THE magazine September 2014

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Santa Fe’s Monthly

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of and for the Arts • September 2014


FINE NATIVE AMERICAN ART

53 OLD SANTA FE TRAIL UPSTAIRS ON THE PLAZA SANTA FE, NM 505.982.8478 SHIPROCKSANTAFE.COM


Contents

35 36 42 5 letters 44 18 universe of: photographer Robert Stivers 47 22 art forum: Untitled drawing by Martin Ramírez 49 25 studio visits: Matthew Chase-Daniel and Erika 53

art openings

& about previews: Erin Currier at Blue Rain Gallery and Florence Miller Pierce at Charlotte Jackson Fine Art flashback: RC Israel and Mary Ironeyes, 2000 international spotlight: Biography: works by Elmgreen & Dragset at the National Gallery of Denmark feature: Spotlight on France by Susan Wider critical reflections: Dana Newmann at Phil Space; Christopher Benson at LewAllen Galleries; James Drake at out

James Kelly Contemporary; Meridel Rubenstein at David Richard Gallery; Roger Green at FreeStyle Gallery (Alb); Tasha

Wanenmacher

27 29

ancient city appetite: Shake Foundation

31

dining guide:

one bottle: The 2010 Etienne Sauzet Puligny-Montrachet

“La Garenne” by Joshua Baer epazote on the Hillside and Counter

Ostrander at Gebert Contemporary; Terminal Domain at Peters Projects; and Unsettled Landscapes at SITE Santa Fe

67 69 70

green planet: Katherine Maxwell, photograph by Jennifer Esperanza architectural details: Indian Summer, photograph by Guy Cross writings: “Surrender” by Sasha LaPointe

Culture In an age that is witnessing the decline of print media, many still look to the photographs on the front page of The New York Times for a pictorial sense of the daily news. Fred Tomaselli: The Times (Prestel, $49.95) is filled with Tomaselli’s manipulations of these photos, conveying his myriad interpretations of the events of the day. The imagery is pure Tomaselli, rich in color and graphic impact, continually imaginative and visually compelling. The original photographic elements remain in the compositions amid the alterations. This is visual storytelling, with the series of stills

serving as a time capsule. Each transformed image is framed by the conservative and familiar masthead, headline, and photo caption from the original. Tomaselli’s gouache and collage interventions expand on the formal and ideological content of the originals. He uses the repetition of the Times’ format and strikingly graphic and psychedelic interventions to reimagine the incidents for us, rendering the formerly documentary pictures more than memorable: they become works of art that reflect the times we live in. Lawrence Weschler, director emeritus of The New York Institute for the Humanities at NYU, former staff writer for The New Yorker, and a contributing editor to McSweeney’s, centers his text on a smart and insightful interview with the artist, which presents Tomaselli’s perspective on the work. These images are the diaries of an acknowledged news junkie who told Weschler, “It is by experimenting with media and just playing around that I end up finding my way in order to make things I haven’t yet seen.”


2014 –2015 EVENTS

17 SEPTEMBER

Alfredo Corchado with Melissa del Bosque

10 OCTOBER

Max Blumenthal with Amy Goodman

[FR I DAY]

22 OCTOBER

Alice McDermott with Michael Silverblatt

12 NOVEMBER

Ann Jones with Andrew Bacevich

10 DECEMBER

Gary Shteyngart with Mary Karr

28 JANUARY

Karen Russell with Porochista Khakpour

4 FEBRUARY

James Baldwin Tribute Evening

4 MARCH

Kevin Barry with Ethan Nosowsky

18 MARCH

Noam Chomsky with David Barsamian

8 APRIL

Ta-Nehisi Coates

15 APRIL

Wallace Shawn with Michael Silverblatt

29 APRIL

Naomi Klein with Katharine Viner

6 MAY

Claudia Rankine with Saskia Hamilton


LETTERS

magazine VOLUME XXII NUMBER III

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, Rebecca Bidus, Davis K. Brimberg, Jon Carver, Kathryn M Davis, Jennifer Esperanza, Carl German, Astrid Giblin, Christopher Guider, Hannah Hoel, Marina La Palma, Sasha LaPointe, Robert Stivers, Richard Tobin, Lauren Tresp, and Susan Wider COVER

Man Carrying Round Object photograph by Robert Stivers See page 18.

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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.

SEPTEMBER

2014

A$$holes on Cellphones: works by Marc Dennis on view at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, 435 South Guadalupe Street. Reception: Friday, August 29, from 5 to 7 pm. Exhibition runs to September 20.

TO THE EDITOR: Have you seen the fabulous press for Unsettled Landscapes, SITE’s new unbiennial-biennial? On the Web you will find articles and reviews heralding this revolutionary, cutting-edge, envelope-pushing exhibition that will become the new standard to which all future biennials everywhere will be compared. It will change the art market and the way we talk about art, and it will leave its viewers committed to a heightened sense of social responsibility. This I had to see. I’m always up to having my world upturned and my landscape unsettled, so I went, twice. After consideration, I’m compelled to make a couple of grandiose pronouncements of my own. Unsettled Landscapes and its six-year plan is not going to alter the conception of other biennials. The Whitney, Venice, or the dozens of other biennials going on nonstop around the world are not frantically scrambling to rework their own upcoming exhibitions upon hearing of this biennial in Santa Fe. Not one person will exit Unsettled Landscapes committed to a heightened sense of social responsibility. It will incite exactly no social or political change anywhere in the world. Any political ideas that might be gleaned from the dour visuals or convoluted texts are either vacuous or hackneyed. The work in this show reflects the mutterings of people with MFA’s, not the musings of inspiring political thinkers. If someone will bet me, I’ll lay down cash that Unsettled Landscapes will not “demonetize the art world.” Can that even be stated with a straight face? David Zwirner, Larry Gagosian, Jeff Koons, et al. are not shaking in their boots at Unsettled Landscapes, I promise. Despite the inclusion of some regional artists, Unsettled Landscapes will do nothing to make “the community” feel that it and SITE are any less detached from each other than ever. To most Santa Feans—even to most of its contemporary artists—SITE sits like a pod in the center of town, occupied by aliens who have taken our shape and learned our language but speak it as foreigners. They mount exhibitions of mundane objects and pictures, accompanied by lengthy wall texts that tell us they are inspired insights by visionaries that offer us the opportunity to better understand ourselves, if only we are hip enough. In an introduction, Lucy Lippard writes that Unsettled Landscapes merges the aesthetic joys we expect from art with socially responsible steps we can follow to institute meaningful social change. I hate to pop Lippard’s balloon, but there are

precious few aesthetic joys in Unsettled Landscapes, only relational aesthetics, and none of it forges a path to social betterment. When viewers leave the exhibition and walk out of SITE’s doors they have not been stirred to action. They’ve probably already forgotten the show because there’s nothing urgent about any of it, much less rousing and revolutionary. Finally, this work is not “cutting edge,” it’s at least a generation behind. Unsettled Landscapes is the same old same old we’ve been seeing in non-profit or university galleries, and some museums for at least the last thirty years, and it’s about as settled as it gets. This is what’s taught in art school. This is the stuff that gets grants and is reviewed in ArtForum. This is the academy. It’s the stodgy old insider establishment, in a dress and make-up, and it cannot, by definition, be both establishment and cutting-edge art at the same time. Passionately arguing Derrida aand Foucault in college during the 80s and 90s may have been great fun, but it doesn’t mean that Theory, with a capital T makes for the basis of a significant art exhibition in the two thousand teens. And Unsettled Landscapes is the proof. —Richard Baron, Santa Fe, via email TO THE EDITOR: In reference to Richard Tobin’s review of David Solomon’s recent show Shape Shifter, it has been well over a hundred years since Walter Pater wrote “The School of Giorgione.” When it comes to looking at art— painting included—I thought we’d come a little farther than quoting Victorian adages. At least Tobin recognizes the antiquity of Horace, who was born in 65 BC. We will always learn from the classics, but today an art critic is antiquating himself by thinking that what defined painting in 1877 defines painting today. If we hold painting to Victorian standards—even Modernist standards—we are missing out on the excitement of new work and, dare I say, the avant-garde. Tobin recognizes that Pater was revolutionary, but it seems that Tobin could stop relying on innovators from the turn of two centuries ago and recognize those of the now. As someone who has been following Solomon’s work for quite a while— through his transition from canvas to aluminum— I can say that Solomon’s facture is impeccable, ever deliberate, and that his “intuitive” process does not qualify him as an Abstract Expressionist. P.S. Abstract Expressionism happened over seventy years ago.

—Kristin Russell,

via email

THE magazine | 5


COLOR FALL

David Ivan Clark, Willy Richardson and Cornelia Thomsen

August 29 – September 23, 2014

Opening Friday August 29 5–7pm

RAILYARD DISTRICT 540 S. GUADALUPE STREET | SANTA FE, NM 875 01 505.820.3300 | WILLIAMSIEGAL.COM


FLORENCE PIERCE

IN THE LIGHT SEPTEMBER 5 - SEPTEMBER 27, 2014 Opening Reception Friday, September 5th, 5-7 P.M.

C H A R LOT T E J AC K S O N F I N E A R T Tel 505.989.8688 | 554 South Guadalupe St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 | www.charlottejackson.com


TOM BERG

REGINA FOSTER

FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 2014 On view through Tuesday,October 7, 2014 217 W. Water Street Santa Fe, NM 87501 phone: 505. 660. 4393 w w w. wa d e w i l s o n a r t. co m

11am - 5pm Tuesday - Saturday


MATT MAGEE RECENT PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE AUGUST 29 – OCTOBER 25 JAMES KELLY CONTEMPORARY |

1611 PASEO DE PERALTA | SANTA FE | JAMESKELLY.COM LOCUS 2013, OIL ON PANEL,10 X 16-1/4INCHES


ALL EX H I B I T I O N S O N V IE W SEPTEMBER 13 — DECEMBER 20

DAVID MAISEL BLACK MAPS

AMERICAN LANDSCAPE AND THE APOCALYPTIC SUBLIME

An exhibition organized by the CU Art Museum, University of Colorado Boulder

OPENING RECEPTION FOR A L L E X H I B I T I O N S F R I DAY, S E P T E M B ER 12, 6–8 PM

“BEAUTIFUL, DISINTEGRATING OBSTINATE HORROR DRAWING” AND OTHER RECENT ACQUISITIONS AND SELECTIONS FROM THE UNM ART MUSEUM’S

PERMANENT COLLECTION

THE GIFT LUZ RESTIRADA MUSEUM HOURS

Tuesday–Saturday: 10 – 4 Closed on Sundays, Mondays, and major holidays ADMISSION FREE and open to the public. A $5 donation is suggested to help support exhibitions. FOR MORE INFO Please visit: www.unmartmuseum.org or call 505.277.4001.

L ATIN AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHY F ROM THE UNM ART MUSEUM David Maisel (American, b. 1961) The Lake Project 15, 2002 (detail); pigment print, 2012; 48 48 inches; A / P; Image courtesy of the artist; © David Maisel

×

Andy Warhol (American,1928–1987) ; Queen Ntombi, 1985; from the series Reigning Queens (Royal Edition ); Screenprint and diamond dust on Lenox Museum Board; 39 3/8 31 1/2 inches; Gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.; © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

×


MARC DENNIS

A$$HOLES ON CELLPHONES RECEPTION FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 5-7 PM THROUGH SEPTEMBER 20

ONGOING: IMPACTS! . 勢み JAPANESE CONTEMPORARY ART UPCOMING: DAVID JOHNS: BIŁ’ HAHODIISHŁAA

THROUGH SEPTEMBER 22

RECEPTION FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 5-7 PM

ZANE BENNETT CONTEMPORARY ART 435 S GUADALUPE ST, SANTA FE, NM 87501 T: 505-982-8111 ZANEBENNETTGALLERY. COM


That’s Where You Need to Be William Betts • Xuan Chen • Maria Park • Willy Bo Richardson August 2 - September 19

PILAR STUDIO TOUR

Morning-glory Vessel by Carl Gray Witkop

Photo: Craig Bennett

Cloudfire pottery Carl Gray Witkop

Xuan Chen, Screens Set2 #9, 2014, mixed media on aluminum panel

Debra Bloomfield • Journey to Wilderness September 27 - October 24 Saturday, September 27, 6:00 - 8:00 pm: Opening Artist Reception, Book Signing & New Mexico Wilderness Alliance Fundraiser

Mary Witkop Coffield, Paintings. Monita Witkop, Images. Stephen Kilborn, Pottery and Paintings Anita Bauer, Silk Paintings and Wearable Art Bruce Gourley, Watercolor and Pastel Drawings PattyMara Gourley, Pottery, Ceramic Art, and more Georgia Neuman, Pottery. Marsha Blumm, Watercolors and Monoscreen Prints GEORGE CHEROPOV OILS, TOUR MAPS AND INFORMATION AT PILAR YACHT CLUB.

http://pilarstudiotour.weebly.com/ 575.751.3042 VILLAGE OF PILAR AT THE ENTRANCE TO RIO GRANDE DEL NORTE NATIONAL MONUMENT ON NM HWY 68, 29 MILES NORTH OF ESPANOLA

Richard Levy Gallery • Albuquerque • www.levygallery.com • 505.766.9888

September 6th & 7th, 10:00AM until 5:00PM

MONROE GALLERY of photography

STEVE SCHAPIRO Once Upon A Time In America

Martin Luther King Marching for Voting Rights with John Lewis, Reverend Jesse Douglas, James Forman and Ralph Abernathy, Selma, 1965

Exhibition continues through September 21 open daily 112 don gaspar santa fe nm 87501 992.0800 f: 992.0810

e: info@monroegallery.com

www.monroegallery.com


ERIN CURRIER From Taos to Laos, September 12 – 27, 2014 Artist Reception: Friday, September 12th, 5 – 7 pm in Santa Fe

Miss Siam, acrylic and mixed media collage on panel, 36" h x 24" w

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


SHEILA MAHONEY KEEFE Tales of Tenderness September 18 to October 20 Reception, Saturday, September 20, 3 to 5 pm.

“THERE IS NO WHY HERE” Karl Koenig’s Photographic Reflections of the

Holocaust Prisoners’ Entrance to Auschwitz

Exhibition on view through September 30

Train Entrance to Auschwitz

The Albuquerque Photographer’s Gallery 303 Romero Street, NW Suite N208 Plaza Don Luis, Albuquerque 505-244-9195 • abqphotographersgallery.com

Unknown Story 3, 30” x 30”, 2014

Unknown Story 4, 24” x 24”, 2014

HAND ARTES GALLERY 505-689-2443 • handartes@latieera.com • handartesgallery.com


Shonto Begay Map of My Heart Through Oct. 26

Journey through contemporary Navajo life with Diné artist Shonto Begay. This exhibition spans 30 years of the artist’s career and celebrates his close relationship with family, culture and the land he calls home.

