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EXPERIENCE SANTA FE
MAYOR David Coss CITY MANAGER Robert Romero CITY COUNCIL Rebecca Wurburger, Mayor Pro Tem Patti J. Bushee, Chris Calvert, Peter Ives, Bill Dimas, Chris Rivera, Carmichael Dominguez, Ronald Trujillo CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU Jim Bradbury, Executive Director Chris Madden, Director of Sales Cynthia Delgado, Marketing Manager
santafe.org/rsvp
INSIGHTFOTO.COM
Need a change of altitude? Feeling lucky? Step right this way! The City of Santa Fe is giving away four luxurious weekend trips to the City Different over the next year, with drawings on June 1 and September 1, 2012, and January 1 and March 31, 2013. Each prize package is valued at $1,500
PRIZE INCLUDES:
Two nights at the Antigua Inn A cooking class at Santa Fe School of Cooking Passes to the Georgia OKeeffe Museum A private champagne and chocolate gallery tour Artisan chocolates from Cocopelli A 3-hour private session with an artist $100 gift card to Absolute Nirvana Spa $50 dining card for Rio Chama Steakhouse
Published by The Santa Fe New Mexican for the City of Santa Fe Convention & Visitors Bureau PUBLISHER Robin Martin ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Ginny Sohn ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Tamara Hand MANAGING EDITOR Rob Dean CREATIVE DIRECTOR Deborah Villa MAGAZINE DESIGNER Melyssa Holik MAGAZINE EDITOR Patricia West-Barker ADVERTISING SALES Cristina Iverson, Art Trujillo PRODUCTION Al Waldron, Operations Director Tim Cramer, Assistant Production Director Dan Gomez, Prepress Manager Larry Quintana, Press Manager Brian Schultz, Packaging Manager ADDRESS Office: 202 E. Marcy St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 Advertising information: 505-986-3082 ON THE COVER The New Mexico Museum of Art on the Santa Fe Plaza was the first building designed in the citys iconic Spanish-Pueblo Revival style. Photo by Gene Peach
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YOURE INVITED
Step out of the ordinary and into Santa Fe, New Mexico. Experience a difference you can see, hear, touch, taste and feel.
Since the Spanish conquest, three nations have claimed this area and each governing power (and the settlers who followed in its wake) has contributed to the citys rich history a history still visible in the streets, architecture and museums of Santa Fe.
TO ENTER
Go to santafe.org/rsvp and click on the contest banner (shown at left)
Chile is a way of life in Santa Fe: Youll find it in our food, our gardens and our farmers markets. But our cuisine is also hot in ways that have nothing to do with chile. Nationally renowned chefs rub shoulders here with local cooks, and our wineries are enjoying a renaissance.
World-class museums? Weve got a dozen. Art galleries? We have more than 250. Music? An internationally renowned opera and other classical music festivals share the stage with jazz, folk and rock.
Santa Fe is a city of markets. Indian arts, Spanish Colonial arts, folk art from around the world, contemporary fine and decorative arts all are on festive display and for sale here. One of the best farmers markets in the country makes its home here, too as do an eclectic group of independent artists and markets.
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Santa Fe is the perfect place to fall in love, marry, honeymoon or celebrate an anniversary. And we have everything you need to plan the perfect party for two, or two hundred and two.
BE A LITTLE ADVENTUROUS
Walk, ride, bike, golf, hunt, fish, hike through hilltops and waterfalls. Natural beauty and unspoiled wilderness make Santa Fe your Rocky Mountain playground without the Colorado crowds.
River rats, mountain bikers and road racers love it here, too.
Take a deep breath, let it out slowly and see why TripAdvisor rated Santa Fe the #1 destination in its Relaxation and Spa category.
