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santafeanNOW.com week of August 14 PRESENTED IN COOPERATION WITH ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL NORTH now top nightlife picks summer sizzles! and entertainment this week’s The City of Santa Fe Event Calendar
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Santa Fean NOW August 14 2014 Digital Edition

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Santa Fean NOW August 14 2014 Digital Edition
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Page 1: Santa Fean NOW  August 14 2014 Digital Edition

santafeanNOW.comweek of August 14PRESENTED IN COOPERATION WITH ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL NORTH

now top nightlife

picks

summer sizzles!

and entertainment

this week’s

The City of Santa Fe Event Calendar

Page 2: Santa Fean NOW  August 14 2014 Digital Edition

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F R I E DMA N W I L S O NF R A M E S

Opening  August  1st ,  2014  

Open  Tuesday  -­  Saturday,  9am-­5pm

3022  C i e l o  C t . ,   S t e .  C

S a n t a   F e ,   N M   8 7 5 0 7

201 Galisteo St. Santa Fe, NM 505-988-2024 www.goldendawngallery.com

Pablita Velarde (1918 - 2006)Helen Hardin (1943 - 1984)

The Only 3 Generation, Full-time, Female, Painting Dynasty Recorded in History

Margarete Bagshaw “Ladies In Red”48” X 36” oil on panel

Join us for our invitation only openingFriday, Aug. 22, 5-7pm. Call for details - 505-988-2024

NOW 8-11-14 GDG.indd 1 8/11/14 5:25 PM

Page 3: Santa Fean NOW  August 14 2014 Digital Edition

f w f r ames@gma i l . c om

5 0 5 -­ 9 3 0 -­ 5 9 2 9

emai l   . . . . . . . . . . . .  

te lephone   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F R I E DMA N W I L S O NF R A M E S

Opening  August  1st ,  2014  

Open  Tuesday  -­  Saturday,  9am-­5pm

3022  C i e l o  C t . ,   S t e .  C

S a n t a   F e ,   N M   8 7 5 0 7

201 Galisteo St. Santa Fe, NM 505-988-2024 www.goldendawngallery.com

Pablita Velarde (1918 - 2006)Helen Hardin (1943 - 1984)

The Only 3 Generation, Full-time, Female, Painting Dynasty Recorded in History

Margarete Bagshaw “Ladies In Red”48” X 36” oil on panel

Join us for our invitation only openingFriday, Aug. 22, 5-7pm. Call for details - 505-988-2024

NOW 8-11-14 GDG.indd 1 8/11/14 5:25 PM

Page 4: Santa Fean NOW  August 14 2014 Digital Edition

AUG 14 –AUG 20

2014now

Free iPhone and Android app

The Best of Santa Fe

Find the best shops, restaurants,galleries, museums, parking locations,

turn-by-turn directions,mobile deals, weather, news, and

local-events with the free app from the iTunes App Store and

from the Android Market.from the Android Market.

Look for the green sticker in the window of participating stores.

SHOPPING IN SANTA FE From the time of the ancient Anazasi, the Santa Fe area has been a trading center. The Santa Fe Trail is synonymous with the romance of the old west, and from the time of New Mexico statehood in 1912, Santa Fe has been a multicultural art center and shoppers’ paradise.

Santa Fe is a top US art center, with museums, shopping, Year-round outdoor activities, top flight restaurants, spas, and world famous cultural events. It’s not just your grandparents’ Santa Fe, it’s walkable, historic, charming, and exciting.A high desert destination of distinction and fun.

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THIS COMING WEEK, world-renowned concert pianist Yefim Bronfman is performing in Santa Fe as part of the Santa Fe Cham-ber Music Festival. My European friends describe him as a rock star in classical music. After seeing him perform here some years ago and also with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, I find him to be one of the most remarkable musicians alive. But he’s not the only one. The Santa Fe Jazz Festival just wrapped up an impressive lineup of concerts featuring highly respected jazz musicians; many of the sing-ers and musicians performing with the Santa Fe Opera are highly regarded in opera circles around the world; and Tony Bennett and Dwight Yoakam are both coming to town in a few weeks, bringing their showmanship and notoriety to our fair city. Is there another city of Santa Fe’s size that can attract this caliber of musicians?

And then there are other art forms, like fine art, which sees several na-tionally known artists exhibiting their work around town this summer. The list of talent is huge, and it gets broader as we near the 93rd annual Indian Market, which begins later this month. As you might also know, several re-nowned writers call Santa Fe home, including Sam Shepard and Armistead Maupin, to name just a few.

What really makes Santa Fe’s arts scene work is you—the viewer, lis-tener, and reader. You’ve come to Santa Fe with your thirst for creative energy and your desire to experience this creativity and capture it in your own life. You came to the right city; now it’s on you to search this issue of NOW, as well as our online calendar, to discover all that’s happening at this moment in Santa Fe. Don’t miss a beat.

Bruce AdamsPublisher

| P U B L I S H E R ’ S N O T E |

DAVI

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BIN

On August 2 & 3, El Rancho de las Golondrinas held its annual Summer Festival and Territorial Law & Order Weekend. For more images of recent goings-on around town, check out Seen Around on page 16.

On August 2 & 3, El Rancho de las Golondrinas held its annual Summer Festival and Territorial Law & Order Weekend. For more images of recent goings-on around town, check out Seen Around on page 16.

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AUG 14 –AUG 20

2014

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Mission fig and Burrata cheese salad with fresh black truffle, prosciutto, and fresh basil at Coyote Cafe. For more dishes from Coyote Cafe, see page 26. Photo by Douglas Merriam.

PUBLISHER bruce adams

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER b.y. cooper

EDITOR amy hegarty

CALENDAR EDITOR samantha schwirck

GRAPHIC DESIGNER whitney stewart

ADDITIONAL DESIGN michelle odom, sybil watson

OPERATIONS MANAGER ginny stewart-jaramillo

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER, SALES MANAGER david wilkinson

MARKETING CONSULTANT andrea nagler

WRITERS

amy gross, kate nelson, cristina olds phil parker, karen schuld, emily van cleve

A PUBLICATION OF BELLA MEDIA, LLC

FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION

215 W San Francisco St, Ste 300Santa Fe, NM 87501

Telephone 505-983-1444 Fax 505-983-1555

[email protected]

Copyright 2014. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Santa Fean NOW

Volume 1, Number 14, Week of August 14, 2014. Published by Bella Media, LLC at 215 W San Francisco St,

Ste 300, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA, 505-983-1444 © Copyright 2014

by Bella Media, LLC. All rights reserved.

nowWelcome to Santa Fe!As a creative, cultural hub, Santa Fe offers an abundance of the world’s best art, attractions, and entertainment opportuni-ties. Santa Fean NOW is an excellent source of information for all that’s happening around town. Whether you’re a local or a tourist visiting for the first time or the 100th, NOW ’s complete listings of everything from gallery openings to live music events will help you make the most of the city.

We look forward to seeing you around the City Different. Should you need any extra tips, please stop by our informa-tion centers at the Santa Fe Railyard or off the Plaza at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center.

Wishing you a wonderful time,

Javier M. GonzalesCity of Santa Fe, Mayor

Randy RandallTOURISM Santa Fe, Director

buzz

707 Canyon Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87501 . 505 983 3707 gfcontemporary.com

GigiMILLS

this l i fe

August 15 - 31

reception August 15

5-7pm

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August 14, 2014 NOW 5

221 Canyon Road Santa Fe 505.955.0550 www.adobegallery.com

The Traditionof the

Martinez Familyof

San Ildefonso Pueblo

AUGUST

Exhibit Continues through September 15

Geoffrey Castle took violin lessons when he was a kid but really learned how to play the instrument after he launched his career in his late teens. “I stood on the corner of 53rd Street and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan and played music on the streets for awhile,” he says. “That was my conservatory training.”

This weekend, Castle, who’s performed on Broadway and on stage with the likes of Alan White, Heart, and Blues Traveler,

gives two performances on his six-string electric violin. The first

show, which takes place on Saturday

night at

the Everyday Center for Spiritual Living, is a more traditional concert, with Castle standing in front of an audience and performing. The second show, on Sunday night at Chalk Farm Gallery, is an informal salon-type recital where Castle will be able to meet and greet guests during his performance.

