THE magazine October 2014

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Santa Fe’s Monthly

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of and for the Arts • October 2014


53 Old Santa Fe Trail | Upstairs on the Plaza | Santa Fe, NM | 505.982.8478 | shiprocksantafe.com


C O N T E N T S German art historian Boris Friedewald introduces his book Women Photographers from Julia Margaret Cameron to Cindy Sherman (Prestel, $39.95) by writing, “From the pioneers of photography during the nineteenth century to the shooting stars of today, the work of women photographers is as unique as their life stories—and their gaze.” What distinguishes this beautifully illustrated collection of profiles and contextual essays from previously published work on women photographers is the international array of artists, from the familiar to some that may be unknown to American audiences. The cover features the iconic shot of Margaret Bourke-White atop a gargoyle, aiming her Graflex at the New York City skyscrapers that came to signify the modern era. The table of contents lists fifty outstanding artists, including Lady Clementina Hawarden (whose work Lewis Carroll found more admirable than Julia Margaret Cameron’s), Jitka Hanzlová, Madame Yevonde, Germaine Krull, An-My Lê, letters universe of: artist Gail Rieke art forum: The Family by Paula Rego studio visits: Adria

Ellis and Jennifer Esperanza

ancient city appetite: Epazote on the Hillside one bottle: Ultra Dishmate “Natural Pear” by Joshua Baer dining guide:

Izanami and M.A.M.A.’S World Take-Out art openings out

previews: David

& about

Johns at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, Dirk de Bruycker at LewAllen Galleries, & Gina Marie Erlichman at Gallery 901 national spotlight:

Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll Babcock Galleries, NYC feature: Grab a Hunk of Lightning by Diane Armitage flashback:

Jim Wagner, 1995

out there: Wheel of Fortune by Livinlargephoto critical reflections: Renate Aller at Chiaroscuro; Tom Chambers at photo-eye Gallery; Impacts! at Zane Bennett

5 letters Rinko Kawauchi, and Dayanita Singh. These 18 universe of: artist Gail Rieke lesser-known contemporaries of 22 art forum: The women Family, byare Paula Rego 25 studio visits: Adria Ellis and Jennifer Esperanza Gertrude Käsebier, Imogen Cunningham, Carrie 27 ancient city appetite : epazote at the Hillside 29 one bottle: The 2010 Etienne Sauzet Puligny-Montrachet “La Garenne” Mae Weems, Tina Modotti, Sally Mann, and Nan 31 dining guide: Izanami and M.A.M.A.’S World Take-Out 35 art openings Goldin, who are also included in this volume. In 36 out & about 42 previews : David Johns at Zane Bennett Contemporary and Flor 1932, Madame Yevonde proclaimed, “If we are 45 national spotlight: Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll 47 national Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll going to spotlight have color: Judith photographs, for heaven’s 51 national spotlight: Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll 53 national : Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll sake let’sspotlight have a riot of color….” Her images, 55 national spotlight: Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll as well as those of her fellow photographers,

Contemporary Art; Jun Kaneko at Gerald Peters Gallery; Cannupa Hanska Luger at Blue Rain Gallery; Prima Materia at Punta Della Dogana (Italy); Gigi Mills at GF Contemporary; Daniel Sprick at the Denver Art Museum; Jeane George Weigel at Hand

provide a broad spectrum of perspectives by

Artes (Truchas); and Women in Cultural Context at Tansey Contemporary green planet: Rick Phelps, photograph by Jennifer Esperanza architectural details: Truchas, photograph by Guy Cross

Writings: “8” by Anthony Hassett. Painting by Hassett.

67 68 70

national spotlight:

Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll

national spotlight:

Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll

national spotlight:

Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist at Driscoll

women whose gaze has contributed to the history of photography.


In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom

A lecture series on political, economic, environmental, and human rights issues featuring social justice activists, writers, journalists, and scholars discussing critical topics of our day.

MAX BLUMENTHAL with AMY GOODMAN FRIDAY 10 OCTOBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

READINGS & CONVERSATIONS brings to Santa Fe a wide range of writers from the literary world of fiction, nonfiction and poetry to read from and discuss their work.

ALICE McDERMOTT with MICHAEL SILVERBLATT WEDNESDAY 22 OCTOBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

In 2000, in one of his last interviews, Edward Said remarked

Alice McDermott has, in the words of The New York Times,

to the Israeli journalist Ari Shavit, “I never use terms like

“staked an impressive claim on a subject matter and a turf—

‘balance of power.’ But I think that even the person doing the

Irish-American Catholic families congregated, for the most

kicking has to ask himself how long he can go on kicking. At

part, in New York City and its suburbs on Long Island.” Her

some point your leg is going to get tired. One day you’ll wake

seven works of fiction include At Weddings and Wakes,

up and ask yourself, ‘What the f- - k am I doing?’”

Charming Billy and Child of My Heart. Her most recent,

Thirteen years later, Israel’s system of institutional discrimination and occupation had only grown more entrenched, with its

Someone, follows the everyday rhythms in the life of Marie, an ordinary Irish-American girl from Brooklyn in the 1930s.

administrators, ambassadors, and arbiters confronting every

One of the great strengths of [Someone] lies in this sense of

challenge thrown in their way with unsentimental determination.

tenderness and intimacy, of empathy for the human condition

—From Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel © 2013

Max Blumenthal is a journalist and author whose articles have appeared in The New York Times, the Los

. . . The narrative unfolds slowly, through small moments of beauty and vividness . . . The moments are small, but packed with complexity and emotion.

—The Washington Post

Angeles Times, The Nation, The Guardian, Alternet, Mondoweiss and elsewhere. He is the author of Republican Gomorrah: Inside the Movement that Shattered the Party and most recently, Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel, for

TICKETS ON SALE NOW

which he has received a 2014 Lannan Notable Book Award.

ticketssantafe.org or call 505.988.1234

Ticket proceeds will be donated to Middle East Children’s Alliance.

$6 general/$3 students/seniors with ID Video and audio recordings of Lannan events are available at:

www.lannan.org


LETTERS

magazine VOLUME XXII NUMBER V

WINNER 1994 Best Consumer Tabloid SELECTED 1997 Top-5 Best Consumer Tabloids SELECTED 2005 and 2006 Top-5 Best Consumer Tabloids P U B L I S H E R / C R E AT I V E D I R E C T O R Guy Cross PUBLISHER/FOOD EDITOR Judith Cross ART DIRECTOR Chris Myers COPY EDITOR Edgar Scully PROOFREADERS James Rodewald Kenji Barrett S TA F F P H O T O G R A P H E R S Dana Waldon Anne Staveley CALENDAR EDITOR B Milder WEBMEISTER

Jason Rodriguez SOCIAL MEDIA Laura Shields

CONTRIBUTORS Diane Armitage, Joshua Baer, Ciel Bergman, Davis K. Brimberg, Jon Carver, Kathryn M Davis, Jennifer Esperanza, Anthony Hassett, Hannah Hoel, Marina La Palma, Richard Tobin, Lauren Tresp, Sarah Weisberg, and Susan Wider COVER

Dorothea Lange with Zeiss Juwel Camera, 1937 ©1937, 2014 Rondal Partridge Archives See page 47.

The Landscape: Real to Abstract: paintings by Martha Mans, Kurt Meer, and Stephen Pentak at Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Road, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, October 17 from 5 to 7 pm. Images: Left: Mans. Center: Meer. Right: Pentak.

TO THE EDITOR: We recently read Richard Baron’s letter in the September issue of THE and wanted him to know that we agree with his writing word for word. And there are other people out there who feel the same way he does: that the mission and leadership of SITE needs to be changed. One would think that a community that has such a strong art presence within the nation could do much better than what we are being offered by SITE. We have written letters to SITE and the board members bringing up similar issues we read in Baron’s letter. —Tom and Carole Bowker, Santa Fe Artists TO THE EDITOR: Katherine M Davis releases a convoluted diatribe in her effort to cloud SITEline’s Unsettled Landscapes. Her professionalism is compromised and uncertainty revealed by summoning a cadre of “friends” for backup. She acknowledges the updated biennial response to change while denying the reality of change. A dedicated exhibit of this scope implicitly holds visual and scholarly and emotional value, according to one’s interests, orientation, priorities, and so on. After allowing a few artists to satisfy her particular need for immediate gratification, Davis confronts us with a disabling deluge of confusion and trepidation: May we consent to be “wowed” by The Great Tree that lacks “visual ascendancy?” Do we get a pass “to pore over a lot of verbiage” that appears compelling? Is a permit required to see an exhibit unlike the “old-school” experience? She must recognize this was not conceived as a pictures show and we don’t go to the New Museum to view Vermeer. And “OOMPH” is available in assorted sizes and forms. The leap that powers Unsettled Landscapes is a contemporary iteration of SITE’s bold early initiatives noted by Davis. Alas, her protestations are but a prelude to the audacious command that SITE restructure according to some ill-conceived bifurcation of curatorial and directorial functions. Her lecture is an aggressive and presumptuous conceit. —Nancy Ziegler Nodelman, Santa Fe, via email

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THE magazine: 505-424-7641 Lindy Madley: 505-577-4471 DISTRIBUTION

Jimmy Montoya: 470-0258 (mobile) THE magazine is published 11x a year by THE magazine Inc., 320 Aztec St., Santa Fe, NM 87501. Corporate address: 44 Bishop Lamy Road Lamy, NM 87540. Phone number: (505)-424-7641. Email address: themagazinesf@gmail.com. Web address: themagazineonline.com. All materials copyright 2014 by THE magazine. All rights reserved by THE magazine. Reproduction of contents is prohibited without written permission from THE magazine. THE magazine is not responsible for the loss of any unsolicited material, liable, for any misspellings, incorrect information in its captions, calendar, or other listings. Opinions expressed do not necessarily represent the views or policies of THE magazine, its owners, or any of its employees, members, interns, volunteers, agents, or distribution venues. Bylined articles represent the views of their authors. Letters to the editor are welcome. Letters may be edited for style and libel. All letters are subject to condensation. THE magazine accepts advertisements from advertisers believed to be of good reputation, but cannot guarantee the authenticity of objects and/or services advertised. THE magazine is not responsible for any claims made by its advertisers for copyright infringement by its advertisers and is not responsible or liable for errors in any advertisement.

This issue is dedicated to Mark Zaplin and Ted Flicker OCTOBER

2014

TO THE EDITOR: When it comes to looking at contemporary art, each viewer is in his or her own parallel universe. Some of those alternate viewing spaces I can relate to and others not so much. Richard Baron claims to have looked at SITE’s biennial Unsettled Landscapes, and moreover he claims to understand just what that biennial is all about. But he got stuck somewhere between his own misunderstandings of Derrida and Foucault and his misunderstandings about the vast territories being discussed in this exhibition, and various artists’ responses to these territories—the ways the territories have been used and abused. So, I wonder if Mr. Baron and I saw the same exhibition—I think not. Mr. Baron appears to have gone to Unsettled Landscapes with his own private agenda in hand, his own superior outlook, ready to dismiss SITE’s ambitious organizing

principle so he could substitute his own, i.e., SITE’s efforts will not change the world of art and help to demonetize its greedy little ways. But Mr. Baron failed to see the forest for the trees and I wonder if he really even saw the trees. What SITE presented is a varied and coherent set of investigations about the Americas and the land that defines these immense geographies and the people who live and struggle there. And, for the artists concerned, this show represents a series of attempts to creatively upend, or re-interpret, the status quo, or present alternative views of historical “facts.” I’ve seen the exhibition multiple times, but never once got bogged down in anyone’s text. There was no need to in order to grasp the variety and the flow of work and the intentions behind it. But this is not to say this show isn’t complex—any exhibition this thoughtful and profoundly layered is bound to be. Is there anything wrong with depth in art? There is indeed a broad overview at work here—a genius loci that has woven together an incredibly worthwhile and visually stimulating set of experiences that, however, require more than a superficial one-off approach to viewing. What’s the problem with that? Serious viewing is its own reward. —Diane Armitage, Santa Fe, via email TO THE EDITOR: I enjoyed the article on Billy Siegal and his history of collecting. Unfortunately, the interviewer did not discuss or ask the hard questions of the moral issues in the acquisition of so much Indian art and history. I went to Bolivia first in 1977 and collected a few pieces of the best quality Indian textiles, but only a handful for personal enjoyment. The conscious choice of not collecting was channeled into commercial handicrafts for export. This approach to commercial Indian textiles and handicrafts was also my choice in working in Ecuador, Peru, and Panama. Later I worked in Senegal and Indonesia with textiles. In all cases I collected small amounts of the finer native art for myself. I have met Billy a few times and know that there was at the time of his acquisitions a small crowd of similarly motivated buyers who were a few steps behind ready to buy the same textiles. All of us on the gringo trail in those years were aware of each other and often crossed paths. But I think Billy probably caught the textile fever well before anyone else and was fortunate to buy and then sell great pieces to museums and collectors. The argument that if the art was not saved it might have been lost is a reasonable argument. Many countries over the years have passed laws to protect their art and history from export. The Andean mountain countries were late in the game in passing such legislation. I credit Billy with recognizing such great art, but wonder if too much of Panama and Bolivia’s textile history passed into private hands and foreign museums and are not available for the viewing of the people who created it. —Peter Jayne, Santa Fe, via email

This issue is dedicated to the lives of Mark Zaplin, Ted Flicker, and Daniel Bish.

THE magazine | 5


JULIE BLACKMON HOMEGROWN

September 26-November 15, 2014 SEPTEMBER 26 - NOVEMBER 15, 2014

An exhibition celebrating Julie Blackmon’s newest book Homegrown published by Radius Books. Signed copies are available. photo-eye Gallery 541 S. Guadalupe St. Santa Fe, NM 87501 505-988-5152 x202 Tuesday-Saturday, 10:00-5:30 In our Bookstore + Project Space, 376 Garcia St.

Brad Wilson: Avian


TONY DEL AP: Selected Works from Fifty Years of Making Art

OCT 17 - NOV 17 |

Reception for the Artist Friday, October 17, 5 - 7 P.M.

CHARLOTTE JACKSON FINE ART 505.989.8688 | 554 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 | www.charlottejackson.com

Film Premiere + Book Signing “Tony DeLap: A Unique Perspective”, a documentary by Dale Schierholt “Tony DeLap,” a book by Art Santa Fe Presents and Radius Books Monday, October 20, 4 - 6 P.M. | Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe Please call the gallery in advance to reserve free tickets.


diane burko investigations of the environment

Debra Bloomfield • Journey to Wilderness September 27 - October 24

september 26-november 2.2014

dirk de bruycker logos

LewAllenGalleries railyard arts District 1613 Paseo de Peralta (505) 988.3250 www.lewallengalleries.com info@lewallengalleries.com

Saara Ekström • Careless Water October 31 - December 19 Artist Reception: Friday, November 7, 6-8 pm Richard Levy Gallery • Albuquerque • www.levygallery.com • 505.766.9888


Don’t miss abiquiu views. exhibition Closes oCtober 26.

Miguel Covarrubias: Drawing a Cosmopolitan line/ Trazando una Línea CosmopoLiTa septeMber 27, 2o14 through January 18, 2o15 Working in pen and ink, watercolor, and oil, the dynamic Mexican artist Covarrubias made substantial contributions to modern art. Prolific and endlessly curious, he had a lifelong fascination with cultures both ancient and modern, remote and urban -much like O’Keeffe, both of whom were part of a global network of artists, writers and intellectuals. This exhibition presents his artistic, literary and anthropological accomplishments as a single body of work, and shows the diversity of modernism as it was lived in the first half of the twentieth century. This exhibition and related programming were made possible in part by a generous grant from The Burnett Foundation. Additional support was provided by The Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Consulate of Mexico in Albuquerque, Linda Marcus, New Mexico Arts, a division of the Department of Cultural Affairs and the National Endowment for the Arts, the Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers’ Tax.

Miguel Covarrubias, The New Yorker, 6 July 1929, Our Lady of the Lily: Georgia O’Keeffe, © Conde Nast.

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RIK ALLEN New glass and metal sculptures, October 3 – 18, 2014 Artist Reception: Friday, October 3rd, 5 – 7 pm in Santa Fe

Soliday Surveyor Blown glass, silver, steel 12" h x 8" w x 8" d

Blue Rain Gallery | 130 Lincoln Avenue, Suite C, Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.954.9902 | www.blueraingallery.com


The Encaustic Art Institute October Events October 4 to November 2 National Juried Encaustic/ Wax Exhibition

41 nation-wide artists’ works were juried into this show by Merry Scully A Best of Show and Award of Excellence will be announced at the opening.

Opening October 4, 2014 Noon to 5 pm Best of Show and Award of Excellence TBA (also part of the Madrid & Cerrillos Studio Tour)

October 4 - 5 and 11 - 12, 2014

Noon to 5 pm EAI joins Madrid & Cerrillos Studio Tour www.madridcerrillosstudiotour.com

Gallery open to the public weekends from Noon - 5 pm or by appointment April through October Contact Douglas Mehrens at 505-424-6487 A non profit arts organization. For map and information go to

www.eainm.com Diane Kleiss, NM

Thanks to Los Alamos National Bank for their continued support.

www.ArtMattersSantaFe.org

Lisa Bick, IN

18 County Road 55A (General Goodwin Road) 18 miles south of Santa Fe on scenic Turquoise Trail Highway 14

Art Matters | Santa Fe, a series of city-wide art events and lectures sponsored by the Santa Fe Gallery Association to showcase the art galleries and museums in Santa Fe. October 17 - 26, 2014 Participating galleries: David Richard Gallery Ellsworth Gallery Evoke Contemporary Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Matthews Gallery New Concept Gallery Pippin Contemporary Sorrel Sky Gallery SITE Santa Fe Tansey Contemporary Winterowd Fine Art

www.SantaFeGalleryAssociation.org


DAVID JOHNS

BIŁ’ HAHODIISHŁAA

SEPTEMBER 26 - OCTOBER 24, 2014 RECEPTION: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2014, 5-7 PM ARTIST WILL BE PRESENT

ZANE BENNETT CONTEMPORARY ART 435 S GUADALUPE ST, SANTA FE, NM 87501 T: 505-982-8111 ZANEBENNETTGALLERY.COM IMAGE: DAVID JOHNS, OCCURRENCE-4 , 2014, ACRYLIC ON CANVAS, 78 X 60 IN.