Tree of Seven Hearts, Shonto Begay

Fine Arts Tradition Two Riders, Howard Post

23rd Annual Trappings of the American West Exhibition & Sale • Opens Sept. 28 Members’ Preview Sept. 27 Celebrate this award-winning exhibition of contemporary paintings, photography, bronze sculpture and exquisitely crafted gear of the working cowboy. All work is available for purchase.

Shops

Authentic Southwestern art, jewelry, publications and more...

New items at shops.musnaz.org

Flagstaff • 928.774.5213 • musnaz.org


PREcognition I REcognition:

Examining the Reciprocal Gaze in Godfrey Reggio’s Film VISITORS

Y

ou are cordially invited to attend an exhibition of still photographs selected from Godfrey Reggio’s latest film VISITORS. Conceived as a corollary to the film, this exhibition will provide audiences an opportunity to experience the images outside the cinematic environment and consider the precognitive responses activated by the reciprocal gaze. James Rutherford, Curator

September 11 to October 8, 2014 Santa Fe Community College Visual Arts Gallery Public Reception Thursday, September 18, 5 to 7 p.m. Followed at 8 p.m. by a special free screening of VISITORS at The Screen at Santa Fe University of Art & Design Major funding for this exhibition provided in loving memory of Larry Silvers. Photographs for the exhibition printed by Elliott McDowell.

School of Arts, Design, and Media Arts • Visual Arts Gallery • Mondays through Fridays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. • 505-428-1501 • www.sfcc.edu

6401 Richards Ave. Santa Fe, NM 87508


Art, everywhere. Experience extraordinary art —indoor, outdoor, counterculture, high-brow, on the walls, off-the-wall, on stage, in the parks, in your ears, projected on sidewalks. Art is everywhere, here, this fall. See more at TAOS.org/fall2014

INDOOR Through January 31, 2015 Fred Harvey & the Making of the American West Millicent Rogers Museum

OUTDOOR August 30–September 1 TAO Studio Tour 35 artists throughout Taos County

September 7 Couse Lecture: Artists' Gardens Harwood Museum of Art

September 4–6 Michael Hearne’s Barndance Music Fest Taos Ski Valley

September 13–14 Taos Chamber Music Group Concert Harwood Museum of Art

September 6 Open House, studio & gardens Couse-Sharp Historic Site

September 20–January 25 ¡Orale! The Kings & Queens of Cool four exhibits at Harwood Museum of Art

September 13 Oktoberfest Celebrations Taos Ski Valley

September 26–October 5 Taos Fall Arts Festival, six exhibits various locations in historic district

September 20 ¡Orale! exhibit openings & street party Harwood Museum of Art & Ledoux Street

September 26 Taos Fall Arts Openings The Paseo Outdoor Art Festival throughout historic district September 27 Quick Draw & Art Auction Taos Center for the Arts & various locations downtown

September 20 Taos Rotary Chile Challenge & Beer Fest art auction & golf tournie Taos Country Club

MURAL BY GEORGE CHACON PHOTOGRAPHED BY HOWIE ROEMER

September 20–21 & 27–28 High Road Art Tour, open studios High Road to Taos

September 27–28 Old Taos Trade Fair Hacienda de los Martínez September 30 San Geronimo Day Taos Pueblo October 4–6 Taos Wool Festival Kit Carson Park

TAOS

Festivals, fairs, studio tours. Surround yourself with all kinds of color. 888.580.8267

Look + Book TAOS.ORG


PHOTOGRAPHER ROBERT STIVERS

began his career as a dancer and a choreographer. But in the early 1980s he suffered a back injury that brought that career to an end. Stivers’ subject matter is comprised of nudes, botanicals, faces, landscapes, and distressed objects where no object appears in sharp focus and no foreground-background relationship suggests even the possibility of a progressive clarification. Stivers writes, “My photography is a personal search for a more philosophical and spiritual surrender.” A new book, entitled The Act of Ruin (Twin Palms), will be available in October. Stivers’ photographs have been exhibited in many galleries—locally, regionally, and nationally; his work is in the collections of many institu, including the Bibliothèque Nationale, the Getty Museum, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. robertstivers.com


UNIVERSE OF

THE COVER:

Man Carrying Round Object was part of a figurative series in the 1990s that

dealt with myth, dreams, memory, and the subconscious. The image on the cover of this issue is unique in that it is slightly more literal than most of the images I’ve made—but only if the viewer knows what to look for.

unknown, and an opportunity for the imagination to roam. I don’t use it so much anymore, but manipulating the focus of a sharp negative will always be one of my tools.

SELF-TRANSFORMATION: If I take a moment to read old interviews and journal entries I observe a near obsession with self-transformation—getting from here to there. I don’t think

FROM DANCE TO PHOTOGRAPHY:

It’s been many years now since the shift

I am obsessed with this anymore. Now I know that life will unfold and each day I can choose

occurred. There was a dark period when I left dance and hadn’t yet picked up a camera. I felt I

to make decisions about how I will perceive the “goings on.” I don’t mean to sound fatalistic

was an abandoned soul on the River Styx. Then there was a magical period when photography and

or resigned; I just want to take things a little easier. In terms of making work, I am very devout

dance merged and complemented each other. The photograph: the final product being still in time

and demanding, and thoroughly embrace the idea of allowing the work to grow and transform.

and space. The dance: taking place over time. Both were immediately accessible and visceral. One

Perhaps I am a hypocrite.

stimulated the other. In fact, it seemed for a period that one could not exist without the other. Present time: I haven’t choreographed or danced for over seven years. I don’t think anything is “missing” per se in my photographs, but I will say that the work is different. Perhaps this is simply artistic evolution.

SEEING:

I love the notion of “seeing”—truly seeing. Diane Arbus said something to the

effect that if she didn’t photograph then people would never see this other world that she had discovered. I aspire to “see” what is hidden, covered, trapped, and bring it to the surface. I need

SOFT FOCUS:

I started relatively late in the field of photography. I was thirty-five, with

virtually no background in the medium. I had an old Hasselblad camera and a friend gave me

to know what lurks inside and needs to be released.

some basic darkroom instruction. I wanted to give the impression that I was capable, so I shot

DREAMS: About fifteen years ago I spent a year in Jungian therapy. My assignment was to keep

everything in sharp focus and printed full frame. After a few years making sharp, full-frame

a dream journal every day. Once a week, the therapist and I would delve into great detail about the

images, I began to wonder if I had boxed myself in. I began to explore throwing the image out

meaning of the dreams and their relevance in my life. At that time, I would cautiously suggest that

of focus in the darkroom. I developed a certain way of doing this that achieved a disquieting

my dreams impacted my work to some degree. Otherwise, I have not consciously sought to infuse

quality, which I immediately embraced, as the technique helped to achieve a mystery, a curious

my work with the themes of memory and/or dreams. They arise through no deliberate act or intent.

photograph by

SEPTEMBER

2014

Dana Waldon

THE magazine | 19


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ART FORUM

THE

magazine asked a clinical psychologist and three 9th grade students from St. Michael’s High School for their take on this crayon-and-pencil drawing by Martin Ramírez. They were given no other information.

The artist’s use of perspective draws the viewer in.

day that he just sits there, expressionless, as though

his hands on a desk, with a train in the background. But

Two walls open just wide enough... psychologically, this

he isn’t fully conscious. Is he at a station, awaiting

it can’t be that simple, can it? Oddly, the man seems

sense of depth provides a feeling of intimacy. Indeed, we

the aforementioned train that will bring him home?

to take no notice of the train in the background. He

are seeing something private here. Perhaps this scene

Is he the artist, waiting for his muse to arrive? Or is

simply fiddles with his fingers, a smile on his face. The

is a dream. Alone at the table, the man may be longing

he everyman, twiddling his thumbs until bedtime?

artist communicates this solitude and focus through an

to take the train in the distance. He may want to visit

—Rebecca Bidus, High School Student

array of lines directed toward the central figure. Trains,

a loved one or even explore a new city. His isolation is

characterized by the loud noise they generate, represent

echoed by the fact that there is only one chair present.

This painting’s message is complex, yet its appearance

anything that annoys and requires attention. The artist

No other person is expected to join him any time soon.

is simple. Elements converge: a train, a man at a desk,

must distance himself from these worldly sounds with

Interestingly, although the train appears to be moving, it

and a wooden plank setting. This artist’s puzzle reveals

walls and water—symbols of emotional separation and

does not have a blowing smoke stack. Symbolically, the

something about himself—the constant struggle to create

distance. After understanding the painting, the message

train is caught between stillness and motion, and this may

art in a world of noise. The man’s face seems too simple.

becomes even simpler. This artist is able to be happy

reflect the man’s internal world. He may feel stuck, as if

Perhaps the artist meant for his face to be simple, because

alone, even with the distractions in the background.

he is metaphorically walking in place. Another possibility

he or she didn’t want the viewer to spend too much time

The message tells us that solitude is more a state of mind

is that the man is playing a piano on stage and the walls

focusing on the face. Instead, our attention is directed

than an actual location.

are not opening but are, in fact, closing in on him. In

toward the train. At first glimpse, the train, and especially

—Carl German, High School Student

this circumstance, he feels trapped by his life choices.

its tracks, are not instantly visible. Once we recognize

Overall, the piece has an anxious quality due to the lines’

them, the picture becomes obvious: it’s a man on a dock,

This image of a man playing a piano depicts the

opposing directions. Dreams are often a

twisted dystopia that the music industry

mixture of fears and wishes. They express

is built upon. In front of the piano, sharp

emotional conflicts.

lines create the effect of doors closing

—Davis K. Brimberg, Ph.D.,

in on him. This shows how the artist is

Clinical Psychologist, Santa Fe

forced into a brutal environment and is confined to only music, isolated from the

This image portrays a mixture of

rest of the world. When an artist is in

conflicting themes. In the background,

the music industry, eventually the battle

the colors are calming and the textures

to attain fame and attention becomes

wooden, creating a feeling of homey

too strenuous and the passion for art

security within its walls. The train is

and music shrivels away. Behind him, the

bringing its sleepy passengers to their

floor is black, showing that he cannot

destination in the dark night. Surely it

change what he made of the past—

will bring them there safely. Under the

leaving him even more imprisoned by his

train tracks are lights that shine rays of

career. Before him lies an empty stage,

a darkened rainbow across a calm body

which seems to be his only fate. His

of water. The dreamlike darkness, water,

destiny is composed of lonely stages and

and train set a soothing backdrop for the

repetitive music. A train is approaching

focal point of the image: the man—our

in the background, coming to whisk the

wide-awake dreamer who is different

artist away once again from any sort of

from the three-dimensional diorama that

moderately stationary and normal life.

surrounds him. He seems to be a paper

The music industry is romanticized to

cutout. He and his furniture appear as a

be a beautiful, adventurous career, when

colorless cross-section. One may at first

in reality it is a brutal, solitary lifestyle.

think of this staging as a way to show his

The artist loses any ability to disconnect

isolation from his surroundings, yet he

from his or her profession. This makes

seems perfectly at home, a marionette

for an isolated, lonely life of constant

on a stage. The man seems to be lost in

judgment. This image subtly portrays this

thought, or scarier, in no thought at all.

concept using different artistic methods.

He might be so exhausted from a long

—Astrid Giblin, High School Student

22 | THE magazine

SEPTEMBER

2014



Experience the Elemental

Jeff Laird | Perforated Triangles SE-OC RIGHT BRAIN GALLERY

3100 Menaul NE, Albuquerque, NM 87107 | Tue - Sat 11-5 505-816-0214 Info@SE-OC-RightBrainGallery.com First Friday ARTSCrawl from 5 - 8 pm | artscrawlabq.org

In Santa Fe and Taos, view by appointment 505-384-5290 | JeffLaird.net Lt: Coral Pink, 2014, powder coated, perforated aluminum, 49” x 30”, 18 lbs. Rt: Purple Martin, 2014, powder coated, perforated aluminum, 49” x 30”, 18 lbs.

Painting: Gary Larson

10 am to 5 pm • Sunday 10 am to 4 pm • Closed Wednesday 86-B Old Las Vegas Highway • Santa Fe • 505.982.9944 www.santafehillside.com


STUDIO VISITS

FRANCIS BACON WROTE, “ALL ART IS AN ACCIDENT. BUT IT’S ALSO NOT AN ACCIDENT, BECAUSE ONE MUST SELECT WHAT PART OF THE ACCIDENT TO PRESERVE.” TWO SANTA FE ARTISTS RESPOND. Whether art (or anything else) is a result of accident or free will or divine plan is a big old question, one that doesn’t really interest me. However, the second part of the quote rings true. I see much of my work as that of an editor. As an artist, I choose from among thousands of ideas that course through me, of which there are few that I try to make. Among those few that I begin, I choose even fewer to finish. Among the few that I finish, I choose even fewer to share with others. The work of an artist requires talent, mastery of craft, time, perseverance, and most importantly, the willingness to keep looking for meaning in unusual places, engaging with our strangest notions, and welcoming the unfamiliar, accidental, and unknown with open eyes and a sharp knife.

—Matthew Chase-Daniel Chase-Daniel will participate in a group show—Signs of Life—at Sturt Haaga Gallery at Descanso Gardens, Pasadena, California. The show runs September 9 to November 23. Dollar Distribution, a conceptual art piece in which one thousand five hundred one-dollar bills will be dropped at random around Santa Fe, opened on August 22 and closes on September 15. Follow on Twitter @dollarxdollar. In 2015, Chase-Daniel will have a solo exhibition of photo-assemblages from the Monterey Bay Wildlife Refuge at Craig Krull Gallery, Santa Monica, California. chasedaniel.com

Well, that works for me right now. It’s the material asserting its presence. It takes away a bit of my control, which is a very good thing.

—Erika Wanenmacher Wanenmacher will be having an exhibition—Incorporate—opening on October 31 at Phil Space, 1410 Second Street, Santa Fe. As well, she will be showing work in the Art C.A.R.S. show at the Center for Contemporary Arts in November.

photographs by

SEPTEMBER

2014

Anne Staveley

THE magazine | 25


VIENNA / SANTA FE Frank Ettenberg 2003 to the Present

September 12 – October 10

Reception: Friday, September 12, 5-8pm

PHIL SPACE

1410 2nd Street, Santa Fe 505.983.7945

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


ANCIENT CITY APPETITE

Ancient City Appetite by Joshua

Baer

Shake Foundation 631 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe Daily, from 11:00 am to 6:00 pm. Major credit cards 505 988-8992 Everything on the menu is delicious, but it would be a shame to miss these dishes:

Double Green Chile Cheeseburger with Jack Cheese and Garlic Mayonnaise: $6.50

Santa Fe Bite, formerly the classic Bobcat Bite out on Las Vegas Highway, now

Fried Oyster Sandwich with Red Chile Mayonnaise: $5.50.

relocated to the southeast corner of Alameda and Old Santa Fe Trail, understands

Green Chile Stew: $3.50 Regular, $5.50 Large.

that simplicity is the key ingredient in a great burger. The double green chile

Adobe Mud Shakes: $5.75; with Malt, $6.25

cheeseburger at Bert’s Burger Bowl, on the northeast corner of Guadalupe and

Affogato: $4.50.