“Playing solo, which is what I’ll be doing in Santa Fe, is the most magical performance experience for me,” says Castle, who graduated from Columbia University in New York City and has lived in Washington State since 1995. “I can create certain kinds of special moments when I’m alone.”

Castle’s music, whether it’s original or his own version of tunes by other musicians like The Beatles or Peter Gabriel, is influenced by Celtic sounds and the blues (as heard, most notably, on his album Streets of Inwood: Celtic Soul). “Everything that can be done on the violin is what I do during my concerts,” he says.

—Emily Van Cleve

Geoffrey Castle, August 16, 7 pm, $15 advance, $20 at the door, Everyday

Center for Spiritual Living, 1519 5th St, 505-954-1438;

August 17, 6 pm, free, Chalk Farm Gallery, 729 Canyon,

chalkfarmgallery.com

BILL

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Geoffrey Castle

electric violinist Geoffrey Castle

buzz

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Page 8: Santa Fean NOW  August 14 2014 Digital Edition

11AM -6 PM. Don’t miss the Twilight Tour on Friday,August 22nd from 4 PM to 9 PM for select homes.

Tickets are only $15.00. For ticket information visit sfahba.com.

Sunwest Construction Specialties William Rotsaert Santa Fe

by Design H and S Craftsmen, LLC Architectural Metal Inc. Fast Signs Paul Davis

Restora t ion Deser t Tees & Spor t ing Goods Kat ie Johnson Photography

The title of Joe Berlinger’s sensational new documentary is Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger. If it’s a contest in evil, the government wins. There have been great, infuriating modern documentaries about corrupt or inept federal officials (No End in Sight, Inside Job), but Whitey is a singular indictment of where our tax dollars go because it’s also a gangster movie.

In 2011, famous Boston mob boss Whitey Bulger was caught and put on trial for charges that included 19 murders. His defense was that he had a secret deal for immunity. The FBI claims Whitey was a rat—er, a confidential informant—whose tips helped them bring down the Italian mafia in Massachusetts. Whitey says he was no informant but that he built a relationship with the feds through payoffs and favors exchanged for protection. This is an important distinction because if Whitey wasn’t ratting, then all the convictions the

FBI obtained by putting his name on arrest warrants could be overturned. And if Whitey wasn’t ratting, that meant the FBI was lying.

Berlinger sharpens a complicated web of characters and events into a thrilling gangster saga of crime and betrayal. He also makes powerful subjects of victims’ family members, wearing pain like masks they can’t remove, denied closure until the FBI admits protecting and enabling Bulger. They’re angrier with the government than with the killer because he could have been stopped. “Without the FBI, my father would be alive today,” a man says. A widow describes being harassed by FBI agents who knew Bulger killed her husband. The film opens with one of Bulger’s alleged extortion victims, Stephen Rakes, telling a horrifying story of being shaken down by Bulger. Rakes was eager to testify, but by the end of the film he had been released by federal prosecutors as a witness and then mysteriously murdered. We watch Rakes’s friend, the brother of a woman Bulger allegedly strangled, get the news by phone. “Do you see the corruption?” he asks, crying. Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger is showing at CCA.—Phil Parker

true colorsWhitey Bulger

the buzz

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August 14, 2014 NOW 7

August 14 thursdayObjects of Art Santa Fe PreviewEl Museo Cultural de Santa Fe555 Camino de la FamiliaPreview event for Objects of Art Santa Fe (see listing on August 15). $10–$13, 6–9 pm, 505-660-4701, objectsofartsantafe.com.

More SalsasSanta Fe School of Cooking125 N GuadalupeHands-on class focused on salsa. $75, 2 pm, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Attributed: Searching for the Unknown Pueblo PottersLyn A. Fox Fine Pueblo Pottery640 CanyonAn exhibition of unsigned historic Pueblo pottery. Free, reception 5:30–8 pm, gallery talk 6 pm, 505-577-0835, foxpueblopottery.com.

Three Months to the Best-Seller ListBODY of Santa Fe333 CordovaGame-changing insights on publishing from legendary writing coach Tom Bird. $12–$15, 10 am–12 pm, 505-986-0362, ext. 2, bodyofsantafe.com.

Advance TranceDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrThree-piece rock band. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Bob FinnieVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterGreat American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Guitarras Con SaborEl Farol808 CanyonLive music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Happy Hours with Jeremy JoyceCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeRoots and blues music. Free, 4:30–6:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

J. J. & The HooligansCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeRock, blues, Americana, and more. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Paw Coal & the ClinkersSecond Street Brewery at Second Street

1814 Second St“Old-timey” music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Sierra La Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoCountry music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Dr. Sun Yat-senSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Huang Ruo’s opera Dr. Sun Yat-sen. From $37, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Mozart Piano QuartetNew Mexico Museum of ArtSt. Francis Auditorium107 W PalaceA Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival performance featuring Debussy’s Syrinx for Solo Flute, Hindemith’s Kleine Kammermusik for Wind Quintet, and Mozart’s Piano Quartet No. 2 in E-flat Major. $25, 12 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

Quartet for the End of Time & MozartNew Mexico Museum of Art

KATE

RUS

SELL

An El Camino that artist Rose B. Simpson painted in black-on-black pottery style will be on view at Santa Fe Clay during Craft Driven, a presentation by Simpson that touches on her work and her artistic journey. For details, see page 13.

August 14–20

true colors

the buzz this week

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St. Francis Auditorium107 W PalaceA Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival performance featuring Mozart’s Divertimento in E-flat Major and Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time. $35–$70, 6 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

Santa Fe Opera Apprentice ConcertFour Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado198 State Rd 592A performance by opera “stars of tomorrow.” Free for resort guests and locals, 6–7 pm, 505-946-5700, fourseasons.com/santafe.

Stars of American Ballet IIThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoA performance by celebrated American dancer Daniel Ulbricht and principals and soloists from New York City Ballet. Ulbricht holds a pre-performance talk at 6:30 pm. $27–$100, 7:30 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

SylviaSanta Fe Playhouse142 E De VargasA performance of A. R. Gurney’s Sylvia, directed by Robert Benedetti and starring Tallis Rose, Jonathan Richards, Barbara Hatch, and Nicholas Ballas. $20 (discounts for students and seniors), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

You Only Sing TwiceLewAllen Galleries (1613 Paseo de Peralta) and Warehouse 21 (1614 Paseo de Peralta)Gala benefit for the Santa Fe Desert Chorale featuring entertainment by the group’s contemporary a cappella ensemble Voasis plus live and silent auctions. $150, 6 pm (cocktails, pre-reception, and hors d’oeuvres at gallery), 8 pm (live auction and performance at Ware-house 21), 505-988-2282, desertchorale.org.

August 15 fridayAntique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Opening PartySanta Fe Community Convention Center 201 W MarcyPeruse and buy from collections of more than 100 dealers. Refreshments served. $75, 6–9 pm, 505-992-8929, whitehawkshows.com.

Drop in and DrawNew Mexico Museum of Art107 W PalacePencils and drawing boards are available for visitors. $6–$9 (kids free), 12–1 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Friday Night Get TogetherGallery 901 and Ronnie Layden Fine Art901 CanyonMusic and refreshments in the courtyard. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-670-6793, ronnielaydenfineart.com.

Objects of Art Santa FeEl Museo Cultural de Santa Fe

555 Camino de la FamiliaMore than 65 national and local exhibitors display paintings; sculpture; fine art; furniture; books; fashion; jewelry; textiles; and tribal, folk, American Indian, African, and Asian art. $17, 11 am–6 pm, 505-660-4701, objectsofartsantafe.com.

The Milagro Beanfield WarSanta Fe Railyard ParkGuadalupe and Paseo de PeraltaOutdoor viewing of the 1988 Robert Redford–directed movie filmed in New Mexico. Free, sunset, 505-983-5483, heathconcerts.org.