Steve Elmore Indian Art

Visit

Scotty Mitchell Dialogue with Beauty opENS Nov. 15

Colorful and dynamic plein air pastels celebrate the landscapes of southern Utah and Grand Staircase – Escalante National Monument.

Helen Cordero

Discover 23rd Annual Trappings of the American West Exhibition & Sale Through DEc. 7

Western craftsmanship in paintings, bronze sculpture, photography and gear of the working cowboy. In partnership with Dry Creek Arts Fellowship.

Nampeyo Authentic Southwestern art, Native American jewelry, publications and more...

Shop shops.musnaz.org

Maria and Julian Martinez

elmoreindianart.com

839 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe NM 87501 505 995 9677



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Art, everywhere.

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Film, fiber, exhibitions, opera. Surround yourself with all kinds of color. Look + Book TAOS.ORG

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October in Taos means a flurry of creativity, presented to you in all forms and fashions, indoors and outdoors. Walk it, watch it, wear it, wonder at it. Be wowed. See more at TAOS.org/fall2014

Through October 5 Taos Fall Arts Festival, six exhibits various locations in historic district

October 4-5 Taos Wool Festival Kit Carson Park

October 17 & 18 Film: Everything Comes from the Streets The Harwood Museum of Art

Through January 25 ยกOrale! The Kings & Queens of Cool four exhibits at The Harwood Museum of Art

October 10-12 Fall for Antiques Show & Sale Millicent Rogers Museum

October 17-January 9 Taos Wilderness Show Taos Town Hall

October 11 Open House, studio & gardens Couse-Sharp Historic Site

October 24-25 SOMOS Storytelling Festival Taos Mesa Brewing & TCA

October 11 & 18, November 1 Live from the Met: opera at TCA 11am: Verdi, Mozart, Bizet

October 24-26 Taos Mountain Balloon Rally in the skies over Taos

October 11-November 9 Taos Glass Art Invitational exhibits eight gallery locations

November 1-2 Taos Chamber Music Group concerts The Harwood Museum of Art

Through January 31 Fred Harvey & Making of the American West Millicent Rogers Museum October 3- November 17 A Slice of Life, photo journalism exhibit Encore Gallery of Taos Center for the Arts (TCA) October 4 Manhattan Shortz Film Fest at TCA


WORLD TRAVELER GAIL RIEKE IS INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED AS A CONCEPTUAL ARTIST WORKING IN COLLAGE, ASSEMBLAGE AND INSTALLATION, A WRITER, A PHOTOGRAPHER, AND A TEACHER. IN ALL MEDIA RIEKE’S WORK IS THOUGHTFUL AND METICULOUS—NO FLUFF HERE. RIEKE WELCOMES VISITORS BY APPOINTMENT TO HER STUDIO/GALLERY IN SANTA FE. GAIL@ RIEKESTUDIOS.COM OR RIEKESTUDIOS .COM CREATING ENVIRONMENTS My studio/gallery rooms in Santa Fe are ever-changing installation environments. They are a place to begin conversations, to unearth the archeology of experience, and to shelter dreams. Some say they are a collection of collections.

TAKING TIME WITH THE WORK Working on many pieces simultaneously in the drawers of the studio allows the collages and assemblages to magnetize their missing pieces in due time. The works grow organically... through the process of adding and subtracting incorporating artifacts and natural wonders... mundane and enigmatic... until the elements feel as if they have always existed together. Seeking, finding, patience and synchronicity... these are my tools….

SUITCASE TRAVEL JOURNALS The “suitcase wall” is a floor-to-ceiling structure that my husband Zachariah and I began building in 2000. It is the home of many travel journals... Mixed-media assemblages each one layered into antique suitcases, boxes, trunks, and baskets. Each journal is a unique response a complex kaleidoscopic exploration a mnemonic device recalling the intricacies of past adventure a hymn to the unexpected... the imagined becoming real TRAVELING All my life I have desired to travel. Senses alive, camera and journal at hand, I am ready for amazements... outside my back door or in a Zen garden in Kyoto. This moment... this moment... will never come again. photograph by

Dana Waldon


UNIVERSE OF

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 19


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ART FORUM

THE magazine

asked a clinical psychologist and three people who love art for their take on this 1988 acrylic-on-paper work—The Family—by Paula Rego. They were shown only the image and were given no other information.

the businessman? This painting disturbs because it

frontally placed and triangulated vessel indicating with

contorts our vision of reality. The apparently small and

the dying tulip (two lips) out of water? Was it just laid

weak—the powerless—are having their way with the

down by someone entering the room? I wonder if this

very symbol of authority in our society—the man in a

picture predates the early work of Eric Fischl with its

suit. The innocents have become the aggressors.

similar sadomasochistic sexual overtones? This room

—Sarah Weisberg, Teacher, Santa Fe

has an unpleasant odor in spite of an open widow. If I were to fully project my training in psychiatry, I would

Are they dressing or undressing this boy, smaller

not be surprised if, like de Kooning, this painter had a

husband, father? The bed is not made; the pillow wears

difficult relationship with Mother.

a triangulated bikini! Blowing curtains are covered

—Ciel Bergman, Artist, Santa Fe

in X’s—the genetic sign for the female gender— highlighting a self-satisfied young girl whose eyes engage

Saatchi Gallery Description

the viewer, hand clasped in pleasure at his diminution.

In The Family the absent father and husband returns

We see a sexually and aggressively charged work.

A relaxed adult female (maid) and middle-sized woman

to the picture plane, only to be manhandled by

A frightened man is dominated by three female

(wife), hips thrust back, are aggressively tugging at

his daughter and his wife. As usual, the narrative

companions. Interestingly, the ladies’ ages are left

this sleeves and pants in an overpowering Alpha-hold.

clues are ambiguous, and the story could have

purposefully unclear. They appear like “little people”

But what is that strange lacy muffin shape under his

several endings. Are the women helping the man

with dwarfism in pre-pubescent hairstyles. By playing

restrained right arm? His ugly grimace is amplified by

or hurting him? Who is the little girl at the window?

with age, the artist suggests that female domination

the flaming and angry eyes locked onto the defiant eyes

Do the clues perhaps lie in the Portuguese retablo

occurs throughout all phases of life. One woman/

of the woman facing him—daggers! Meanwhile, Saint

featuring St. Joan, and St. George slaying the dragon?

girl glares sternly into the man’s eyes. It is uncertain

George is still slaying his dragon under the witnessing

Is the man as doomed as the dragon, or will he in

whether she wants to seduce or destroy him. Another

eye of a towering female of royal rank. The entire

fact resurface like the fox, to eat the stork, once

female clutches him so tightly she nearly suffocates him.

picture seems to roil with an oppressive, overbearing

it has removed the bone lodged in his throat?

A third one stands aggressively like a bar’s bouncer

dominance of the negative feminine. But what is that

—Saatchi Gallery, London, England

or doorman. Additionally, the background armoire has an image of a man fighting a monster. This battle echoes the war of the sexes happening in the main scene. Psychologically, there is also an exhibitionistic/ voyeuristic quality to this piece. For example, two of the females stare out at the viewer and invite us to watch the group’s sexual activity. I am reminded of Freud’s famous statement: “He who in the unconscious is an exhibitionist, is at the same time a voyeur.” —Davis K. Brimberg, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, Santa Fe As St. Michael raises his sword to strike Satan a finishing blow in this illuminated retablo, he gazes out from behind the performance curtains to watch the real show: a menacing imp begins to remove the pants of a paralyzed businessman while her diminutive partner preps for backup by cracking her knuckles. A wily Satan has managed to escape his stage for a new performance piece he’s been working on: a reversal of power roles, foreshadowed by the lithe crane impaling an upturned fox engraved upon the bureau. The Hopperesque distance in this piece is not physical, but emotional—the characters completely miss each other’s eyes. Even the audience can’t make contact. If we follow the gaze of the oblivious maid and Miss Shadowcaster, we see that their eyes are focused on the pitcher and the limp rose. What ritual are we meant to witness? What do their eyes communicate that their puppet bodies cannot? Is the pitcher an unholy grail with which they have poisoned

22 | THE magazine

OCTOBER

2014


generously underwritten by

presents

UNABRIDGED The 1st Annual Lambda Literary Authors Series Readings and discussions with nationally acclaimed LGBTQ authors:

Ana Castillo is one of the most powerful voices

Justin Torres is author of the best-selling novel

in Chicana literature. She is the author of So Far From God and Sapogonia, both New York Times Notable Books of the Year, as well as The Guardians, Peel My Love like an Onion, and most recently, Give It To Me published by the Feminist Press. She divides her time between Chicago and southern New Mexico.

We the Animals, which won the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award, and has been translated into fifteen languages. He has published short fiction in The New Yorker, Harper's, Granta, Tin House, and The Washington Post. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he is currently a Cullman Center Fellow at The New York Public Library.

Moderated by

Andrew Holleran is the author of Dancer And From the Dance, a novel about pre-AIDS New York, and, most recently, Grief, a novella set in post-AIDS Washington, D. C. An original member of The Violet Quill, he has written two other novels, a book of stories, and a collection of essays. He teaches Creative Writing at American University in Washington, and currently writes for The Gay and Lesbian Review.

Amy Scholder has been editing and publishing progressive and literary books for over twenty years. Her visionary style has brought high visibility to her authors, and has been praised for its contribution to contemporary literature and popular culture. She has served as editorial director of the Feminist Press, editor-in-chief of Seven Stories Press, US publisher of Verso, founding co-editor of HIGH RISK Books/Serpent’s Tail, and editor at City Lights Books.

SATURDAY 25 OCTOBER AT 7:00 PM The Armory for the Arts Theater

1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, New Mexico General admission: $25 / VIP - preferred seating with Authors’ & Moderator’s After Party: $150 Tickets and information please call: 505.984.1370 or www.sfperformingarts.org Autographed copies of the authors’ books will be available for purchase through Garcia Street Books at the event.

presented in association with: sponsored by:

www.lambdaliterary.org



STUDIO VISITS

DIANE ARBUS SAID, “A PICTURE IS A SECRET ABOUT A SECRET. THE MORE IT TELLS YOU THE LESS YOU KNOW.” TWO PHOTOGRAPHERS RESPOND TO ARBUS’S STATEMENT. The beauty of photography for me is that every image is my own secret. The secret begins when my emotions and being respond to what I am seeing. What I love about photography is that it allows me to extract the exact piece that makes me stir. You will rarely know what else is going on. That emotion will always be my secret, and your response will be yours. The beauty is that we are each entitled to have our own experience and for each and every one of us it will be different.

—Adria Ellis In 2014 Ellis’s photographs were shown at BMFA Arts Centre, Ontario, Canada; Holcim Gallery, Toronto, Canada; Mira Forum, Porto, Portugal; MPLS Photo Center, Minneapolis; and the Soho Art House, New York City. www.aconicaoncanyon.com and Instagram ~ @aconica

I must have looked at my Diane Arbus photo book 10,000 times as a young woman—I cherished it. Maybe Arbus felt that way because she moved in her own secret world as she brought images of people who lived outside of “culture” to the forefront of the collective vision. On one hand this is a very romantic quote, yet it is also much like a Zen koan.

—Jennifer Esperanza Esperanza will be co-directing a short film with artist Stephen Auger in late 2014. She will then travel to Oaxaca, Mexico to photograph stills for her daughter Emily Esperanza’s feature art film El Culto De La Muerte with her partner/artist Richard Kurtz, who has a role in the feature. They will then travel to Brazil for a collaborative travel/art project. She will be blogging as they go: jenniferesperanza.com/category/blog

photographs by

OCTOBER

2014

Anne Staveley

THE magazine | 25


CLOUD CLIFF BAKERY at the SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET TUESDAY and SATURDAY

Fragile Waters Ansel Adams Ernest H. Brooks II Dorothy Kerper Monnelly

Las Cruces Museum of Art October 25 - January 10

This exhibition was organized by Photokunst and curated by Jeanne Falk Adams as guest curator. 491 North Main Street Las Cruces, NM, USA las-cruces.org/museums 575-541-2137

Above left: Ansel Adams, Point Sur, Storm; Big Sur, CA, 1946; Gelatin silver print, 19.5x15”; Courtesy Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust. Above center: Ernest H. Brooks II, Pirouette; Santa Barbara Island, 1993; Gelatin silver print, 18.25x18.75”, 1998, ed. 1/50; © Ernest H. Brooks II. Above right: Dorothy Kerper Monnelly, Melting Ice; Ipswich River, Boxford, MA; Gelatin silver print, 20x16”, 1994; © Dorothy Kerper Monnelly


ANCIENT CITY APPETITE

Ancient City Appetite by Joshua

Baer

Epazote on the Hillside 86 Old Las Vegas Highway, Santa Fe Open daily, except Wednesdays, from 11:00 am until 2:30 pm. Major credit cards – Reservations suggested 505 982-9944

When you arrive at Epazote on the Hillside, the first thing you want to do is order

Epazote’s horno to 700°F. (Don’t worry about burning your fingers. They bring you

the Rack of Lamb for Two, medium rare, with all the sauces. Order it before you

a pair of tongs.) Each botana also comes with Chef Fernando’s sauces, including his

sit down. If your hostess or waitress asks you if you mean the cordero, or lamb loin,

moles, and with a plate of small tortillas. After grilling each slice on the stone, you

say no. Tell her you want the Rack of Lamb for Two, the one Chef Fernando cooks

peel it off with the tongs, dip it in one, two, or all of the sauces, and eat it either

in the horno and brings to the table, sliced into chops, surrounded by small dishes

by itself or wrapped in a tortilla.

containing each of his sauces, including his inspired moles. Don’t go to Epazote and

neglect to order the Rack of Lamb for Two ($50). And don’t let the price discourage

for Two to your table. The chops will be on a platter, surrounded by small portions

you, either. If Fernando Olea is an artist—and he deserves that reputation—then

of his sauces. If you ask, Chef Fernando will list the ingredients he uses in his sauces,

Epazote’s Rack of Lamb for Two is his masterpiece.

and tell you how and why the flavors of his moles differ from each other. And it

makes sense to ask, because Fernando Olea understands the nature of mole as well

While you’re waiting for your rack of lamb, make sure to order a glass of the

Twenty minutes after you sit down, Chef Fernando will bring the Rack of Lamb

Mango Lemonade ($3.50), and these botanas:

as anyone alive. When you eat the rack, use your hands. Dip each chop into the

Lechón (marinated pork loin) $8

sauces. Indulge. Lose control. And remind yourself, from one bite to the next, that

Pato (Muscovy duck breast) $10

the best flavors live in the meat that lies closest to the bone.

Salmón (wild Pacific salmon) $7

Atun (yellowfin tuna) $6

Ancient City Appetite recommends places to eat, in and out of Santa Fe.

In Spanish, botanas means “snacks.” Epazote’s botanas come to your table

The photograph is by Guy Cross. Send the names of your favorite places

as thin, raw slices, accompanied by a large, black stone that has been heated in

OCTOBER

2014

to places@ancientcityappetite.com.

THE magazine | 27


“Santacafé always feels chic, yet causal— like “Cheers” with class.” – John Vollersten, Santa Fean

New look New menu! The Compound A Santa Fe Tradition ~ reinvented!

lunch - monday thru saturday sunday brunch dinner nightly

Lunch • Dinner • Bar

restaurant bar 231 washington avenue - reservations 505 984 1788

photo: Kitty Leaken

e Los L od u ch

ros ce

Ra n

gift certificates, menus & special events online www.santacafé.com

Reservations 505.982.4353 653 Canyon Road compoundrestaurant.com

Drink different. Small Batch Heirloom Spirits from the Great Southwest www.kgbspirits.com


ONE BOTTLE

One Bottle :

E arth F riendly P roducts U ltra D ishmate “N atural P ear ” by J oshua We had a friend, a holy man, who used to come over and make pizzas.

B aer . Around nine-fifteen, the holy man would go outside, turn off his oven,

He had his own portable propane oven. On the days leading up to the

come back inside, put his hand on my shoulder, and say, “Josh, I have to be up

nights when he made pizzas, he would arrive at two in the afternoon

at four, so I’m going to go.” After the holy man left, my wife and I would sit

with his oven, a picnic cooler, and five bags of groceries. The cooler was

around the table with our guests and reminisce about the pizzas. There was

full of Ziploc bags. Each bag contained a softball-size lump of fresh

never room for dessert. Couple by couple, our guests would hug us,

pizza dough. After we unpacked the groceries, the holy man

thank us for the evening, go out to their cars, and make their way

and my wife and I would prep until all of the cheeses,

down the driveway and into the night. Sometimes my wife

sauces, and toppings were ready. At six-fifteen, the

would help me clear the table. Other times, I would find

holy man would light his oven. At six-thirty, after

her asleep in her chair, with a gentle expression on her

his oven got to 700°F, he would roll out a ball of

face. At that point, I would lift her from her chair, walk

dough until it was fourteen inches wide and one

her into our bedroom, tuck her into bed, and return to

inch thick, then he would toss it into the air. We

the kitchen to face the dishes.

have Polaroids of the holy man tossing the dough. In

Which brings us to Earth Friendly Products Ultra

some of the Polaroids, the space between the top of

Dishmate “Natural Pear.”

his forehead—he’s waiting for the dough to come down,

Earth Friendly Products also makes Almond, Apricot,

so he can catch it—and the underside of the spinning

and Grapefruit dish soaps. As much as I like the Apricot,

dough reaches a distance of no less than four feet.

I can’t go more than a day without using the Natural Pear.

His first pizza was always the Gambas Borrachas,

You can buy Earth Friendly Products’ dish soaps at Whole

or Drunken Shrimp. The holy man would paint the

Foods, Kaune’s, or La Montañita Co-op.

dough with a chipotle-tomato-beer sauce, cover the

If you like to cook, you like to eat, and if you like to

sauced circle with shredded Muenster cheese, and

cook and eat, you like to cook dinner for your friends.

then dot the surface with shrimp, cooked bacon, and

Nothing brings a smile to people’s faces like a dinner

scallions. As soon as the pizza went into the oven, all

cooked especially for them. And when you introduce

of our guests would arrive. I could never explain this

eight or nine bottles of great wine to that equation,

phenomenon, and still can’t. It was like they were

chances are, your guests will be telling stories about

parked in formation at the bottom of our driveway,

that dinner for the rest of their lives. The only

noses into the wind, waiting for that first, ineffable

downside is the dishes. Somebody has to do them,

whiff of bacon flash-fired with shrimp.

and that somebody might as well be you.