Fiestas, harvest festivals, winter markets, special holiday concerts and celebrations on nearby pueblos and in downtown Santa Fe bring color and joy to the fall and winter seasons. Bring your skis, snowshoes and snowboards to take advantage of winter snowfall.
automobile and air, people have been coming to Santa Fe to explore, trade and refresh themselves for hundreds of years. Called the Dancing Ground of the Sun by early Native American inhabitants and nicknamed The City Different by town fathers at the turn of the 20th century, Santa Fe is a paradise for art lovers, history buffs, cultural explorers and outdoor adventurers alike. What makes us so special and so beloved by so many different kinds of people? Santa Fe sits 7,000 feet up in the southernmost end of the Rocky Mountains so were not only the oldest capital city in the U.S., but were also the highest. Tucked into a valley of the Ro Grande, were surrounded by 1.5 million acres of unspoiled national forest. You wont find a lot of cactus here; what you will find are juniper and pion-covered hills, aspen and cottonwood groves and pine forests. Fruit trees, lilacs, rose gardens and hollyhocks are abundant too a gift from past settlers preserved by present residents. Our altitude also helps define our weather. Santa Fe is a four-season town, with snow in the winter. The air is clean and dry, the skies a clear, bright blue. The sun shines an average of 325 days a year. Our night skies are also beautiful, protected from light pollution; the stars and planets sparkle brightly a sight lost to most city dwellers decades ago.
Santa Fe is a small town just over 33 miles square, with about 70,000 residents. But its richer in history, arts and culture than cities five times its size. And less crowded. With more than 200 restaurants, 250 art galleries and a dozen world-class museums tucked into a relatively small space, its easy to explore. A major marketplace for Native American, Spanish Colonial and international arts and crafts, our summer festivals and fiestas draw visitors from all over the world who are looking for the signature architecture, natural beauty and excitement they can only find here. Santa Fe is less than 650 miles from Dallas, less than 900 miles from Houston. There are daily flights from Dallas to the Santa Fe Municipal Airport, and were an easy hours drive from Albuquerque International Airport. Theres an adventure waiting in Santa Fe for everybody, for every age and every budget. We invite you to explore The City Different and discover for yourself why its been fascinating people for hundreds of years. And please RSVP Let us know when you are coming or what additional information you may need to plan a trip. If you want help selecting or booking a place to stay, we can help with that too.
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YOURE INVITED
KITTY LEAKEN
An inviting haven of traditional Southwestern hospitality awaits you at the Inn on the Paseo. Sophisticated city charm and laid-back country living create the perfect setting for your romantic get-away in downtown Santa Fe. 855-334-8895 www.innonthepaseo.com
An elegant yet affordable alternative to Santa Fes upscale full-service hotels. Our charming inn located in downtown Santa Fe offers a host of studio and one-bedroom accommodations perfectly designed for couples and families alike. 855-341-7179 www.laspalomas.com
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borders moved, religious practices intertwined and artistic endeavors influenced centuries of style. The remains of some of the original Native settlements, some as early as 400 A.D., are still unearthed when ground is broken for new construction. Three flags Spanish, Mexican and American, have waved over Santa Fe four if you count the time the Confederacy briefly held the town in 1862. Spanish soldiers and missionaries colonized the territory and by 1610 Santa Fe was a capital city governed by Don Diego De Vargas, who laid out the Plaza according to Spanish Colonial design. He also built the Palace of the Governors, the oldest public building in continuous use in the United States. A major revolt by Pueblo warriors destroyed most of the city except for the Palace of the Governors in 1680. When the Spanish returned to reclaim the city in 1692, they also began to rebuild it. By 1821, Santa Fe changed from an outpost of the Spanish Empire to an outpost under Mexican rule, growing larger and more diverse with the opening of the Santa Fe Trail. In 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ceded the city (and the territory of New Mexico) to the United States, ending the Mexican-American War and traders, trappers and other Anglo settlers poured into town. You can learn much about Santa Fes
history simply by strolling around the city. Still standing are the Barrio de Analco; the San Miguel Mission Church, the oldest church in the U.S.; El Santuario de Guadalupe, built in 1781 as the first church to honor the Virgen de Guadalupe in North America; the Loretto Chapel, possibly the first Gothic structure built west of the Mississippi, with its world-famous miraculous stairway; the New Mexico Museum of Art, which ushered in the iconic Spanish-Pueblo Revival architectural style; the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi that dominates downtown Santa Fe, built by the Frenchborn Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy between 1869 and 1886; and many other buildings, both privately and publicly owned. And not all our history is locked into buildings. A walk through the narrow, twisting streets following the path of the Acequia Madre, the Mother Ditch that brought water to the families and farmers of Santa Fe, is one of the most charming in town. Outside of town, a visit to one of the eight Northern New Mexico Pueblos, where the history and traditions of the areas first residents are interwoven into everyday life, is a special experience. El Rancho de Las Golondrinas, a living history museum, offers a one-of-a-kind look at life in the Spanish, Mexican and Territorial periods. Visit once and we think you will agree: Santa Fe, New Mexico, is not only beautiful it has a history and authentic sense of place found nowhere else in the United States.