Cooking Inspired by Georgia O’KeeffeSanta Fe School of Cooking125 N GuadalupeA cooking class that utilizes Georgia O’Keeffe’s recipes found in Margaret Wood’s book A Painters Kitchen: Recipes from the Kitchen of Georgia O’Keeffe. $85, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Japanese Cuisine WorkshopSanta Fe Culinary Academy112 W San FranciscoChef Tanya Story hosts a workshop focused on Japanese cuisine. $120, 9 am–3 pm, 505-983-7445, santafeculinaryacademy.com.

100 RingsPatina Gallery131 W PalaceArtist Peter Schmid presents work from German jewelry studio Atelier. Free, reception 5–7:30 pm, 505-986-3432, patina-gallery.com.

Apocalypse ReversedTansey Contemporary652 CanyonWork by glass artist Emma Varga. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-995-8513, tanseycontemporary.com.

Archetype SeriesDavid Rothermel Contemporary142 Lincoln, Ste 102New paintings by David Rothermel. Free, reception 5–8 pm, 575-642-4981, drfa-sf.com.

Artifacts and IconsNew Concept Gallery610 CanyonPaintings by Reg Loving, scuptures by Tim Prythero, and photographs by Steven A. Jackson. Free, recep-tion 5–7 pm, 505-795-7570, newconceptgallery.com.

Indian Summer, 1835–1935William R. Talbot Fine Art Antique Maps & Prints129 W San Francisco, Second FloorAn exhibition featuring works by Karl Bodmer, George Catlin, and McKenney & Hall as well as paintings and prints by Emil Bisttram, Howard Cook, Datus Myers, Ralph Pearson, Arnold Rönnebeck, and Elizabeth Sherman. Early maps of the Southwest and Indian Territory are also on display. Free, through September 30, 505-982-1559, williamtalbot.com.

Internal LightPippin Contemporary200 Canyon Abstract paintings by Cody Hooper. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-795-7476, pippincontemporary.com.

Shadows of Passion: Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art820 CanyonVictoria Taylor-Gore presents a new series of pastels inspired by love and loss in Fidelio, Carmen, and Romeo and Juliet. See profile on page 21. Free, recep-tion 5:30–7 pm, 505-988-1311, alexandrastevens.com.

The Art of DeceptionMeyer East Gallery225 CanyonPaintings by Natalie Featherston. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-983-1434, meyereastgallery.com.

The Boundless MomentMatthews Gallery669 CanyonWoks by American poets paired with contempo-rary realist pieces by Utah-based painter Eric G. Thompson. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-992-2882, thematthewsgallery.com.

This LifeGF Contemporary707 CanyonA solo exhibit of work by painter Gigi Mills. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-983-3707, gfcontemporary.com.

Tufa Cast JewelrySilver Sun656 CanyonTufa-cast jewelry, paintings, and more by Monty Claw (Navajo). Free, reception 5–7 pm, 800-562-2036, silversun-sf.com.

Haciendas—A Parade of Homes

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August 15–18: Antique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show

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9August 14, 2014 NOW

Various LocationsThe premier builder showcase of the Southwest, presented by the Santa Fe Area Home Builders As-sociation. See profile on page 27. $15, 11 am–6 pm, August 15–17 and 22–24, 505-982-1774, sfahba.com.

Transforming SufferingUpaya Zen Center1404 Cerro GordoAcharya Fleet Maull leads an exploration of the five Buddha families and methods for transforming the five distributing emotions of “great attachment, anger or aggression, ignorance or bewilderment, and pride and envy.” Eleven CEUs available for counsel-ors, therapists, and social workers. $285, through August 17, 505-986-8518, upaya.org.

Bob FinnieVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterGreat American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Buffalo NickelLa Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoHonky-tonk and country & western. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Doug MontgomeryVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterPopular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

E. Christina Herr & Wild FrontierSecond Street Brewery at Second Street1814 Second StAmericana music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Hayes Carll & His BandSanta Fe Sol Stage & Grill37 FireCountry music. Presented by Heath Concerts. $17, 7:30 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Happy Hours with Jess KleinCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeFolk music. Free, 5–7:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Jay Boy Adams & Zenobia with Mister SisterCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeLive music. Free, 8:30–11:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

J. J. & The HooligansEl Farol 808 CanyonRock, blues, Americana, and more. $5, 9–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Matthew AndraeInn and Spa at Loretto211 Old Santa Fe Trl

Brazilian/flamenco/classical music. Free, 8–11 pm, 800-727-5531, innatloretto.com.

PachangaThe Lodge at Santa Fe750 N St. FrancisSalsa, cumbia, bachata, and merinque music and dancing. $5, 9:30 pm–1:30 am, 505-992-5800, lodgeatsantafe.com.

Ronald RoybalHotel Santa Fe1501 Paseo de PeraltaNative American flute and Spanish classical guitar. Free, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1200, ronaldroybal.com.

Step In Blues TrioSecond Street Brewery at the Railyard1607 Paseo de PeraltaBlues music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

The Three Faces of JazzEl Mesón 213 Washington

Jazz piano trio. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-983-6756, elmeson-santafe.com.

TV KillersDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrIndie rock music. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Classical Meets Flamenco Concert SeriesGarrett’s Desert Inn311 Old Santa Fe TrlClassical guitarist David Wescott Yard and flamenco/classical guitarist and vocalist Mito de Soto. Presented by Starlight Productions. $10–$15, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1851, davidwyard.com.

Soaking up the Summer with VoasisWarehouse 211614 Paseo de PeraltaThe Santa Fe Desert Chorale’s contemporary a cappella group, Voasis, returns for a run of summer concerts as part of the chorale’s 2014 Pop Series. $22–$100, 8 pm, 505-988-2282, desertchorale.org.

SylviaSanta Fe Playhouse142 E De VargasA performance of A. R. Gurney’s Sylvia, directed by Robert Benedetti and starring Tallis Rose, Jonathan Richards, Barbara Hatch, and Nicholas Ballas. $20 (discounts for students and seniors), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

The Impresario and Le RossignolSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Mozart’s The Impresario and Stravinsky’s Le Rossignol. From $39, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

August 16 saturdayAntique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W MarcyThis annual antiques show brings more than 150 collectors and dealers to one location for buying, selling, and browsing historic Indian art. $10/day or $17/three days, 10 am–5 pm, 505-992-8929, whitehawkshows.com.

Objects of Art Santa FeEl Museo Cultural de Santa Fe555 Camino de la FamiliaMore than 65 national and local exhibitors display paintings; sculpture; fine art; furniture; books; fash-ion; jewelry; textiles; and tribal, folk, American Indian, African, and Asian art. $17, 11 am–6 pm, 505-660-4701, objectsofartsantafe.com.

Photo WorkshopInn at Santa Fe8376 CerrillosA two-day workshop to master the program Perfect Photo Suite. $295 (includes lunches),

14Send us your event information!

All submissions are welcome, but events will be included in NOW as space allows.

To have your event listed in the calendar section of NOW,

please either email your information and any related photos to

[email protected] or self-post your event at

santafeanNOW.com. All material must be emailed or self-posted

two weeks prior to NOW’s Thursday publication date.

August 15: Hayes Carll & His Band at Sol Santa Fe

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9 am–5 pm, through August 17, christinehauber.com.

Santa Fe Artists MarketRailyard Park1611 Paseo de PeraltaPainting, pottery, jewelry, photography, and more by local artists. Free, 8 am–1 pm, 505-310-1555, santafeartistsmarket.com.

Santa Fe Society of Artists Fine Art ShowFirst National Bank of Santa Fe Parking Lot107 W San FranciscoA diverse group of works by premier local artists are on view in an outdoor fine art show. Free, all day, 505-926-1497, santafesocietyofartists.com.

Santa Fe Farmers MarketSanta Fe Railyard1607 Paseo de Peralta Fresh produce from local vendors. Free, 7 am–1 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.com.