By the time the first pizza was ready, all the

If I could wash the plates, pots, pans, and

guests were seated at the table with their napkins

silverware, take three Aleve, and go to bed, that

unfolded in their laps and their forks and knives

would not be so bad. My problem is, after I finish the

clenched in their hands. After removing the pizza

dishes, I turn around and look at the table, which is

from the oven, the holy man brought it into the

covered with wine glasses. To leave them for the next

kitchen, transferred it from the pizza peal to a cutting

morning strikes me as heresy, like leaving the dead and

board, sliced it into twelve sections, drizzled the sections with salsa verde, and

wounded on the battlefield. Those glasses held the wines in their clear, precise

brought the sliced pie to the table, where it was greeted with a collective gasp.

bodies. They delivered the sights, smells, textures, tastes, and sounds of those

Five minutes later, all twelve sections were gone, and the second pizza was in the

wines. They deserve to go to bed clean and shiny, within and without.

oven. On a good night, eight of us would go through six or seven pizzas.

Putting Riedel wine glasses in the dishwasher also strikes me as heresy.

I use the term “holy man” because our friend was a religious man, a man whose

That’s why, some time after midnight, I empty the sink, wipe it out, and refill

life was, is, and will always be devoted to practice. When he talked about his life,

it with hot water, a dash of Comet, and a generous helping of the Ultra

he used the word “practice,” though he never said “my practice,” “the practice,”

Dishmate “Natural Pear.” After I wash each glass, checking each rim for lipstick,

or “practice, practice, practice” the way doctors, lawyers, and musicians do. It was

I empty the sink, refill it with warm water, rinse the glasses, dry them with

just “practice.” Not “practice makes perfect”—more like “practice makes practice.”

paper towels, and put them back in the cupboard where they spend

Most of the time, the holy man talked about the expressions on our guests’ faces. Because this was, as you may have guessed, metaphysical pizza, transcendental

their downtime. And then I go to bed, in a house where the air holds the scent of ripe pears.

pizza, pizza that nourished body and soul. At least once during each of those evenings, a guest would finish eating a slice of Gambas Borrachas, catch the holy man’s eye, and say, “How did you do that?” To which the holy man would reply, “Bacon is God.” OCTOBER

2014

One Bottle is dedicated to the appreciation of good wines, good times, and good dish soap, one bottle at a time. All content is ©2014 by onebottle.com. You can write to Joshua Baer at jb@onebottle.com.

THE magazine | 29



DINING GUIDE

Marvelous Food + Tranquility =

IZANAMI at 10,000 Waves 3451 Hyde Park Road Reservations: 428-6390 $ K E Y

INEXPENSIVE

photos :

$

up to $14

MODERATE

$$

$15—$23

EXPENSIVE

$$$

$24—$33

Prices are for one dinner entrée. If a restaurant serves only lunch, then a lunch entrée price is reflected. Alcoholic beverages, appetizers, and desserts are not included in these price keys. Call restaurants for hours.

VERY EXPENSIVE

$$$$

$34 plus

EAT OUT OFTEN

G uy C ross

...a guide to the very best restaurants in santa fe, albuquerque, taos, and surrounding areas... 315 Restaurant & Wine Bar 315 Old Santa Fe Trail. 986-9190. Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: French. Atmosphere: An inn in the French countryside. House specialties: Steak Frites, Seared Pork Tenderloin, and the Black Mussels are perfect. Comments: Generous martinis, a terrific wine list, and a “can’t miss” bar menu. Winner of Wine Spectator’s Award of Excellence. Watch for special wine pairings. Andiamo 322 Garfield St. 995-9595. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Italian. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: Start with the Steamed Mussels or the Roasted Beet Salad. For your main, choose the delicious Chicken Marsala or the Pork Tenderloin. Comments: Great pizza. Anasazi Restaurant Inn of the Anasazi 113 Washington Ave. 988-3236 . Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner. Full bar. Valet parking. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: Contemporary American with a what we call a “Southwestern twist.” Atmosphere: A classy room. House specialties: For dinner, start with the Heirloom Beet Salad. Follow with the flavorful Achiote Grilled Atlantic Salmon. Dessert: the Chef’s Selection of Artisanal Cheeses. Comments: Attentive service. Bouche 451 W. Alameda Street 982-6297 Dinner Wine/Beer Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: French Bistro fare. Atmosphere: Intimate with an open kitchen. House specialties: Standouts starter is the Charcuterie Plank. You will love the tender Bistro Steak in a pool of caramelized shallot sauce and the organic Roast Chicken for two with garlic spinach. Comments: Chef Charles Dale is a consummate pro. Cafe Cafe Italian Grill 500 Sandoval St. 466-1391. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Italian. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: For lunch, the classic Caesar salad or the tasty specialty pizzas, or the grilled Eggplant sandwich. Dinner: the grilled Swordfish. Comments: Friendly. Café Fina 624 Old Las Vegas Hiway. 466-3886. Breakfast/Lunch. Patio Cash/major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Call it contemporary comfort food. Atmosphere: Casual. House

specialties: For breakfast, both the Huevos Motulenos and the Eldorado Omlet are winners. For lunch, we love the One for David Fried Fish Sandwich, and the perfect Green Chile Cheeseburger. Comments: Annamaria The baked goods are really special. Café Pasqual’s 121 Don Gaspar Ave. 983-9340. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Multi-ethnic. Atmosphere: Adorned with Mexican streamers and Indian maiden posters. House specialties: Hotcakes got a nod from Gourmet magazine. Huevos motuleños—a Yucatán breakfast—is one you’ll never forget. Chopstix 238 N. Guadalupe St.  982-4353. Lunch/Dinner. Take-out. Patio. Major credit cards. $ Atmosphere: Casual. Cuisine: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. House specialties: Lemon Chicken, Korean barbequed beef, Kung Pau Chicken, and Broccoli and Beef. Comments: Friendly owners. Counter Culture 930 Baca St. 995-1105. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Patio. Cash. $$ Cuisine: All-American. Atmosphere: Informal. House specialties: Burritos Frittata, Sandwiches, Salads, and Grilled Salmon. Comments: Good selection of beers and wine. Cowgirl Hall of Fame 319 S. Guadalupe St. 982-2565. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Good old American. fare. Atmosphere: Patio shaded by big cottonwoods. Great bar. House specialties: The smoked brisket and ribs are the best. Super buffalo burgers. Comments: Huge selection of beers. Coyote Café 132 W. Water St. 983-1615. Dinner Full bar. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: Southwestern with French and Asian influences. Atmosphere Bustling. House specialties: Main the grilled Maine Lobster Tails or the 24-ounce “Cowboy Cut” steak. Comments: Great bar and good wines. Dr. Field Goods Kitchen 2860 Cerrillos Rd. 471-0043. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: New Mexican Fusion. Atmosphere: Casual and friendly. House specialties: Starters: Charred Caesar Salad, Carne Adovada Egg Roll, and Fish Tostada. Mains: El Cubano

Sandwich, and Steak Frite, . Comments: You leave feeling good. Real good. Downtown Subscription 376 Garcia St. 983-3085. Breakfast/Lunch No alcohol. Patio. Cash/ Major credit cards. $ Cuisine: Standard coffee-house fare. Atmosphere: A large room where you can sit, read periodicals, and schmooze.. House specialties: Espresso, cappuccino, and lattes. El Faról 808 Canyon Rd. 983-9912. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Spanish Atmosphere: Wood plank floors, thick adobe walls, and a small dance floor for cheek-to-cheek dancing. House specialties: Tapas. Comments: Murals by Alfred Morang. El Mesón 213 Washington Ave. 983-6756. Dinner Beer/Wine. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Spanish. Atmosphere: Spain could be just around the corner. Music nightly. House specialties: Tapas reign supreme, with classics like Manchego Cheese marinated olive oil. Hillside 86-B Old Las Vegas Highway. 982-9944 Lunch: 11-2:30. Closed Wednesday. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Inspired New World cuisine. Atmosphere: Spacious and bright. House specialties: Botanas: meats and seafood that you cook at your table on hot rocks. The botanas are accompanied by delicious small corn tortillas, moles, and oils. The “New Mexico” Mole with infused oils is utterly spectacular. Chef Fernando Olea’s Popocatepetl—a black pepper–encrusted Angus beef tenderloin is perfection. Comments: Epazote offers innovative cuisine. epazote on the

Georgia 225 Johnson St. 989-4367. Patio. Aprés Lunch and Dinner - Full bar. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: Clean and contemporary. Atmosphere: Friendly and casual. House specialties: Start with the Charcuterie Plate or the Texas Quail. Entrée: The the Pan-Roasted Salmon. Good wine list and a bar you will love. Comments: Aprés Lunch: served from 1:30-5:30. Geronimo 724 Canyon Rd. 982-1500. Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: We call it French/Asian fusion. Atmosphere: Elegant and stylish. House specialties: Start with

the superb foie gras. Entrées we love include the Green Miso Sea Bass served with black truffle scallions, and the classic peppery Elk tenderloin. Comments: Wonderful desserts. Harry’s Roadhouse 96 Old L:as Vegas Hwy. 986-4629 Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner 7 days Full bar. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: American and New Mexican. Atmosphere: Down home House specialties: For breakfast go for the Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon, Cream Cheese. Lunch: the All-Natural Buffalo Burger. Dinner: the Ranchero Style Hanger Steak. Comments: Friendly. Il Piatto Italian Farmhouse Kitchen 95 W. Marcy St. 984-1091. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Italian. Atmosphere: Bustling. House specialties: Our faves: the Arugula and Tomato Salad; the Lemon Rosemary Chicken; and the Pork Chop stuffed with mozzarella, pine nuts, and prosciutto. Comments: Farm to Table, all the way. Izanami 3451Hyde Park Rd. 428-6390. Lunch/Dinner Sake/Wine/Beer Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Japanese-inspired small plates. Atmosphere: A sense of quietude. House specialties: For starters, the Wakame is a winner. We loved the Nasu Dengaku, eggplant and miso sauce, and the Butakushi, Pork Belly with a Ginger BBQ Glaze. Comments: Super selection of Sake. Jambo Cafe 2010 Cerrillios Rd. 473-1269. Lunch/Dinner Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: African and Caribbean inspired. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: Jerk Chicken Sandwich and the Phillo, stuffed with spinach, black olives, feta cheese, and roasted red peppers, Comments: Chef Obo wins awards for his fabulous soups. Joseph’s Culinary Pub 428 Montezuma Ave. 982-1272 Dinner. Beer/Wine Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Innovative. Atmosphere: Intimate. House specialties: Start with the Butter Lettuce Wrapped Pulled Pork Cheeks or the Scottish Fatty Salmon Sashimi. For your main, try the Lamb & Baby Yellow Curry Tagine or the Crispy Duck, Salt Cured Confit Style. Comments: The bar menu features Polenta Fries and the New Mexican Burger. Wonderful desserts, excellent wine selection, beer on draft, and great service.

Kohnami Restaurant 313 S. Guadalupe St. 984-2002. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine/Sake. Patio. Visa & Mastercard. $$ Cuisine: Japanese. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: Miso soup; Soft Shell Crab; Dragon Roll; Chicken Katsu; noodle dishes; and Bento Box specials. Comments: Love the Sake. La Plancha de Eldorado 7 Caliente Road at La Tienda. 466-2060 Highway 285 / Vista Grande Breakfast / Lunch / Dinner / Sunday Brunch Beer/Wine. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: An Authentic Salvadoran Grill. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: The Loroco Omelet, Pan-fried Plantains, and Salvadorian tamales. Comments: Sunday brunch. Lan’s Vietnamese Cuisine 2430 Cerrillos Rd. 986-1636. Lunch/Dinner Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Vietnamese. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: The Vegetarian Pumpkin Soup is a blend of lemongrass, lime leaf and tofu with a red curry spice. Fave entree is the BoTai Dam: Beef tenderloin w/ garlic, shallots, and lemongrass .Comments: Friendly waitstaff. La Plazuela on the Plaza 100 E. San Francisco St. 989-3300. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Full Bar. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: New Mexican and Continental. Atmosphere: Casual House specialties: Start with the Tomato Salad. Entrée: Braised Lamb Shank with couscous. Comments: Beautiful courtyard for dining. M.A.M.A.’S World Take-Out 3134 Rufina St. 424-1116/ 989-8028. Breakfast/Lunch: 9am-3 pm. $$ Cuisine: Middle Eastern, American, Mexican, Asian, and Salvadoran. House specialties: Falafel, Sandwiches, Breakfast Burritos, Pad Thai, Pupusas, and the world-famous Hiram’s Hot Dog. Comments: Grab, go,and enjoy. Midtown Bistro 910 W. San Mateo, Suite A. 820-3121. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine/ Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: American fare with a Southwestern twist. Atmosphere: Large open room. House specialties: For lunch: the Baby Arugula Salad or the Chicken or Pork Taquitos. Entrée: Grilled Atlantic Salmon with Green Lentils, and the French Cut Pork Chop. Comments: Good dessert selection.

continued on page 33 OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine |31


Authentic French Food & Wine in Downtown Santa Fe chef/Owner louis Moskow’s classically prepared French fare has received notable praise from Wine Spectator, Esquire, Zagat, Bon Appétit, Food & Wine, Fodor’s, The New Mexican & The Albuquerque Journal.

e New auTuMN MeNu uSiNg lOcally SOuRced iNgRedieNTS awaRd -wiNNiNg wiNe liST exTeNSive SelecTiON OF wiNeS by The glaSS Full baR / lOuNge aRea wiNe diNNeRS pRivaTe ROOMS available

Sun-Thur, 5:00-9:00pm u Fri-Sat, 5:00-9:30pm 315 Old Santa Fe Trail u Santa Fe, NM www.315santafe.com u Reservations:(505) 986.9190


DINING GUIDE

Beer/Wine Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Innovative natural foods. Atmosphere: Large open room. House specialties: In the morning, try the Mediterranean Breakfast— Quinoa with Dates, Apricots, and Honey. Our lunch favorite is the truly delicious Indonesian Vegetable Curry on Rice; Comments: For your dinner, we suggest the Prix Fixe Small Plate: soup, salad, and an entrée for $19. Wines and Craft beers on tap.

M.A.M.A.’S World Take-Out | Food to Go | 3134 Rufina Street Mu Du Noodles 1494 Cerrillos Rd. 983-1411. Dinner/Sunday Brunch Beer/Wine. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Pan-Asian. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: Vietnamese Spring Rolls and Green Thai Curry, Comments: Organic. New York Deli Guadalupe & Catron St. 982-8900. Breakfast/Lunch Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: New York deli. Atmosphere: Large open space. House specialties: Soups, Salads, Bagels, Pancakes, and gourmet Burgers. Comments: Deli platters to go. Plaza Café Southside 3466 Zafarano Dr. 424-0755. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner 7 days Full bar. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: American and New Mexican. Atmosphere: Bright and light. House specialties: For your breakfast go for the Huevos Rancheros or the Blue Corn Piñon Pancakes. Comments: Excellent Green Chile. Rio Chama Steakhouse 414 Old Santa Fe Trail. 955-0765. Brunch/Lunch/Dinner/Bar Menu. Full bar. Smoke-free dining rooms. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: All-American, all the way. Atmosphere: Easygoing. House specialities: Steaks, Prime Ribs and Burgers. Haystack fries rule. Recommendations: Nice wine list. Ristra 548 Agua Fria St. 982-8608. Dinner/Bar Menu Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Southwestern with a French flair. Atmosphere: Contemporary. House specialties: Mediterranean Mussels in chipotle and mint broth is superb, as is the Ahi Tuna Tartare. Comments: Nice wine list. Rose’s Cafe 5700 University W. Blvd SE, #130, Alb. 505-433-5772 Breakfast/Lunch. Patio. Major credit cards. $ Cuisine: A taste of the Yucatán with a Southwest twist. House specialties: We love the Huevos Muteleños and the Yucatán Pork Tacos. Comments: Kid’s menu and super-friendly folks. San Q 31 Burro Alley. 992-0304 Lunch/Dinner Sake/Wine Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Japanese Sushi and Tapas. Atmosphere: Large room with a Sushi bar. House specialties: Sushi, Vegetable Sashimi and Sushi Platters, and a variety of Japanese Tapas. Comments: Savvy sushi chef. S an F rancisco S t . B ar & G rill

50 E. San Francisco St. 982-2044. Lunch/Dinner Full bar.

OCTOBER

2014

Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: As American as apple pie. Atmosphere: Casual with art on the walls. House specialties: At lunch try the San Francisco St. hamburger on a sourdough bun; the grilled salmon filet with black olive tapenade and arugula on a ciabatta roll; or the grilled yellowfin tuna nicoise salad with baby red potatoes. At dinner, we like the tender and flavorful twelve-ounce New York Strip steak, served with chipotle herb butter, or the Idaho Ruby Red Trout, served with grilled pineapple salsa. Comments: Visit their sister restaurant at Devargas Center.

on the mark. Comments: A great selection of wines. Happy hours 3-6 pm and after 9 pm.

Santacafé 231 Washington Ave. 984-1788. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Southwest Contemporary. Atmosphere: Minimal, subdued, and elegant House specialties: The world-famous calamari never disappoints. Favorite entrées include the grilled Rack of Lamb and the Pan-seared Salmon with olive oil crushed new potatoes and creamed sorrel. Comments: Happy hour special from 4-6 pm. Great deals: Half-price appetizers. “Well” cocktails only $5.