Catron, is as much a part of Santa Fe culture as Fiesta, metallic dark red Monte

Santa Fe offers the green chile cheeseburger aficionado a variety of good options.

Carlos, skin-tight jeans, and Zozobra. At the corporate, professionally slick, sports The first time you go, don’t expect to be overwhelmed. If you go between noon

bar end of the spectrum, 5 Star Burger, in the De Vargas Shopping Center at the north

and one, you might have complaints about the line, or about how long it took to fill

end of Guadalupe Street, offers what they call a “gourmet burger.” The green chile

your order. The second time you go is when the pleasant surprises begin. Each bite

cheeseburger version of 5 Star’s gourmet burger holds its own against every other

of the double green chile cheeseburger is better than the one before it. The red

burger in town. But when it comes to the dependable joy of eating a green chile

chile mayonnaise in the fried oyster sandwich is a franchise all by itself. If you order

cheeseburger on a daily basis, Shake Foundation stands out, in a prima inter pares kind

a regular green chile stew and sip the broth from the paper cup while you wait for

of way. Warning: Shake’s food grows on you. It creates cravings. If you go at three

your burger you’ll appreciate why New Mexico green chile enjoys worldwide acclaim.

or four pm on a fall afternoon, you’ll be back for more at the same time the next day.

Many of the regulars at Shake Foundation drink their shakes while they eat their

burgers. An equally valid approach is to have the burger as your entrée and your shake

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

or affogato as dessert. After a ten or fifteen minute wait, good things happen to the

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

ice cream. It doesn’t melt so much as age into something rich and special.

to places@ancientcityappetite.com.

SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 27


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

Under the Rainbow A Perfect Table The Compound A Santa Fe Tradition ~ Reinvented!

lunch - monday thru saturday sunday brunch dinner nightly

restaurant bar

Lunch • Dinner • Bar

Reservations 505.982.4353 653 Canyon Road compoundrestaurant.com

231 washington avenue - reservations 505 984 1788

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

photo: Kitty Leaken


ONE BOTTLE

One Bottle :

T he 2010 E tienne S auzet P uligny -M ontrachet “L a G arenne ” by J oshua

For as long as I can remember, love has been the answer. The question

B aer .

when I tell myself that my work is a labor of love, but love costs me more

doesn’t matter. One way or another, sooner or later, inside or outside,

than it makes me, so it’s up to my working self to cover my loving self’s

love will play its hand. And when love shows its cards, there will be

action. These are crass, commercial thoughts, to be sure, but in the absence

no doubt about the winner, because love conquers all.

of calculation, money disappears into thin air.

Philosophers can argue about its manifestations and meanings. Poets can rhapsodize about its mercurial nature. Singers can swoon

Which brings us to the 2010 Etienne Sauzet Puligny-Montrachet “La Garenne.”

over its power, gurus can proclaim its rightful place on the path to

Puligny-Montrachet is a village in Burgundy, and is the most celebrated

enlightenment, Hamlet can personify its doubts. Jesus can abandon

of the villages associated with white Burgundy. “Garenne” translates as

the tomb and assure us that love survives death. John Lennon can

“An underground system of interconnected tunnels occupied by

remind us that love is all we need. We can change the story as often

rabbits”—what we call a rabbit warren. In France, one thing is always a

as we like. We can change it into other places and other times, into

version of something else. The nose is the heart of the face. The eye is

other voices in other rooms. We can relocate its magic to a parallel

the window to the soul. Milan is the Lyons of Italy. In Burgundy, they

universe. No matter how much or how little we try to challenge

call La Garenne the Chablis of Puligny-Montrachet. The reference

love with cleverness, love is, was, and will always be the only

alludes to the dry, flinty, marginally salty flat spot that characterizes

game in town.

a classic Chablis, and makes a cameo appearance in Puligny’s La

If you want to know how great love is, use “love” in a sentence in place of “money.” People manage money. Have you ever met anyone who knew how to manage love? Money is a store of value, a currency you earn, save, and spend.

Garennes. Of those La Garennes, Sauzet’s is regarded as the one where that cameo approaches the sublime. In the glass, Sauzet’s La Garenne displays more gold than silver, and the depth of its gold gives you some idea of how

Try earning love some time. Try saving it, spending it,

the wine will look after a decade of aging, not that any

or exchanging it for some foreign love. Many of us waste

lover of wine has the discipline to cellar it for that

money, occasionally on love. Try to waste love. The

long. The bouquet is the reason why you can never

moment you think you’ve wasted it, love invades your

have enough good white Burgundy in your cellar. If

heart. People own money, or believe that they do.

there are clouds in heaven, they smell like this wine.

Love is not for sale.

On the palate, the attack is simultaneously playful

My relationship with love began years ago, on

and somber. The wine ignores your bloodstream.

a beach in Andalucía, about an hour south of

It moves into your heart as you taste it. The finish

Málaga. I was looking out to sea, imagining that I was

extends the bouquet’s message. You do your best

a passenger, maybe even a sailor, on one of the ships

to stay with it. You tell yourself that staying with

on the horizon, when it hit me. Life was a gift, but

it is your soul’s right, your predestined obligation,

I had no choice about when that gift would be taken

but the finish is gone before those desires become

from me, no more than I had chosen when to receive

thoughts. Gone but not forgotten, except that

it. The only thing I could keep was the love—for the

memory cannot do justice to the experience that

sunlight, for the wet sand, for the sound the waves

just escaped from your glass.

made before they broke, for my parents, for being

People—men and women—have accused me of

their child. Life, I told myself, will betray you. Love

being in love with love. Guilty as charged. Bring me

will keep its promise.

something better to love than love itself. Show me the

These days, my relationship with love is more

mature alternative. Deliver it to my house. I will trade

complicated, which is to say that it has become more

it for all the wine in my cellar. Being in love with love

of a guess than a conclusion, which is to say that

has its solipsistic pitfalls, to be sure. Any lover worth

my conclusions are more fragile than they were on

his salt will admit to that. But life is short—too short

that beach. As much as I love people—and I love the

to look love in the eye and blink.

people in my life the way a priest loves the divine— life has taught me that love is not enough. It may be the only game in town, but playing that game does not pay my bills. I love my work, and there are times

SEPTEMBER

2014

One Bottle is dedicated to the appreciation of good wines and good times, 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

New World Cuisine at

epazote on the Hillside 86-B Old Las Vegas Highway, Santa Fe Lunch: 11:00-2:30 Closed Wednesday Reservations: 982-9944

$ KEY

INEXPENSIVE

$

up to $14

MODERATE

$$

$15—$23

EXPENSIVE

$$$

VERY 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.

$34 plus

EAT OUT OFTEN photos :

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 starters are the “Les Halles” onion soup and 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 O’Brien’s baked goods are really special. Try them. You’ll love them. 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 on hot, 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. All of the salads are made with fresh, local ingredients. Comments: Attention to detail is the word here. Epazote offers its diners a unique dining experience. 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: We suggest the Pan-Roasted Salmon or the Talus Wind Ranch Rack of Lamb. Good wine list and a bar you will love. Comments: Aprés Lunch: served from 1:30-5:30. Nice bar menu. Chef Brett Sparman knows his stuff, for sure.

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. $$ Cuisine: Italian. Atmosphere: Bustling. House specialties: Our faves: the Arugula and Tomato Salad; the Lemon Rosemary Chicken; and the Pork Chop stuffed with mozzarella, pine nuts, and prosciutto. Comments: Farm to Table, all the way. Izanami 3451Hyde Park Road. 428-6390 Lunch/Dinner Saki/Wine/Beer Major credit cards. $$$ Cuisine: Japanese-inspired small plates. Atmosphere: A sense of quitetude. House specialties: For starters, both the Wakame and the Roasted Beet Salads are winners. We also loved the Nasu Dengaku— eggplant and miso sauce and the Butakushi—Pork Belly with a Ginger BBQ Glaze. Comments: A wonderful selection of Saki. 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. $$$ Cuisine: Vietnamese. Atmosphere: Casual. House specialties: The Vegetarian Pumpkin Soup is a blend of lemongrass, lime leaf and tofu with a red curry spice. Our fave entree is the BoTai Dam: Beef tenderloin w/ garlic, shallots, lemongrass, limeleaf, basil, slow-cooked and served with noodles. Comments: Friendly waitstaff. La Plazuela on the Plaza 100 E. San Francisco St. 989-3300. Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Full Bar. Major credit cards. $$$ 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. 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 SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 31


on the Hillside

Inspired New World Cuisine

Fresh Seafood when you want it!

oySterS

live Ster b o l e n i ma

Smok troued t

Squid

mexica n Shrimwhite p halibut

jonaha wS l crab c ScallopS

t h g SoFt cauon d Sh l wi Salm crab ell S

Lunch: 11:30 to 2:30 • Closed Wednesday 86-B Old Las Vegas Highway • Santa Fe 505.982.9944 • www.santafehillside.com

Sun-Thur, 5:00 - 9:00 pm u Fri - SaT, 5:00 - 9:30 pm 315 Old SanTa Fe Trail u SanTa Fe, nm u www.315 SanTaFe.cOm reServaTiOnS recOmmended: (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.

Counter Culture | Ahi Tuna Tacos | 930 Baca 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.

SEPTEMBER

2014

995-1105

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


SILVIA LEVENSON A SUBJECT TO AVOID August 29 - October 11, 2014

Silvia Levenson, Until Death Do Us Part II, 2009, Kilncast glass, 11.75” x 20.5”

Artist reception: Friday, August 29, 5:00 - 7:00 PM

SALVATORE EMBLEMA TRANSPARENCY: COLOR AND LIGHT September 12 - October 18, 2014 Opening Reception: Friday, September 12, 2014

Salvatore Emblema, Untitled 0307, 1976, Tinted de-threaded burlap, 78.75” x 59”

DavidrichardGALLEry.com The Railyard Arts District

DAVID RICHARD

544 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501

GALLERY

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


OPENINGS

SEPTEMBERARTOPENINGS FRIDAY, AUGUST 29

Casweck Galleries, 713 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 988-2966. Solo Show: new paintings by Chuck Volz. 5-7 pm. David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. A Subject to Avoid: works by Sylvia Levenson. 5-7 pm. David Rothermel Contemporary, corner of Lincoln and Marcy, Santa Fe. 575-6424981. Juxtaprose Series: paintings by David Rothermel. 5-8 pm. James Kelly Contemporary, 1611 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. 989-1601. Recent Paintings and Sculpture: new works by Matt Magee. 5-7 pm. NMSU University Art Gallery, D.W. Williams Hall, 1390 E. University Ave., Las Cruces. 575646-2545. Off the Wall: exhibition inspired by the minimal wall drawings and sculptures of Sol LeWitt, featuring Allie Rex, Judith Braun, Christie Blizard, and Nathan Green. 5-7 pm. Peters Projects, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. 954-5800. Suzanne Caporeal: recent paintings. Laura Wilson: photographs. 5-7 pm. TAI Modern, 1601 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. 984-1387. Zen: collaboration between bamboo artist Tanabe Shochiku and lacquer artist Wakamiya Takashi. 5-7 pm.

Mariposa Gallery, 3500 Central Ave. SE, Alb. 505-268-6828. And the Big Storm Began: drawings and paintings by Greg Tucker. Goldie Garcia: paintings by the iconic jewelry artist. 5-8 pm. New Concept Gallery, 610 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 795-7570. Landscapes: Southwest expressionist paintings by Cecilia Kirby Binkley. 5-7 pm. Sorrel Sky Gallery, 125 W. Palace Ave., Santa Fe. 501-6555. Wisdom Keepers: works by Star Liana York. 5-7 pm. The Gallery ABQ, 8210 Menaul Blvd. NE, Alb. 505-292-9333. Visions of Nature: photographs by James Janis. Encaustics by Carol Lopez, and watercolors by Tricia H. Love. Salon exhibit: work by Michael Meyer. 5-8 pm.

Blue Rain Gallery, 130 Lincoln Ave., Suite. C, Santa Fe. 954-9902. From Taos to Laos—New Works by Erin Currier: mixed-media works inspired by the artist’s travels. 5-7 pm. David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 983-9555. A Transparency— Color and Light: works by Salvatore Emblema. 5-7 pm. David Rothermel Contemporary, corner of Lincoln and Marcy, Santa Fe. 575-642-4981. Landscapes from the Archives: paintings by David Rothermel inspired by the Southwest landscape. 5-8 pm. Exhibit/208, 208 Broadway SE, Alb. 505450-6884. Full Circle: work by Dana and Ruth Kleinman. 5-8 pm.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7

Albuquerque Museum of Art and History, 2000 Mountain Rd. NW, Alb. 505-2424600. Local Treasures: awards ceremony by the Albuquerque Arts Business Association honoring eight exceptional artists. 1-3 pm.

by Maisel of the American West. Beautiful Disintegrating Obstinate Horror Drawing and Recent Acquisitions from the UNM Art Museum’s Permanent Collection: includes works by Richard Diebenkorn, Damien Hirst, Raymond Jonson, Georgia O’Keeffe, Beatrice Mandelman, Louis Ribak, and Andy Warhol, among others. Luz Resestirada— Latin American Photography from the UNM Art Museum: photographs by Pedro Meyer, Flor Garduño, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Luis González Palma, Joel-Peter Witkin and Vik Muniz. The Gift: graphic interpretations of events in the life of Christ by John Tatschl (1906-1982). 6-8 pm. Wade Wilson Art, 217 W. Water St., Santa Fe. 660-4393. Delicate Beauty: new paintings by Regina Glassman Foster. 5-7 pm. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13

PHIL Space, 1410 2nd St., Santa Fe. 9837945. Vienna/Santa Fe: works by Frank Ettenberg from 2003 to the present. 5-8 pm.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12

Placitas Community Library, 453 Hwy. 165, Placitas. 505-867-3355. Dana Patterson Roth: nature-based photographs by Patterson Roth. 5-7 pm.