Summer Cooking ClassEstrella Del Norte Vineyard106 N Shining SunSanta Fe School of Cooking hosts a Southwestern-themed cooking class on Estrella Del Norte’s garden patio. Instructors demonstrate using a wood-fired oven and grill while wine experts discuss New Mexico’s wine history and production. $120, 10 am–12 pm, 505-455-2826, estrelladelnortevineyard.com.

Annual Opening EventShiprock Gallery53 Old Santa Fe TrlEvery August, Shiprock Santa Fe presents its finest selection of historic Native American art during its biggest event of the year. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-982-8478, shiprocksantafe.com.

Aymara Balandrán Ponchos from the Giles Mead CollectionWilliam Siegal Gallery540 S GuadalupeWeavings from the Aymara people in Bolivia. Free, reception 5–7 pm, 505-820-3300, williamsiegal.com.

Indian Market ShowMountain Trails Fine Art200 Old Santa Fe TrlMountain Trails commemorates Indian Marketwith its annual seasonal exhibit showcasing works by a dozen or so gallery artists, including sculptor Alvin Marshal (Navajo) and painter Greg Overton (Iroquois). Free, reception 6–9 pm, 505-983-7027, mountaintrailsfineart.com.

Through Our EyesNedra Matteucci Galleries1075 Paseo de PeraltaRealist oil paintings by Santa Fe–based couple John and Terri Kelly Moyers. Free, reception 2–4 pm, 505-982-4631, matteucci.com.

SONY and High Resolution Audio, Want to Hear More?

Constellation Home Electronics215 N GuadalupeJust as HDTV revolutionized our television viewing with its huge leap in picture quality, High-Res Audio is doing the same for the music we listen to. Come listen and learn about High Resolution Audio (HRA) and how SONY is leading the way in gear and music. Free, 10 am, 505-983-9988, constellationsantafe.com.

Bob FinnieVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterGreat American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Buffalo NickelLa Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoHonky-tonk and country & western. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar with John SerkinSweetwater Harvest Kitchen1512 PachecoSlack key guitar music. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-795-7383, sweetwatersf.com.

Hot Club of Santa FeSecond Street Brewery at Second Street1814 Second StGypsy jazz music. Free, 6–9 pm, 505-982-3030, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Jazz (Off the Plaza)Swiss Bakery Pastries & Bistro401 S GuadalupeLive music on the patio. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-988-1111, swissbakerysantafe.com.

Matthew AndraeInn and Spa at Loretto211 Old Santa Fe TrlBrazilian/flamenco/classical music. Free, 8–11 pm, 800-727-5531, innatloretto.com.

MushiDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrJazz funk trio. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Pete Stein with Lucy Barna

Second Street Brewery at the Railyard1607 Paseo de PeraltaAmericana music. Free, 7–10 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Ronald RoybalHotel Santa Fe1501 Paseo de PeraltaNative American flute and Spanish classical guitar. Free, 7–9 pm, 505-982-1200, ronaldroybal.com.

Santa Fe Chiles Dixie Jazz BandCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeLive music. Free, 2–5 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Santa Fe RevueCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeAmericana music. Free, 8:30–11:30 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

The GruveEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $5, 9–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Survival: New MexicoEl Rancho de las Golondrinas334 Los PinosPractice outdoor survival techniques like building a fire, constructing shelter, and shooting with bows and arrows. $8 ($6 seniors and teens, kids free), through August 17, 10 am–4 pm, golondrinas.org.

The Secret Life of ButterfliesCerrillos Hills State Park County Rd 59Butterfly expert Steve Cary leads an outing through the park to find and identify the butterflies that call Cerrillos home. $5, 2–4 pm, 505-474-0196, cerrilloshills.org.

Brandenburg Concertos 3, 4 & 5The Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoThe Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival presents three of Bach’s famous Brandenburg concertos. $35–$45, 5 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

CarmenSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Bizet’s Carmen starring soprano Ana María Martínez. From $39, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Soaking up the Summer with VoasisWarehouse 211614 Paseo de Peralta

August 16: Survival: New Mexico at El Rancho de las Golondrinas

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The Santa Fe Desert Chorale’s contemporary a cappella group, Voasis, returns for a run of summer concerts as part of the chorale’s 2014 Pop Series. $22–$100, 4 pm and 8 pm, 505-988-2282, desertchorale.org.

SylviaSanta Fe Playhouse142 E De VargasA performance of A. R. Gurney’s Sylvia, directed by Robert Benedetti and starring Tallis Rose, Jonathan Richards, Barbara Hatch, and Nicholas Ballas. $20 (discounts for students and seniors), 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

August 17 sundayAntique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W MarcyThis annual antiques show brings more than 150 collectors and dealers to one location for buying, selling, and browsing historic Indian art. $10/day or $17/three days, 10 am–5 pm, 505-992-8929, whitehawkshows.com.

Life Drawing SeriesDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrDraw from a live model while enjoying beer and waffles. $22, 11 am–1 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Objects of Art Santa FeEl Museo Cultural de Santa Fe555 Camino de la FamiliaMore than 65 national and local exhibitors display paintings; sculpture; fine art; furniture; books; fashion; jewelry; textiles; and tribal, folk, American Indian, African, and Asian art. $17, 11 am–6 pm, 505-660-4701, objectsofartsantafe.com.

Plein Art Painting on the PatioNew Mexico Museum of Art107 W PalaceThe patio is open for a “personal adventure in art.” Admission to patio free, museum admission $6–$9, 9 am–12 pm (museum opens at 10 am), 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Santa Fe Society of Artists Fine Art ShowFirst National Bank of Santa Fe Parking Lot107 W San FranciscoA diverse group of works by premier local artists are on view in an outdoor fine art show. Free, all day, 505-926-1497, santafesocietyofartists.com.

The Gospel of ArtThe William&Joseph Gallery727 CanyonThe Broomdust Gospel Quartet performs in the gallery. Free, 12–2 pm, 505-982-9404, thewilliamandjosephgallery.com.

Turquoise from Prehistory to PresentMuseum of Indian Arts & Culture710 Camino Lejo

A lecture series presented in conjunction with the exhibition Turquoise, Water, Sky: The Stone and Its Meaning. Free with museum admission, 2–4 pm, 505-467-1200, indianartsandculture.org.

Doug MontgomeryVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterPopular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6:30–10:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Eric JohnsonSanta Fe Sol Stage & Grill37 FireConcert presented by Heath Concerts. $27, 7:30 pm, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Geoffrey Castle on ViolinChalk Farm Gallery729 CanyonElectric violin music by Geoffrey Castle. See profile on page 5. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-983-7125, chalkfarmgallery.com.

Hot HoneySecond Street Brewery at the Railyard1607 Paseo de PeraltaLive music. Free, 1–4 pm, 505-989-8585, secondstreetbrewery.com.

Jessa YoungDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrSinger/songwriter. Free, 5–7 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Nacha MendezEl Farol 808 CanyonLatin world music. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Apprentice ScenesSanta Fe Opera

301 Opera Dr“Stars of tomorrow” perform one of two evenings of fully staged opera scenes. From $5, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Bronfman Plays BrahmsThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoWorld-renowned pianist Yefim Bronfman, who serves as the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival’s 2014 artist-in-residence, performs Brahms’s Piano Quintet in F Minor on a program that also includes Schnittke’s Moz-Art for Two Violins and the Dover Quartet playing Glazunov’s Novelettes. $35–$45, 5 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Nothing, But Were Afraid to AskSanta Fe Playhouse142 E De VargasOne-night-only performance, starring Kaye Ballard and featuring pianist David Geist, to benefit the Santa Fe Fiesta Melodrama 2014. $20, 7:30 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

Echoes of MarySantuario de Guadalupe417 Agua FriaA Schola Cantorum of Santa Fe performance of sacred music, including Franz Biebl’s Ave Maria and Esteban Salas’s Ave Maris Stella. Donation, 7–8:30 pm, concert preview 6:30 pm, 505-474-2815, schola-sf.org.

Soaking up the Summer with VoasisWarehouse 211614 Paseo de PeraltaThe Santa Fe Desert Chorale’s contemporary a cappella group, Voasis, returns for a run of summer concerts as part of the chorale’s 2014 Pop Series. $22–$100, 4 pm, 505-988-2282, desertchorale.org.