Second Street Brewery 1814 Second St. 982-3030. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Pub grub. Atmosphere: Real casual. House specialties: We enjoy the Beer-steamed Mussels, the Calamari, and the Fish and Chips. Comments: Good selection of beers

Santa Fe Bar & Grill 187 Paseo de Peralta. 982-3033. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: American and New Mexican. Atmosphere: Casual and friendly. House specialties: Cornmealcrusted Calamari, Rotisserie Chicken, or the Rosemary Baby Back Ribs. Comments: Easy on the wallet. Santa Fe Bite 311 Old Santa Fe Trail. 982-0544 Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: American and New Mexican. Atmosphere: Casual and friendly. House specialties: For breakfast, go for either the Huevos Rancheros or the Build Your Own Omelette. Can’t go wrong at lunch with the 10 oz. chuck and sirloin Hamburger or the Patty Melt on rye toast. At dinner (or lunch) the Ribeye Steak is a winner. Good selection of sandwiches and salads (we love the Wedge Salad with smoked Applewood Bacon). And the Fish and Chips rivals all others in Santa Fe. Comments: The motto at The Bite: “Love Life – Eat good.” We agree. Santa Fe Capitol Grill 3462 Zafarano Drive. 471-6800. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: New American fare. Atmosphere: Contemporary and hip. House specialties: Tuna Steak, the Chicken Fried Chicken with mashed potates and bacon bits, Ceviche, and the New York Strip with a MushroomPeppercorn Sauce. Desserts are

Saveur 204 Montezuma St. 989-4200. Breakfast/Lunch Beer/Wine. Patio. Visa/Mastercard. $$ Cuisine: French meets American. Atmosphere: Casual. Buffet-style service for salad bar and soups. House specialties: Daily specials, gourmet sandwiches, wonderful soups, and an excellent salad bar. Comments: . Do not pass on the Baby-Back Ribs when they are available.

Shake Foundation 321 Johnson St. 982-9708. Lunch/Early Dinner - 11am-6pm Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: All American. Atmosphere: Casual with outdoor table dining. House specialties: Green Chile Cheeseburger, the Classic Burger, and Shoestring Fries. Comments: Sirloin and brisket blend for the burgers. Take-out or eat at a picnic table. Shohko Café 321 Johnson St. 982-9708. Lunch/Dinner Sake/Beer. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Authentic Japanese Cuisine. Atmosphere: Sushi bar, table dining. House specialties: Softshell Crab Tempura, Sushi, and Bento Boxes. Comments: Friendly waitstaff. Station 430 S. Guadalupe. 988-2470 Breakfast/Lunch Patio Major credit cards. $ Cuisine: Light fare and fine coffees and teas. Atmosphere: Friendly. House specialties: For your breakfast, get the Ham and Cheese Croissant. Lunch fave is the Prosciutto, Mozzarella, and Tomato sandwich. Comments: Many Special espresso drinks. El Gancho Old Las Vegas Hwy. 988-3333. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Major credit cards $$$ Cuisine: American. Atmosphere: Family restaurant House specialties: Aged steaks, lobster. Try the Pepper Steak with Dijon cream sauce. Comments: They know steak here. Steaksmith

at

Sweetwater 1512 Pacheco St. 795-7383 Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner. Sunday Brunch

Teahouse 821 Canyon Rd. 992-0972. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner 7 days Beer/Wine. Fireplace. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Farm-to-fork-to tableto mouth. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: For breakfast, get the Steamed Eggs or the Bagel and Lox. A variety of teas from around the world available, or to take home. Terra at Four Seasons Encantado 198 State Rd. 592, Tesuque. 988-9955. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: American with Southwest influences. Atmosphere: Elegant House specialties: Breakfast: Blue Corn Bueberry Pancakes. Dinner, start with the sublime Beet and Goat Cheese Salad. Follow with the PanSeared Scallops with Foie Gras or the delicious Double Cut Pork Chop. Comments: Chef Andrew Cooper partners with local farmers to bring seasonal ingredients to the table. An excellent wine list The Artesian Restaurant at Ojo Caliente Resort & Spa 50 Los Baños Drive.  505-583-2233 Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Wine and Beer Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Local flavors. Atmosphere: Casual, calm, and friendly. House specialties: At lunch we love the Ojo Fish Tacos and the organic Artesian Salad. For dinner, start with the Grilled Artichoke, and foillow with the Trout with a Toa ste Piñon Glaze. Comments: Nice wine bar. The Compound 653 Canyon Rd.  982-4353. Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$$ Cuisine: American Contemporary. Atmosphere: 150-year-old adobe. House specialties: Jumbo Crab and Lobster Salad. The Chicken Schnitzel is always flawless. All of the desserts are sublime. Comments: Chef and owner Mark Kiffin, won the James Beard Foundation’s “Best Chef of the Southwest” award. The Palace Restaurant & Saloon 142 W. Palace Avenue 428-0690 Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio Major credit cards $$$ Cuisine: Modern Italian Atmosphere: Victorian style merges with the Spanish Colonial aesthetic. House Specialties: For lunch: the Prime Rib French Dip. Dinner: go for the Salmon poached in white wine, or the Steak au Poivre. Comments: Super bar. The Pink Adobe 406 Old Santa Fe Trail. 983-7712. Lunch/ Dinner Full Bar Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: All American, Creole, and New Mexican. Atmosphere: Friendly and casual. House specialties: For lunch we love the Gypsy Stew or the Pink Adobe Club Sandwich. Dinner:the Steak Dunigan or the Fried Shrimp Louisianne Comments: Cocktails and nibblles at cocktail hour in the Dragon Room is a must! The Shed 113½ E. Palace Ave. 982-9030. Lunch/Dinner

Beer/Wine. Patio. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: New Mexican. Atmosphere: A local institution located just off the Plaza. House specialties: If you order the red or green chile cheese enchiladas. Comments Always busy., you will never be disappointed. The Ranch House 2571 Cristos Road. 424-8900 Lunch/Dinner Full bar Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: BBQ and Grill. Atmosphere: Family and very kid-friendly. House specialties: Josh’s Red Chile Baby Back Ribs, Smoked Brisket, Pulled Pork, and New Mexican Enchilada Plates. Comments: The best BBQ ribs. Tia Sophia’s 210 W. San Francisco St. 983-9880. Breakfast/Lunch Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: Traditional New Mexican. Atmosphere: Easygoing and casual. House specialties: Green Chile Stew, and the traditional Breakfast Burrito stuffed with bacon, potatoes, chile, and cheese. Lunch: choose from the daily specials. Comments: Real deal. Tune-Up Café 1115 Hickox St. 983-7060. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: All World: American, Cuban, Salvadoran, Mexican, and, yes, New Mexican. Atmosphere: Down home. House specialties: For breakfast, order the Buttermilk Pancakes or the Tune-Up Breakfast. Comments: Easy on your wallet. A true local hangout. Vanessie

of

Santa Fe

434 W. San Francisco St. 982-9966 Dinner Full bar. Smoke-free. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: American. Atmosphere: Piano bar and oversize everything, thanks to architect Ron Robles. House specialties: New York steak and the Australian rock lobster tail. Comments: Great appetizersgenerous drinks. Vinaigrette 709 Don Cubero Alley. 820-9205. Lunch/Dinner Beer/Wine. Major credit cards. $$ Cuisine: American. Atmosphere: Light, bright and cheerful. House specialties: Organic salads. We love all the salads, especially the Nutty Pear-fessor Salad and the Chop Chop Salad. Comments: NIce seating on the patio. When you are in Albuquerque, visit their sister restaurant at 1828 Central Ave., SW. Zacatecas 3423 Central Ave., Alb. 255-8226. Lunch/Dinner Tequila/Mezcal/Beer/Wine Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Mexican, not New Mexican. Atmosphere: Casual and friendly. House specialties: Try the Chicken Tinga Taco with Chicken and Chorizo or the Slow Cooked Pork Ribs. Over 65 brands of Tequila. Zia Diner 326 S. Guadalupe St. 988-7008. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Full bar. Patio. Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: All-American diner food. Atmosphere: Real casual. House specialties: The perfect Chile Rellenos and Eggs is our breakfast choice. At lunch, we love the Southwestern Chicken Salad, the Fish and Chips, and any of the Burgers Commets: A wonderful selection of sweets available for take-out. The bar is most defintely the place to be at cocktail hour.

THE magazine | 33


NANCY DWYER

SELECTIONS: THEN AND NOW

WHAT

October 17 - November 22, 2014

October 24 - December 6, 2014

Artist Reception: Friday, October 17th | 5:00 - 7:00 PM

Artist Reception: Friday, October 24th | 5:00 - 7:00 PM

Eugene Newmann, Riff 2, 2013, Oil on linen, 22.25” x 19”

Nancy Dwyer, Everybodys Angry, 2013, Oil on papier maché, 74” x 50” x 44”

EUGENE NEWMANN

David Richard Gallery is participating with three in-gallery discussions: Figuration and Abstraction in Contemporary Painting with artists Eugene Newmann and Gregory Botts Saturday, October 18, 2014 2:00 - 3:00 PM The Paintings of Salvatore Emblema: Transparency through Color and Light Panel includes: Peter Frank, Critic, Huffington Post; Andrew Connors, Curator, Albuquerque Museum of Art; and Suzan Woodruff, Los Angeles-based Artist Sunday, October 19, 2014 2:00 - 3:00 PM Nancy Dwyer Discusses “WHAT”, Her Newest Sculptures and Exhibition Panel includes: Nancy Dwyer, Artist; Libby Lumpkin, Professor, Art History, University of New Mexico; Merry Scully, Curator, New Mexico Museum of Art; and Edie Tsong, Artist Saturday, October 25, 2014 2:00 - 3:00 PM

DavidrichardGALLEry.com The Railyard Arts District

DAVID RICHARD

544 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501

GALLERY

(505) 983-9555 | info@DavidRichardGallery.com


OPENINGS

OCTOBERARTOPENINGS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3

Henington Fine Art, 802 Canyon Rd., Santa

hand-woven rugs and tapestries by Connie

The Gallery ABQ, 8210 Menaul Blvd.

Fe. 577-8339 or 690-9160. West By Southwest:

Enzmann-Forneris. 5-7 pm.

NE, Alb. 505-292-9333. 2 Perspectives: oil

Blue Rain Gallery, 130 Lincoln Ave., Suite

paintings by SJ Shaffer and photographs by

C, Santa Fe. 954-9902. Solo Show: new works

Peter and Kim Robbins. 5-8 pm.

paintings by Jean Porter and watermedia M atrix

G allery, 3812 Central Ave.

SE, Alb. 505-268-8952. PSNM Signature

by Rik Allen. 5-7 pm.

and drawings by Jerry Love. Salon exhibit: Rebecca Nolda. 5-8 pm.

Intrigue Gallery, 238 Delgado St., Santa

Membership Exhibit: the Pastel Society of

Brigitte Bruggemann Studio, 667 Canyon

Fe. 820-9265. Face It: new work by Pamela

New Mexico’s exhibition of 33 members

Ventana Fine Art, 400 Canyon Rd., Santa

Rd., Santa Fe. 614-5762. L’Arte e Poesia:

Frankel Fiedler that concentrates on the face.

of distinction. 5-8 pm.

Fe. 800-746-8815. Ladronas: pastels by Mary

abstract paintings by Bruggemann. 5-7 pm.

5-7 pm.

Silverwood. 5-7 pm. Monroe Gallery

of

Photography, 112 Don

Eggman & Walrus, 130 W. Palace Ave., 2nd

Liquid Outpost @ Inn

Loretto, 211

Gaspar Ave., Santa Fe. 992-0800. Joe McNally:

Weyrich Gallery, 2935-D Louisiana Blvd.

Fl., Santa Fe. 660-0048. The Grand Finale

Old Santa Fe Tr., Santa Fe. A Walk Through

works by photojournalist McNally including 45

NE, Alb. 505-883-7410. Homage: porcelain

Show—Moving to Utah!: paintings by Nonnie

Southern France: photographs by Michael

photographs and life-size Polaroids. 5-7 pm.

works by Kathryne Cyman. 5-8:30 pm.

Thompson and John Barker. 5:30-9 pm.

Gallagher. 4-6 pm. Patina Gallery, 131 W. Palace Ave., Santa

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4

Gallery 901, 901 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 559-

Manitou Galleries, 123 W. Palace Ave.,

Fe. 986-3432. Measure of Days—Drawn to the

304-7264. Kimono: sculptural works by Gina

Santa Fe. 986-0440. Roger Hayden Johnson &

Wall III: third exhibition in a series, abstract

Act 1 Gallery, 218 Paseo del Pueblo

Marie Erlichman. 5 pm.

Liz Wolf: architectural landscapes by Johnson

paintings by Daniel Kosharek. 5-7:30 pm.

Norte, Taos. 575-758-7831. Mark Horst

at

and sculptures by Wolf. 5-7:30 pm.

Solo Exhibition: paintings by Horst. 4-6 pm. Peyton Wright Gallery, 237 E. Palace Ave.,

Harwood Art Center, 1114 7th St. NW, Alb. 505-242-6367. Small Works—Ghost of Sea: plains

Marigold Arts, 424 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe.

Santa Fe. 989-9888. Absolute Conviction:

Encaustic A rt I nstitute, 18 County Rd.

paintings by Alan Paine Radebaugh. 6-8 pm.

982-4142. Wind Maps and Mind Shadows:

paintings by Paul Burlin. 5-7 pm.

55A, Cerrillos. 424-6487. National Juried Encaustic/Wax Art Exhibition: 43 artists, juried by Merry Scully, Head of Curatorial Affairs at the N.M. Museum of Art. 12-5 pm. Taos Artist Collective, 106-A Paseo del Pueblo Norte, Taos. 575-751-7122. Two-Person Show: encaustic works by Mary Stratton and mixed-media abstract paintings by Danielle Domenic. 4-7 pm. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10

Blue Rain Gallery, 130 Lincoln Ave., Suite C, Santa Fe. 954-9902. Solo Show: new works by Doug West. 5-7 pm. Canyon Road Contemporary, 403 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 983-0433. Wild Things: polymer clay sculptures by Adam Thomas Rees and watercolors by Travis Bruce Black. 5-7 pm. EXHIBIT/208, 208 Broadway, SE, Alb. 505-450-6884.

In

The

Telling:

street

photography by Adrian Panaro. 5-8 pm. Gebert Contemporary, 558 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 992-1100. Solo Show: new works by Xavier Mascaro. 5-7 pm. Hunter Kirkland Contemporary, 200-B Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 984-2111. Imagínate: abstract work exploring internal landscapes by Peter Burega. 5-7 pm. Homegrown: photographs by Julie Blackmon on view at photo-eye Gallery, 541 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe. On view through November 15. OCTOBER

2014

continued on page 38

THE magazine | 35


WHO WROTE THIS? “The past is just a story we tell ourselves.� John Slattery or Spike Jonz or Shekhar Kapur or Monica Bielanko

THE DEAL

For artists without gallery representation in New Mexico. Full-page B&W ads for $750. Color $1,000.

Reserve space for the November issue by Monday, October 15 505-424-7641 or email: themagazinesf@gmail.com

Honey Harris Show with THE magazine Thursday, October 9 10:30 am

98.1 FM KBAC


OUT AND ABOUT photographs Mr. Clix Lisa Law Linda Carfano Jennifer Esperanza

Jonas Povilas Skardis

Mac (and PC) Consulting 速

Training, Planning, Setup, Troubleshooting, Anything Final Cut Pro, Networks, Upgrades, & Hand Holding

phone: (505) 577-2151 email: Pov@Skardis.com Serving Northern NM since 1996


OPENINGS

James Kelly Contemporary, 1611 Paseo de

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19

Peralta, Santa Fe. 989-1601. Inside Out: works created by Santa Fe artists being treated for

David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe

mental illnesses. Preview: 5-7 pm.

St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. The Paintings of Salvatore Emblema: Transparency Through

Marfa Contemporary, 100 E. San Antonio

Color and Light, with Peter Frank: gallery

St., Marfa, TX. 423-729-3500. Ulysses: works

discussion (part of Art Matters). 2-3 pm.

by New York artist Spencer Finch. 4-7 pm. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24

Mark White Fine Art, 414 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 982-2073. Mark White—New

David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe

Paintings and Sculpture: new works by the

St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. What: sculptures by

artist. 5-8 pm.

Nancy Dwyer. 5-7 pm.

Nüart Gallery, 670 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe.

Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, 435 S.

988-3888. Modiste: new paintings by Erin

Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 982-8111. Eros and

Cone. 5-7 pm.

Thanatos: new work by Michael Petry. 5-7 pm.

Pippin Contemporary, 200 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 795-7476. Painted Meditations on the Landscape: works by Michael Ethridge. 5-7 pm.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25 Shape- ol- o -gy: photographs, prints, and altered books by Will Karp at Tybie Davis Satin Gallery, 145 Washington Street, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, October 10 from 4 to 6 pm. Sculptures and abstract oil paintings by Mark White on display at Mark White Fine Art, 414 Canyon Road, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, October 10 from 5 to 8 pm.

David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. Nancy Dwyer

Sorrell Sky Gallery, 125 W. Palace Ave.,

Discusses What, Her Newest Sculptures and

Santa Fe. 501-6555. Carrie’s West: paintings

Exhibition: gallery discussion (part of Art

by Carrie Fell. 5-7:30 pm.

Matters). 2-3 pm.

Tybie Davis Satin Gallery, Santa Fe Main

SPECIAL INTEREST

Public Library, 145 Washington St., Santa Fe. 955-6781. Shape-ol-o-gy: two- and three-

516 Arts, 516 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505-

dimensional artworks by Will Karp. 4-6 pm.

242-1445. Floyd D. Tunson—Son of Pop: survey of Tunson’s works addressing cultural identity,

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11

American social history, race, class relations, pop culture, art history, and the beauty of

James Kelly Contemporary, 1611 Paseo de

pure abstraction. Through Sat., Dec. 15.

Peralta, Santa Fe. 989-1601. Inside Out: works

516arts.org

created by Santa Fe artists being treated for mental illnesses. Fundraiser. 4-6 pm.

Abiquiu Studio Tour, Galeria Arriba at the Abiquiu Inn, Hwy. 84, Abiquiu. Works by 80

Placitas Community Library, 453 Hwy.

artists. Sat., Oct. 11-Mon., Oct. 13. 10 am-5

165, Placitas. 505-867-3355. Still Here, Then

pm.

and Now—Women Artists of Placitas from the 1940s to the 1970s: artworks and history of 15 local artists. 2-4 pm.

Albuquerque Museum, 2000 Mountain Rd. David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18

St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. Selections: Then THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16

NW, Alb. 505-242-4600. Gods and Heroes: masterpieces from the École des Beaux-Arts,

and Now: work by Eugene Newmann.

David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe

Paris. Sat., Oct. 11 through Sun., Jan. 4, 2015.

5-7 pm.