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KITTY LEAKEN
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877.262.4666 198 State Road 592, Santa Fe, New Mexico encantadoresort.com
Auberge Resorts: Auberge du Soleil, Napa Valley, CA | Auberge Residences at Element 52, Telluride, CO | Calistoga Ranch, Napa Valley, CA Rancho Valencia, Rancho Santa Fe, CA | Esperanza Resort, Cabo San Lucas, MX | The Inn at Palmetto Bluff, SC
MUSEUMS
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Four world-class museums, a cafe and an outdoor labyrinth are clustered together on Museum Hill, just a few minutes from downtown Santa Fe. The Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian offers distinctive exhibitions of contemporary and historic Native American art. The museum is famous for its focus on little-known genres and for solo shows by living Native American artists. Downstairs,
Spanish-Pueblo Revival architectural style for which Santa Fe is famous. The collection blends work from Native American, Hispano and European-based cultures. The state-of-the-art New Mexico History Museum opened in 2009. Using innovative interactive technology coupled with unique artifacts including diaries, oral histories, paintings, maps, photographs and videos the permanent exhibit covers 500 years of the making of the American West from diverse points of view. Its large campus includes the Palace of the Governors the oldest continuously occupied public building in the U.S. Fray Anglico Chvez History Library and the Native American Vendors Program. Georgia OKeeffe Museum This collection of more than 3,000 works is housed in the only museum in the world dedicated to an internationally known woman artist. The collection of over 3,000 works includes OKeeffe paintings, drawings and sculptures that date from 1901 to 1984, the year failing eyesight forced OKeeffe into retirement.
SITE Santa Fe is a contemporary art space that produces the only international biennial of international art in the U.S. Former curators have gone on to organize several Venice Biennales, and one has received the MacArthur Foundation genius award. Year-round exhibits and educational programs are dedicated to fostering avant-garde art. El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving, protecting and promoting the Hispano art, culture and traditions of Northern New Mexico. This 31,000-squarefoot warehouse facility houses galleries, exhibition spaces and a theater. The Santa Fe Art Institute, housed in a distinctive building designed by Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta on the campus of the Santa Fe College of Art and Design, has a fellowship program that brings outstanding artists to town. Exhibitions, workshops and public lectures explore the intersections of contemporary art and society. The School for Advanced Research (formerly the School of American Research) is committed to promoting the professionalization of anthropology and the recognition of Southwestern Native arts and artists. SAR houses a large collection of Native American art and artifacts and sponsors scholarly research and cultural exchange with symposia, fellowships, public lectures and publications. Residing in the former private adobe estate, El Delirio, the grounds and buildings are an aesthetic delight.
Its all here, all summer long. In addition to established groups and special events, check out the free concerts and dancing on the Plaza, flamenco performances and other music available at Santa Fes hotels, bars and lounges. Each season, The Santa Fe Opera offers patrons rotating performances of beloved classics and innovative contemporary operas between June 29 and August 25. The drama onstage is enhanced by the beautiful landscape surrounding the open theater, and lures both performers and music lovers from around the world to the companys mountain home. Santa Fe Desert Chorale brings singers from around the country together with colleagues from the Southwest to perform new commissions representative of the eclectic cultures of Northern New Mexico as well as international classics. The Chorale has both a summer season and a holiday concert series in December. Now in its 40th year, the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival features top-notch international performers in architecturally significant auditoriums between July 15 and August 20. The New Mexico Jazz Festival brings top names in jazz to the Lensic Performing Arts Center in Santa Fe and Outpost Production Space in Albuquerque during the last two weeks of July. The Santa Fe Thirsty Ear Festival brings blues, folk, roots rock, country and Americana artists to various venues between June 7 and 10, 2012. Santa Fe Bluegrass and Old Time Music Festival, August 24 to 26, 2012, brings the clawhammer-style banjo playing called frailing to the Santa Fe County Fairgrounds. St. Johns College Music on the Hill concert series is held on the schools athletic field in June and July. Bring a blanket and sample local cuisine while enjoying jazz under the stars. The concert is free; the food is for sale.