SylviaSanta Fe Playhouse142 E De VargasA performance of A. R. Gurney’s Sylvia, directed by Robert Benedetti and starring Tallis Rose, Jonathan Richards, Barbara Hatch, and Nicholas Ballas. $20 (discounts for students and seniors), 4 pm, 505-988-4262, santafeplayhouse.org.

August 18 mondayAntique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W MarcyThis annual antiques show brings more than 150 collectors and dealers to one location for buying, selling, and browsing historic Indian art. $10/day or $17/three days, 10 am–5 pm, 505-992-8929, whitehawkshows.com.

Gallery ConversationsNew Mexico Museum of Art107 W PalaceEvery Monday the museum invites a new speaker—leaders, writers, artists, and others—to give an informal tour through the

August 17: Eric Johnson

at Sol Santa Fe

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museum, offering their unique point of view. $6–$9, 12:15–1 pm, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Santa Fe Indian MarketVarious locationsThe Southwestern Association for Indian Arts (SWAIA) kicks off the 93rd annual Santa Fe Indian Market, which draws artists and collectors from around the world. Most events, which continue through Sunday, August 24, are freeand open to the public. 505-983-5220, santafeindianmarket.com, swaia.org.

Lisa Law Film FestivalWarehouse 211614 Paseo de PeraltaA screening of Woodstock: The Director’s Cut, hosted by award-winning photographer and filmmaker Lisa Law, in honor of the 45th anniversay of Woodstock. Donation, 7 pm, tour of Law’s “psychedelic bus” Silver 6 pm, 505-989-4423, warehouse21.org.

Screening of Leandro Katz’s FilmsCenter for Contemporary Arts 1050 Old Pecos TrlArgentine poet, filmmaker, and artist Leandro Katz, whose work is featured at SITE Santa Fe, visits CCA to present newly restored versions of his films, including Los Angeles Station and Paradox. $5, 7–9 pm, 505-216-0672, ccasantafe.org.

TamalesSanta Fe School of Cooking125 N GuadalupeHands-on class focused on tamales. $98, 10 am, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Bill Hearne TrioLa Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoCountry music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Cowgirl KaraokeCowgirl BBQ319 S GuadalupeKaraoke hosted by Michele Leidig. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-982-2565, cowgirlsantafe.com.

Doggie Happy HourJunction530 S GuadalupeBring your dog for happy hour on the patio. Free, 4–6 pm, 505-988-7222, junctionsantafe.com.

Doug MontgomeryVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterPopular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6:30–10:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Santa Fe Great Big Jazz BandTiny’s Restaurant1005 St. Francis

Big band favorites with jazz singer Joan Kessler. Free, 7–9 pm, 505-983-9817, tinyssantafe.com.

Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Tiho DimitrovEl Farol 808 CanyonA combination of blues, rock, and pop music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

CarmenSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Bizet’s Carmen starring soprano Ana María Martínez. From $39, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Cooking with Martinu & SchubertThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoA Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival performance featuring Martinu’s La Revue de Cuisine and Schubert’s Octet in F Major. $12–$75, 6 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

August 19 tuesdayAt the Artist’s TableSanta Fe School of Cooking125 N GuadalupeDinner inspired by Santa Fe’s art community. Pre-sented in conjunction with the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the Partners in Education Founda-tion for the Santa Fe Public Schools. $250, 6–9 pm, 505-983-5411, santafeschoolofcooking.com.

Farm to TableSanta Fe Culinary Academy112 W San FranciscoChef Rocky Durham uses local produce to create a summer meal. $75, 5:30–7:30 pm,

505-983-7445, santafeculinaryacademy.com.

Santa Fe Farmers MarketSanta Fe Railyard1607 Paseo de Peralta Fresh produce from local vendors. Free, 8 am–1 pm, 505-983-4098, santafefarmersmarket.com.

Leandro Katz with Candice HopkinsArmory for the Arts1050 Old Pecos TrlFilmmaker, writer, and artist Leandro Katz talks with independent curator Candice Hopkins, screens some of his films, and reflects on his long and prolific career in the arts. $5–$10, 6 pm, 505-989-1199, sitesantafe.org.

Community DaySanta Fe Botanical Garden at Museum Hill715 Camino LejoMonthly day of free admission for New Mexico residents and students. Sponsored by First National Bank. 9 am–5 pm, 505-471-9103, santafebotanicalgarden.org.

Lloyd “Kiva” New: Touching Native InspirationEl Museo Cultural555 Camino de la FamiliaAn interpretation by IAIA graduate Rose Marie Cutropia of textiles by Lloyd “Kiva” New, a co-founder and former president of IAIA and the “father of contemporary Native fashion design.” The show kicks off the Antique American Indian Art Show Santa Fe, and proceeds go to IAIA student scholar-ship funds. $50, 6 pm, 505-424-2310, iaia.edu.

Bill Hearne TrioLa Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoCountry music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

Canyon Road Blues JamEl Farol 808 CanyonLive music. Free, 8:30 pm–12 am, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Doug MontgomeryVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterPopular piano music by Juilliard-trained pianist. Free, 6–8 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Santa Fe Bandstand After PartyInn and Spa at LorettoLive music by Max Gomez. Free, 8:30–11 pm, 866-582-1646, innatloretto.com.

SPINRaDDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrFusion jazz music. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

August 18 & 19: Leandro Katz (seen here) participates in events related to his films.

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Summer Flamenco SeriesEl Farol 808 CanyonFlamenco dinner show. $25, 6:30–8 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Tango MilongaEl Mesón213 WashingtonTango dancing. $5, 7:30–11 pm, 505-983-6756, elmeson-santafe.com.

Don PasqualeSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Donizetti’s Don Pasquale starring baritone Andrew Shore. From $39, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

The Far West and Dave & Phil AlvinJames A. Little Theater1060 CerrillosThe Far West opens for Dave & Phil Alvin, who recently made an album together for the first time in 30 years. $25–$49, 7:30–8:10 pm (The Far West), 8:20–9:45 pm (Dave & Phil Alvin), 800-838-3006, southwestrootsmusic.org.

Yefim Bronfman Piano RecitalThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoWorld-renowned pianist Yefim Bronfman, who serves as the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival’s 2014 artist-in-residence, performs Prokofiev’s Piano Sonata No. 6 and Marc Neikrug’s Passions, Reflected, which the composer wrote for Bronfman. $20–$25, 12 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

August 20 wednesdayLet’s Take a LookMuseum of Indian Arts and Culture710 Camino LejoCurators from the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and the Laboratory of Anthropology are in the MIAC lobby to evaluate your treasures. Free, 12–1 pm, 505-467-1200, indianartsandculture.org.

The Antique American Indian Art Show Santa FeEl Museo Cultural de Santa Fe555 Camino de la FamiliaAuthentic antique American Indian art from some of the country’s top galleries. Free, through August 21, 11 am–6 pm, antiqueindianartshow.com.

Sundance Institute Native Film SeriesJean Cocteau Cinema418 MontezumaA four-day event consisting of shorts and features created by indigenous filmmakers. See profile on page 15. Ticket prices vary, through August 24, daily at 6:30 pm, 505-466-5528, jeancocteaucinema.com.

Craft DrivenSanta Fe Clay545 Camino de la FamiliaArtist Rose B. Simpson discusses her work in sculpture and performance art; her journey in life; and the artistic process. Free, 7–8 pm, 505-984-1122, santafeclay.com.

Rock and Roll Rap Sessions: Your Band as BusinessSanta Fe Community Convention Center201 W MarcyA panel of music industry entrepreneurs discusses the role and demands of entrepreneurship in the music world. Free, 6–8 pm, nmlawyersforthearts.org.

Dharma TalkUpaya Zen Center1404 Cerro GordoA weekly talk (called How to Be Patiently Impatient) presented by Sensei Hozan Alan Senauke, vice abbot of the Berkeley Zen Center in California. The evening begins with a 15-minute meditation session. Free and open to the public, 5:30–6:30 pm, 505-986-8518, upaya.org.