St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. Figuration and

albuquerquemuseum.org

Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave.,

Abstraction in Contemporary Painting, with

Santa Fe. 466-5528. Dark Places: photographs

Ellsworth Gallery, 215 E. Palace Ave.,

Eugene Newmann: gallery discussion (part of

Art Matters, Santa Fe. The Santa Fe Gallery

and jewelry by Sam Atakra Haozous and

Santa Fe. 989-7900. Beyond Reason: new

Art Matters). 2-3 pm.

Association hosts the second annual series

Melissa Dominguez. 5-7 pm.

works by william dubby fuqua and Lisa

of city-wide arts events at local galleries

Rainbird. Artist talk: 3-4 pm. Reception:

SCA Contemporary Art, 524 Haines Ave.

and museums. Fri., Oct. 17-Sun., Oct. 26.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17

5-7 pm.

NW, Alb. 505-228-3749. The Collective is

artmatterssantafe.org

Canyon Road Contemporary, 403 Canyon

Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Rd.,

exhibition wherein the collective appropriates

Artists’ Materials Expo, Buffalo Thunder

Rd., Santa Fe. 983-0433. Historic Canyon

Santa Fe. 820-0807. The Landscape—Real

the structure of a group show. Closing

Resort and Casino, 30 Buffalo Thunder Tr.,

Road Paint Out & Sculpt Out: 8 painters and

to Abstract: oil paintings and watercolors

reception: 5-8 pm. Water Projects Fundraiser:

Santa Fe. Creative Fusion: 3 days of consumer

3 sculptors in conjunction with the Canyon

by Martha Mans, Kurt Meer, and Stephen

works by Basia Irland. 5-8 pm (and on Sun.,

art materials show and 4 days of workshops.

Road event. 5-7 pm.

Pentak. 5-7 pm.

Oct. 19, 10 am-2pm.)

Thurs., Oct. 16-Sun., Oct. 19. expoartisan.com

Closer to the Truth Collective: multi-media

continued on page 40

38 | THE magazine

OCTOBER

2014


TANSEY CONTEMPORARY “RE-CONNECTING TO THE PAST” By Patrick McGrath Muñiz October 24, 5 - 7 pm

Tansey Contemporary Gallery Event

Patrick McGrath Muñiz ~ “THE UNINVITED” ~ 24" x 36 ~ Oil on canvas

Patrick discusses his work and the unique opportunity contemporary art provides to help us connect to and learn from Humanity’’s collective past. Muñiz will speak at the gallery, addressing the evolution of his work, inspirations and ideas behind it, and his thoughts on what role art might play in raising awareness about social and environmental injustices. The Gallery will show a selection of Patrick’s works.


ARTScrawl, Alb. Citywide, self-guided

Open Studio, 58 & 59, CR 159, Abiquiu.

arts tour, Fri., Oct. 3, 5-8 pm. The Heights

The First Ever Open Studio: individual and

Artful Saturday, Sat., Oct. 18, 3-6 pm.

collaborative work, in sculpture, jewelry, and

artscrawlabq.org

painting by Abiquiu artists Doug Coffin, Joseph Hall, and Walter Nelson. Sat., Oct. 4 and Sun.,

Center

for

Contemporary Arts, 1050

Oct. 5, 10 am-4 pm.

Old Pecos Tr., Santa Fe. 982-1338. Autumn in the Gallery: public events throughout

Open Wound Horror Film Festival at Santa

the fall—lectures, parties, and star-gazing.

Fe Comic Con, Buffalo Thunder Resort and

ccasantafe.org

Casino, 30 Buffalo Thunder Tr., Santa Fe. Fri., Oct. 24-Sun., Oct. 26. openwoundfilms.com

Chiaroscuro, 702 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. Paa-ko Fine Artists Art Show & Sale, Paa-

992-0711. Group Show. Runs Oct.11-Nov. 22.

ko Event Center, 232 Paa-Ko Dr., Sandia Park. Dixon Studio Tour, Dixon. 33rd annual

505-286-0897. 10% of all sales benefit the

tour. Meet the artists, Fri., Oct. 31, 5-7

East Mountain Food Pantry. Sat. and Sun., Oct.

pm at the Dixon Community Center. Tour:

18 and 19, 11am-5 pm. paakoartists.com

Sat. and Sun., Nov. 1 and 2, 9 am-5 pm. Pagosa Makers Expo & Tour, Fri. and

dixonarts.org

Sat., Oct. 11 and 12. Two-day interactive Galisteo Studio Tour, Galisteo. 27th annual tour, featuring over 30 artists. Sat., Oct. 18 and Sun., Oct. 19, 10 am-5 pm. galisteostudiotour.org

Journey to Wilderness—photographs by Debra Bloomfield on view through Monday, October 24 at Richard Levy Gallery, 514 Central Avenue SW, Albuquerque. An exhibition of paintings—Measure of Days—by Daniel Kosharek on view at Patina Gallery, 131 West Palace Avenue, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, October 3 from 5 to 7:30 pm.

experience in Pagosa Springs, Colorado providing “makers” an opportunity to bring their creative endeavors from the basement, garage, and kitchen table out for public viewing and consumption. Details: pagosamakers.org

Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, 217 Johnson St., Santa Fe. 946-1000. Miguel Covarrubias—

Quilt Fiesta, Santa Fe County Fairgrounds

Drawing a Cosmopolitan Line: works tracing

Exhibit Hall, 3229 Rodeo Rd., Santa Fe. Classic

the breadth of Covarrubias’s intellectual

to contemporary quilts at this bi-annual festival.

and artistic interests as well as his friendship

Fri. and Sat., Oct. 10 and 11, 10 am-5 pm, Sun.,

with O’Keeffe. Through Sun., Jan. 18, 2015.

Oct. 12, 10 am-4 pm. $5 admission. nmqg.org

okeeffemuseum.org Red Dot Gallery, 820 Canyon Rd., Santa GF Contemporary, 707 Canyon Rd., Santa

Fe. 820-7338. Faculty Art Exhibition: works

Fe. 983-3707. Paint Out with Justin Skillstad,

by faculty members from Santa Fe University

Rachel Darnell, and Eric Reinemann on Sat.,

of Art and Design and Santa Fe Community

Oct. 18, 10 am-5 pm.

College. Through Fri., Oct. 24. red-dot-gallery. com

Giacobbe-Fritz Fine Art, 702 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 986-1156. Paint Out with Nocona

Richard Levy Gallery, 514 Central Ave. SW,

Burgess and Siri Hollander on Sat., Oct. 18,

Alb. 505-766-9888. Journey to Wilderness:

10 am-5 pm.

large-scale photographs by Debra Bloomfield. Reception, book signing, and New Mexico

Greg Moon Art, 109A Kit Carson Rd.,

Wilderness Alliance Fundraiser. Through Fri.,

Taos. 575-770-4463. New Mexi-Low: survey

Oct. 24. Careless Water: new work by Saara

of lowbrow art in New Mexico. Through

Ekström. On view Oct. 31-Dec. 10. Reception:

Fri., Oct. 31. gregmoonart.com

Fri., Nov. 7, 6-8 pm. levygallery.com

Historic Canyon Road Paint Out & Sculpt

Lannan Speaker Series, Lensic Performing

Peralta, Santa Fe. 988-3250. Diane Burko—

Santa Fe Botanical Garden, 715 Camino

Out, Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. Artist receptions,

Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St., Santa

Investigations of the Environment: photographs

Lejo, Santa Fe. Origami in the Garden: outdoor

“en plein air” painting, an art flash mob, and

Fe. 988-1234. Max Blumenthal with Amy

of landscape and geology by Burko. Through

sculpture exhibition by Kevin Box. Through

performance by Santa Fe Public Schools’

Goodman, Fri., Oct. 10, 7 pm. Alice McDermott

Sun., Nov. 2. lewallengalleries.com

Sat., Oct. 25. santafebotanicalgarden.org

Music Education Program. Fri. evening, Oct.

with Michael Silverblatt, Wed., Oct. 22, 7 pm.

17 and Sat. afternoon beginning at 12 pm,

Tickets by phone or online: lensic.org.

Matthews Gallery, 669 Canyon Rd., Santa

SITE Santa Fe, Armory for the Arts Theater,

Fe. 992-2882. Collector’s Forum—An Insid-

1050 Old Pecos Tr., Santa Fe. “Shared

Las Vegas Art Studio Tour, Las Vegas, NM.

er’s Guide to the Art World: free workshops

Authority in the Art Museum—Precedents,

IAIA MoCNA, 108 Cathedral Pl., Santa

505-425-1085. Sat. and Sun., Oct. 25 and 26,

on buying, selling, and caring for fine art with

Process, and Propositions”: an Innovative

Fe. 428-5907. Artist Talk: Ric Gendron and

10 am-5 pm. Details: lasvegasarttour.com

curators, appraisers, and conservators. Fri.,

Thinker Lecture by Kim Kanatani about the

Oct. 17 and 24, 5-7:30 pm. Reserve a seat:

shifts in museums toward accessible art and

992-2882.

democratic practices. Fri., Oct. 10, 6 pm.

Oct. 18. visitcanyonroad.com

Courtney Leonard on Thurs., Oct. 23, 6-7 pm, in the main museum gallery.

LewAllen

Galleries,

1613

Paseo

de


OPENINGS

St. John’s College, 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca,

516 A rts , 516 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505-

B allroom

Santa Fe. 984-6000. Dean’s Lecture Series

242-1445. Hearts and Minds: storytelling,

Mimms Ranch, Marfa, TX. The Marfa

and Dean’s Concert Series through Oct. Full

poetry, music, and theater about youth

Triptych—Three

listing:

mentorship and legacy in the context of

Texas: part two, “The Desert,” is a

S pecial G uest , A gu , Art studio/home

the exhibition Floyd D. Tunson—Son of

solo performance for layered piano by

of Ciel Bergman and Ed Okun, 3202

Pop. Sat., Oct. 11, 7 pm. 516arts.org

composer Graham Reynolds. Sat., Oct. 4,

Calle Marie, Santa Fe. Sat., Oct. 18, 7:30

sjc.edu/programs-and-events/santa-fe-

community-calendar

M arfa , The Overlook at Portraits

of

West

7:30 pm. Tickets: ballroommarfa.org J ami S ieber & S teve G orn

in

C oncert ,

Tansey Contemporary, 652 Canyon Rd.,

pm. Reception following the concert.

Santa Fe. 995-8513. A Broader Interpretation

Tickets:

of Southwestern “Landscapes”: new and iconic

jamisieber.com

brownpapertickets.com

Info:

works from gallery artists. Through Tues., Oct. L ambda

21. tanseycontemporary.com

L iterary

A uthors

S eries ,

Armory for the Arts Theater, 1050 Old Taos County Historical Society, Kit Carson

Pecos Tr., Santa Fe. 984-1370. Unabridged:

Electric Boardroom, 118 Cruz Alta Rd., Taos.

3 nationally acclaimed LGBTQ authors

Who Are the Harvey Girls?—The Inside Story: free

read from their current works and have

public lecture by Liz Mikols. Sat., Oct. 4, 2 pm.

a conversation about their work, their

taoscountyhistoricalsociety.org

community, and being LGBTQ. Sat., Oct. 25, 7 pm. Tickets: sfperformingarts.org

Tarnoff Art Center, Wildflower Rd., Rowe. Psychology

L as P lacitas A rtists S eries , Las Placitas

and Embodiment in Art” lecture by Dean

Presbyterian Church, Hwy. 165, Placitas.

Howell. Sun., Oct. 12, 5-7 pm. ABRACADABRA:

505-867-8080. ZOFO duet—Piano Four

workshop on the myths and truths about the

Hands:

making of art with Howell. Fri., Oct. 17, 6-8 pm

Keisuke Nakagoshi perform Gershwin,

and Sat. and Sun., Oct. 18 and 19, 10 am-3 pm.

Debussy, Riley, and more. Sun., Oct. 19,

Flowing Grasses—The Life of Artist Dean Howell:

3 pm. Tickets: placitasartistsseries.org

505-919-8888.

“Perception,

Eva-Maria

Zimmermann

and

full length documentary. Sun., Oct. 26, 4-7 pm. N ational H ispanic C ultural C enter

tarnoffartcenter.org

P erforming A rts S eason , 1701 4th St. The First Ever Open Studio

for

Abiquiu

Artists: 58 & 59 County Rd. 159, Abiquiu. 505-685-0504. Doug Coffin, Joseph Hall, and Walter Nelson show new work in sculpture, jewelry, and painting on Fri. and Sat., Oct. 4

SW, Alb. 505-246-2261. This season Inside Out is an exhibition of works created by Santa Fe artists being treated for mental illness. Fundraiser preview: Friday, Octobaer 10, from 5 to 7 pm at James Kelly Contemporary, 1611 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. Open to the public: Saturday, October 11 from 9 am to 6 pm. Reception: 4 to 6 pm. All sales will go directly to the artists. Image: Helen Lane. 516 Words: Hearts and Minds—meditations on youth, mentorship, and legacy in response to the artwork of Floyd D. Tunson (above). Event takes place at 7 pm on Saturday, October 11 at 516 ARTS, 516 Central Avenue, SW, Albuquerque. Image: Floyd D. Tunson. 516arts.org

and 5, 10am-4pm.

includes Siembra, the first Latino theater festival,

with

dance

performances,

musical concerts, and more. Schedule: nhccnm.org P erformance

S anta

Fe,

Lensic

The Gallery ABQ, 8210 Menaul Blvd. NE,

Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San

Alb. 505-292-9333. Poetry at Four: New Mexico

Francisco St., Santa Fe. 988-1234. Berlin

poets sharing their poems and stories from

Philharmonic

the Beatlick Press’s award-winning La Llorona

Nakamatsu: Sun., Oct. 12, 4 pm. Tickets:

Anthology. Costumes encouraged. 3-6 pm.

performancesantafe.org

Thoma

Foundation,

Art

House,

231

Wind

Quintet

with

Jon

SCA C ontemporary A rt , 524 Haines

Delgado St., Santa Fe. 995-0231. Luminous

Ave.

Flux: contemporary digital and geometric

Collective is Closer to the Truth Collective:

art.

multi-media exhibition in the collective

Through

Sat.,

March

21,

2015.

thomafoundation.org

NW,

Alb.

505-228-3749.

The

appropriates the structure of a group show. Evening of performance: Fri., Oct.

Wheelhouse Art, 418 Montezuma Ave., Santa

3, 7-8 pm. scacontemporary.com

Fe. 919-9553. Persistence of Vision: narrative paintings by Dirk Kortz. Through Mon., Oct.

CALL FOR ARTISTS

27. wheelhouseart.com Currents, New Media Festival: deadline Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, 435

for 2015 submissions is Mon., Dec. 1, 2014.

S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 982-8111. Bił’

Submit online: currentsnewmedia.org.

Hahodiishłaa: paintings by David Johns. Through Fri., Oct. 24. zanebennettgallery.com

ALL LISTINGS FOR THE NOVEMBER CALENDAR DUE BY OCT. 16. EMAIL:

PERFORMANCE

OCTOBER

2014

THEMAGAZINESF@GMAIL.COM

THE magazine | 41


PREVIEWS

David Johns: Bił’ Hahodiishłaa Zane Bennett Contemporary Art 435 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe. 982-8111 On view through Friday, October 24, 2014 Artist David Johns draws upon his Diné (Navajo) heritage

Gina Marie Erlichman: Kimono Gallery 901 901 Canyon Road, Santa Fe. 780-8390 October 3 to October 24, 2014 Reception: Friday, October 3, 5-8 pm.

in a series of abstract paintings that express a spiritual

The geometry of the kimono form is as pleasing as the

the unknown that resides in the depth of the soul. By

Golden Mean. The former utilizes a vertical rectangle

directing his attention to that which is hidden, he is able to

flanked on each side by squares that run half the length

create works that speak to essence while allowing viewers

of the rectangle creating a horizontal and vertical balance.

their individual responses. Traditional Navajo symbolism

That said, whether one sees the work in Gina Marie

can be seen in the choice of colors that represent the four

Erlichman’s exhibition as non-objective geometry or

cardinal directions, the four seasons, and the paths of life.

and emotional state that he likens to prayers in color and light. The exhibition’s title, Bił’ Hahodiishłaa, translates as “This is how I made it, this is how it came to be.” Johns’ painterly concerns are directed at revealing or unearthing

Johns says, “Everything I do I hope comes from a place of

accents echoing tonal values that reflect their materials.

Dirk de Bruycker: Logos LewAllen Galleries 1613 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. 988-3250 September 26 to November 2, 2014 Reception: Friday, September 26, 5-7 pm.

The works are enriched by the depth and density of the

The abstract canvases of Dirk de Bruycker are created

Johns has a long and impressive career in the arts, including

encaustic medium, a wax mixed with pigment in a layering

from layered patterns of luminous oil paint washes

teaching, national and international exhibitions and solo

process affording multiple permutations and the ability to

and stained sepia that float above under-painted forms

shows, and an honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters

create textural effects. The imagery is subtle, incised or

rendered in asphaltum, a natural tar-like substance used

from the University of Northern Arizona, he values his

embossed on compiementary shapes. This solo exhibition

in printmaking or as a thin glaze finish. These color-field

work primarily as a spiritual journey that is guided by his

is Erlichman’s first at Gallery 901, which opened in July

works have become the signature style of the artist’s

lifelong studies and work as a practitioner of Diné tradition

of this year. Gallery owners and artists John Schaeffer

thirty-five-year career. The compelling presence of

and culture.

and Sherry Ikeda share Erlichman’s affinity for encaustic.

these paintings seems to emanate from the force of

Erlichman’s kimonos present examples of this process in

brooding and struggle that opposes the sublime beauty

combination with a variety of media.

of the amorphous images. Reflecting on his notions

reads them as kimono designs, the imagery is abstract and textured. Erlichman’s approach to the kimono reflects her interest in leather, clay, glass, painting, metal, and encaustic. The colors are sometimes iridescent, with dignified

harmony. When my mind, body and spirit are in balance, then I can produce an image which reflects my truth…. It is not the form that touches our deepest longing, but rather the story my images evoke in the viewer.” Although

David Johns, Occurrence-4, acrylic on canvas, 78” x 60”, 2014

of beauty, de Bruycker states, “Throughout the years Gina Marie Erlichman, Midnight Butterfly Kimono (triptych), mixed media on cradled board with clay, grass, plaster, bronze patina, and pastel, 34” x 40” x 2”, 2014

I have searched for a tactile but fragile beauty, a kind of dangerous beauty, a fleeting one. This tragic beauty interests me.” De Bruycker’s pursuit of beauty results in paintings that suggest universal emotions while leaving space for personal meaning. The show’s title, Logos, in

the

artist’s

interpretation,

refers to “the Greek word for non-mathematical, non-scientific, non-linear

order,

rather

an

intuitive, subjective, and complex order,

but

nevertheless

an

order.” As process pieces, these works

evolve

spontaneously,

perhaps subconsciously, as the materials own

resolve

order.