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MUSIC
217 JOHNSON ST. SANTA FE, NM 5O5.946.1OOO OKMUSEUM.ORG OPEN DAILY 1O AM 5 PM OPEN LATE, UNTIL 7 PM, FRIDAY EVENINGS
Georgia OKeeffe, Black Place, Grey and Pink, 1949. Oil on canvas, 36 x 48 inches. Georgia OKeeffe Museum, Gift of The Burnett Foundation (1997.06.030). Georgia OKeeffe Museum. Todd Webb, Georgia OKeeffe at Glen Canyon, 1961. Gelatin silver print, 7 1/4 x 9 1/4 inches. Georgia OKeeffe Museum, Gift of The Georgia OKeeffe Foundation (2006-06-1000). Todd Webb Estate.
The Museum of Contemporary Native Art is part of the only four-year fine arts degree institution in the nation devoted to contemporary Native American and Alaska Native arts. Showcasing the latest trends in Native art, history and culture, there are close to 7,500 works in the collection, including paintings, works on paper, sculpture, ceramics, jewelry, photography, apparel, textiles, cultural arts, new media and installations. The Governors Gallery, on the fourth floor of the Roundhouse, New Mexicos State Capitol building, presents six exhibitions a year featuring work by prominent living New Mexico artists. Clara Apodaca, first lady of New Mexico from 1975 to 1978, founded the gallery in 1975.
THE EXHIBITION THAT SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON THE ADVENTURESOME ASPECTS OF OKEEFFES LIFE & ART
There are more than 250 galleries in Santa Fe, most concentrated on world-famous Canyon Road, the downtown Palace Avenue and GALA Arts Districts and the Railyard Arts District, which has attracted a number of new contemporary galleries to the historical Guadalupe Street area. Outdoor sculpture is everywhere, so keep your eyes open as you walk around town.
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In the mid-19th century, the Santa Fe Trail helped bring essential and luxury goods to the Southwest. Over time, wagon trains gave way to freight trains, railways to highways. Today there are potters trails, art-glass trails and fiber-arts trails crisscrossing Northern New Mexico, and Santa Fe is still an important destination for shoppers looking for goods that are hard if not impossible to find anywhere else. Every day of the year, members of New Mexicos pueblos and tribes display their jewelry and other artworks on blankets under the covered porch of the Palace of the Governors. Licensed by the Museum of New Mexico, these vendors sell only original, handmade work made with traditional materials.
ART SANTA FE
July 12-15, 2012
Now in its 12th year, this international art fair offers access to a full range of contemporary art for window shoppers and serious collectors alike. A gala opening, lectures and other events complement the show and sale. artsantafe.com
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How much can 100 small growers produce in 100 days? Youll be amazed by the abundance youll find year-round at the Santa Fe Farmers Market. Ranked one of the top 10 farmers markets in the nation by The Huffington Post, the SFFM has been selling herbs, soaps, salves, honey, corn dolls, chile ristras and other farm-based crafts as well as fresh meats and produce for more than 40 years. Live music and special chef
and kids events round out the offerings. Open every Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Santa Fe Railyard. santafefarmersmarket.com
KITTY LEAKEN
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Two well-established flea markets offer additional shopping opportunities. The Santa Fe Flea houses its 93 regular vendors and more day traders indoors at the El Museo Cultural in the Santa Fe Railyard through April and outdoors under huge tents at The Downs, a defunct racetrack south of Santa Fe, in summer and fall. The Pueblo of Tesuque Flea Market, 6 miles north of Santa Fe, is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. from March through December. Both venues feature a wide range of locally crafted and international goods, from antiques to clothing, original art to yard sale finds. Scattered throughout the city are shops and studios too numerous to list selling everything from traditional Southwest to ethnic to contemporary clothing, jewelry, tableware, woven goods, home dcor and furniture, patio and garden furnishings. If youve shopped the rest, its time to shop the best Santa Fes wonderfully diverse, independent artists TONIGHT . FEBRUARY 24 . 2011 . 5-7PM and retailers.