Bob FinnieVanessie Santa Fe427 W WaterGreat American Songbook works plus pop from the 1960s and ’70s. Free, 6:30–9:30 pm, 505-984-1193, vanessiesantafe.com.

Cathy FaberLa Fonda Hotel’s La Fiesta Lounge100 E San FranciscoCountry music. Free, 7:30–11 pm, 505-995-2363, lafondasantafe.com.

John KurzwegEl Farol 808 CanyonLive music. Free, 8–11 pm, 505-983-9912, elfarolsf.com.

Karaoke NightJunction530 S GuadalupeKaraoke. Free, 10 pm–12 am, 505-988-7222, junctionsantafe.com.

Kim WattsDuel Brewing1228 Parkway DrJazz/folk music. Free, 7:30–10:30 pm, 505-474-5301, duelbrewing.com.

Beethoven’s Last: Piano Music & String QuartetThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoA Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival performance featuring Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 16 in F Major, Piano Sonata No. 30 in E Major, and Six Bagatelles for Piano. $12–$70, 6 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

CarmenSanta Fe Opera301 Opera DrA performance of Bizet’s Carmen starring soprano Ana María Martínez. From $39, 8 pm, 505-986-5900, santafeopera.org.

Liang Wang Plays Mozart & PoulencThe Lensic Performing Arts Center211 W San FranciscoA Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival performance of Mozart’s Oboe Quartet in F Major and Poulenc’s Trio for Oboe, Bassoon, and Piano featuring New York Philharmonic Principal Oboe Liang Wang as well as a performance of Ullmann’s String Quartet No. 3 featuring the Dover Quartet. $20–$25, 12 pm, 505-982-1890, santafechambermusic.com.

OngoingMyth MakerPOP Gallery142 LincolnPaintings by Joel Nakamura. Free, through August 31, 505-820-0788, popsantafe.com.

Rumi on CanvasLongworth Gallery530 CanyonPaintings by Rahileh Rokhsari. Free, through August 31, 505-989-4210, thelongworthgallery.com.

The Art of Nature and All That Is NaturalEncaustic Art Institute Pyramid Gallery18 County Rd, 55A, CerrillosEncaustic art show. Free, through September 1, 505-424-6487, eainm.com.

In the MoodViVO Contemporary

August 17 & 19: Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival Artist-in-Residence Yefim Bronfman gives his first performances of the season, including a solo piano recital.

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725 CanyonLocal musicians and artists. Free, through September 2, 505-982-1320, vivocontemporary.com.

Rewind Replay: 1950–2014David Richard Gallery544 S GuadalupePaintings by Lilly Fenichel. Free, through September 6, 505-983-9555, davidrichardgallery.com.

William Albert Allard, Kevin Bubriski, and Greg MacGregorVERVE Gallery of Photography219 E MarcyThree separate but concurrent shows featuring works by documentary photographers. Free, through September 6, 505-982-5009, vervegallery.com.

African Art MasqueradeIntrigue Gallery238 DelgadoVintage African masquerade masks, art from Robert Fiedler’s collection, and gallery tribal art. Free, through September 8, 505-820-9265, intriguegallery.com.

Reveriephoto-eye Gallery541 S GuadalupePhotographs by Tom Chambers. Free, through September 13, 505-988-5152, photoeye.com.

Jun KanekoGerald Peters Gallery1101 Paseo de PeraltaAn exhibition of more than 20 past and present works by ceramist Jun Kaneko. Free, through September 14, 505-984-5700, gpgallery.com.

The Tradition of the Martinez Family of San Ildefonso PuebloAdobe Gallery221 CanyonAn exhibit of pottery and paintings by Maria Martinez, her husband, her son, and her grandson. Free, through September 15, 505-629-4051, adobegallery.com.

David Crane and José SierraSanta Fe Clay545 Camino de la FamiliaCeramics by David Crane and porcelain stoneware pieces by José Sierra. Free, through September 20, 505-984-1122, santafeclay.com.

Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro SurrocaLewAllen Galleries1613 Paseo de PeraltaHiroshi Yamano and Pedro Surroca present meditative interpretations of tree branches.Free, through September 21, 505-988-3250, lewallencontemporary.com.

Once Upon a Time In AmericaMonroe Gallery of Photography112 Don GasparPhotographs by Steve Schapiro. Free, through

September 21, 505-992-0810, monroegallery.com.

Historic San Ildefonso Polychrome PotterySteve Elmore Indian Art839 Paseo de PeraltaPottery from San Ildefonso Pueblo, ca. 1875–1925. Free, through October 16, 505-995-9677, elmoreindianart.com.

One Man ShowAcosta Strong Fine Art640 CanyonPaintings by Jack Dunn. Free, ongoing, 505-982-2795, johnbstrong.com.

Pablita Velarde, Helen Hardin, and Margarete BagshawGolden Dawn Gallery201 GalisteoPaintings by acclaimed Native American artists (and family members) Pablita Velarde, Helen Hardin, and Margarete Bagshaw. Free, ongoing, 505-988-2024, goldendawngallery.com.

Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: The Hawaii PicturesGeorgia O’Keeffe Museum217 Johnson The first exhibition to feature artwork created in Hawaii by American modernists and friends Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams. $6–$12 (kids free), through September 14, 505-946-1000, okeeffemuseum.org.

Local Color: Judy Chicago in New MexicoNew Mexico Museum of Art107 W PalaceAn exhibition of Judy Chicago’s large-scale projects and smaller-scale personal artworks opens to the public in honor of the artist’s 75th birthday. $6–$9, 10 am–5 pm, through October 12, 505-476-5072, nmartmuseum.org.

Harvesting TraditionsPablita Velarde Museum of Indian Women in the Arts213 Cathedral A solo exhibition of works by Kathleen Wall. $10, through January 4, 2015, 505-988-8900, pvmiwa.org.

Spiral Lands, Chapter 2, 2008Museum of Contemporary Native Arts108 Cathedral A slide and sound installation by Andrea Geyer, in collaboration with SITE Santa Fe as part of SITElines: New Perspectives on Art of the Americas. $10 (discounts for students, members, and New Mexico residents), through January 11, 2015, 888-922-IAIA, iaia.edu.

Poetics of Light: Pinhole PhotographyNew Mexico History Museum113 LincolnA collection of nearly 225 photographs and 40 cameras that show how a light-tight box with a tiny hole can help capture amazing photos. $6–$9, through March 2015, 505-476-5200, nmhistorymuseum.org.Painting the Divine:

Images of Mary in the New WorldNew Mexico History Museum113 LincolnA 1960s’ ecclesiastical wave of urban renewal inspired mission churches throughout the Americas to undergo renovations and, all too often, cast off centuries-old art work. $6–$9, through March 29, 2015, 505-476-5200, nmhistorymuseum.org.

Turquoise, Water, Sky: The Stone and Its MeaningMuseum of Indian Arts & Culture710 Camino LejoThe Museum of Indian Arts & Culture presents its extensive collection of Southwestern turquoise jewelry and educates on the geology, mining, and history of the stone. $6–$9, through May 2016, 505-467-1200, indianartsandculture.org.

City ToursWalking tours of Santa Fe with various companies including Historic Walks of Santa Fe (historicwalksofsantafe.com), Get Acquainted Walking Tour (505-983-7774), A Well-Born Guide (swguides.com), and New Mexico Museum of Art (nmartmuseum.org).

EntreFlamencoThe Lodge at Santa Fe750 N St. FrancisWorld-class Spanish dance ignites an intimate the-ater setting in a series of performances by flamenco stars Antonio Granjero and Estefania Ramirez. $25–$45, 8 pm nightly (except Tuesdays), through August 31, 505-988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Santa Fe Bandstand Santa Fe Plaza100 Old Santa Fe TrlAnnual summer-long music festival on the Plaza in downtown Santa Fe. A full range of diverse music is presented nightly, from Americana and indie to country, jazz, world, New Mexico classics, and more. Free, through August 28, 505-986-6054, santafebandstand.org.

For more events happening around town, visit the Santa Fean’s online calendar at SantaFean.com.