De

into

their

Bruycker’s

palette is vibrant, reflecting the influence of this Northern European artist’s seasonal residence in Nicaragua. De Bruycker has received recognition from the National Endowment for the Arts and his works are included in numerous public and private collections throughout the United States and Europe. Dirk de Bruycker, Winter, mixed-media, oil on canvas, 30” x 24”, 2014

42 | THE magazine

OCTOBER

2014


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Paintings on Plywood Clockwise from top: The mysterious lure of the desert oil on plywood 75 x 200 cm, 2014 David’s left eye (David Bell, Mellow Velo) oil and varnish on plywood 7.5 x 6.2 cm (full size), 2014 The truth about cuts and dogs oil on plywood 60 x 160 cm, 2013 Lines No. 4 graphite, oil and plywood strips on plywood 40 x 48 cm, 2014

Swedish artist Gordon Skalleberg • www.gordonskalleberg.com • email: gordon.skalleberg@eyemagine.se


N AT I O N A L S P O T L I G H T

Untitled by Judith

The acknowledged Modernist canon of artists is strongly dominated by Europeans and Americans. We now know that postwar abstract painting was also happening all over the globe, and there were a number of pioneering artists working in Central and South America who made significant contributions. Judith Lauand: Brazilian Modernist, 1950s-2000s is the first New York City solo exhibition of one of the most celebrated Brazilian artists. Lauand began producing geometric abstractions, precise objective and mathematical constructions that identified her with Concretism, in the early 1950s. She was the only woman invited to show with the Grupo Rutura, formed in São Paulo, and became identified with the Brazilian avant-garde by mid-century. In the succeeding decades she experimented with figural and popular representation, OCTOBER

2014

Lauand assemblage, and optical color contrasts. Lauand continues to work today in vibrant color, investigating the multiplicity of structural forms that can be created on canvas. Her work has been exhibited in Europe, shown numerous times at the Bienal de São Paulo, and in 2011 she was given a major retrospective at the Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo. The New York exhibition was curated by Aliza Edelman, Ph.D., whose research and publications have focused on the postwar modern woman, geometric abstraction, and Abstract Expressionism in the Americas. A book by Edelman accompanies the exhibition honoring the artist’s prolific achievements. The exhibition is on view at Driscoll Babcock Galleries—525 West 25th Street, New York City—from October 23 through December 20, 2014. THE magazine | 45


Hand turned from New Mexican cottonwood

Picture Frame Specialist since 1971

Randolph Laub studio 2906 San Isidro Court

3

Santa Fe, NM 87507

www.laubworkshop.com

3

505 473-3585


F E AT U R E

Grab a Hunk of Lightning by Diane Armitage

D

orothea

Lange’s

granddaughter

the project as ill health began to swallow ever-larger

and walked with a limp. In spite of being given the label

Dyanna Taylor has made an absorbing

chunks of her energy. As images and negatives are

of “lame,” first by her mother and then by herself, Lange

documentary, Dorothea Lange: Grab

pulled out of her archive, the film moves back and forth

grew up to be a singularly attractive and charismatic

a Hunk of Lightning, an eloquent depiction of the

in time in effortless fashion, and Lange’s career as one

young woman. Not only that, she was adventurous

photographer’s illustrious life, for the PBS American

of the greatest American documentary photographers

to a fault, levelheaded, courageous, hardworking,

Masters series. Taylor, a Santa Fe resident and award-

is revealed in her deeply rooted commitment and

and determined. The second decade of the twentieth

winning cinematographer and videographer, centered

compassion for the world.

century saw the first heady wave of women’s liberation

her film on Lange’s final years in the 1960s, as Lange

Lange, born in 1895, decided she was going to be

organizes a lifetime of work for a retrospective at

a photographer before she ever got a camera, but what

the Museum of Modern Art curated by the legendary

exactly inspired this idea isn’t clear. Did it have something

Lange had her own portrait studio in San

champion of photography John Szarkowski. This

to do with the nature of appearances, and the fact that

Francisco by 1919, and it came about by a fluke.

exhibition would be the first retrospective ever given

she might have thought that her own appearance was

She and a friend had set out from the East Coast to

to a woman photographer. At that point in her life,

less than acceptable? Lange had contracted polio at the

travel around the world but had their money stolen

however, Lange was racing against the clock to finish

age of seven and thereafter she had a deformed foot

in San Francisco, so it was there that Lange settled.

in America, and Lange embraced its freedoms with an open-minded enthusiasm.

continued on page 48 OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine |47


She got a job doing over-the-counter photographic processing for a company which led her in no time to open her own studio at the age of twenty-four. She photographed wealthy and successful individuals and their children and established her credentials as a photographer with a particularly sensitive eye for portraiture. Lange’s empathy for the plight of humanity would grow over time so that images of the wealthy would eventually be supplanted by some of the most iconic and heart-grabbing portraits of individuals trapped in various extremes of deprivation. Her portrait of Florence Owens Thompson—the woman in Lange’s most recognized photograph, Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, from 1936— continues to haunt the consciousness of America because the life of migrant workers is still fraught with problems. The magnetic quality of this image emanates from a deep well of privation and inequity and symbolizes a timeless universal condition—this starving and beset mother could be from anywhere in the world yesterday, today, or tomorrow.

Lange made heartgrabbing portraits of individuals trapped in various extremes of deprivation

In addition to incorporating still images from Lange’s extensive body of work, Dyanna Taylor’s movie also uses archival film material from the first half of the twentieth century and of Lange herself—in her Berkeley studio or at the family beach cottage on the Pacific that she shared with her second husband, Paul Taylor, and their respective children, stepchildren, and grandchildren. The archival material that features Lange reveals her as a small, elegant, and pixieish woman with a child’s wispy voice who nevertheless had often recorded head-on various rough-and-tumble situations—such as San Francisco longshoremen involved in a series of violent waterfront strikes as they faced an armed police force. As Lange increasingly took her attention away from her affluent clients, she faced the conditions of the Great Depression and its horrific consequences. That stark reality was compounded by the Dust Bowl migrations into California of people looking for a better life—The Grapes of Wrath in the flesh—and Lange’s natural sensitivity to the human condition found its pathway into a visual dialectical embodiment. Willard Van Dyke chose some of her


F E AT U R E

images for a gallery show, and they were subsequently

stoicism with which the Japanese-Americans met their fate.

world. Although Paul Taylor is doing research that doesn’t

seen by Paul Taylor, a labor economist, who wanted to

The mystery is that the existence of the internment camps

include a need for Lange’s photography, she brings her

use one of them for a project he was working on. Lange

would be buried away from the American public for a long

camera along and creates a stunning and luminous series

and Taylor began to go into the field together, she taking

period of time. This is one body of work by Lange that

of images from places like India, Southeast Asia, Pakistan,

photographs and he writing about the conditions of the

would not make its way into the mainstream of post–World

Japan, and Korea. On this trip Lange’s drive to explore the

farm workers in the Imperial Valley. Though married to

War American history for many years. And after the fact,

many faces of the human condition took precedence over

other people at the time—Lange’s first husband was

one can only ask about the internment camps, as Lange did

her own ill health. On this trek through foreign lands and

the painter Maynard Dixon—they fell in love, left their

herself, “How did this happen?”

multiple lifestyles, she felt finally able to say to herself, “I’m

spouses, and got married in 1935, forming one of the

Throughout Grab a Hunk of Lightning, Lange works

beginning to be an artist.” Lange would not live to go to

most formidable partnerships in the world of American

with her young assistant, Richard Conrad, in preparing the

the opening of her retrospective in New York, in January

arts and social research.

work for her retrospective, and we see them grouping and

1966; she passed away three months before that. But the

Lange and Taylor produced a classic work of agricultural

regrouping images in pairs or in related series, and we feel

viewers of this film, along with the granddaughter who

history together, a book called An American Exodus: A Record

privileged to be witnessing this intimate process. At one

made it, are there, if not exactly in her place, then as her

of American Erosion, from 1939, and it’s filled with searing,

point, Lange says to Conrad, “Sometimes images come

posthumous guides in a final chapter where the work of

revelatory images of agrarian dystopia. However, during

together and make a loud noise,” and then she knows she

Dorothea Lange still lives in all its ravishing determination.

World War II, Lange would work on her own again and

has arrived at some visual relationship that is just right. Of

—Diane Armitage

become immersed in the life of Japanese-Americans in

all the things Lange had to say about her life and career,

California who were rounded up and forced to move to

I found that statement one of the most memorable.

internment camps, such as Manzanar in the Owens Valley

Somehow, at the last stage of her life, riddled with

of California. Lange’s deeply felt response resulted in one

health problems as she was, Lange was able to go on

of the first records of these ruined lives and the profound

one final journey with her husband—a trip around the

OCTOBER

2014

First Page: Rondal Partridge, Dorothea Lange with Graflex, gelatin silver print, 1937. Photo: ©1937. 2014 Rondal Partridge Archives This Page: Rondal Partridge, Dorothea Lange in her Bay Area home studio, gelatin silver print, 1964. Photo: ©1964. 2014 Rondal Partridge Archives

THE magazine |49


JIM WAGNER AT THE BAR AT THE TAOS INN, CIRCA 1995


FLASHBACK 1995

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 51


WHEEL OF FORTUNE

BY LIVINGLARGEPHOTO


OUT THERE

installation An interactive art ajor Arcana based on the 22 M d by Anne of the Tarot create therland. Staveley and Jill Su e� “Wheel of Fortun 2014 Burning Man Honorarium Art Installation

What door would you choose or which door will choose you? m livinlargephoto.co rot.com wheeloffortune-ta

pho

OCTOBER

2014

by tograph

Anne Stavel

ey

THE magazine | 53


Gallery 901 October 3–28, 2014 Artist Reception October 3 5–8PM

Neptune’s Kimono Mixed media on cradled panel with plaster, kiln glass, bronze patina and pastel 46.5 x 61.5 x 2 inches (Triptych)

K I MONO

G I N A M ASR IE ERLICHMAN CULPTURAL MIXED MEDIA

GALLERY

901 C a n yo n R oa d · S a n ta F e N M 87501 · 505 780 8390


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Gigi Mills: This Life

GF Contemporary 707 Canyon Road, Santa Fe

GIGI MILLS WAS RAISED IN A FAMILY OF CIRCUS-MEN, HAS NO FORMAL ART training, and developed a painting style that’s unavoidably

these formal divisions illuminate Mills’s slightly macabre,

grey rectangles with the same grand but bleak instrument.

derivative of Milton Avery, who painted in the early twentieth

sometimes superimposed world with a certain limelight.

We see a sitting chair in the foreground with a quickly

century. At times, Mills and Avery are differentiated only by

The Pianist’s Birthday is particularly dark and looks more

rendered paisley pattern and the back of a cloaked woman.

each other’s timeliness. Avery was considered the American

like a funeral than a party, despite the birthday cake, but even

All three objects take equal precedence and their dynamic

Matisse (with whom he was close friends) and aided in the

that looks anything but celebratory. It’s a black blob that

is aloof while the whole image verges on abstraction. The

transition from representation to color-field abstraction. Mills

doesn’t even pass for chocolate and is decorated by dabbed

paint is thin and the composition is lyrical but removed, even

learned by studying the masters and resumes this artistic

white flowers. The pianist is downcast and barely notices

anachronistic. Not even Avery, who was born in 1885, uses

legacy today with an echoing repertoire typically composed

this single notion of nativity before him. His female comrade,

such specific cultural codes, and in fact his figures look more

of, as Mark Rothko said of Avery, “a domestic, unheroic cast.”

though next to him, does nothing to engage socially. Her back

contemporary than Mills’.

There are superficial similarities: both artists sign their

faces us and her black sleeveless dress announces her skin

Collaged additions are obvious and charmingly awkward

name with sgraffito marks rather than additional paint and

with vampiric paleness, white and ghostly. The piano declares

in the upturned fingers and dress hem of the black female

both reference their immediate surroundings through flat,

an uninterrupted silence without its player. The most jovial

saint in Saint and Dog/Field of Birds. The heroine looks more

reduced, geometric shapes painted in thin layers with little

gesture cannot ignite this party, which lacks actions and has a

childlike than saintly and is homely dressed, holding two doves

detail, and still, nearly anonymous figures. Mills distinguishes

complacent and fashionable decadence characteristic of the

against a scribbled yellow backdrop that’s punctuated by the

herself through spare and well-incorporated collaged

Victorian fin de siècle.

whole flock of shiny white birds. It’s a particularly action-

elements, and although Avery occasionally used muted

The grand piano features in a few other paintings,

colors, Mills uses them consistently. Her recent show, This

where a wistful woman faces it with mysterious gravity.

Life, is nearly monochromatic with a few color accents, and

Piano, Chair and Woman shows a bare room blocked out in

packed scene by Mills: the birds flutter around, the saint eyes the canine, and the canine braces for interaction. Avery’s concern with color clearly pioneered modern abstraction and his domestic, unheroic cast were almost pawns in the process. Sketchers by the Stream (1951) and Maternity (1950) are great examples of this transition from figuration to color-blocked abstraction. Mills’ painting Sleeping Near the Shallows is the piece most closely teetering on this, at times, very thin line. With a few less sgraffito marks, there would cease to be a man or dog. Her concern with reducing objects to their basic form is clear and she says that painting should also have a “psychological and aesthetic weight to hold the viewer, to entice them to keep coming back.” Her composition and palette bear this burden that is relieved by the whimsical Matisse patterning and her playful layers of collage. This Life is both dour and innocent and illustrates an idealistic, oddly Victorian Arcadia that is curiously posited as contemporary—it is not this life at all. Her paintings express a childlike facture that’s decoratively morbid and almost her own.

—Hannah Hoel

Gigi Mills, Sleeping Near the Shallows, oil on linen, 16” x 20”, 2014

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine |55


MONROE GALLERY of photography

Opening Reception for Acclaimed Photojournalist Joe McNally Friday, October 3 • 5-7pm

A young girl takes to an abandoned building for the shade in January of 1999, Mumbai, India

Exhibition continues through November 23 open daily 112 don gaspar santa fe nm 87501 992.0800 f: 992.0810

giacobbefritz.com

e: info@monroegallery.com

www.monroegallery.com

505-986-1156

702 Canyon Road

featuring artists

SIRI HOLLANDER NOCONA BURGESS

HISTORIC CANYON

ROAD PAINT & SCULPT OUT Saturday, October 18th 10am-2pm

gfcontemporary.com 505-983-3707 707 Canyon Road

featuring artists

ERIC REINEMANN JUSTIN SKILLSTAD RACHEL DARNELL


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Tom Chambers: Reverie

photo - eye G allery 541 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe

“The whole is other than the sum of the parts.” –Kurt Koffka

IN HIS RECENT EXHIBITION AT PHOTO-EYE GALLERY, REVERIE, TOM CHAMBERS’ photomontage

constructions

depict

scenes

of

the effect is not undesirable, the images are robbed

The image feels so contrived that its impact is

between

of the impact of the process of their creation. The

magnified; the curiousness of the composition makes

young women and wild animals—and fleeting

fact that this is photography is lost in translation,

it powerfully unconvincing. The envisioned world

moments of intrigue. Mostly comprised of works

and becomes moot.

of girls and animals frolicking and communing as in

surreal,

unsettling

interactions—often

from his Animal Visions and Illumination series, the

However, the work shines in the moments

fairytales becomes flimsy and corrodes. The gestalt

images are insights into the artist’s personal visions,

and gestures that inadvertently betray the artist’s

cracks at its seams, and becomes a melancholic veil.

inspired by his musings, dreams, and travels. The

construction. Unlikely proportions and slightly

The artist’s hopeful reverie falls prey to the harsh

scenes, despite their naturalism, are fantasies

mismatched lighting are subtly disturbing without

truth: images culled from the real world can never

containing the wonder and whimsy of youth, and

being obvious. For example, in Daybreakers (2013), a

fulfill constructed dreams. The viewing process of

the unsettling juxtapositions of innocent youth and

girl walks in a foggy field with three fawns. The field

these iterations of contemplation and fantasy is both

wild beast.

is heavily misted and pictorially flat. The foreground

potent and disarming.

Chambers achieves these fantastic tableaux

bearing the subjects is so short that it defies

—Lauren Tresp

through digital photomontage. He begins with a very

credibility, yet the fawns are clear and volumetric.

loose concept sketch. These small schemata are

The contrast between the painterly backdrop and

dramatically sparse, with very few details beyond

the protruding creatures is stark and disconcerting.

Tom Chambers, Daybreakers, archival pigment ink print, 20” x 20”, 2013

the subjects involved and a sense of composition. From this vague conception the artist photographs each of the necessary elements separately, including backgrounds, figures, animals, objects. The elements are then pieced together in Photoshop to construct the final image. The process from start to finish takes a month or more for each artwork. Elaborate and time-consuming to be sure, the technique of photomontage is nothing new. It predates the digital age of Photoshop by a century, and first required cutting and piecing together film negatives and composite printing. Photomontage, the process of combining two or more photographs into the illusion of a single image, was pioneered by mid-Victorian photographers Oscar Rejlander (The Two Ways of Life, 1857) and Henry Peach Robinson (Fading Away, 1858). These early experiments often fell into the genre of the tableaux vivants in which actors were costumed, staged, and theatrically lit. The tableau is distinct in art photography in its constructedness and unsettlingly unsuccessful imitation of painting. Chambers’ photo-constructions fall into this lineage of the tableau. Picturesque, Old World settings, atmospheric, sepia-toned palettes, and girls in long, draped dresses create scenes of irrepressible

Romance

verging

on

affectation.