GENE PEACH
TAI GALLERY GEBERT CONTEMPORARY Geigoto: Photography by Dirk De Bruycker, Exhibition of E JACKS C H ARLOT TInternational ArtistsON Taka N E A RT FI Kobayashi
www.charlottejackson.com
GEBERT CONT EMPORARY 505 983-3838
505 989-8688
JAMES KELLY CONTEMPORARY Oli Sihvonen, LE WA LLE N GA LLE RI E S Energy Fields, Life as a Painter
www.lewallengalleries.com
S A NT E F E CLAY 505 984-1122
505 988-3250
www.taigallery.com
Z AN E B E N N E TT G AL L E RY 505 982-8111
www.gebertcontemporary.com
www.santafeclay.com
www.zanebennettgallery.com
S I TE S AN TA F E 505 989-1199
JA MES KEL LY CONT EMPORA RY W I LLI A M S I E GA L GA LLE RY ZANE BENNETT 505WILLIAM SIEGAL 989-1601 505 CHARLOTTE JACKSON 820-3300
GALLERY www.jameskelly.com Ancient + Contemporary CONTEMPORARY ART Under Thirty-Five: Dunham Aurelius, Tamara Zibners, Heidi Pollard, and more FINE ART www.williamsiegal.com Alfonso Fratteggianni Bianchi, Triptycon
www.sitesantafe.org
CAMINO DE LA FAMILIA
The Railyard Arts District (RAD) is comprised of LA FAMILIA CAMINO DE eight EL MUSEO SANTA FE CULTURAL CLAY prominentPRailyard area galleries and SITE SantaP Fe, P BOX RAILYARD a leading contemporary arts venue. RAD seeks to add PARKING WAREHOUSE 21 MARKET STATION REI GARAGE to the excitement of the new Railyard area through FARMERS MARKET SANTA FE DEPOT coordinated events like RAILYARD our monthly Last Friday Art Walk SITE Santa Fe PLAZA P and Free Fridays at SITE, made possible by the Brown Foundation, Inc., of Houston. We invite you to come ZANE BENNETT R A I L Y A R D andRexperience all we have to offer. PA K WILLIAM JAMES GEBERT
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The Railyard Arts District (RAD) is comprised of nine prominent Railyard area galleries and SITE Santa Fe, a leading contemporary arts venue. RAD seeks to add to the excitement of the new Railyard area through coordinated events like this monthly Art Walk and Free Fridays at SITE, made possible by the Brown Foundation, Inc., of Houston. We invite you to come and experience all we have to offer.
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Join us at SITE Santa Fe for Time-Lapse, a group exhibition that challenges the notion that an exhibition is a xed entity. With hourly, daily, and weekly alterations to the works in the show, no two days of Time-Lapse will be the same.www.sitesantafe.org
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bE a lITTlE aDVENTUROUs
Santa Fe sits in north-central New Mexico
a part of the state thats been described as north to adventure and central to everything. And, with 1.6 million unspoiled acres of the Santa Fe National Forest just minutes from downtown, its easy to see why the city is considered a Rocky Mountain playground. Santa Fe is the perfect base camp for outdoor activities whether you are looking for an easy stroll or a lungbusting adventure. At least a dozen hiking trails are within a few miles of the city. You can choose a relatively flat trail or gradual uphill climb or a strenuous 2,000foot gain, and you can wander through wildflower meadows or aspen vistas, forests of pion, juniper or ponderosa. Horseback riding, hunting, fishing, biking, river rafting, tennis and golf are among the sporty diversions. Rent bicycles, scooters and motorcycles or bring your own; make use of our outdoor adventure companies and experienced guides or strike out on your own. Santa Fes unpolluted air, bright blue skies and more than 325 days of sunshine make stepping outside that much more enjoyable. You can take a hike or hook a trout at the Namb Lake Recreation Area just 15 minutes from downtown Santa Fe, on the Namb Pueblo. An easy 15-minute hike brings you to the base of the beautiful Namb Waterfalls. The 56-acre lake above the falls is well-stocked with mountain trout. Youll find hundreds of petroglyphs created by Puebloan people living in the area between the 13th and 17th centuries as well as some left by travelers along El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, the Royal Road to the Interior Lands that began bringing Spanish colonists to the region in 1598 at the La Cieneguilla Petroglyph Site. Its very close to the city, and a 10-minute walk from the site parking lot brings you to the basalt cliffs where the petroglyphs are located. The Dale Ball Trail System starts within two miles of the Santa Fe Plaza. The well-maintained trails link together so you can plan short, moderate or long hikes; the network covers more than 32 miles and can be accessed from a number of points around the city. The Nature Conservancy Trail is a 1.5-mile interpretive loop on 190 acres of open space in the Santa Fe Watershed area. Here youll pass through bosques of cottonwood and willow trees and see ponds and streams and the remains of a Victorian-era dam. Birds are also abundant here. Randall Davey Audubon Center & Sanctuary, at the end of Upper Canyon Road and nearby the Nature Conservancy Trail, offers guided bird walks, easy nature trails and a visitors center on site. The 135-acre preserve, which ranges from meadows to ponderosa pine forest, is located on the former estate of painter, printmaker and sculptor Randall Davey. Daveys works, along with his original furnishings, can be seen during tours of his house and art studio. New Mexico protects its night skies from light pollution. If you havent seen the stars and planets for a while, you can step outside your hotel or sign up for a guided night sky tour an easy drive from Santa Fe. If lying under a tree in a shady park is more your thing, Santa Fe has more than 50 parks to choose from. Picnic, play, run your dogs, watch a soccer game or just sit back and smell the roses theres something for everyone in our open air playground.