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Sundance Institute Native Film Series

FROM AUGUST 20 TO AUGUST 24, the Jean Cocteau Cinema celebrates Native American filmmakers by hosting the Sundance Institute Native Film Series. The shorts and feature films showcased in the series come to Santa Fe courtesy of the Sundance Institute Native American and Indigenous Film Program, which supports artists around the world through the Institute’s Feature Film Program, Documentary Film Program, Theatre Program, Creative Producing Fellowship and Summit, and Sundance Film Festival. The program’s director, N. Bird Runningwater, will be present throughout the series and will introduce many of the films to the audience.

Shorts, which run between 9 and 16 minutes each, will be shown on August 20 and include Wakening by Danis Goulet; OK, Breathe Auralee by Brooke Swaney; The Cave by Helen Haig Brown; Shimasani by Blackhorse Lowe; and Sikumi by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean. Navajo director and screenwriter Sydney Freeland’s Drunktown’s Finest, which won the grand jury and audience awards at Outfest’s 2014 Los Angeles LGBT Film Festival, will be shown on August 21, 22, and 23. Drunktown’s Finest is the story of three young Native Americans—an adopted Christian girl, a rebellious father-to-be, and a promiscuous transsexual—trying to escape the hardships of life on an Indian reservation. Freeland offers introductory comments about her film and hosts a question-and-answer session after each screening.

Presented prior to each screening of Drunktown’s Finest are the features This May Be the Last Time by Spirit Award nominee Sterlin Harjo (August 21); On the Ice by MacLean (August 22); Skins by Chris Eyre (August 23), who earned acclaim with his award-winning debut film Smoke Signals; and Boy by Academy Award nominee Taika Waititi (Sunday).

the Jean Cocteau Cinema hosts a celebration of Native American filmmakers

by Emily Van Cleve

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Sundance Institute Native Film Series, $10 ($8 students and seniors, $6 kids 12 and under), August 20, 6:30 PM, August 21–24, 6:30 PM and 8:30 PM, Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma, jeancocteaucinema.com

Director Chris Eyre (third from left) on the set of Smoke Signals in 1995

Billy Luther (left) and N. Bird Runningwater in 2012 at a Sundance Institute and Autry National Center film event

Sundance Film Festival’s 2014 Native Forum Reading Reception

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Every week, Santa Fean NOW hits the street to take in the latest concerts, art shows, film premieres, and more. Here’s just a sampling of what we got to see.

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photographs by Stephen Lang

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Covering Santa Fe in a unique way. aBqJournal.com/subscribe

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te l : 505.989.7741 • www.dresf.comA F u l l S e r v i c e R e a l E s t a t e B r o k e r a g e

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eastside retreat

618 East Alameda, Unit C. Retaining its historic charm, this completelyremodeled 2 bedroom, 21⁄2 bath adobe home is on a private lane in theheart of the historic Eastside and has stunning gardens, ample parking anda 389 sq. ft. heated basement storage area.MLS#201400774 $897,500

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It’s Santa Fe’s high summer season, which means lots of openings at galleries and museums around town. Santa Fean NOW was at a number

of those shows’ recent receptions, and here’s just a sampling of the fun people we celebrated with.

TELL  YOUR  STORY

CONTACT:  Andrew  Fann

[email protected]

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TELL  YOUR  STORY

OPEN-­CALL

JUNE  26th,  JULY  12th,  19th,  &  26th

INTERVIEWS

 12  -­5  P.M.

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Honey- and cardamom-dusted phyllo Napoleon with Brussels sprout leaves, crispy Italian ham, root vegetable sauté, local goat cheese, sherry wine sauce, and a carrot ginger foam

Joseph’s of Santa Fe Fresh, local ingredients served with a European flair are part of the memorable dining experience at Joseph’s of Santa Fe, a “culinary pub” helmed by acclaimed chef Joseph Wrede. The eye-popping entrées, which burst with a rich array of colors, textures, and flavors, include a salt-cured, confit-style crispy duck with a sweet potato caramel glaze, French lentils, warm radicchio, and a date and pancetta salad. Vegetarian options include sweet potato gnocchi with sage brown butter and a fresh vegetable sautee courtesy of the Santa Fe Farmers Market, while the bar menu features duck-fat fries with homemade ketchup and pumpkin, kale, corn, and local porcini enchiladas. Joseph’s also includes a broad selection of boutique fine wines from Oregon, California, Italy, and France as well as an ample selection of premium beers.—Karen Schuld

Joseph’s of Santa Fe, 428 Agua Fria, josephsofsantafe.com

eating drinking+

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artopenings | reviews | artists

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Natalie Featherston’s witty and deceptive trompe l’oeil paintings combine old Dutch Master traditions with a modern sensibility and sense of humor (see: her nods to Magritte and Lichtenstein). Still lifes, she says, present unique challenges. In contrast to portraiture and land-scape, “you have to build the stage . . . selecting the sub-jects, colors, and textures.” Although expertise in trompe l’oeil “may qualify me for the one-trick pony category, I can’t imagine painting anything else,” she adds. Her show The Art of Deception can be seen at Meyer East Gallery (August 15–August 28, reception August 15, 5–7 pm, 225 Canyon, meyereastgallery.com).—Eve Tolpa

Natalie Featherston, Brush Stroke, oil on panel, 12 x 24"

Natalie Featherston, The Turned Page: Magritte,

oil on panel, 12 x 12"

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artP R O F I L E

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Shadows of Passion

LOVE, ROMANCE, AND PASSION inspired the 20 pastel paintings in former New Mexico resident Victoria Taylor-Gore’s show Shadows of Passion: Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow at Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art. Open-ing Friday, August 15, and on view through the end of the month, the exhibit features imaginary interior scenes set in mysterious and magical landscapes.

“I hadn’t done . . . interior scenes for a few years, but for this show I’ve created mostly interiors,” the artist says. People are conspicuously and purposely absent from the work, as Taylor-Gore wants the viewer to visually enter her paintings—to move through a room, sit down on a chair, or look out a window—and not be affected by a narrative that a human presence can create.

Last spring, Taylor-Gore, an assistant professor and chair of the visual arts, design, and humanities depart-ment at Amarillo College, found inspiration in the works of Shakespeare and classical operas like Bizet’s Carmen, which reinforced her commitment to infusing her paint-ings with passion and romance. A half-dozen works in the show were inspired by the play Romeo and Juliet and feature a single rose in them.

Victoria Taylor-Gore presents an evocative new show at Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art

by Emily Van Cleve

Route 66 motels are the jumping-off point for another series of paintings, a handful of which are included in Shadows of Passion. Inte-rior motel scenes reflect the loneliness and melancholy Taylor-Gore finds in some of Shakespeare’s darker plays, and an object in a motel room, perhaps a shoe or a suitcase, is always included in the painting to indicate that a person has been there.

Taylor-Gore, who received a BFA from West Texas A&M University and an MFA from the University of California, Santa Barbara, is drawn to what she calls rich “twilight colors,” having become enamored with the work of French post-impressionist Paul Gauguin early in life. “Gauguin was one of my first big influences,” she says. “His colors are basically my palette.”