Though these staged moments first seem to be “fleeting” (a girl toppling on a ladder, or perched precariously on a bridge), their staginess leaves them devoid of unpredictability, the usual province of the camera. Highly refined surface textures and an unnaturally saturated palette create an illusion closer to painting or CGI than photography. While

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 57


Ocean|Desert

Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art 702½ Canyon Road, Santa Fe

THE ILLUSION OF SEPARATENESS IS THE TITLE AUTHOR JANET DEES CHOSE for her essay in the monograph Ocean|Desert, a premiere

Intrigued by the notion that White Sands National

deeper narrative. In this sense, I understand Aller’s

of photographer Renate Aller’s latest body of work

Monument in New Mexico and Colorado’s Great Sand

preferences for the Romantic painters, especially

published by the ever-impeccable Radius Books. It’s a

Dunes National Park are physically aligned, Aller came to

Caspar David Friedrich, whose Nature with a capital N

lovely and informative essay, which, mercifully, doesn’t

this part of the country to photograph the “Desert” part

is sublime, and humans the ephemeral aberrance, or at

presume to tell the reader what to think, while at the

of the exhibition. The large-scale photograph, #079, of

best mere witnesses to a greatness they cannot begin

same time affording intellectual access to Aller’s pairing

the Great Sand Dunes, minus its “Ocean” counterpart,

to apprehend. When we consider what the men from

of ocean with desert. The two are not readily similar, on

carried a monumental presence that brought to

the Manhattan Project wrought in these ethereal dunes,

a human scale at least, unless we shift to the geological

mind Georgia O’Keeffe’s Black Place paintings with

we sense the impossibility of our own humanity. The

perspective of time and consider the fact that much of

their dramatic extremes of bright and dark. Aller has

individuals in the pictures gain a simple virtuousness in

our earth has been covered by the sea, and plenty of

O’Keeffe’s ability to convey the visual allure of abstracted

contrast to a history they seem unaware of. They are

fossils of some of the earliest seashells are found in the

land and sky, yet the photographer does not mimic the

immigrants in the Land of Plenty at a Price.

desert. As Aller states, “You can measure the existence

painter; nor does Aller’s work hint at being anything like

Meanwhile, the ocean waits to reclaim the land. In

of the ocean in the desert.”

an Homage to Georgia, which we see all too often here

Aller’s diptychs, the sandscapes could be the beaches

Chiaroscuro

in Santa Fe. Rather, it is the case that the human mind

behind the sea, as if the photographer took her ocean

Contemporary Art, was equally as lovely as the book, and

seeks to make similarities and comparisons, comparisons

pictures, then turned around and shot the scene behind

saved from being simply repetitious by gallery director

that the land provides and good artists re-present.

her. But there is a gravitas here that belies such an

Ocean|Desert,

the

exhibition

at

John Addison’s installation choices. Large-scale prints

The White Sands pictures are conspicuous because

instinctive first impression, a tension that lends a slight

of the sandscapes have an impact that is quite different

of the people who populate them. Photographing on

sense of foreboding to these compositions. Despite the

from the diptychs that comprise Aller’s vision. “The idea

an Easter Sunday, Aller was surprised to discover that

frank beauty of her single vistas—#135, White Sands is

was to marry the ocean and the desert because they

families come there to celebrate holidays. The potency

so classic, so pristine, that I can’t imagine anyone not

carry each other’s memory,” says the artist, who has

of white as a metaphor for the purity and renewal of

wanting to own it—the twin views of water and sand,

been photographing the Atlantic Ocean from the top of

Easter increases when the viewer realizes that White

the latter oddly populated, carry the weight of the show.

her house on Long Island for fifteen years. Her house is

Sands is the home of the first A-Bomb blasts. Ever silent,

This is a planet that will forever be strange to us, no

on stilts, and that gives her a vantage point that seems

the constantly changing hills of gypsum grains do not

matter how closely we observe it. We are of this earth,

to make the ocean more manageable. As Aller describes

reveal their secrets; they may be radioactive still, but

but have become so alienated from it. The loneliness of

it, “up close, the ocean almost towers over” its human

they are undeniably gorgeous.

our human predicament inhabits these photographs, like

visitors. In the artist’s photographs, the Atlantic looks

The people here seem as interior, as quiet, as the

elegant and remote, like someone’s wealthy, proper

place itself. Theirs is not a posed or pretentious stillness,

grandmother from another era. No one surfs, swims,

but a natural, if temporary, co-habitation between

or fishes in Aller’s ocean; it is comforting and close, left

children, their parents, and the sands. Innocence abides,

alone to its elegiac dreaming.

not only on the surface of the picture, but within its

children in the sand dunes.

—Kathryn M Davis

Renate Aller, Ocean|Desert #61 White Sands March 2013, #62 Atlantic Ocean May 2013, archival pigment print, 19” x 43”, 2014


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Cannupa Hanska Luger

Blue Rain Gallery 130 Lincoln Avenue, Suite C, Santa Fe

CANNUPA HANSKA LUGER FIRST IMPRESSED US WITH HIS BEGUILING SHOW OF feathered boom boxes, which he later publicaly smashed on

not stuffed animals. Their inspired visages, stoic little bodies,

Cowardly Lion. Once Upon a Time There Were Humans:

the floor. This daring usurpation followed by the enthralling

and anthropomorphic surprises encourage imagination

Owl’s mask is downright Neolithic in black porcelain

civic destruction left the Santa Fe art world and the Native

nonetheless. Once Upon a Time There Were Humans:

that’s primitively shaped and attached to the brown felt

community at large in keen anticipation of his next move.

Antelope looks like a funny little Frenchman with a black

head with a piece of string.

This town is still full of dogged Native stereotypes and we

upturned mustache and beady eyes. His figure is bulbous

Luger’s new work is an expertly executed consideration

are thirsty for a fresh Native artist to destroy them.

and meets the ground with no feet. Grey rectangles slump

of Native identities that does not tease out specific traditions

Emerging from a family of artists, Luger never felt that

as arms and his ceramic face looks more like a tooth than

in any educative way, but then again, Luger is fond of using

art was beyond reach. In 2011, he graduated with honors

a man. Almost abashedly revealing are Antelope’s gracefully

stereotypes. By representing the very thing that the artist

from the Institute of American Indian Arts, where the

long horns wrapped in bright stripes of red, white, and grey

aims to shatter, and by doing so with poignancy and whim,

idea of a Native singularity appeared screamingly defunct.

felt. He is mythic and allegorical.

he communicates to a broader cultural audience in the same

The lack of descriptors for “Native American” is a huge

Once Upon a Time There Were Humans: Lion also

way that Takashi Murakami iconizes his own Japanese cast

driver for Luger’s socially conscious work. Native identities,

has a mustache, but his is stubborn and downturned

of characters. In Luger’s newest work, animals and humans

informed by a multitude of landscapes and histories, are as

beneath a broad triangular nose. Layered squares

tango in a singularly Native enigmatic web and stereotypes

varied as America itself. Luger himself was born in North

and triangles of felt radiate from his face to create a

that aren’t stale are no longer stereotypes.

Dakota, in 1979, on the Standing Rock Reservation and

bountiful mane that flowers from his stout, cylindrical

—Hannah Hoel

sites his “genetics” as Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota,

body. A red tail loops around from his backside. He is

Austrian, and Norwegian, possibly with an amalgam of

gruff, but encourages sympathy—reminiscent of the

Cannupa Hanska Luger, Once Upon a Time There Were Humans: Narwhal, ceramic, felt, and steel, 11” x 6 1/2” x 8”, 2014

additional European blood. Americans are predominantly mutts, and yet, embarrassingly, there is still a challenge in accepting indigenous artistic tradition or innovation into the mainstream consciousness without oversimplifying it to a fault—mostly from lack of education and resources—and Luger is proudly opening the floodgates. He does it with humor, artistic maturity, and a candid affect that’s not just unintimidating but contagious. Over Indian Market, Blue Rain Gallery had a notably rigorous production of daily shows, amid which Luger debuted two new bodies of work—both of doll-size ceramic and felt humanoids. The first series, Regalia, categorizes ceremonial animal masks worn on human bodies. Each figure wears a different animal, for which he or she is named, and something about these frank classifications feels purposefully simple. Regalia: Wolf is a black female, naked, with claws. Her arms are reaching up to the gods or ether. A wolf’s head in white porcelain, circled by a burly brown coif, covers her head. She is part wolf, part woman, absolutely mythical and talismanic as she waves into the air. Regalia: Lynx is a proud warrior whose puffed chest pushes upward, and although he has a man’s body, his extremities are also animalistic: furry feet, claw fingernails, and a feline face framed by orange feathers. He has the defiance of a rapper and the face of a sage—a caricature, and yet dead serious—who offers himself as a target verging on martyrdom. Luger says of the Regalia series that the “regalia itself has a life and purpose more than simply the object being worn; it is an extension of a way of being.” The characters thus fully assume their embodiments. Ironically, Luger intends the second series, Once Upon a Time There Were Humans, to be in the far future when we humans are extinct and animals try to honor us. The fairytale title immediately prompts folklore and a fabled heritage. The dolls are solid and heavy and their sewn felt exterior makes them unbearably tactile, but disappointingly

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 59


Women in Cultural Context: A multi-media group exhibition

Tansey Contemporary 652 Canyon Road, Santa Fe

WOMEN IN CULTURAL CONTEXT PRESENTS THE WORK OF TEN MALE AND FEMALE artists who all choose to explore women’s responses to

dress that is really all of those things. The bodice is

tresses, butterflies, insects, flowers, and a fluffy rabbit.

society’s expectations of them across cultures. The work

glass and the flapper-style skirt concealing the lighting

He appears above one of the vase’s legs and his color

spans various media as well, from stoneware to glass

mechanism is constructed of strands of chandelier

scheme continues down that leg. The other side of the

to raw silk. Susan Taylor Glasgow can transform glass

glass elements and Pollyanna prisms. This is unabashed

vase features birds painted in exquisite colors and even

into just about anything. Beauty First is Cinderella’s glass

femininity meets cold, hard constraint. It’s very hard to

in relief. Zaytceva’s Madame Butterfly takes the feminine

slipper on the prince’s royal glass presentation pillow,

look at the slipper, the flapper dress, and Loves Me, Loves

notion of tea service to a whole new level. Here is Chio

straight from the fairy tale. Both slipper and pillow

Me Not, a glass brassiere formed from at least twenty-

Chio San, reclining with knife in hand, and her body is

feature creamy peach tones contrasting with black.

eight pieces of glass, without wondering what it would

created from four separate tea cups. Again Zaytceva’s

Glasgow uses iridescent ribbon to bind components

feel like to try to wear them.

skill as a natural history illustrator prevails. Every detail

of the glass pillow together and to outline the edges

The fairytale theme continues with the work of

is present. The hair sticks and knife are not painted on;

of the shoe’s foot bed. She has even fused lace to the

Irina Zaytceva. Hers are delicate porcelain sculptures

they are separate pieces of porcelain. And there is a

underside of the pillow to make the glass look lacey. And

painted with the detail of a natural history illustrator

tiny fan, painted in bright, happy colors on the ground

how does the shoe stay atop the pillow without sliding

à la Maria Sibylla Merian. Primavera Vase is much too

near Butterfly’s right hand. Three detailed cranes are

off? Tiny indentations in the surface of the glass pillow,

gorgeous to ever hold flowers. The vase stands on five

painted into the folds of her kimono. This play on tea

just enough to prevent a shattered disaster. Glasgow’s

short legs, each ending in a delicate curl. The nature

sets echoes Glasgow’s play on clothing.

Golden Queen is hard to believe. It’s a hanging chandelier

scene includes a maiden with painstakingly painted

Stephanie Trenchard sculpts and paints objects within her glass creations and the elements can be combined in various ways to tell multiple stories. Material Culture in the Studio comprises four nested sand-cast glass blocks, each with a painted inclusion. These domestic images are of an antique yellow settee; a royal blue flower; a red, yellow, and blue floral-motif teapot; and a cozy green house. They float in the rigidity of the glass blocks, linked by a watery, glass-distorted rendition of the painting that Trenchard executes on the back of each block. As with Glasgow’s glass pieces, gentle feminine images are constrained within the structure. Twentieth Century Muses combines nine glass blocks stacked in three rows of three, but there are many possibilities for different configurations. Five of the blocks have painted images that represent Georgette Magritte, Alice B. Toklas, Camille Claudel, Anna Akhmatova, and Marie-Thérèse Walter. The other four blocks depict orange, blue, red, and white flowers, which Trenchard describes on the gallery’s website as representing “the bloom of life.” The show was installed by gallery owner Jen Tansey and gallery sales associate Paige Diem. And they really got it right. There is a peach theme that flows through the gallery from front to back. It begins in Krista Harris’s Beauty Sleep painting; continues through Sheryl Zacharia’s two large sculptures, Half Woman Half Man and Do I Look Fat in This (complete with hidden feminist messages on the back); moves through Zaytceva’s Madame Butterfly and Glasgow’s Cinderella slipper; and comes full circle on the rear wall in another Harris painting called Advice for a Rainy Day (inspired by rainy day activity suggestions from women in Harris’s life). This theme guides the eye and creates a beautiful sense of unity in the art.

—Susan Wider Susan Taylor Glasgow, Beauty First, slipper on glass pillow, 7” x 16” x 16”, 2014


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Jeane George Weigel: Painting Truchas

Hand Artes Gallery 137 County Road 75, Truchas

“The land of New Mexico makes it possible to be an abstractionist.” – Beatrice Mandelman

FOR ARTIST JEANE GEORGE WEIGEL, RELOCATION TO NEW MEXICO turned her from a realist painter to an abstractionist, and

mountain town on the High Road between Santa Fe and

“My experience of Truchas hasn’t been easy. I’ve been

she has never looked back. The New Mexico landscape

Taos. Established by a Spanish land grant in 1754, the

both compelled and repelled by it. It is my hope that my

is contagiously raw. It is itself stripped down to pure

eight-thousand-foot-high village has remained remote

art reflects that kind of push-pull….” A perusal of her

essence; it facilitates the cracking open of pretentions

over the centuries. Situated on a spectacular ridge,

writings offers many intimate insights into this woman’s

and the emergence of inner realities. For those ready to

the town’s location, geography, and history make it a

psyche, and opens doors into her powerful, abstracted

receive it, the Northern New Mexico landscape offers

unique destination for an artist seeking solitude and crisp

landscape paintings.

bitter truth, hard living, and the stark beauty of sunlight

mountain air.

Weigel also writes about the cultural legacy of the

The artist writes about the hardness and sweetness

area, and cites some of her influences. She is inspired

The experience of life in Truchas, New Mexico, is a

of life in Truchas in her blog, high-road-artist.com. In

by the Taos Moderns, and in particular the influence of

pivotal experience and inspiration for Weigel. Her work

it she documents her Southwestern journey of self-

painter Beatrice Mandelman—who relocated from New

is deeply rooted in specificity of place and it merges

discovery (now going on ten years), contemplates the

York City to Taos in 1944—is obvious. However, while

her love of the light, colors, shapes, and rich history

processes of the working artist, profiles other artists and

the Taos Moderns avoided figural representation in favor

of her home. Truchas is a small, somewhat decrepit

neighbors, and celebrates local history. Weigel writes,

of abstraction, Weigel’s work does not shy away from

falling across sublime open space.

representing the striking forms that fill the surrounding vistas. Her abstractions are landscapes that capture the essence of effervescent light meeting jagged mountain and gritty earth. A recurring motif is the wood and wire fences that crisscross the land, built and rebuilt, pieced and parsed over generations of land ownership and land use. The sharp geometries of human activity intertwine with the sweeping lines of mountains and valleys and provide the compositional structure for Weigel’s loose brushwork. Blocky planes of color make up hillsides, adobe structures, and patches of vegetation. Much is left up to the paint itself; neutral, textured expanses lie bare and raw. Although the subject matter is rather romantic, the paintings are not picturesque. Idealization is avoided through choice of palette. Dusky blues dominate some panels; sunrise purples dominate others. Some panels capture the sun’s ability to wash out color in the heat of high noon. But all are pierced with sketchy dark delineations that serve as constant reminders of the realness of life high in the mountains. Weigel’s work does not seek to represent the land so much as it emanates a deeply personal portrait of her experience. “This land demands something of me,” she says, “I’m not allowed to be passive on it…. I know, now, that I came here to heal, to be healed, to be embraced and sheltered and nurtured by this tough place. Because this place knows something of grief, and it also knows about compassion.” Anyone who has visited Truchas will resonate with the essence of the High Road in these intuitive paintings. For those who haven’t, the paintings are standing invitations, beckoning to seek your own truth amid the mountaintops.

—Lauren Tresp

Jeane George Weigel, End of Day, Truchas, acrylic on canvas, 24” x 24”, 2014.

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 61


Daniel Sprick’s Fictions: Recent Works

Denver Art Museum 100 West 14th Avenue Parkway, Denver

THE SELF IS LARGELY A CONSTRUCT, YET FUNDAMENTALLY REMAINS one of the most powerful fictions to which humans are prey.

Living and working in Denver, Sprick embodies for

We constantly invent ourselves, and others invent what they see

me something of the Rocky Mountains, though he does

of us. Daniel Sprick’s oil portraits ratify the immanence of the

not specifically portray the majestic nature we associate

individual while positing identity as a mysterious mix of essence,

with rugged western wilderness. For some years Sprick

chance, and choice. The use of Fictions as the title of the show

painted primarily still lifes. The Denver Art Museum

suggests the artist is as exhilarated by the freedom to invent as

owns one, a large memento mori painting—Release Your

he is bound by the duty to reproduce what he sees.

Plans—which is on display in a room near this exhibition.