Aconica, 556 Canyon Rd. (behind the Pushkin Gallery), Santa Fe. 988-2979. Modernity, Mobility, Simplicity: unique photographs by Adria Ellis. 5-7 pm.

UNM Art Museum, 1 University of New Mexico, Alb. 505-277-4001. David Maisel/ Black Maps—American Landscape and the Apocalyptic Sublime: large-scale photographs

Rio Bravo Fine Art Gallery, 110 N. Broadway Ave., Truth or Consequences. 575-894-0572. Fiberart 2014—A Mixed Bag: invitational exhibition featuring works by thirty-six fiber artists. 6-9 pm. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19

Giacobbe-Fritz Fine Art, 702 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 986-1156. Craig Kosak— Warpaint: paintings representing solitude’s path. 5-7 pm.

Wheelhouse Art, 418 Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe. 919-9553. Here and Now, Now and Then: installation, sculpture, and photography by Margaret Denney. 5-7 pm.

Hunter Kirkland Contemporary, 200-B Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 984-2111. Two-Person Show: encaustics by Laura Wait. Scuptures by T. Barney. 5-7 pm.

Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, 435 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 982-8111. A$$holes on Cellphones: new drawings by Marc Dennis. 5-7 pm.

New Concept Gallery, 610 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 795-7570. Landscapes: paintings of northern New Mexico by Linda Petersen. 5-7 pm.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5

Nüart Gallery, 670 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 988-3888. Alberto Galvez: new works from Spain. 5-7 pm.

Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, 554 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 989-8688. Florence Miller Pierce—In the Light: survey of several decades of Transcendentalist works by Pierce. 5-7 pm.

The Jonathan Abrams MD Art Gallery, University of New Mexico Hospital, 5th Fl., Ambulatory Care Center, 2211 Lomas Blvd. NE, Alb. Impressions—Paintings by Jill Christian: color-field paintings by Christian. 4-6 pm.

Chiaroscuro Contemporary Art, 702 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 992-011. Ocean | Desert: photographs by Renate Aller. 5-7 pm. Gallery 901, 901 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 559304-7264. Logos in the Next Dimension: works by artist and designer Wilfried Haest. 5-8 pm. Marigold Arts, 424 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 982-4142. The Spirit of New Mexico: turnedwood vessels by Jim McLain. 5-7 pm.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20

Delicate Beauty: new works by Regina Glassman Foster on view at Wade Wilson Art, 217 West Water Street, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 12, from 5 to 7 pm. Exhibition runs through October 5.

Hand Artes Gallery, 137 County Rd. 75, Truchas. 505-689-2443. Tales of Tenderness: new mixed-media work by Sheila Mahoney Keefe. 3-5 pm. continued on page 38

SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 35


WHO SAID THIS? “There’s no retirement for an artist, it’s your way of living so there’s no end to it.” Joseph Albers or Cy Twombly or Henry Moore or Mark Rothko

THE DEAL

For artists without gallery representation in New Mexico.

Full-page B&W ads for $750. Color $1,000. Reserve space for the October issue by Monday, September 15 505-424-7641 or email: themagazinesf@gmail.com

Honey Harris Show with THE magazine Thursday, September 11 at 10:30 am

98.1 FM KBAC


OUT AND ABOUT photographs by Mr. Clix

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

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21

Las Placitas Presbyterian Church, 7 Paseo de San Antonio, Placitas. 505-8678080. Placitas Artists Series September Artist Reception: photography, fiber art, and painting by four New Mexico artists. 2-3 pm. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26

Blue Rain Gallery, 130 Lincoln Ave., Suite. C, Santa Fe. 954-9902. Solo Show: new paintings by Deladier Almeida. 5-7 pm. Canyon Road Contemporary, 403 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 983-0433. Lingua Franca— Modular Designs in Fused Glass by Doug Gillis: glass works by the artist. 5-7 pm. David Rothermel Contemporary, corner of Lincoln and Marcy, Santa Fe. 575-642-4981. Inheritance by Osmosis: paintings by David Rothermel revealing the artist’s stylistic influences from living American masters. 5-8 pm. Gerald Peters Gallery, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe. 954-5700. Don Coen: works by Coen. 5-7 pm. GF contemporary, 707 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 983-3707. Après Museé: new works by Pascal. 5-7 pm. GVG Contemporary, 241 Delgado St., Santa Fe. 982-1494. Invention and Re-invention: group show with work by gallery artists. 5-7 pm. Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 820-0807. Grand Cru of Color: Twenty-five mixed-media and acrylic works by Daniel Phill. 5-7 pm. LewAllen Galleries, 1613 Paseo de Peralta,

Santa Fe. 988-3250. Dirk de Bruycker— New Work: new abstract work by de Bruycker. Diane Burko—Investigations of the Environment: paintings and photographs by Burko. 5-7 pm. photo-eye

Gallery, 541 S. Guadalupe St., Santa Fe. 988-5159. Homegrown: large-scale color photographs by Julie Blackmon. 5-7 pm. Santa Fe Clay, 545 Camino de la Familia, Santa Fe. 984-1122. Greetings from North Carolina: work by nine potters from North Carolina. 5-7 pm. Tansey Contemporary, 652 Canyon Rd., Santa Fe. 995-8513. A Broader Interpretation of Southwestern “Landscapes”—works by Mark Bowles, Judith Content, Geoffrey Gorman, Hilario Gutierrez, Krista Harris, Carol Shinn, and Sheryl Zacharia. 5-7 pm. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27

516 Arts, 516 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505242-1445. Floyd D. Tunson—Son of Pop: survey of Tunson’s works addressing cultural identity, American social history, race and class relations, pop culture, art history, and the beauty of pure abstraction. 6-8 pm. Gaucho Blue Gallery, 14148 State Rd. 75, Peñasco. 575-587-1076. High Road Art Tour: select gallery artists and tour participants. 10 am-5 pm.

include Dennis Larkins, Esteban Bojorquez, Conrad Cooper, Joel Nakamura, Brandon Maldonado, Leah Saulnier, Greg Moon, and others. 5-7 pm.

Local Treasures awards at the Albuquerque Museum of Art and History, Sun., Sept. 7, 1-3 pm. Old Town ARTScrawl, Fri., Sept. 19. Listings and maps: artscrawlabq.org

Richard Levy Gallery, 514 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505-766-9888. Journey to Wilderness: large-scale photographs by Debra Bloomfield. Reception, book signing, and New Mexico Wilderness Alliance Fundraiser. 6-8 pm.

CCA Cinematheque, 1050 Old Pecos Tr., Santa Fe. 982-1338. Santa Fe Jewish Film Festival: The Sturgeon Queens—a documentary about the family behind New York’s legendary deli emporium, Russ and Daughters. Complimentary brunch and live klezmer music following the screening. Sun., Sept. 7, 11 am. santafejff.org

SPECIAL INTEREST

17th Annual Pilar Studio Tour, 575-7513042. Sat and Sun, Sept. 6 and 7, 10 am-5 pm. Info and map: www.pilarstudiotour.com 34th Annual Whole Enchilada Fiesta, Las Cruces. Enchilada-eating contest, local entertainment, carnival rides, and more. Fri., Sept. 26-Sun., Sept. 28. enchiladafiesta.com

Creative Santa Fe, James A. Little Theater, 1060 Cerrillos Rd., Santa Fe. 988-1234. Tony Hsieh—Lecture and Dialogue with Geoffrey West: lecture by the Zappos CEO, in partnership with the Santa Fe Institute and St. John’s College. Wed., Sept. 3, 6-7 pm. creativesantafe.org

333 Montezuma Art, 333 Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe. 988-9564. The Deeper the Southern Roots: work by Thornton Dial and Lonnie Holley. Through Dec. 31.

Encaustic Art Institute, 18 County Rd. 55A, Cerrillos. 424-6487. 6th Annual Afternoon Gala and Art Auction: silent and live auctions, encaustic art demos for kids and adults, wonderful food, and live jazz. Sun., Sept. 14, 2-6 pm. eainm.com

516 Arts, 516 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505242-1445. Floyd D. Tunson—Son of Pop: survey of Tunson’s works addressing cultural identity, American social history, race and class relations, pop culture, art history and the beauty of pure abstraction. Artist/curator talk, Thurs., Sept. 25, 6 pm. 516arts.org

EL Gallery & Studio, 95 County Rd. 75, Truchas. 505-689-1018. On the High Road: “sur-folk” paintings by Eric Luplow. Part of the High Road Art Tour, Sept. 21, 22, 27 and 28. ericluplow.com

Ghost Pony Gallery, 1634 State Rd. 76, Truchas. 505-689-1704. High Road Art Tour: Pearce preview with Trish Booth and new works by Leonardo Pieterse. 10 am-5 pm.

Albuquerque Photographer’s Gallery, 303 Romero St., Alb. 505-244-9195. There is No Why Here—Fragments of the Holocaust: photographs by Karl P. Koenig. Through Tues., Sept. 30. abqphotographersgallery.com

Greg Moon Art, 109-A Kit Carson Rd., Taos. 575-770-4463. New Mexi-Low: a survey of lowbrow art in New Mexico. Artists

ARTScrawl, Alb. Citywide, self-guided arts tour, Fri., Sept. 5. East Mountain ARTScrawl, Sat., Sept. 6, 10 am-5 pm. 2014

From left to right: Homegrown—large-scale color photographs by Julie Blackmon on display at photo-eye Gallery, 541 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 26 from 5 to 7 pm. Après Museé—new works by Pascal at GF Contemporary, 707 Canyon Road, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 26 from 5 to 7 pm. And the Big Storm Began—oil-on-panel paintings by Greg Tucker at Mariposa Gallery, 3500 Central Avenue SE, Albuquerque. Reception: Friday, September 5 from 5 to 7 pm.

continued on page 40

38 | THE magazine

SEPTEMBER

2014


TANSEY CONTEMPORARY A BROADER INTERPRETATION OF SOUTHWESTERN “LANDSCAPES”

Hilario Gutierrez ~ “RUSH TO SUMMER” ~ 54” x 45” ~ Acrylic on canvas

September 26 - October 21, 2014 Opening Night, Friday, September 26, 5 - 7 pm

A diverse group of artists’ work demonstrates that landscape inspired work can come in any form and meduim. Artists include: Mark Bowles, Judith Content, Hilario Gutierrez, Krista Harris, Carol Shinn, and Sheryl Zacharia


OPENINGS

FUZE-SW, 476-1162. Food and folklore festival including cooking demos, lectures, and tastings, Fri., Sept. 12-Sun., Sept. 14. Details: fuzesw.museumofnewmexico.org Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, 217 Johnson St., Santa Fe. 946-1000. Miguel Covarrubias— Drawing a Cosmopolitan Line: works tracing the breadth of Covarrubias’s intellectual and artistic interests. okeeffemuseum.org Harwood Museum of Art, 238 Ledoux St., Taos. 575-758-9826. ¡Orale! The Kings and Queens of Cool: works from the Post-Pop or Lowbrow, that grew out of West Coast surfer, car, and street culture. Sat., Sept. 20, 2014Sun., Jan. 25, 2015. harwoodmuseum.org Heart Gallery of New Mexico Foundation, Las Campanas Clubhouse, 132 Clubhouse Dr., Santa Fe. Cocktail mixer with hors d’oeuvres, raffle, and live auction to benefit New Mexico’s foster youth. Sat., Sept. 13, 6-9 pm. heartgallerynmfoundation.org High Road Art Tour, High Road to Taos Scenic Byway between Santa Fe and Taos. 888-8663643. Seventeenth annual tour of galleries and artist studios in Northern New Mexico. Sat. and Sun., Sept. 20-21 and 27-28, 10 am-5 pm. highroadnewmexico.com Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe. 466-4428. Before Bataan: New Mexico’s 20th Coast Artillery: from the Palace of the Governor’s photo-archives. Sept. 15-Oct.12. Museum of Northern Arizona, 3101 N. Ft. Valley Rd., Flagstaff, AZ. 928-774-5213. 23rd Annual Trappings of the American West Exhibition and Sale: art and goods by eighty artists from fourteen Western states. Member preview sale: Sat., Sept. 27, 5:30 pm. Public opening: Sun., Sept. 28 at 10 am. Through Sun., Dec. 7. Works by Diné artist Shonto Begay, through Sun., Oct. 26. musnaz.org New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., Santa Fe. 476-5200. Symposium for Painting the Divine—Images of Mary in the New World: learn more about the veneration of Mary in the Americas from scholars and art historians. Sat., Sept. 27 and Sun., Sept. 28. Exhibition through March 29, 2015. More events: nmhistorymuseum.org Pilar Studio Tour, 575-751-3042. Seventeenth annual tour showcasing works in oil, acrylic, ceramic, fiber art, and more. Sat., Sept. 6 and Sun., Sept. 7, 10 am-5 pm. pilarstudiotour.com Pojoaque River Art Tour, 505-455-3496. Twenty-first annual tour, Sat. and Sun., Sept. 20 and 21, 10 am-5 pm. Artists’ reception and silent auction at Than Povi Fine Art Gallery, Fri., Sept. 19, 5-8 pm. Maps: pojoaqueriverarttour.com

40 | THE magazine

Richard Levy Gallery, 514 Central Ave. SW, Alb. 505-766-9888. That’s Where You Need to Be: works by William Betts, Xuan Chen, Maria Park, and Willy Bo Richardson. Through Fri., Sept. 19. levygallery.com Sandia Heights Art Studio Tour, 505-2809772. Eighteen artists show at the eleventh annual tour. Sat., Sept. 6 and Sun., Sept. 7, 10 am-5 pm. Details: sandiaheightsart.com SITE Santa Fe, SITE center at the Armory for the Arts Theater, 1050 Old Pecos Tr., Santa Fe. “Unsettled Landscapes? What This Means to an Anthropologist”: Marcus Hamilton, Santa Fe Institute Fellow, explores this concept from an archaeological, anthropological, and ecological perspective. Tues., Sept. 23, 6 pm. sitesantafe.org Taos County Historical Society, Kit Carson Electric Boardroom, 118 Cruz Alta Rd., Taos. “From Josiah Gregg to Edward Abbey—Book Trails Across New Mexico”: free lecture by author Dr. David Farmer. Sat., Sept. 6, 2 pm. Teacher Open House, The Museums on Mountain Rd., Alb. 505-841-2861. Open and free events and resources for local educators. Wed., Sept. 17, 5:30-8 pm. TEDxABQ, Popejoy Hall, University of New Mexico, 203 Cornell Dr., Alb. 505-277-8010. “Ahead of Its Time—A Visionary Architect for Native Drama”: lecture on the history of the Paolo Soleri Amphitheater by architect Conrad Skinner. Sat., Sept. 6. More talks: tedxabq.com The Paseo: Multimedia Outdoor Art Installations, 40th Annual Taos Fall Arts Festival, Taos. Twenty-two artists will present seventeen outdoor art installations that will change the landscape of Taos art. Fri., Sept. 26. paseotaos.org PERFORMANCE