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run, 12-mile bike course and 400-meter swim in the pool at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center, where the event starts and ends. This is a USA Triathlonsanctioned event, so you must be a USAT member to compete. The second annual Santa Fe to Buffalo Thunder Half Marathon (September 16, 2012) runs uphill for a couple of miles from its scenic start in the city, then begins a gradual 1,300-foot descent to its finish at Buffalo Thunder resort on Pojoaque Pueblo. A 5K run and 1-mile fitness walk also are held at Buffalo Thunder, timed to complete by the time the marathon runners arrive. Legendary Olympic Gold Medalist Billy Mills is the official race starter, and will be on hand for the weekend. Not all roads to adventure are packed or paved. Santa Fe is also a great base camp for river rafting on the Ro Grande and Ro Chama, one of Americas designated Wild and Scenic Rivers. A handful of rafting companies can handle the needs of novices and river rats alike.
KARL STOLLEIS
FOLK ART
SANTA FE INTERNATIONAL
MARKET
July 13, 14 & 15, 2012
Museum Hill Santa Fe, New Mexico
folkartmarket.org
505.992.7600
Partially funded by the 1% Lodgers Tax and
FOLK ART
SANTA FE INTERNATIONAL
Major partners: New Mexico Dept. of Cultural Affairs, Museum of International Folk Art, the Museum of New Mexico Foundation, and City of Santa Fe. Partial funding provided by the City and County of Santa Fe Lodgers Tax. Photograph Eric Kaufman
Call 888-488-6431 Go www.santafe.org/rsvp Call 888-488-6431 Go to santafe.org/rsvp Or scantothe QR code code Or scan the QR
KITTY LEAKEN
HONDA SYORY U
TA I G A L L E R Y
1601 B Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 Across from SITE Santa Fe 505.984.1387 www.taigallery.com
Innocent Glitter
2011, 20 x 19 x 23 inches
SANTA FE
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of skies the kind pilots call severe clear bringing with it crisp, clear air and the enticing aroma of roasting chiles and pion fires. The almost continuous sunlight brightens the spirits, despite the shortening days. Aspens flutter their golden leaves and cottonwoods splash color over the landscape. When the snow falls, the Sangre de Cristo Mountains are wreathed in the haunting, rose-colored blush that gives them their name. In the unpolluted night sky, the darkness is warmed by glittering stars the kind you cant see anymore in most large cities. What better time to plan a visit?
High in the foothills of the Rockies, fall slips in with the bluest
percussive music, dramatic skits and elaborate dress. The dances have a relationship to the time and traditional activities of the year, but because they are sacred and religious in nature, the precise meanings of the events are kept private. To see these ancient rituals continuing today in places that are hundreds of years old is to sense the weight of history and feel awe at the power of tradition. If you go, be respectful and know that all published times (and sometimes dates) are approximate.