Sprick’s technical mastery is the result of his being

Included is an adjoining reconstruction of some of the

deeply rooted in an academic tradition of painting that goes

painting’s mysterious elements and a video of the artist

back to the Renaissance. His respect is for the craft of artists

talking about his work. Release Your Plans embodies an

who, as he says, “painted with no limit on the amount of labor

enchanted space with the quality of a Vermeer interior,

[the work would] take to accomplish.” Especially intriguing

but with a subtle but palpable animation—as if some

is seeing this commitment alongside a confidence and

kind of force were whirling through the space. (Imagine

freedom that are utterly of the moment. Sprick’s precisely

the hair and draperies of Botticelli’s figures—Venus or

rendered models practically shimmer within a thoroughly

Spring’s dancing Graces—and how they seem to flow

contemporary field of vision that gracefully points to its own

in an imaginary wind, a zeitgeist.) Some of the figures

effacement without hitting us upside the head with irony.

of Fictions, for example Moses, Homeless, reside in a

Expressionistic brushwork in the background foregrounds the

similarly animated environment of their own. Ketsia

lucidity of representation, tempering photographic perfection

seems to be morphing, not like Bernini’s Daphne, into

with seamless swerves into expressionistic scufflings at the

a tree to escape Apollo’s lust, but rather dancing in the

edges of the figures, their hair trailing off into wisps, clouds,

sheer joy of being, between the worlds of photorealism

jangles of paint flung outwards.

and abstract painting. All the images in this show are striking. There are skulls, a reclining nude, a reclining skeleton, a window with mirror, a partial view of a figure in a chair, a painting called Jared showing a young man in dreadlocks, which has been acquired by the museum. The paintings portray people of both sexes, and a wide range of ethnicities, ages, body types, and apparent social circumstances. Beijing Man and Chief Ironshell were two of the figures I found most captivating, perhaps as they were more “exotic” in the sense of being farther from my own sketchy identity tags (white, female). On the other hand, a painting called Tom M., which shows a remarkable physiognomy, was even more intriguing to me precisely because I am slightly acquainted with the individual portrayed. In resonance with what he refers to in an interview as “complete conviction… a real palpable belief in the importance of the work” that motivated artists such as Holbein, Vermeer or nineteenth century landscape painters, Sprick’s gravitas in the handling of oil paint is evident both in precision and looseness, truly manifesting a kind of painterly middle way. We are fortunate to have access to such a fine intersection of disciplined craft and that masterful whim sometimes called grace.

—Marina La Palma

Daniel Sprick, Moses, Homeless, oil on board, 21” x 20”, 2012. Photo: Wes Magyar & WM Artist Service Daniel Sprick, Ketsia, oil on board, 20” x 24”, 2012. Photo: Wes Magyar & WM Artist Service


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Jun Kaneko

Gerald Peters Gallery 1011 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe

“I CALL IT THE SPIRITUAL SCALE. I AM TRYING TO…PULL THE VIEWER INTO IT. Then the physical scale is not the issue. You become one with it.” It is understandable if viewers are confused to find that this comment by artist Jun Kaneko and the accompanying ceramics and glass works, on view last month at Gerald Peters Gallery, hail from Omaha, Nebraska. Born in Nagoya, Japan in 1942, Kaneko was sent at age seventeen to Los Angeles by his painting teacher to study with ceramicist Jerry Rothman. He never turned back. Schooled at the Chouinard Art Institute, at UC Berkeley under Peter Voulkos, and at Claremont Graduate School under Paul Soldner, Kaneko pursues his long and prolific career from a vast studio space in Omaha, NE, where he also serves as co-founder of the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art.

If the core of Kaneko’s ceramic work—the large and very large tuberous, closed forms which he calls dangos (“dumpling” in Japanese) seem out of place in Nebraska, they seem oddly at home in the Southwest, where the dangos evoke both the columnar and the cushion-shaped barrel cactus of the high desert, and where by now they merit a place within a region rich in a heritage and living history of Pueblo pottery. Kaneko is most widely known for some two dozen public art commissions where he employs a literally monumental scale with which, as an August 2013 CBS Sunday Morning feature put it, “the Japanese-born artist has been rewriting the rules on the size and shape of ceramic art.”

Glimpses of his public art could be seen in the recent exhibition at Gerald Peters Gallery here in Santa Fe, with the futuristic pair of monumental bronze, enamel and stainless steel heads facing each other in mutual selfabsorption—ambassadors of the much larger outdoor versions of his public projects weighing more than half a ton. These metal versions of his “head” pieces here convey an ominous sci-fi feel akin to the giant, art deco idols of Ridley Scott’s Prometheus, an effect that is absent in Kaneko’s colossal heads whose beautiful monochrome or patterned glazed surfaces and placid features—highly individual or thoroughly abstracted—neither infer a dystopian future nor recall some ancient Olmec past. In the gallery’s garden are several examples of one of the more recent additions to Kaneko’s monumental repertory, his larger-than-life tanuki, based upon the badger-like East Asian raccoon dog that has become a beloved character in Japanese folklore. Each ceramic tanuki, requiring a year to make, stands seven feet high and has a color scheme of a piñata. Winnie the Pooh it’s not, but the tanuki is a magnet for children who respond to its wide-eyed innocence and delight in petting its rich polka-dot and polychrome shape. The exhibition includes his tall, pensive, kilnformed glass plinths that lean against the wall like 1960’s Mimimal artist John McCracken’s planks of fiberglass and pigmented polyester resin. But here there is an ethereal gravitas in the glass that is decidedly lacking in McCracken’s surfboard steles. There are also several examples of the glazed raku ceramic wall slabs from the last few years. These easel-size wall panels with parallel vertical strips of intense contrasting hues explore a modernist tradition of juxtaposing geometric shapes of pure saturated colors that runs from Piet Mondrian to Ellsworth Kelly. What Kaneko adds to such inquiry is the sheer visual beauty of the objects that pervades the earlier experiments with the kiln-formed glass. As visually and mentally engaging as the more recent work comes across in the show, the viewer never fails to be drawn to the disarming simplicity and luminous colors of the drago forms. These hand built, glazed forms employ the ancient raku technique—modernized by ceramicist Paul Soldner and Kaneko—to yield unique, unexpected effects, such as the spider-web, crackled glazed surfaces and black unglazed clay surfaces. Viewers leave the show with a deeper appreciation, not only for Kaneko’s works, but for all ceramic forms. “Universal” is often a hallmark of enduring art, and here is no exception. But in the case of Kaneko’s closed-form ceramics and glass works on view here in Santa Fe, while they are evidently at home anywhere, clearly they belong here.

—Richard Tobin

Jun Kaneko, Untitled, glazed raku ceramic, 24 ½” x 15 ½” x 10”, 2010

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 63


Impacts!: Japanese Contemporary Art

Zane Bennett Contemporary Art 435 South Guadalupe Street

YOU GO SOMEWHERE ELSE TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU COME FROM. ZANE Bennett Contemporary Art’s exhibition of objects made by

“Tokyo is part of the West” was a phrase I heard over

imaginary landscape paintings. The paint application is as

contemporary Japanese artists says more about Santa Fe than it

and over from Japanese natives last year when I had the

deliberate and varied as his palette is spooky and sophisticated.

does Japan. Presented in conjunction with Mizuma Art Gallery

opportunity to visit Japan. This show does nothing to challenge

In Unknown Garden Boschian figures of mini-giant (uh huh) bears

of Tokyo, and organized by Zane Bennett’s sales director, Shinji

this notion. There is a plethora of interesting, edgy, powerful

and kitties populate a mountainous, mushrooming candyland.

Ochiai, the show seems overly calculated for ZBCA’s exclusive

art currently being made in Japan that doesn’t find its way here.

Ishii Toru’s traditional Yuzen dyeing on silk is astounding in its

clientele rather than revealing anything new about the state of

Some of the best work I saw there combined a traditional

intricacy and brilliance. On the Crossroad is a controlled explosion

Japanese contemporary art. Here the real face of artistic Japan

Japanese meticulousness and attention to aesthetics with

of riotous color and form about crossing cultures and the street.

hides herself behind a pretty fan, like some modest princess

powerful political subtexts, or messages of legitimate social

Kan-no Sakan’s urethane and acrylic tondos demonstrate a

from the eleventh century Tale of Genji. Santa Fe’s best-heeled

transformation. The common theme of Impacts! was escapism.

similar intricacy, a hallmark of much of the work in the show,

galleries are primarily visions of our capitalist hallucination and

Oddly, the exhibition has no reference whatsoever to

but update it to pure abstraction. An animated video by Kondoh

must behave as such. The paradigm is commercial and profit-

the Fukushima power plant disaster, WW II, or radioactivity

Akino presents yet another interesting and ambiguous fantasy

driven, which could be fine in moderation, but as with the rest of

in general. This seems like deliberate sugarcoating. What if a

world, but figurative sculptures by Tanada Koji had the most

the mainstream cultural machine, the one-percenters’ economy

client who favors the deadly stupid concept of nuclear energy

impact of all.

sets rigid parameters for legitimate cultural exchange, except

or civilian murder might be offended? Yet one immediate and

These intimate, smaller than life-size figures, carved in

when it is consciously opposed, or deliberately ignored—

obvious association of the word “impacts” in conjunction

wood and polychromed, have beautifully pensive expressions

something that neither gallery, on either side of the globalized

with Japan and the United States are the impacts suffered by

and a timeless simplicity that goes on and on. Reminiscent of the

reality sees any real value in doing. This critique applies equally

Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Am I wrong? The Japanese title for

similarly stylized puppets of local ZBCA artist Armond Lara and

to all big players on the current SF gallery scene: Chiaroscuro,

the exhibition, Hazumi! meaning bounce or bounce-back, with

medieval effigies like the Gero Crucifix, these figures transcend

Charlotte Jackson, the new LewAllen, etc. All might look a little

a second meaning of a lively or “impactful” conversation or

ethnicity or national affiliation by resting simply on the universal

more deeply at just how humans profit from art.

exchange that lends its energy to a future venture, has better

and perennial appeal of a felt and well-sculpted presence.

Frankly, I’m surprised since ZBCA’s recent show of

interpretive possibilities.

So, capitalism can’t invalidate everything, but we do see

contemporary Native American work was powerfully political and

The worst moments in this show come from the washed-

the strain that the paradigm of endless wealth accumulation

revelatory. Among Santa Fe’s more deeply pocketed commercial

up “impact” of manga (graphic novels) and anime upon the

inevitably imposes. It leaves the wealthy out of touch, yet

spaces, Zane Bennett has perhaps more than any other tended to

Japanese art world. Ironically placing this visual language in a

still encumbered, as Foucault delighted in pointing out,

present shows of conceptual merit. So the sense of disappointment

high-art setting (can you say Murakami?) is today a tired trope.

and it leaves the rest of us looking any- and everywhere

here is keener. Santa Fe needs at least one dealer to step into the

If there’s one princess who ought to withdraw behind her shoji

for real meanings. Because without them, we don’t know

empty shoes left by the likes of Elaine Horwitch, Arlene LewAllen,

screen it’s that wide-eyed anime girl whom middle school

who we are, where we come from, or where we’re going.

and Linda Durham—dealers whom one felt put the advancement

students in the U.S. have been doodling for a generation or two.

—Jon Carver

of art above profit because they recognized that as the only way

Manga is better art in its original context.

to truly succeed. What the world and our little art town need now is more true art and less art marketing.

Yet, there are a number of strong artists at work here who deserve mention. Eguchi Ayane presents big, truly weird,

Nanami Ishihara, Lucky Dragon No. 5, Japanese pigment, acrylic gouache on cotton, mounted on panel, 75 9/16” x 153 7/8”, 2012


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Prima Materia

Punta Della Dogana Dorsoduro District, Venice, Italy

IT’S RARE TO HAVE AN EXHIBITION THAT SEEMS TO BE THE PERFECT “ALCHEMICAL” marriage of artwork and the spaces in which it is situated.

from the intensity and artistry of the work, with its underlying

This is the case, though, with Prima Materia—a show both

theme of the transformation of matter into concept.

Boetti’s piece Catasta (Stacked), made from fibercement tubes, paired well with Merz’s neon text piece

conceptually sumptuous and subtle that features the work

For contemporary artists, an engagement with

that read: se la forma scompare, la sua radice è eterna

of thirty-two artists. Prima Materia was curated by Michael

materials is indeed an alchemy based on discourse, and in

(if the form disappears, its root is eternal). This concept is

Govan, Director of the Los Angeles County Museum of

this case there is the added dialogue between the work and

part of the arcane science and philosophy of alchemy that

Art, and Caroline Bourgeois, an administrator for the

the extraordinary environment of polished concrete floors,

deals with the transmutation of materials, and it informs

François Pinault Collection, from which all of the work was

brick walls, trussed ceilings, and a palette of hues found in

this entire exhibition. Merz’s incantation ties all the work

drawn. Members of the well-known Arte Povera group

the bricks from which the walls are made: colors that range

together in some strange and exciting way, as does the

are represented, along with artists such as Sherrie Levine,

from a dull blood-red to various shades of pink and chalky

exquisite architecture. And David Hammons’ video Phat

Theaster Gates, Marlene Dumas, Llyn Foulkes, David

white. It almost feels like the architecture itself gave birth

Free created a particularly poignant alchemical union with

Hammons, Diana Thater, and Roman Opalka. And I can’t

to all the work—whether it was Levine’s twelve chillingly

the space as his piece was projected directly against a brick

imagine a more sublime venue for showing their or anyone

precise crystal skulls in a pristine grid; the eight paintings of

wall so that the underlying grid created a complex visual

else’s work. The Punta Della Dogana is an astoundingly

Dumas, with their themes of love, death, grief, and fatalistic

texture for the haunting journey of the protagonist in the

beautiful building whose historical underpinnings have been

acceptance; or Roni Horn’s round blocks of tinted cast-glass

video.

largely left intact, though expanded upon by the Japanese

that suggested solidified chunks of water.

The main action in Phat Free was a man slowly walking

The work of the Italian Arte Povera artists, along with the

down an urban street kicking a large can, and all that

Opened in 2009, the Punta Della Dogana—once one

Japanese Mono-ha cohort—the two groups echoing certain

could be heard was the sound of the can careening along

of two customs houses in Venice—has a triangular shape

sensibilities—looked particularly stunning in the huge galleries

the asphalt. The camera was handheld, the motion often

and is at the tip of land on the island of Dorsoduro; on one

of the Dogana. Individuals such as Mario Merz, Alighiero

deliberately blurry, and a feeling of disconnected tensions

side is the beginning of the Grand Canal and on the other are

Boetti, and Michelangelo Pistoletto dovetailed provocatively

was paramount. In a final gesture, the man kicks the can up

the open waters of the San Marco Basin. What are normally

with artists such as Kishio Suga and Susumu Koshimizu—all

into his hands and then the video loops back to an empty

incredibly busy, noisy, and even chaotic waterways, become a

of whom shared an aesthetic concerning the paradoxical

street and the sound of metal scraping against a poetic

silent pantomime of marine activity inside the ravishing brick

combination of materials. There were Suga’s zinc squares

emptiness. For Hammons’ piece, the walls became part of

and concrete galleries. There are many large, half-moon-

and rectangles in a floor installation that also incorporated

the skin of his work, supporting, containing, and protecting

shaped windows throughout the building and as a viewer

hunks of similarly sized granite. Koshimizu’s large paper cube

the artist’s evocative discourse on futility bonded to the act

looks up and out, the traffic patterns of boats of all description

placed on the floor was open on top and inside nestled a large

of turning lead into creative gold.

dominate this liquid environment, but inside you can’t hear

square boulder—the paper and the rock in a dialogue with

—Diane Armitage

a thing. Close by and diagonally across the water to the left

each other that concerned ideas about the nature of lightness

is Piazza San Marco, with its thousands and thousands of

and the ephemeral in contrast to the heaviness of obdurate

tourists engaged in taking thousands and thousands of selfies,

stone. Another rock piece, by Lee Ufan, the main theorist

yet the din from the piazza is entirely muted within the serene

of the Mono-ha artists, had its own magnetic properties as a

Mario Merz (left), se la forma scompare, la sua radice è eterna (if the form disappears, its root is eternal), neon tubing and mixed media, 1982. Alighiero Boetti (right), Catasta (Stacked), fiber-cement tubes, 1967. installation view.

and elegant Dogana. There is nothing to distract the viewer

large rock rested on an expanse of shattered glass.

David Hammons, Phat Free, video projection, 1995-2000

architect Tadao Ando.

OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 65


Jennifer Esperanza Photography www.jenniferesperanza.com ~ 505 204 5729

Santa Fe Scout Collection available at

1219 Cerrillos Road (across from Recollections) and

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GREEN PLANET

RICK PHELPS

PA P E R M AC H E , E C H O M AG I C I A N , ARTIST WHEN I decided to focus on paper the world entered my art work through its imagery and waste. I like existing on the edge of folk/funk, punk/pop, minimal/baroque, fine/commercial art, and incorporating craft at the intersection of culture and commerce and chocolate.

MY process and materials are borrowed from Nature; layer upon layer the way a tree grows. My scraps of paper are recycled in my gardens. For the most part, my pieces themselves

are

compostable,

returning

to source. My work has always reflected the cycles of the seasons. Recycling and composting are valuable tools in the universal struggles of entropy versus evolution.

Photograph by Jennifer Esperanza

Phelps’s work is represented by Cafe Pasqual’s Gallery and Todos Santos Chocolate in Santa Fe. Location: Gallery Zip • Valencia NM OCTOBER

2014

THE magazine | 67


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A R C H I T E C T U R A L D E TA I L S

T ruchas , N ew M exico photograph by

OCTOBER

2014

Guy Cross THE magazine | 69


WRITINGS

8

by

Anthony Hassett has lived a life of unceasing and courageous philosophical inquiry, flagrant rebellion, and the relentless pursuit of the Real. “8” is from Gazette (CSF Publishing, $19.99). Hassett studied with William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg, whose refined and incomprehensible insults continue to inspire his own dream to produce his own degree of oblivion, or minor literature, or both. When in the United States, Hassett resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

70 | THE magazine

A nthony H assett

Silence and the sun so clear I sought clover where I could find Only thorn and salt… But for the knowing of those nervous Coils of ore, menacing carbons would set Me back or snare where farther down sheers Anthropos, shut in on itself Like an unborn child… Where the quiet laurel breathes in these Hard dry hillsides, untouchable, This little bit of wind, this small spun Bloom of violets, and unsure fingers Made suddenly sure. And of all the ends, that end. And of all the hours to pass away Let this one’s lulls be rarer still. And your tenderness, too: the slow Shade, the piece of suffering Torn out of us by other beings, The clover that even you might believe Motive enough, for an instant Of bright enchanted heat…

OCTOBER

2014


Fa r r e l l B r i c k h o u s e ligia Bouton eric ganduno M at t M c c l u n e Jason MiddleBrook

OctOber 17 – December 21 1 0 1 1 pa s e o d e p e r a lta s a n ta F e n m t 505.954.5800

petersprojects.com


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G E B E R T C O N T E M P O R A R Y. C O M


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