National Hispanic Cultural Center, 1701 4th St. SW, Alb. 505-242-5289. Siembra: New Mexico’s first-ever Latino theater festival, including works by Pulitzer Prize winner Quiara Alegría Hudes, and New Mexico author Rudolfo Anaya. Sept. 2014-May 2015. nhccnm.org Telluride Blues and Brews Festival, Telluride Town Park. Celebration of blues music and microbrews: Fri., Sept. 12-Sun., Sept. 14. Info and passes: tellurideblues.com From top to bottom: Grand Cru of Color—mixed-media acrylic paintings by Daniel Phill at Karan Ruhlen Gallery, 225 Canyon Road, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 26 from 5 to 7 pm. Show runs through October 9. Modernity, Mobility, Simplicity—Adria Ellis exhibits unique photographs at Aconica, 556 Canyon Road (behind the Pushkin Gallery), Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 12 from 5 to 7 pm. Wisdom Keepers—works by Star Liana York on view at Sorrel Sky Gallery, 125 West Palace Avenue, Santa Fe. Reception: Friday, September 5 from 5 to 7 pm. AUGUST

2014



PREVIEWS

Florence Miller Pierce: In the Light Charlotte Jackson Fine Art 554 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe. 989-8688 September 5 to 30, 2014 Reception: Friday, September 5, 5 to 7 pm. The subject of light has fascinated artists throughout the centuries. Florence Miller Pierce (19182007)—the name change from Florence Pierce is by request of the estate—created works that are profound examples of the primal significance of light in modern and contemporary art. In the Light surveys the development of the artist’s output over several decades. From painted geometric forms on canvas to her later radiant resin sculptures with surfaces varying from matte to gloss finishes, Miller Pierce created a body of work that is represented in numerous museum collections and noteworthy exhibitions. Miller Pierce arrived in Taos in 1936 and studied with Emil Bisttram. She joined the Transcendental Painters Group, whose members included Raymond Jonson, her husband Horace Pierce, and Agnes Pelton, the only other woman artist in the group. In the course of her development she worked with ink on rice paper and sculpted in stone and balsa wood. By accident, she discovered the play of light on resin when she spilled a few drops on foil. This led to years of experiments with the medium while refining her techniques. Miller Pierce retained her early interest in creating geometric sculptural forms, transformed by the luminous colors achievable through the use of resin on Plexiglas. The artist’s personal favorites were the white resin pieces with their minimal, elegant appearance.

Erin Currier: From Taos to Laos Blue Rain Gallery 130 Lincoln Avenue, Suite C, Santa Fe. 954-9902 September 12 to 27, 2014 Reception: Friday, September 12, 5 to 7 pm. Erin Currier is a traveler whose work incorporates aspects of her trips in multiple ways. She collects discarded ephemera and trash found on her journeys to use in her collaged and painted mixed-media portraits. Currier is a keen observer and conducts research on the people, cultures, and histories of the places she visits. All of this material colors the journal entries and finished art works she creates. Her studies have enabled her to see the commonalities shared by humans, although class, race, and ideologies may differ. For her new series, From Taos to Laos, Currier discovered numerous similarities between the American Southwest and Southeast Asia. She finds many aspects—from economic and ecological concerns to a preference for spicy food to deep-seated spiritual traditions relevant to a sense of place in both cultures, and incorporates them into her dense visual imagery, allowing viewers to join her in making cultural connections. Ultimately, the figurative work pays homage to those living outside of authority. As Currier says, “The discarded waste is re-transfigured into, hopefully, something of beauty in the same way the cast off discarded human beings who are the subject of many of my portraits are, themselves, re-contextualized through the privileged position of portraiture historically relegated to oil barons and kings.”

Top: Florence Miller Pierce, Untitled, resin relief, 70” x 30”, 1985 Bottom: Erin Currier, Kwan Yin, acrylic and mixed-media collage on panel, 36” x 24”, 2014

42 | THE magazine

SEPTEMBER

2014


Photography: Craig Clark

CHUCK VOLZ

Artist Reception August 29, 5-7pm 713 Canyon Road

713 Canyon Road

& 203 West Water St.

Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.casweckgalleries.com • 505.988.2966



FLASHBACK

RC Israel and Mary Iron Eyes at the Tony Price Memorial, Synergy Ranch, March 9, 2000 SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 45


HirosHi Yamano

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.

Branches August 8-sePtembeR 21

pedro surroca ALFREDO CORCHADO with MELISSA

DEL BOSQUE

WEDNESDAY 17 SEPTEMBER AT 7PM LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

jesse blancHard amalgams of color August 29-sePtembeR 21

My cell phone vibrated in my jeans pocket…It was July 2007. The last time I felt safe in Mexico. I recognized the low-pitched voice on the other end: a longtime trusted source, a U.S. investigator with informants inside some of the most brutal drug cartels in Mexico. I grabbed a pen and notepad and slipped into my bedroom. I closed the door… I spoke his secret code name and joked, “Hey --------, Qué onda? What’s up?” He got to the point: “Where are you?” “In Mexico”. “Where exactly?” “In my apartment. Why?” “They plan to kill an American journalist within twenty-four hours,” he said. “Three names came up. I think it’s you. I’d get out.”

— From Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter’s Journey Through a Country’s Descent into Hell© 2013

Alfredo Corchado, Mexico bureau chief for the Dallas Morning News, is a noted expert on immigration, drug violence, and U.S.-Mexico foreign policy. He has reported on many topics, from the disappearance and murders of women in Ciudad Juárez, to the exodus of Mexico’s middle class to the United States, to the exposure of government corruption and the reach of Mexican drug traffickers into U.S. communities. TICKETS ON SALE NOW

ticketssantafe.org or call 505.988.1234 $6 general/$3 students/seniors with ID Video and audio recordings of Lannan events are available at:

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

www.lannan.org


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

INSTALLATION VIEW by

Elmgreen & Dragset

The artist duo Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset have been working together for twenty years, creating sculpture, installations, and performances that they describe as filmic scenographies with viewers actively participating. Biography, at the National Gallery of Denmark, consists of fifty works that address issues of maintaining a personal identity in a celebrity-driven culture by utilizing the ability to create self-staged identities made possible through social media. The exhibition allows visitors to play a major role in these theatrical constructions as they peek into the banal homes of fictional tenants or make their way through institutional spaces such as a homeless shelter, a public restroom, and a morgue. Elmgreen and Dragset alter the spaces through the use of humor, poetry, and visual devices, allowing new realities to unfold. Their works address the challenge of finding the freedom to be a SEPTEMBER

2014

non-conformist within the rigid constraints of a society that is riddled with fear and controlled by consensus. To house this exhibition, the ground floor of Denmark’s largest museum will be physically transformed. Alongside Prada Marfa, a full-scale replica modeled after the faux Prada boutique in the dry plains and highway landscape near Marfa, Texas and other wellknown installations from previous exhibitions, there will be site-specific works. Welcome consists of a full-scale Airstream caravan crushed by a giant WELCOME TO LAS VEGAS sign. Elmgreen and Dragset have shown work at the Serpentine Gallery, Tate Modern, and biennials around the world, including Berlin, São Paulo, Istanbul, and Venice. On view at the National Gallery of Denmark, Sølvgade 48-50, Copenhagen, from September 19, 2014 to January 4, 2015. THE magazine | 47


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

SPOTLIGHT ON FRANCE Des accidents Happy Accident Number One

by Susan Wider

heureux

Pippa is the creation of publishing executive

to one hundred other independent publishers. The

If you are heading down rue du Sommerard off Boulevard

and humanitarian Brigitte Peltier, who founded the

basement houses an art gallery that presents exhibitions

St. Michel, in Paris’s Latin Quarter, it is hard to miss Pippa.

organization in 2006. Pippa’s own publishing arm

(painting, sculpture, photography, engraving, etc.)

The tomato-red storefront begs you to approach. And

produces three collections: one on travel, one on

throughout the year.

when you’re close enough to read the sign on the front

children’s literature, and one called, quite conveniently,

A recent gallery exhibition, Autour du conte (Around

of the building you see Edition Librairie Papeterie Galerie

collection généraliste. The ground-floor bookstore offers

the Story), organized by French independent publisher

(Publisher Bookstore Stationery Shop Gallery). Perfect.

Pippa’s own publications along with books from close

and story specialist Flies France, brought together the

SEPTEMBER

2014

continued on page 50

THE magazine | 49


work of eight artists from throughout Europe. Each artist

snakeskin, even giraffes’ knees.

What they don’t tell you about is the gallery hiding

is known for his or her work in fine art, but each one also

While many bookstores have the obligatory cat,

inside. I start up the stairs from the gift shop to look

illustrates children’s books, and these illustrations are the

Pippa has an artist in residence. He is François Pouch—

at a book display and discover I’m in an art gallery. The

focus of the exhibition. There are drawings, engravings,

known simply as Pouch in France. At age seventy he is one

exhibition is as beautiful as it is unusual. Called simply O,

watercolors, collages, pen and ink, and more. Based in

of France’s noted press illustrators and has branched out

it comprises twenty-six paintings by artist and Pauillac

Florence, mixed-media artist Brunella Baldi hints at her

into book illustration. In Bulles de Musique (Music Bubbles),

resident Laurent Valera. He is known throughout France

former career as a choreographer in every one of her

a collaboration with French poet and oboist Daniel Py,

for his innovative installations, sometimes incorporating

paintings. Rabbits’ ears sway in unison with dune grasses.

his gentle line drawings of figures from all corners of

light reflected on water to transform the shapes of

Houses roll on wheels. Bunnies cycle downhill on unicycles

the Parisian music scene capture poignant moments

continents; or blending ladders, trap doors, and mirrors

made of pink seashells. The flight of giant shadowy green-

in the lives of street musicians, opera singers, nightclub

to challenge our sense of constraint; or creating raku

gray birds in a white sky pulls the buildings off their

performers, and even the local crickets and magpies.

carapaces shed by unknown creatures.

foundations in the city below. Everything in Baldi’s work

Second Happy Accident

For O, Valera needed only plastic drinking glasses,

dances. Warsaw native Joanna Boillat incorporates twenty

Duplication is far from being identical.

paint washes, and white Canson paper. He fills each glass

years as a designer at Pierre Cardin into her art. Embellir

—Laurent Valera

with diluted acrylic-tinted water, then empties it. When he

ce qui nous entourne (embellish what surrounds us) is

The village of Pauillac lies partway up the Médoc

places each glass upside down on the paper the remaining

key in her stated philosophy. Her current preference for

peninsula north of Bordeaux. This is wine country and

color trickles down the glass and bleeds onto the paper.

gouache with colored pencil brings us a conniving, stitched

the vineyards infiltrate the town wherever they can.

He imprints each sheet with twenty-five circles, or O’s, in

together charcoal-gray coyote with roses for eyes and

Why have an empty lot on the corner when you could

five rows of five, created from twenty-five glasses. (The

near-human hands. Anastassia Elias uses ink impressions

just as easily grow some grapes there? Off-season, on the

romantic in me wanted them to be wine glasses or even

of her fingertips to create textures that at first glance look

sleepy little main street, the Maison du tourisme et du vin

the bottom circles of some nice bottles of Bordeaux.) As

like engravings. She applies this detail in a turtle’s back, a

is exactly that, the tourism and wine office. Combined.

soon as glass number twenty-five is in place, he returns to


F E AT U R E

the first glass and removes all glasses in the same order.

building by architect Firmin Bourgeois and his successor,

hallway nearly as long as the building itself presents nearly

The manner in which he lifts each glass creates different

Ludovico Visconti, was indeed built to house the Tuileries

two-dozen paintings by Auguste Renoir, many of which

effects. Sometimes there is a little burst of color outside

Gardens’ orange trees. Today the upstairs galleries are

were in his studio at the time of his death. The effect of so

the circle. Sometimes two colors mix. The paper reacts to

a chapel of sorts for Claude Monet’s mural ensemble

many ornate gilt frames extending along one long wall feels

the water and distorts, playing its role in the finished piece.

Les Nymphéas (Water Lilies). Created for the building’s

over the top yet compelling, even before looking inside

The colors diffuse as they respond to the rippling of the

transformation to a museum, the eight compositions

the frames. Halfway along the wall there is a clever cut-

paper. “It’s magical, fascinating,” says Valera, “still today,

(1914-1926) fill two oval rooms. The devotional hush

out that creates a peephole into the next set of galleries.

even after having made so many of them.” The letter O

in these spaces keeps people from doing anything but

The opening is a perfect frame for André Derain’s Arlequin

rhymes with eau, the French word for water, and for

whisper. Visitors are surrounded by wall-size views—

à la guitare, a teaser of what is still to come. This next series

Valera the O also represents the circular form—each an

at different times of day—of Monet’s lily pad pond at

of galleries brings groupings of Matisse, Modigliani, Utrillo,

individual world expressing multiple points of view from

Giverny, his home in Normandy. There could hardly be a

Rousseau, Picasso, and more. And there are surprises, like

the simple element of unpredictable traces left behind by

better way to understand Monet’s process than by sidling

Marie Laurencin with her vertical brushstrokes, underwater

a glass of water on immaculate paper.

up to these enormous brush strokes.

colors, and rosy pinks, hidden and otherwise; and Chaïm

The downstairs level at the Orangerie is something else

Third Happy Accident

entirely. Here the calm of Monet’s inner sanctum—what

Of course the Louvre and the Musée d’Orsay and

he himself called an oasis—is replaced with extravagance,

Beaubourg and Versailles are delicious places to discover

multiple artists, and wonderful variety. The Jean Walter and

art, but I like hunting down the less-visited gems. I decided

Paul Guillaume Collection is the museum’s other anchor,

to give the Orangerie a go on my last morning in Paris, and

and the second half of its identity. Paul Guillaume was an

it was perfect. Located at the extreme western end of

art dealer in the 1920s, who made a promise to himself

the Tuileries Gardens at Place de la Concorde, this 1852

that he would create a modern art museum for Paris. A

SEPTEMBER

2014

Soutine, whose buildings, trees, and even people’s noses lean and sway precariously in their frames. Fourth happy accident? That’s for my next visit. First page: Pippa, photo courtesy of Brigitte Peltier. This page, left to right: Laurent Valera, O (detail), diluted acrylic on paper, 50 x 70 cm, 2014, courtesy of the artist. Joanna Boillat, Le coyote et le cèdre (The Coyote and the Cedar), gouache and colored pencil on paper, 40 x 27 cm, 2010, courtesy of the artist. Marie Laurencin, Portrait de Mademoiselle Chanel, oil on canvas, 92 x 73 cm, 1923.

