontiers of spontaneity and indulge in I-don’t-give-a-cluck exuberance. For the sake of your peace-of-soul and your physical health, you need to wriggle free of at least some of your grown-up responsibilities so you can romp and cavort and frolic.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) To celebrate my birthday, I’m taking time off from dreaming up original thoughts and creative spurs. For this horoscope, I’m borrowing some of the BOLD Laws of author Dianna Kokoszka. They are
Homework: What experience do you deny yourself even though it would be good for you and wouldn’t hurt anyone? Write a note giving yourself permission. Share at Truthrooster@gmail.com.
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone 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
JUNE 22-28, 2016
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ACUPUNCTURE
ASTROLOGY
MASSAGE THERAPY
DR. JOANNA CORTI, DOM Powerful medicine, powerful results. Men’s health, prostatitis, Removal of internal scarring. Therapies: Transmedium psychic surgery, past life healing, homeopathy, acupuncture. parasite/ liver and whole body cleanse. 505-501-0439 Workman’s comp accepted.
ASTROLOGY Santa Fe astrologer Steven McFadden available for consultations. Life insight. Soul keys. Skillful means. Check me out, and set up an appointment. www.chiron-communications.com
TANTRA MASSAGE & TEACHING Call Julianne Parkinson, 505-920-3083 • Certified Tantra Educator, Professional Massage Therapist, & Life Coach LIC #2788
ACUPUNCTURE/ MASSAGE
It’s Nice to Be Kneaded! Especially at Mountain Spirit Integrative Medicine Massage, Acupuncture & Naprapathy. Luxurious clinic. Choice of 15 Providers. Open Every Day! Insurance welcome: Two hours of bliss for one low CoPay. (505) 988-HELP www.MountainSpiritNM.net $20 off First visit for New Patients
ARTFUL SOUL CENTER
PSYCHICS
CONSCIOUSNESS
LOVE. CAREER. HEALTH. Psychic readings and Spiritual counseling. For more information go to www.alexofavalon.com or Experience Joyful Awakenings. call 505-982-8327. Also serving Clear blocks to the Joyful Flow the LGBT community. of Love in all areas of your life, including relationships, prosperity, health and manifesting your unique expression in the world. Sessions done remotely or in person. Aleah Ames, CCHt. TrueFreedomSRT.com 505-660-3600.
TAROT READINGS
GLUTEN-FREE REPATTERNING
TAROT READINGS Helpful information. Specific questions. General guidance. Down-to-Earth cosmic readings. Private Sessions - Parties - Classes. Hal, 505-310-5276, skyhorse23@hotmail.com ARTFUL SOUL CENTER NOW OPEN Barry Cooney, Director The Center offers master training and mentoring for individuals, couples and groups in ENHANCING MIND/BODY/SPIRIT AWARENESS; BUILDING SOUL BASED RELATIONSHIPS; DEVELOPING EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE; LIVING CREATIVELY. Call for a FREE consultation session. 505-220-6657
Personalized program to help you eliminate wheat & gluten without pain or deprivation. Includes instructions, menus, energy balancing, and support. Jane Barthelemy Kinesiology, Dietary Coach www.fiveseasonsmedicine.com 505-216-1750
CALL 983.1212
ARE YOU A THERAPIST OR A HEALER? YOU BELONG HERE IN MIND BODY SPIRIT!
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SERVICE DIRECTORY CHIMNEY SWEEPING COMPUTERS GOT TECH???
COMPUTERS, TABLETS, SMARTPHONES, NETWORKS. SWARTZTECH 505-310-6890
PERSONAL & PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
FENCES & GATES
Safety, Value, Professionalism. We are Santa Fe’s certified chimney and dryer vent experts. New Mexico’s best value in chimney service; get a free video Chim-Scan with each fireplace cleaning. Baileyschimney.com. Call Bailey’s today 505-988-2771.
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SANTA FE COYOTE FENCING Specializing in Coyote Fencing. License #16-001199-74. We strive for excellence. Richard, 505-690-6272.