The burning of Zozobra, or Old Man Gloom an event originally created by artist Will Schuster in 1924 puts the match to a giant papier-mch marionette to banish the hardships of the past year. The event kicks off Fiesta de Santa Fe now in its 300th year on September 6, 2012. Established by a proclamation commemorating the relatively peaceful 1692 resettlement of Santa Fe by the Spanish after the 1680 Indian revolt, Santa Fe Fiesta holds to its religious roots while celebrating with re-enactments, a childrens pet parade, food booths on the Plaza, a craft fair and a candlelight procession led by the crowned King and Queen of Fiesta the first weekend after Labor Day. The Harvest Festival at El Rancho de Las Golondrinas (October 67, 2012) encourages visitors to bring in the harvest with villagers as they crush grapes for wine by foot, string chile ristras, make tortillas, bake fresh bread and participate in many more traditional activities. It happens annually in early October. The Winter Indian Market (November 2425, 2012) sponsored by the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts is held during Thanksgiving weekend. The show and sale feature more than 100 Native artists, award-winning artist demonstrators, a silent auction, a raffle and a fashion show featuring the work of Native designers. Winter Spanish Market brings 100 Hispanic artists working in traditional Spanish Colonial art forms to the Santa Fe Community Convention Center December 12, 2012. Eight of the 19 Indian Pueblos in New Mexico are in the northern part of the state and within easy reach of Santa Fe. Most have dances and feasts throughout the fall and winter months that are open to visitors. The ritual performances are communal public prayers that involve dancing, singing,
Las Posadas, an annual re-enactment of the holy familys search for shelter held on the Santa Fe Plaza in mid-December, features candlelight, music, devils on the rooftops and hot cocoa and cookies in the courtyard of the Palace of the Governors. No matter how cold the night or how much snow packs the streets, the crowds always turn out for the annual Canyon Road Christmas Eve Walk. Farolitos (candles in brown paper bags) and luminarias (bonfires) light the road and illuminate paths to galleries and homes; hot cider, caroling, dogs and kids in strollers add to the warm camaraderie of a festive and dearly loved holiday celebration. Special Christmas performances by the Desert Chorale and the monks from the Benedictine Abbey of Christ in the Desert Monastery, candlelight services at local churches and the creation of an ice menorah sculpture on the beautifully lit Santa Fe Plaza round out the holiday offerings. Many of the hotels, ringed with farolitos, keep their fireplaces crackling, all the better to warm yourself after a lovely stroll around town.
With thousands of acres of wilderness just minutes from downtown, Santa Fe is a fall and winter paradise for hikers, snowshoers, skiers, snowboarders and other outdoor enthusiasts. At least a dozen hiking trails from easy to challenging are within a few miles of the city. The Santa Fe Ski Basin has 77 trails and gets plenty of snowfall. In fall, a scenic chairlift operates on the mountain. In winter, you can grab your skis, snowshoes or snowboard. Typically, the Ski Santa Fe season runs from Thanksgiving to Easter. While the Santa Fe wilderness areas are easily accessible, its important to remember that many trails start at 7,500 feet and ski areas sit at 12,000-foot elevations. The altitude may test you even if you are fit so plan wisely to get the most out of your fall and winter visit.
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CANYON ROAD
S A N TA F E
visitcanyonroad.com
mclarryfineart.com
505.988.1161
McLarry
mclarrymodern.com
505.983.8589
505-983-8815
800-746-8815
www.ventanafineart.com
Visit us at the DALLAS ART FAIR April 13-15, 2012 The Fashion Industry Gallery, Downtown Dallas HOUSTON FINE ART FAIR September 14-16, 2012 Reliant Center, Houston
Featured artists at Houston and Dallas Art Fairs: LARRY BELL GEORGE CONDO SUSAN DAVIDOFF JIM DINE MARK DI SUVERO GNTHER FRG HELEN FRANKENTHALER SAM FRANCIS JAMES HAVARD DONALD JUDD DAVID KAPP FRANOIS MORELLET ROBERT MOTHERWELL MIMMO PALADINO ED RUSCHA MARY SHAFFER TOM WESSELMANN
ZANE BENNETT CONTEMPORARY ART, located in Santa Fes Railyard Arts District, provides a unique environment for exhibiting art in all media. Its exterior adobe architecture belies its interior with glass catwalks, stairway, sky lights and central atrium. ZBCAs roster includes exceptional work by internationally-recognized artists, blue-chip artists, regional and local artists.
435 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 T: 505 982-8111 F: 505 982-8160 zanebennettgallery.com