THE magazine | 51


après musée

BLUE SENSE 1 diptych 30x30 each mixed media

pascal

Reception for the Artist September 26 5-7pm

707 Canyon Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501 gfcontemporary.com 505.983.3707


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Temporal Domain 1011 Paseo

de

Peters Projects Peralta, Santa Fe

W E OWE M A LRAUX F O R TH E N O TI O N O F A RT A S A M OVEA B LE FEA ST. Perhaps the most enduring contribution of André Malraux’s

The formless molten mass of aluminum of Lynda

artistry over the course of a long and distinguished

magnum opus, The Voices of Silence, is its core insight about a

Benglis’s Figure 6 is emblematic of a very different

career, marked by the artist’s unerring sense of what

work of art’s capacity to adapt itself to different contexts and

approach to specific objects, one that, for her, celebrates

divides art from design.

thus be informed with new meaning over time. Otherwise,

their shared organic identity. The power and perverse

The three large ink-on-paper drawings and the

art of the past would be only that: art history. Titian’s Man

formal appeal of Benglis’s lumpen skulptur is on a par

mounted steel and enamel wall sculpture by Roxy Paine

with a Glove, relocated from its original setting to that of

with the antithetical elegance of Ken Price’s equally

do not engage at the level of the work by the other artists

the museum, becomes simply “a Titian.” The risk is that we

amorphous ceramic work.

in the show. That said, Paine’s RDA, a pyramid of pain

don’t look beyond its celebrity status. The reward can be

Two

easel-scale

paintings

from

Harmony

divided into eighteen compartments illustrating devices

Hammond’s Aperture series—monotypes on Twinrocker

for torture and ascending from medieval to modern

The summer show at Peters Projects features six artists

paper with grommets—have the convincing look and

variants, is a potent indictment of our contemporary

who have links to northern New Mexico—mostly to Santa

feel of oil on canvas, while her large oil and mixed media

culture of violence.

Fe or, in the case of Agnes Martin, to Taos. More to the point,

on canvas Frazzle comes across as matte monotype.

Agnes Martin’s 1973 portfolio of screen prints, On a

and save for one artist, the work in the show represents

Common to these three works is Hammond’s abiding

Clear Day, appeared a year or so before the artist would

our discovery of new import.

the signature styles that each developed

resume a career in painting that she had

in the 1960s and 1970s. This was the

abandoned in 1967, when personal crisis

period of late Modernism marked by the

led her to leave her studio and New

rise of diverse movements that broke

York City to travel in the Southwest,

away from the long Modernist tradition

where she would settle and build a new

culminating in Abstract Expressionism.

studio, in Cuba, New Mexico, in 1974.

The fact that many of the works in the

Each print in the series is a variation of

show were done after 2000—decades

a gray grid drawn in graphite on cream-

after their “prototypes”—shows that

colored rag paper. On a Clear Day is a

these artists continued or continue to find

rare opportunity to witness Martin’s

them meaningful.

understanding of “inspiration” as a

Minimal artist John McCracken’s

mode of intellection, however intuitive.

painted planks, each composed of

The first twelve prints are variants on

plywood, fiberglass, and resin (Cosmos,

a closed grid format framed by borders

2001; Particle, 2005; Traveler, 2005)

on all sides. The next five prints (13-17)

reprise the sculptural type that he

explore an open-form grid of horizontal

debuted in 1966. Positioned as seen here

lines, and the last thirteen (18-30) depict

with Traveler, a tall, narrow rectangular

open grids of hatching horizontal and

plank rests on the gallery floor but leans

vertical lines whose open ends produce

on the wall—for McCracken a stance

the effect of a wire mesh. Any lingering

that mediates Minimalist insistence on

tendency of the viewer to see these

the literal presence of the artwork as

signature grids of Martin as “austere

“specific object” by evoking traditional

geometries” is dispelled by the added

sculpture (floor) and painting (wall)

nuance achieved by her modulations

with their inherent illusive or allusive

of cell scale and shape and of the

reference. Yet McCracken reaffirms

thickness of horizontal line in several

the work’s status as an object in the

prints. This approach, both intellective

viewer’s own space with the latter’s

and intuitive, can be seen in her large

reflection

pale acrylic horizontal-band paintings of

mirrored

in

its

glossy

1993-1994 now permanently installed

monochrome surface. James Lee Byars’ conceptualist tack

in the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos.

deploys the aesthetic of the specific object

For the artists in Temporal Domain

to carry Zen-like texts and titles that

as well as for its viewers, Malraux’s

infuse idea and image as visual meditation.

insight about art as a moveable feast

His

continues to hold true.

understated

koans

and

wryly

ambivalent imagery (The Philosophical

—Richard Tobin

Nail), and above all, beautiful objects, are both saving grace and key to the success of his work.

SEPTEMBER

2014

James Lee Byars, The Philosophical Nail, gilded iron, 10 ¾” x 11/ 4” x 11/ 4”, 1986

THE magazine | 53


Beckett on Film A Four-Part Series Beckett on Film is a collection of films presenting all 19 of Samuel Beckett’s plays including Endgame, Waiting for Godot, Catastrophe and Rough for Theatre. Each film is unique, featuring some of the world’s most talented directors and actors including David Mamet, Harold Pinter, Michael Gambon and Kristin Scott-Thomas. SEPTEMBER 7 Act Without Words 1 Endgame SEPTEMBER 14 Rough for Theatre 1 Footfalls That Time Catastrophe Rough for Theatre 2 SEPTEMBER 21 Breath Waiting for Godot SEPTEMBER 28 Act Without Words 2 A Piece of Monologue Play Rockaby

Every Sunday in September at 11am At The Screen FREE ADMISSION (FIRST-COME, FIRST-SERVED) VISIT WWW.THESCREENSF.COM FOR A FULL SCHEDULE

Santa Fe University of Art & Design 505.473.6494 1600 St. Michael’s Drive Santa Fe, NM 87505

www.lannan.org


CRITICAL REFLECTION

James Drake: Pages: New Drawings

James Kelly Contemporary 1611 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe

IT IS A CURIOUS EXPERIENCE TO ENCOUNTER UNEXPECTED REMNANTS OF ONE’S LIFE. Whether it is an outdated outfit brought out from storage,

exacting detail in charcoal and graphite, and gestural

outlines the history of the collection of the Budapest Museum of

or a journal entry we are sure we authored but no longer

washes of ink. His subject matter has the randomness of

Fine Arts. The text claims that some drawings at the institution

identify with, these moments are confrontations with our

the contents of a sketchbook, tangibly holding space for

descended from the hands of Giorgio Vasari, a forefather of

younger, other selves now lost to the process that is aging.

the ephemera floating around his mind. Across the re-

Western art history. This selection of text feels like a poignant

This peculiar confrontation with the passage of time also

appropriated pages are a wild boar, a swan, a birdcage, and a

tribute to the tradition of art historical study.

haunts the current solo exhibition of new drawings by James

particle accelerator, to name a few examples. These images,

Birdcage, drawings #1266, 1267, 1268, 1269, 1270

Drake at James Kelly Contemporary. Drake’s drawings on

some fully fleshed, some sketched like studies, along with

& 1271 (2014) features an elegantly drawn birdcage over

paper fold time back on itself, both in the sphere of the

the printed Old Master plates, invite a poetic exercise in

a collage of printed plates and text. The text outlines the

personal life of the artist and in the timeless patterns of art

discovering—or inventing—associations.

formation of the Budapest Museum as wrapped up with the

history. The resulting installation is simultaneously wistfully

The elusive nature of these connections makes viewing

Hungarian socio-political struggle to attain freedom from

the works akin to listening to a private conversation, as if the

the Habsburg monarchy in the mid-nineteenth century.

The ten drawings on display are products of a

artist was in dialogue with his younger self. Indeed, it is difficult

The book posits that public access to fine art was and is crucial

commitment to draw every day for two years, an effort that

for the onlooker to parse intentional mark-making from the

for cultural and artistic innovation, a sentiment that must

resulted in over twelve hundred drawings. The bulk of that

marks, stains, and wear of time; the accidental process of

have struck a chord with Drake, as his work in Pages pays

endeavor is being shown in a concurrent exhibition at the

creation from the intentional. For example, in Eye & Mouth,

homage to his own access to the work of the Old Masters.

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego in the exhibition

drawings #1252 & 1253 (2013), two book pages arranged

The content of the text finds its allegory in the lovely, empty

James Drake: Anatomy of Drawing and Space (Brain Trash). The

in a diptych bear faint yet meticulous sketches. An open eye

birdcage rendered alongside it.

selection at James Kelly Contemporary is an intimate group

on one, a parted mouth on the other, the papers are stained

The introspective environment of the installation feels

of drawings arranged in collages, diptychs, and triptychs.

with neutral washes of ink. It is unclear whether these faces

both like a love poem and an elegy. There is melancholy in

Each of the works is drawn on and comprised of pages of

are in the process of fading away or newly emerging. Either

the loose, organic washes of ink, and the curling, yellowing

the first book on drawing the artist acquired as a young man.

way, the sketches percolate within the rich fabric of the book

papers, remnants of a life. There is also profound respect

Master Drawings from the Collection of the Budapest Museum

pages, delicate insights into the artist’s process, practice,

and humility as Drake acknowledges his indebtedness to the

of Fine Arts, 14th–18th Centuries (Abrams, 1956), which

and preparation.

traditions of the creation and dissemination of art in the best

romantic and refreshingly contemporary.

way possible: his own contemporary innovations and unique

contains reproductions of Old Master drawings, is now

In the same way that the works are self-reflexive, they are

yellowing, stained, and appears to have been well loved.

historically reflexive. Homage is paid to the sphere of influence

creative vision.

Drake dismembered the volume and removed its pages to

to which the artist is indebted, as well as to the tradition of art-

—Lauren Tresp

add his own drawings on blank pages as well as over and

historical study itself. Included in the collaged papers are pages

across the works of his art-historical predecessors.

of text from the book of drawings. In Accelerators, drawings

An impressive draftsman, the artist alternates between

SEPTEMBER

2014

#1262, 1263, 1264 & 1265 (2014), the book’s introduction

James Drake, Birdcage, drawings #1266, 1267, 1268, 1269, 1270 & 1271, graphite on book pages, 38” x 72”, 2014

THE magazine | 55


SAM SCOTT

MESSAGES FROM THE WOUNDED HEALERS

Shining Back, oil on canvas, 80” x 54”, 2014

Center for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe • 505-982-1338 Opening Reception: Friday, August 22 from 6 to 8 pm. Artist Talk: Saturday, August 23 at 2 pm. Sam Scott is proudly represented in Santa Fe by Yares Art Projects • 123 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe • 505-984-0044


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Dana Newmann: In the Realm of Surrealism

Phil Space 1410 Second Street, Santa Fe

IS THERE ANYTHING OUT THERE THAT DANA NEWMANN CAN’T USE IN HER ART? My work is built from the ephemera of everyday life. —Dana Newmann

spoons, and five wooden fish hanging mobile-like in front of

the story possibilities are endless. The Dialogue photographic

what was once a gorgeous flower-painted clock face. Plenty

pairings are pure cleverness and creativity. In Dialogue IV we

of story elements here. The Surrealist’s Cabinet of Wonders

find two nineteenth-century photographs called cabinet cards.

features a bright green wooden suitcase and its title is hand-

The photos are of two young women, obviously sisters.

There are tiny charms hiding in her collages. There are pages

lettered in white onto black piano keys glued to an outside

Newmann has hand-lettered onto each photo a conversation

from music manuscripts and dictionaries. Animal teeth,

edge of the case. Just like the wall pieces, the cabinets are like

about sibling rivalry where the sister on the left touts her status

marbles, political campaign buttons; nothing is off limits.

three dimensional collages and should also be read like ever-

as firstborn and the sister on the right boasts about being

And it isn’t really that she repurposes these things. It’s more

shifting stories. Newmann has been a collector of treasures

prettier and thinner. In Dialogue V the entire conversation

like a rescue operation. I look at her work, whether it’s the

throughout her life and using them in her art is what she

among the pictured individuals takes place through collaged

framed collages, the shadow boxes, the curiosity cabinets, or

describes as a way to “honor the objects but at the same time

fortune cookie inserts. Fire is a somewhat simpler collage, but

an altered book retelling of a Max Ernst novel, and I see a

pass them along into life.”

with big impact. One day while cutting up an old dictionary and

million little details from my own history. Isn’t that a game

The gallery’s largest room holds nearly two-dozen framed

tossing the pieces onto the embers of a dying fire, Newmann

piece from Monopoly hiding in that collage? Wait, didn’t I have

collages, “psychological studies,” and “dialogues.” In much of

retrieved the page where the word fire appears. She collaged a

a tiny pocketknife like that once? (I gave it to Barbie; it was her

Newmann’s art, she offers us the tools to tease out a story, or

second singed page under it and added snippets of burnt-black

size.) And the vintage photographs are just like those of my

even several. Her philosophy is that the work should be read

paper as highlights. The result is eerie and beautiful. Newmann

great-grandparents.

like books, and then reread to glean even more detail from the

may categorize her work as surrealist, and she’s right, but she also brings us face to face with the grim reality of childhood gone

Newmann has an interest in the history of art, and the

elements, or to come up with a whole new story. In A Matter of

pieces in the show’s front room are collages reworked from

Physics she gives us page one of a musical score, a letter-E stencil,

and past treasures lost.

history. She has taken pages from a reprint of Max Ernst’s

part of an ornate picture frame, and a little cluster of green

—Susan Wider

1934 surrealist graphic novel, Une semaine de bonté, and

European postage stamps. From these superimposed elements,

Dana Newmann, Memento Mori Curiosity Cabinet, 24”w x 21”h x 6”d, 2010

collaged bits and pieces of cutout images onto the original pages to create a new feminist reading of the novel. In addition to the three framed single pages on the walls, we can also page through the entire book (conservator’s gloves provided) which rests on a nearby lectern and contemplate Newmann’s use of strategically placed cutouts of snakes and vegetables. On one page a man’s head has been replaced by an octopus. On another, a woman’s breast has a giant radish pasted onto it. It’s not so much ton sur ton as it is vintage sur vintage. I won’t be able to use old-timey clip art now without thinking of Newmann’s feminist treatise. The gallery’s middle room contains three curiosity cabinets, several wall-mounted shadow boxes, and a demi skull. The skull is an assemblage entitled Sagittal and is perhaps the most interesting of this group of items because the search for what’s inside is ridiculously fun. The skull rests on its right cheek, like a bowl. Everything is Clorox-white and at first the contents look like a bleached brain—the right brain in this case. Closer inspection reveals tiny bits and pieces of, once again, rescued treasures. There are many types of animal teeth, a wishbone, small animal skulls, tiny jaws, and the occasional hand or leg from an antique china doll. It’s hard to stop hunting in there for other things we might recognize. Inspired by sixteenth century cabinets of curiosities, Newmann’s cabinets are also great fun to explore—and this time touching is allowed, no gloves necessary. The cabinets are beautifully planned and are found objects, not built. For Memento Mori Curiosity Cabinet, whose title is written on an oversized luggage tag tied to the handle, the cabinet might have been an old doll trunk or a traveling salesman’s sample case. Inside are milagros, old books, a child’s shoe, antique

SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 57


Tasha Ostrander: Plains of Apparition

Gebert Contemporary 588 Canyon Road, Santa Fe

ONE BEAUTIFULLY COOL SUMMER NIGHT IN THE MOUNTAINS, THE WILD-ASS sound of hooves a-gallop bounced through the screen

preoccupying Ostrander.

some organic detritus on the floor, which one of the

in thought and manner, I rose to the open door, the

preoccupying humanity right now. From Buñuel up

massive mammals appears to sniff. The view out the

clatter of rock shattering still

through Deleuze you see this “civilization versus

window is a blue rectangle of the adjacent building,

silence.

nature” duality engaged. You see it in Constable’s

but somewhere in the misty background a dreamy

The untamed moon, wide awake like day, lay witness

White Horse and in Nauman’s spinning dogs and deer.

diorama-type Himalayan wonderland lingers like a

to the neighbor’s donkeys running in silver circles

You see it in the ban on filming in meat processing

distant memory. How these daydreaming goat-yaks

against the box canyon walls, braying like asses about

plants, and in the shrinking polar environment.

came to be shopping for a new location for their

having kicked down a small portion of the old man’s

The Deleuzean rereading of the Garden of Eden

finance business is anybody ’s guess. Lord knows it

rickety fence. The sound of their hooves held a

story as boosterism for the Agricultural Revolution

ain’t easy being a taxidermied endangered species,

rhythm that when you listened carefully bespoke their

and a prime source of Western dualism undoes

and the longing for open mountain ranges under blue

mule-headed joy.

the myth. One can envision collapsing the Judeo-

skies can make even the stuffiest people do crazy

of

Christian man vs. nature duality that has become so

things.

digital prints, three free diorama donkeys wander

destructive to human and animal psyches and habitats

One crazy thing about The Takins is that the blue

an ambiguous landscape, ears flattened back, eyes

in order to co-create a future of true sustainability

rectangle of anti-view window can also be read as a

wide.

the

In

Tasha

Ostrander’s

recent

exhibition

In

fact,

this

is

The building seems to contain a big houseplant and allegory

door and broke me from the fields of dream. A-strewn

the

fundamental

and

for all the life forms on the planet. Humans need to

reflection on the glass that frames the print, bringing

taxidermy exhibitions at Philadelphia’s Academy of

nature-harmonize our amazing technologies so that

the image almost subliminally into the viewer’s space,

Natural Sciences (to which Ostrander’s family has

they can be produced, distributed, and employed

as well as creating another meta-level of presentation

donated many stuffed animals) are then digitally

without significant disruption (excepting beneficial

as the viewer decodes the layers of the image. From

superimposed, constituting a surreal world that

augmentation) to the natural systems of production,

diorama with animals and landscape to anonymous

more than anything recalls numerous moments in

including but not limited to soil, water, and air, that

steel and plate-glass space to faux reflection on the

the great films of Luis Buñuel when the barnyard and

sustain all the earth’s animal-people.

window glass of the piece, perhaps the strength of

Photographs

of

architectural

spaces

the boardroom are conflated. As in Buñuel’s work,

In The Takins, one of Ostrander’s strongest

this triple-headed, conceptually circular game of

the architectural settings stand in for civilization

prints, a small lost herd of large, horned creatures

faux and real is what powers this composition and

while the animals symbolize the natural world. Put

moves through what appears to be the second

suggests that Ostrander is actually at her best as an

over

or third floor of an abandoned office building.

installation artist. Where’s the taxidermied yak that

simply,

this

is

the

fundamental

allegory

talks back to Rauschenberg? Why not literalize the echoes, reflections, superimpositions, etc. that fill the prints and really invite the viewer into a new state of awareness? For all their formal beauty (The Owls is lovely) the prints remain elegantly

remote.

Ostrander

is

a

subtle visual thinker and artist, and here she almost disappears into her own reverie. In many ways the images presented in Plains of Apparition can be read as studies for a piece that would require more of the artist’s and viewer’s space-time, as either a timebased media like video, or a spacebased one like installation. Or perhaps this material could be more fully realized through a combination, as has been the case in some of Ostrander’s successful past forays into the very real architecture of the art wilderness.

—Jon Carver


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Unsettled Landscapes 1606 Paseo

de

SITE Santa Fe Peralta, Santa Fe

By addressing land as culturally meaningful as well as simply a place to look at or settle, or exploit, artists can point the way both back, toward lost historical lessons and forward, recalling Marshall McLuhan’s description of art as an early warning system. —Lucy R. Lippard, “Invasive Species, Restlessness, Disturbances, and Other Events,” from the catalogue for Unsettled Landscapes

THE VERY IDEA OF CASTING A NET OVER THE AMERICAS AND EXTRICATING an integrated set of meanings from the enormity of these

corporation’s) life—broods over Unsettled Landscapes. The

In this dense but eminently rewarding exhibition, art is

spaces makes my head swim. The North and South American

artists in this show interrogate aspects of a place whose true

placed in such contexts as deep time, geographical uncertainty,

continents are like the proverbial iceberg that we can only

nature can never be fixed, can never be unequivocally signed,

toxic byproducts, cultural blowback, or historical revisionings,

hint at in terms of its true size because of all the submerged

sealed, and delivered to the great maw of history. I’m thinking

to name only a few of the issues with which the artists grapple

histories, politics, economies, ecologies, and cultural practices.

now of Luis Camnitzer’s fascinating piece on the construction of

in Unsettled Landscapes. In spite of the uniqueness of each

Putting together an exhibition like Unsettled Landscapes—

the Panama Canal, Amanaplanacanalpanama. One could say that

vision, all these projects are related; they are conceptually

with its forty-six artists representing multiple viewpoints and

the epicenter of historical reckoning about our collective sense

nested inside each other, their themes coiling and uncoiling from

methodologies—was a huge curatorial undertaking, to say

of destiny is right here in New Mexico, and only a scant thirty-

within, sharing echoes, shadows, and reflections of knowledge,

the least. Add to that the fact that Unsettled Landscapes is only

five miles and seventy years separate SITE Santa Fe from Los

speculation, interpretation, and imaginative thinking. Yet not all

the first installment of a whole series of related biennials called

Alamos and the nail on which Robert Oppenheimer hung his hat.

of the projects are recent—Agnes Denes’s seminal ecological

In addressing the charged history of our relationship

intervention Wheatfield—A Confrontation, once situated in

Kevin Schmidt’s A Sign in the Northwest Passage was

to nuclear energy and the weapons industry, the group

lower Manhattan, is from 1982. Such thoughtful, probing, and

intended to function as a kind of evil eye against the development

Futurefarmers constructed a work called Forging a Nail, its

critical work takes time to unpack in a viewer’s mind, but the

of natural resources in the Arctic. He constructed a huge sign

relative simplicity acting as a curious mirror to the paradox

rewards are many in terms of visual impact and the artistic

out of wood and carved into it biblical text from the Book of

of modernity itself and humanity’s fraught position within

integrity behind the making of any given piece. Keep this in

Revelations as a warning about the ecological catastrophe that

its continuum. The group fabricated three nails: one from an

mind—an iceberg’s true dimensions cannot ever be adequately

could result from gas and oil exploration in that region. Schmidt

ancient meteorite that fell to earth about fifty-thousand years

determined and the coordinates of a journey around it are always

positioned his slab of wood on a section of the still-frozen

ago; one made of steel pennies used in place of copper ones

subject to adjustment because every iceberg slowly undergoes

Northwest Passage, yet when the artist went back to check on

during World War II; and the third nail made from Trinitite, a

its own erosional process as it drifts, like this exhibition, from

his sign a year later, no trace of it could be seen anywhere, either

residue of the first atomic bomb test that took place in Southern

the Arctic Circle to Tierra del Fuego and beyond, calving as it

by air or by boat, in the open water that he found. This piece

New Mexico. The fourth nail in this work was only referred to in

goes along.

casts a long shadow over the drama of climate change and the

a copy of an interoffice memorandum from Los Alamos, dated

—Diane Armitage

implications for the development of the Arctic as a result of the

October 18, 1943. In it is a request from Oppenheimer for a nail

melting ice.

on the wall that he could use to place his now-iconic fedora. In

SITElines that will unfold over a period of years.

If Schmidt’s piece points a finger at the indifference with

this work of concise artistic choices full of a haunting resonance,

which a big corporation meddles in the fate of an ecologically

Futurefarmers dug into the files of history and constellated one

sensitive

of the great conundrums of contemporary life.

region,

Melanie

Smith’s

extraordinary

video

Agnes Denes, Wheatfield—A Confrontation: Battery Park Landfill, Downtown Manhattan—With Statue of Liberty Across the Hudson, two acres of wheat planted and harvested by the artist a block from Wall Street and the World Trade Center, 1982. Commissioned by Public Art Fund, NYC. © Agnes Denes. Courtesy Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, NYC.

Fordlandia—a work filled with gorgeous images shot in the Amazon jungle and judiciously edited into a visual tapestry full of wonder and melancholy—steeps itself in an historical event. Fordlandia addresses not only current signifiers of life in the Amazon, with its insane riot of flora and fauna, but a segment of past corporate tinkering as well. In the early 1920s, Henry Ford attempted, but ultimately failed, to set up a factory there. Smith uses no narrative text in her critique of Ford’s dreams of mechanization in the steamy tropics. She relies instead on the juxtaposition of stunning visual sequences to allude to the reasons why Ford was not successful in producing the world’s largest supply of rubber; he failed because he was never able to grasp the bigger geographical picture with its literal and figurative Amazonian complexity. The idea of a sense of place—the deeply held belief in it or the reverse, its unimportance in a person’s (or a

SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 59


Meridel Rubenstein: Eden Turned On Its Side: Selections from Photosynthesis

David Richard Gallery 544 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe

EDEN TURNED ON ITS SIDE IS A NINE-YEAR ENDEAVOR IN THREE PARTS: Photosynthesis, The Volcano Cycle, and Eden in Iraq. A selection

industrialization, and destruction. To capture this Edenic ideal that

from the first series (started in 2007) and two volcano images

informs Photosynthesis, Rubenstein photographed people and

are hanging in a small side room of David Richard Gallery. The

vegetation from New Mexico, Vermont, and Singapore.

decontextualizes the object in reconsideration. In digital postproduction, Rubenstein repeatedly uses a large central circle suspended amid puffy white clouds that acts

expected completion of Eden in Iraq is 2016. Meridel Rubenstein

Perhaps the most literal selection is a grid of nine

like a thought bubble, a magnifying glass, and a globe all at once.

is a renowned photographer and environmentalist asking through

photographs, each with a single leaf from a different tree in a

Its contents vary, but its most basic image, seen in Gaia Cloud

this timely series, “Can Eden be restored?”

different stage of photosynthesis. These specimens transcend

and Winter Cloud, is a simple circle whose contents are inverted

Rubenstein (along with plenty of others) maintains the

their weary decay and, magnified, their decomposition becomes

using Photoshop. Greek mythology identifies Gaia as one of the

Judeo-Christian ideal of Eden that the Earth was at one time

filigree and the green, gold, yellow, and orange become idyllic

primordial deities and more succinctly as the personification of

perfect. First there was light, which allowed for photosynthesis,

displays of the intelligence of nature. They float in darkness on

earth or even Mother Earth. Gaia Cloud conjoins heaven and

vegetation, and life. A symbiosis between man and his lair was born

black grounds as if to indicate the pending absence of light. Like

earth while probing the existence of heaven on earth.

that we really still depend on today despite millennia of innovation,

Georgia O’Keeffe’s abstracted plants, Photosynthesis Leaf Grid

The floating mandala in Fall Seasonal illuminates an autumn tree—ancient and wise in its enormity and healthy in its idyllic brilliance. It may as well be the tree of knowledge where we ate the apple, where our eyes were opened, and from which we thus endured expulsion. Paradise was barred but also preserved. Fall Seasonal suggests this distance and dislocation while referencing another creation story: the Big Bang. A fertile ball floats in a gaseous atmosphere ready to combust. Winter Seasonal is the sibling image, which documents a leafless tree preserving its energy through the cold. In both of these images, the tree is chopped into smaller frames of macro and micro rectangles that, pieced together, offer a multi-perspective composition of paradise, proposing nature’s omniscience. Rubenstein writes that “wherever people thought there to be Eden, invariably there would have been some sort of environmental conflagration that destroyed it.” The flaming sword barring entrance to the Garden of Eden in Genesis is just one example of this heated destruction that forms section two. The Volcano Cycle concretely focuses on Indonesia’s Ring of Fire and Mount Toba’s eruption over seventy thousand years ago, theorized to have caused a global catastrophe resulting in a bottleneck in human evolution. These images are printed on aluminum panel to evince “deep, geological time full of minerals and melted ore.” For Eden in Iraq, Rubenstein went to Southern Iraq’s former marshlands, also known as Mesopotamia, which are cited as the hub of civilization if not the original Garden of Eden. In 1991 (following the First Gulf War), Saddam Hussein diverted the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, thereby making the area inhospitable for refuged militiamen as well as for all the other mammals and fish. The previously dense ecosystem was drained, leaving behind a desert. Rubenstein and environmental engineer Mark Nelson want to restore this site of war and destruction to a brimming garden, reinstating Eden to this post-Edenic site. In this epic trilogy there is no fairytale or apocalyptic beginning and end, but instead a cyclical proposition of birth, destruction, and renewal. Rubenstein seamlessly stitches together our legendary fables with our ephemeral geography and prompts intent reconsideration of our cultural heritage and legacy.

—Hannah Hoel

Meridel Rubenstein, Fall Seasonal, archival pigment inks on Hahnemuehle 100 rag paper, 67” x 48 ¾”, 2010


CRITICAL REFLECTION

Unsettled Landscapes 1606 Paseo

de

SITE Santa Fe Peralta, Santa Fe

TOO MANY WORDS; NOT ENOUGH OOMPH. THAT’S THE IMPRESSION I WAS left with after walking away from SITE Santa Fe’s latest

The New Yorker review—to be able to “relax and enjoy” the

years after what some of these people are suggesting was

biennial effort. Before delving more deeply into the

art without having to either “be maddened” by inaccessible

the organization’s heyday, SITE has failed to impress, again.

exhibition, Unsettled Landscapes, I need to establish two

imagery or look up its every detail in a “brainy” catalogue.