Resolve issues quickly, affordably, privately, respectfully: • Divorce, Custody, Parenting plan • Parent-Teen, Family, HANDYPERSON Neighbor CARPENTRY to LANDSCAPING • Business, Partnership, Home maintenance, remodels, Construction additions, interior & exterior, irrigation, stucco repair, jobs Mediate-Don’t Litigate! small & large. Reasonable FREE CONSULTATION rates, Reliable. Discounts avail. to seniors, veterans, handicap. Jonathan, 670-8827 www.handymannm.com
THE HANDYMAN YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED. Dependable and creative problem solver. With Handyman Van, one call fixes it all. Special discounts for seniors and referrals. Excellent references. 505-231-8849 www.handymanvan.biz
Summer is the best time for cleaning your fireplace or woodstove. Should additional maintenance be needed, you’ll save a bundle over winter prices. CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS 38 years serving Santa Fe Call 505-989-5775
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
PLASTERING & CLEANING SERVICES STUCCCO
“European Trained” Cleaning Services • Residential/ Commercial • Bonded & Insured • Exceptional custom tailored cleaning services • Pet Friendly • Extremely Dependable • Reasonable Rates • Serving Santa Fe & Surrounding areas • Free estimates
505 660-4505
PHILIP CRUMP Mediator
SUMMER SPECIALS! $1600 SQ. FT for $2800 (color coat only) Specializing in stucco recolor, restore, entire replaster. Interior plaster/venetian plaster specialists. Using Sto Products and introducing Total Wall! Affordable prices. We help the locals look good by not charging outrageous prices! Call 505-204-4555
philip@pcmediate.com
505-989-8558
WEIGHT LOSS INTRODUCING NEW AND IMPROVED BODY WRAPS ~~ new technique, added luxury, more results. We offer Basic, Deluxe and new Vitality Wrap ~~ beefed-up formula with added age reversal properties! Call Fitness Plus at 505-473-7315 or Brandy at 505-3163736 for information and appointment.
CALL: 505.983.1212
EMAIL: classy@SFReporter.com
BE MY FUR-EVER FRIEND!
ADVERTISE IT HERE IN THE SERVICE DIRECTORY! 983.1212
NAAZ
NAAZ and NABILA were rescued with their
mother from a feral cat colony in Santa Fe during one of our Trap, Neuter & Release (TNR) operations. While the mama was spayed and returned to the colony, the kittens showed promise for becoming social and adoptable and indeed their siblings NADIA, NADIRA and NILS have been adopted. TEMPERAMENT: NAAZ and NABILA are now lovely young adults who are playful and social after they settle into a new home. NAAZ and NABILA would be happy being placed together, but both cats would also be good companions for other young cats. NAAZ is a beautiful calico girl with a short coat; NABILA has a medium-length coat. AGE: born approx. 4/30/13.
NABILA
City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
CALL FELINES & FRIENDS AT 316-2281
www.FandFnm.org
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!
226 BOX LOCATIONS
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530 W Cordova Road
VITAMIN COTTAGE NATURAL GROCERS
542 N Guadalupe Steet
OP.CIT.
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HASTINGS
3328 Cerrillos Road
LA MONTAÑITA CO-OP
DeVargas Mall, 157 Paseo de Peralta
Say Yes We Can! Call Me for Special Pricing
Faye 982-9504
Hooray! Our 20th Anniversary
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Est. 1990
982-9504
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WE BUY... DIAMONDS GOLD & SILVER
GEMOLOGIST AVAILABLE THINGS FINER Inside La Fonda Hotel 983-5552
YOGA THE BEST WAY
PERSONAL INSTRUCTION SANTAFEYOGA.COM PRIVATE LESSONS AT OUR ROSARIO HILL STUDIO 505-819-7072
LU’S CHINESE HEALING MASSAGE LLC
COLONICS BY A RN 699-9443 METTA MASSAGE! Swedish and Deep Tissue. 505-289-7522. 1480 Saint Francis Lic 8160
BEING HELD For 1 hr • sliding scale • www.duijaros.com
LARGE: $12/Line (24 characters) MEDIUM: $11/Line (40 characters) SMALL: $10/Line (60 characters) ALL COLORS: $15/Line
COLOR COPIES 35¢
AMATA CHIROPRACTIC
988-3456/982-1777
Neuro-Emotional Attunement Nutritional Therapies
505.988.9630
SELECTING NATIVE PLANTS FOR YOUR LANDSCAPE
SATURDAY, JUNE 25 10:00 AM - 11:00 AUDUBON WILDLIFE CENTER - UPPER CANYON ROAD - SANTA FE Santa Fe Master Gardeners Association Santa Fe Native Plant Project (SNaPP) and Audubon Wildlife Center Project Teams
Call Carol at 505 216-0750 or email carol@InciteToWrite.com
TOP PRICES • CASH • 3 GEMOLOGISTS ON STAFF
Free meetings Thurs 5:30 pm Call Juan 505-501-2721 dbsalliance.org
GET CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS
Big Star BooksïWe buy/trade used books & CDs 820-7827 • 329 Garfield St. • bigstarbooks.com
QIGONG & TAICHI CLASSES
4 CLASSES PER WEEK: MON, WED, FRI, SAT CALL JANE (505) 217-1750 www.FiveSeasonsMedicine.com
MASSAGE BY JULIE
Swedish/Deep Tissue. Same Day Appts Welcome. $50/hr 19 yrs experience Lic. 3384 670-8789
EPSOM SALT FLOATING WELCOME TO MEMORIAL SERVICES SPIRITUAL, LOVING WEDDING OFFICIANT. TEXTILE REPAIR 505.629.7007 2 sensory deprivation tanks! Relax at floatlosalamos.com call 695-9234
for David Pease at University Unitarian Church Sunday, June 26, lp
Non-denominational / LGBT weddings. Call Robbie at (505) 231-0855
REGISTER NOW FOR SUMMER IMMERSION W/
SILVER • COINS • JEWELRY • GEMS
Earthfire Gems • 121 Galisteo • 982-8750
AMY, WENDELIN & MELISSA - JUNE 14 - 17 YS 2016/17 TEACHER TRAINING BEGINS SEPT 9TH - APPLY NOW!