What has happened to New Mexico’s most important

major points. First, I sincerely appreciate that, under the

Which brings me back to my original point: Why do we have

contemporary-art organization? Does the board think they

directorship of Irene Hofmann, the institution has examined

to pore over a lot of verbiage in order to understand A)

can rest on SITE’s laurels? Do they realize that the better

and subsequently shifted the biennial experience from its

what the biennial is about, and B) the relevancy of each of

you are, the better you need to become?

by-now-tiresome “parachute” track, wherein the usual

the artworks to the exhibition as a whole?

One of the above-mentioned friends has called this

suspects, members of the international art elite, swoop

Here’s the bottom line, SITE: We want to be wowed!

failure to continue to conceive of and execute visually

down upon some exoticized locale and do their artsy thing.

Not made to feel guilty or, depending upon our backgrounds

stunning art exhibitions the “Louis Grachos effect,”

After the big gala and a panel or two, they swoop back

and ethnicity, politically correct, and/or exonerated. Didactic

which goes like this: The person who can administer an

out again, leaving the local population largely unmoved by

strategies and documentarian methodologies get old quickly,

organization like SITE and be a great curator (as Grachos,

the fact that a significant art event just took place in their

especially when we dare to presume we’ve gone to a venue

who is now executive director of The Contemporary

city. Second, there are works in this exhibition that serve

to look at, excuse me for being old-school, art.

Austin, did) is one-in-a-million. And Grachos (with a few

as exceptions to my opening statement. Among them is

What SITE did from its opening venture in 1995, up

very well-chosen guest curators) did it back in 1996 up

Liz Cohen’s Trabant lowrider, a real crowd pleaser and a

into the early 2000s, was gutsy, phenomenal, and rare in

through the early 2000s. Those were different times; even

compelling work of art. But Santa Fe has seen it before,

the art world. Postmark: An Abstract Effect (1999), curated

he probably couldn’t do it all today. The board needs to hire

some years ago at the Center for Contemporary Arts.

by Louis Grachos; and Beau Monde: Toward a Redeemed

an outstanding executive director and let that person direct

Jason Middlebrook’s Your General Store was a treasure

Cosmopolitanism, SITE’s Fourth International Biennial (2001-

the damn place, meanwhile employing a consecutive slew

trove of weird goodies you could trade for similarly weird

2002), curated by Dave Hickey, were benchmarks in the

of brilliant curators. When it comes to SITE Santa Fe, I’m

goodies, an enjoyable way to browse, in a yard-sale trance,

organization’s history. Several other standouts come to mind,

not ready to settle. I hope its board members aren’t either.

through a chunk of time. A pair of works dealing with

including 2003’s Uneasy Space, the first two biennials, and

—Kathryn M Davis

New Mexico’s atomic past also caught my attention: one

Andy Goldsworthy and Janine Antoni’s shows, not necessarily

a poetic and oddly touching piece by Futurefarmers about

in that order. It’s been quite some time since this town has

Robert Oppenheimer’s desire for a nail on which to hang

witnessed art shows that held together like those did.

his hat (see the preceding review); the other comprising three poignant photographs by Albuquerque artist Patrick

Several

of

my

friends

have

reported

their

Kent Monkman, Bête Noir, acrylic on canvas with sculptural installation, 16’ x 16’ x 10’, 2014. Courtesy of the artist and Sargent’s Daughters, NYC. Photo: Eric Swanson

disappointment in the current biennial. A dozen or so

Nagatani. And who could forget Miss Chief, Kent Monkman’s fabulous alter ego in his installation, Bête Noir? I’d go back simply to see that piece again. One work mentioned favorably by nearly everyone I’ve spoken to about the biennial is Miler Lagos’s The Great Tree, made of locally sourced newsprint. It’s beautiful, but there lies its onus. It’s an easy piece (easy to admire, that is) that doesn’t do much in the way of conveying meaning solely through its visual merits. I wanted to “get it,” at least on a subconscious level, without having to read an encyclopedic entry about it. Still, this work is better than most of the other entries offered in the show, in that it might, simply by virtue of its likeability, stimulate viewers to search out its message. But whatever happened to visual ascendancy? At a certain point in any exhibition, most of us would like—to paraphrase Peter Schjeldahl in his latest

SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 61


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CRITICAL REFLECTION

Christopher Benson: Withheld Narratives 1613 Paseo

LewAllen Galleries Peralta, Santa Fe

de

THIS IS SIMPLY THE WAY THINGS ARE: THEY STAND, THEY SLOPE, THEY REFLECT light—that is the first impression I get from many of the paintings

utilitarian spaces, with bonus stark rectilinear shadows. Morandi

immanent meaning; Matisse in terms of the intimate engulfing of the

in this show. The exhibition’s title Withheld Narratives implies there

and de Chirico come to mind as painters who, in their works that

figure in the composition, bringing both to life more vividly. What

is something more, something one ought to try to ferret out. But

portray streets and buildings, created a similar sense of stillness

is intriguing is how Benson generally effaces his technique, while

I for one am happy just to gaze at these tableaux as if they were

and inevitability. But Benson is too much a modernist to leave it

occasionally letting it pop out like a sly smile. For example, in Interior

windows into singularly serene parallel universes, looking much like

at that. In Roswell #6 his charming willingness to “break the rules”

with Sleeping Girl he allows himself to show off just a bit, rendering

this one only cleaner, tidier, and somehow less contingent. Tiverton

reminds us that the artist is making subtle, sophisticated choices. At

the figure’s foot as distorted through the glass of a coffee table.

Window explicitly enacts this windowing quality by showing (as if

the picture’s center, the sunlit expanse of a big blocky rectangular

My favorites of the show oscillate between Cordova Ruin

pulling back a movie camera) an actual window, along with the

chunk of warehouse looms at us, deliberately out of tune with the

and Truchas #1. Large Figure is a simple nude rendered in broad

room, in which sunlight is conjured by luscious color lavishly applied

perspective of the rest of the image, calling into question the illusion

brushstrokes, the kind of confident painter’s gesture that allows

to an area on the lower left. Several canvases (with titles like Black

of a “realistic” space in which these buildings exist. In Black Mesa 5

the paint to just be what it is on the canvas. In Tintagel Castle Ruin,

Mesa 4 or Truchas #1) portray serene parallel-universe northern

the banality of the content plays against the painter’s deft rendering,

a landscape that looks more like Ireland than New Mexico, the

New Mexico landscapes containing trucks, buildings, blacktop,

engendering in this viewer a kind of hovering attentiveness.

technique is less sharp-edged, allowing itself to slide towards

fences, bushes, trees, power lines, telephone poles, the shadow of wire on asphalt—normally ignored visual phenomena.

Then there are the interiors with figures. Echoes here of both

the canvas rather than evenly distributed with uncanny clarity.

—Marina La Palma

Nowhere in evidence, narratives are perhaps being implied.

in those two artists’ rendering of interiors and the consequent

If you choose to imagine some, then go ahead, enjoy. Roswell

differences in the affect of those spaces and their occupants:

#5 and Roswell # 7 possess the repose of empty industrial or

Hopper because of the way ordinary spaces are made to quiver with

SEPTEMBER

2014

abstraction, the focus bunched into one place near the center of

Edward Hopper and Henri Matisse, despite the strong difference

Christopher Benson, Black Mesa 4, oil on linen, 46” x 58”, 2010

THE magazine | 63


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CRITICAL REFLECTION

Roger Green: Series Pentimenti

FreeStyle Gallery 1114 Central Avenue SW, Albuqzuerque

ALBUQUERQUE’S FREESTYLE GALLERY IS A FITTING VENUE FOR ROGER GREEN’S Series Pentimenti, an exhibition that celebrates erosion and

a profusion of dust and detritus. He then applies additional

phantom afterimages of fish as they hover at the threshold of

erasure as essential aspects of the creative process. Perched on

coats of paint, but never enough to fully conceal the previously

visibility. These shapes never crystallize into depictions of actual

historic Route 66, the gallery has seen a long line of businesses

inflicted lacerations. Given the rigors of this process, one might

koi bodies, but rather remain in that liminal zone between

and urban development projects rise and fall in its midst. The

expect the final painting to have an uneven, densely textured

form and non-form, veiled figuration and pure abstraction.

current landscape includes a laundromat, a dilapidated motel,

surface. But the opposite is true. At Green’s insistence, I ran my

The double entendre of the painting’s title—Reflections on a

and a hot-dog drive-through. Empty lots and outdated signage

finger over Fossil I and found it silky smooth. Before displaying

Koi Pond—is telling in this regard. Wisps of green and turquoise

memorialize the city’s previous incarnations. This ephemerality

his works, Green uses a hand grinder to erode their scarred

impart a shimmering quality that recalls the Impressionists’

is also palpably present inside the gallery, where, just prior

surfaces into perfect flatness.

captivation with the intricacies of light. But the palimpsestic

to the installation of Green’s works, a plumbing mishap sent

This aesthetic choice is proof that Green’s abrasive,

layeredness of the composition shifts our focus to how the

water through the ceiling, soaking sheetrock and drenching

destructive techniques are not meant to shock and provoke

artist has refracted this visual experience through the lens of his

the roughhewn wood floor. All of this is a perfect backdrop

à la the Dadaists. Despite the seemingly haphazard erasures

subjectivity. Series Pentimenti is less interested in the end result

to Green’s exhibition, which draws its inspiration from the

of his creative process, Green’s finished works project an

of this alchemical process than in the interlinked evolutionary

layered remnants of advertising posters that captured the

undeniable symmetry and controlled formalism. Reflections

stages by which it happens. Each work in the series is a visual

artist’s attention when navigating Chicago’s subway system as

on a Koi Pond—a standout in the show—attests to one of the

record of the many additions and erasures it had to endure. Flat,

a child. The translucent, wafer-thin vestiges of these posters

artist’s abiding preoccupations: the highly charged space where

ground-down surfaces simultaneously conceal and reveal what

ignited a fascination for the way time erodes and accumulates

form and formlessness bleed into one another. An oceanic,

lies beneath—the ghosts of what once was, suggestions of what

on surfaces. Hence the series title of Pentimenti, which refers

pulsating blue reminiscent of the German Expressionists draws

could have been, and hints of what still is.

to an image comprised of older images that have been partially

the eye into the composition, while blood-orange splotches

—Christopher Guider

erased or obscured.

evoke the bulbous bodies of well-fed koi. White, scratched-out

As an homage to this phenomenon, Green’s latest series

brushstrokes create a ghost-like effect, as if we’re looking at the

Roger Green, Reflections on a Koi Pond, acrylic on board, 24” x 24”, 2014

privileges the artistic process over the finished product. This is skillfully exemplified in his painting Fossil I, which resembles an aerial portrait of a frozen, wind-swept planet. Deep-blue rivulets weave and wind their way across the canvas, while white lines applied with an oversize, paint-encrusted brush create the friction, grit, and texture so central to his aesthetic. Green unearths forms hidden beneath the abraded surface, chipping and chiseling away negative space to expose depth and interiority. The non-figurative language of the work means we’re not shown an actual fossil, but rather a window into the excavation process itself. There’s no primordial gestalt to be discerned, just an endless transposition of archeological layers. The painting bathes the viewer in a spectral light that has passed through and been altered by each of these layers. In keeping with Green’s Abstract Expressionist heritage, Fossil I and the other paintings in the series convey a resolute flatness, an unapologetic two-dimensionality. But, remarkably, this flatness manages to communicate substantial depth thanks to scratched, see-through surfaces that reveal previous coats of paint. Like Penelope unraveling her shroud each night, Green paints over previous versions of his work and selectively scrapes away sections of the composition, which recalls the grattage techniques of Surrealist artists such as Max Ernst and Joan Miró. These purposeful erasures and erosions—which Green refers to as “the subtractive process of artistic production”—position creation and destruction as inseparable yin-yang forces. Green repeatedly wounds his compositions, sometimes scraping hard enough to reveal the white, goose-bump protrusions of the underlying canvas. “Every surface craves dust,” wrote the Russian poet Joseph Brodsky, “for dust is the flesh of time.” As if to prove that assertion, Green grinds and gouges early versions of his works to create SEPTEMBER

2014

THE magazine | 65


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SEPTEMBER

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

INDIAN SUMMER photograph by SEPTEMBER

2014

Guy Cross THE magazine | 69


WRITINGS

SURRENDER by

Sasha LaPointe

For you I would climb into the ring bare knuckled I want to fight you bare fisted and I want to fight dirty I want to put you in the petticoats this time tie you to the rail road tracks watch you sweat and just before the whistle blows loosen the knots I want to shackle you to the walls in the dark of my basement I want to remove the gag and spoon feed you your favorite flavor of ice cream I want to tell you you’ve been a very bad boy and stomp each stiletto up the staircase make you watch the swing of my hips the whip in my hand as I slam the door behind me I want to scratch our initials in the thin skin on your shoulders I want to inflict and lick the wounds I want to blind fold you in the kitchen and cook you breakfast naked for you I writhe around the floor pull my hair and claw at my clothes and when I see you there in the doorway as you catch me here a fist full of my own hair and sweating I get up smiling I straighten my skirt say what I always say what I only ever say good morning and you watch as I walk away

Sasha LaPointe is a Coast Salish Native from Seattle, Washington. She is currently pursuing her undergraduate work at the Institute of American Indian Arts with a focus on creative writing. She has published work in As/Us: A Space for Women of the World and in Aborted Society’s ABSOC Zine.

70 | THE magazine

SEPTEMBER

2014


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Suzanne Caporael, 670 , 2014, oil on linen

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Renate Aller: Ocean | Desert September 5 - October 4

Reception: Friday, Sept. 5 , 5-7 pm

Solo E xhibition - L ar ge Scale Photography

Ocean | Desert, #103 - Great Sand Dunes, November 2011, Archival pigment print, 30 x 40

Ocean | Desert, #19 - Atlantic Ocean, November 2013, Archival pigment print, 40 x 60

The Edges September 5 - October 4

Reception: Saturday, Sept. 13 , 2-4 pm

Rebecca Bluestone - Chris Richter - Jay Trac y

Richter, Greenspace

Tracy, Blast: Detail #41 Bluestone, Landscape Series Triptych #4

c h i a r o s c u r o 702 1/2 & 708 CANYON RD AT GYPSY ALLEY, SANTA FE, NM

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