XCELLENT MACINTOSH SUPPORT TAKE YOUR NEXT STEP 982-0990 YOGASOURCE-SANTAFE.COM
Positive Psychotherapy • Career Counseling
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1540 Cerrillos Road • 986-1110
Medical Intuition
YOGASOURCE DIAMONDS AND GOLD WE BUY AND SELL VOTED BEST YOGA STUDIO!
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Printers, Design Center 418 Cerrillos Rd Black on White 8¢
Gentle Chiropractic
All levels incl. autism & SE students InciteToWrite.com
WRITING TUTOR
DEADLINE: NOON TUESDAY
505-983-1212 PRAJNA YOGA THE ART OF TEACHING
20+yrs professional, Apple certified.
xcellentmacsupport.com • Randy • 670-0585
STOP SMOKING? LOSE WEIGHT? Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist 15 years experience; over 95% sucess rate
ANNA SEBASTIAN MA, C.HT. 505.920.1012
JULY 28 - AUGUST 2
THE ART OF HEALING
SAM SHAFFER, PHD 982-7434 • www.shafferphd.com
GOT TECH QUESTIONS? COMPUTERS, TABLETS, SMARTPHONES NETWORKS, SECURITY, SMARTHOME SWARTZTECH 505-310-6890
VOICE LESSONS
AUGUST 4- AUGUST 9
Felecia Ford World Class Vocalist 505-603-0744
PRAJNAYOGA.COM 988-5248
I LOVE TO ORGANIZE
THE ART AND CANCER SUPPORT CENTER
Experienced References Sue 231-6878
NEW EVENING MAT CLASSES!! 10-Class Pass for $90
PILATES SANTA FE 995-9700 Voted Best Pilates Studio! Mon-Fri 7am-7pm | Sat 8am-2pm
Liza Williams Gallery
DETOX/CELLULITE REMOVAL/INCH LOSS Relaxing Body Wraps
See Service Directory for more information or call 505-316-3736/505-473-7315
HIP HOP @ MOVE!!
is starting a Cancer Support Group EVERY THURSDAY 5-7 PM
• If you have cancer or know someone who does, please join our support group. • We will have guest speakers who talk about integrative therapies.
• We will learn much from many people sharing their own stories and therapies.
THUR 6-7 PM & SAT 4-5 PM 901 W. SAN MATEO / 505•660•8503 WWW.MOVEDCP.COM
• We will offer wonderful local doctors who can help you with your cancer adventure.
• You can start your own cancer therapy by simply eliminating certain foods like: sugar, meat, and dairy, and eating organic veggies and some fruits. • A vegan diet with low or no sugar is a great start for your new diet.
• Anyone in New Mexico who has cancer can get a cannabis card and we can show you how.
“YOU ARE WHAT YOU INK”
INNER FOR TWO
106 N. Guadalupe • (505) 820-2075
HAPPY HOUR @ THE BAR 4-6:30 PM Wed. thru Sun. $4 $5 $6 Appetizers •
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• Chicken Fried Asian Ribs • Brie & Apricot Jalapeno Poppers • Mushroom Ragout w/ Boursin in Phyllo • Blue Crab Cakes & Remoulade
New Mexico Hard Cider Taproom FEATURING 24 TAPS Serving the best in local cider, beer and wine
HOURS: Mon–Thur 3pm–Close | FRI, SAT, SUN Noon–Close 40
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227 DON GASPAR | SUITE 11A
Inside the Santa Fe Village
505-920-2903
www.tinasink.com Check us out on
505 Cerrillos Road
Unit A105 across from Ohori’s Coffee in the Luna Building
www.nmcider.com
HAPPY HOUR: Mon-Sat 5-7pm and ALL DAY SUNDAY!