Victoria Taylor-Gore: Shadows of Passion: Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow, August 15–August 31, reception August 15, 5:30–7 pm, Alexandra Stevens Gallery of Fine Art, 820 Canyon, alexandrastevens.com

The Stage, pastel on paper, 9 x 19"

Rose and Hills, pastel on paper, 9 x 19"

Natalie Featherston, Brush Stroke, oil on panel, 12 x 24"

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artP R E V I E W S

openingart receptionsJohn Moyers and Terri Kelly Moyers:

Through Our EyesNedra Matteucci Galleries

1075 Paseo de Peralta, matteucci.comAugust 16–September 6

Reception August 16, 2–4 pm

Santa Fe–based couple John and Terri Kelly Moyers share a fascination with the

Southwest, and each has won multiple awards for their realist oil paintings, which

incorporate landscapes from the region and, recently, those of Europe, too. “John

and Terri are exciting artists,” says gallerist Nedra Matteucci, “because they constantly

challenge themselves through their work, and each new show ref lects a vitality and skill that sets their paintings apart.”—ET

Terri Kelly Moyers, Summer Roses, oil on canvas, 30 x 24"

Indian Market ShowMountain Trails Fine Art, 200 Old Santa Fe Trl mountaintrailsfineart.comAugust 18–August 24, reception August 22, 6–9 pm

Mountain Trails commemorates Indian Market with its annual seasonal exhibit showcasing works by a dozen or so gallery artists, among them third-generation sculptor Dustin Payne, who crafts Western-themed bronzes chronicling the history, culture, and inhabitants of the region; Lisa Danielle, whose meticulously rendered realist paintings depict Pueblo pottery; and Troy Collins, who celebrates the beauty of aspens in his vibrant impressionistic landscapes. Sculptor Alvin Mar-shal (Navajo) and painter Greg Overton (Iroquois) represent their Native cultures through their respective mediums.—ET

Eric G. Thompson: The Boundless MomentMatthews Gallery, 669 Canyon, thematthewsgallery.comAugust 15–August 28, reception August 15, 5–7 pm

Works by American poets—including Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, and Emily Dickinson—are paired with Utah-based painter Eric G. Thompson’s contemporary realist pieces. Citing Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth as inf luences, Thompson creates still lifes, landscapes, and portraits using oil, egg tempera, and watercolor. “I feel that every one of my paintings is essentially a study of light or lack thereof,” he says.—ET

Troy Collins, Youth at Play, oil on canvas, 36 x 72"

Eric G. Thompson, Raven’s Hair, oil on panel, 24 x 18"

David Rothermel, Archetype, acrylic on panel, 32 x 27 x 2"

Archetype SeriesDavid Rothermel Contemporary, 142 Lincoln, Ste 102, drcontemporary.com

August 15–August 27, reception August 15, 5–8 pm

Gallerist and contemporary painter David Rothermel presents a new body of work representing a shift in direction from a past focus on tonal harmony to a heightened

sense of contrast, both in terms of color and dimension. In his vertically formatted acrylic-on-panel pieces, there is, says the artist, an interplay between the layers of

opaque and transparent pigment, resulting in “more of a feeling of deep space.”—ET

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ongoingCody Hooper: Internal LightPippin Contemporary, 200 Canyon

pippincontemporary.com Through August 26

Reception August 22, 5–7 pm With a background in watercolor, ab-

stract New Mexico artist Cody Hooper is accustomed to working in layers, using

thinned acrylic and glazes to create texture, and sometimes sanding down portions of the panel to further build surface contrasts. His latest show, he says, conveys his personal journey of

spirit, and to that end the pieces focus on “illusions of light, contrast, complex

layering, bold colors, and surfaces.”—ET

Cody Hooper, I’ll Fall Into You, acrylic on panel, 48 x 48"

Jun KanekoGerald Peters Gallery, 1101 Paseo de Peralta, gpgallery.com

Through September 14Gerald Peters presents more than 20 works—both past and present—by

Nagoya-born contemporary ceramist Jun Kaneko, among them dangos (Japanese for “dumplings”), which are hand-built sculptures resembling vases with closed tops, and pieces depicting tanukis, raccoon-like figures

from Japanese folklore. Also on display are Kaneko’s glass slabs and layered glass chunks, representing a departure in material while

retaining the artist’s commitment to aesthetic elegance.—ET

Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro SurrocaLewAllen Galleries, 1613 Paseo de Peralta, lewallencontemporary.com Through September 21, reception August 8, 5–7 pm

Hiroshi Yamano and Pedro Surroca present meditative interpretations of tree branches. Japanese-born Yamano is of a pioneering generation of glass artists who moved the medium away from vessels and toward sculpture, and his pieces incorporate glass blowing, cutting, and etching as well as copper- and silver-plating. Surroca’s focus on the line, light, and shadow of the branch form results in paintings with a spare elegance.—ET

Hiroshi Yamano, From East to West “Scene of Japan” (FS #159), blown/sculpted glass, silver leaf engraving, and copper plating, 18 x 26 x 18"

Jun Kaneko, Untitled, ceramic, 25 x 23 x 9"

Bruce King: Old Light, New ColorWaxlander Art Gallery & Sculpture Garden 622 Canyon, waxlander.comThrough August 25Reception August 22, 5–7:30 pm

Waxlander unveils new oil paintings by Bruce King that represent a change of direction for the artist, in terms of placing more emphasis on light, incorporat-ing more subtlety of color, and applying paint with brushes rather than a palette knife. “The land is alive, and I seek to capture that,” says King, who was raised on the Oneida reservation in Wisconsin. “I try to show how the land supports the humans.”—ET

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ongoingartP R E V I E W S

ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: HELEN TINDELA tattooed cholo holds up Our Lady of Guadalupe. A campsite is strewn with enough gear to outfit a bricks-and-mortar household. A couple gets down to business courtesy of a sexy red sports car. If these images make you laugh, then Helen Tindel scored.

“I like my art to be funny and happy. I try to think of positive memories or experiences and things that make me laugh,” says the artist. Using clayboard panels rarely larger than 9 x 12", the 26-year-old engineers a near riot of activities in a cartoon style that boasts a healthy dose of 21st-century charm—cheeky, chic, and cool. You’d be hard-pressed to find hints of Tindel’s famous genetics in her brush. And she likes that just fine.

“What I think I got from my fam-ily of artists is the knowledge that I can do whatever I want and I don’t care what you have to say about it,” she says during a paint-ing break in her Railyard-area home studio. Daughter of modernist painter Margarete Bagshaw and granddaughter and great-grand-

daughter of Helen Hardin (1943–1984) and Pablita Velarde (1918–2006)—internationally acclaimed Native American painters—Tindel says she’s still creating her artistic narrative. After her paint-ings began earning fans through her mother’s Golden Dawn Gallery, she busted a new move this summer by painting stripes, swirls, splatters, and more on base-ball caps and high-heeled shoes offered on her Hel-Yeah.com website.

“I love making hats,” she says. “I dream about hats. I’m obsessive-compul-sive about them. It’s totally my own.” Given her lineage, was art inevitable? Tindel shrugs, then shoots from the lip: “I didn’t grow up with someone teaching me how to be a geisha.”—Kate Nelson

The Boys in the Band, oil on panel, 9 x 12”

Happy Camper, oil on panel, 8 x 10"

Green Glow, Rasta Splatter Stripe, and Rasta Boom handpainted hats

Jinni Thomas and Pauline Ziegen: Quiet BeautyKaran Ruhlen Gallery225 Canyon karanruhlen.com Through August 21A pair of New Mexico abstract artists explore nature and beauty as it is interpreted and expressed through art. Jinni Thomas consid-ers all of her subtly hued mixed-media-on-panel pieces to be self-portraits, while Pauline Ziegen’s work is inspired by the high desert land-scape. For her, the process of abstraction is “all about editing and simplifying the visual world into formal elements that become metaphors of emotion.”—ET

Pauline Ziegen, On a Winter‘s Sunday, oil, gold leaf, mixed

media on panel, 48 x 36"

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ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: PABLO MILAN Not only does Pablo Milan have a gallery with his name on it, he has a town, too. His ranching grandfather founded the village of Milan, near Grants, in the 1950s, and today the sixth-generation Hispanic artist lives and works there with several members of his immediate and extended family.

Milan began painting at 17 years old, creating a full wall mural for a high school class. Now, 36 years later, his works on display in his gal-lery’s annual Indian Market show include large-scale canvases. “He likes to paint big,” says Linda Little, director of the Pablo Milan Gallery.

Little notes that Milan is renowned for his use of color and technique. “He starts each painting with a wash, then applies fast-drying acrylic, sprays it with water, and applies layer after layer,” she says. “We have one or two with 30 layers of paint.”

Milan’s colorful works depicting rows of horsemen, Native American dancers, and other images create the effect of watercolor painting and draw on his training with Japanese artists while he was stationed in Tokyo with the Air Force.—Cristina Olds

Indian Market Group Show, August 22–August 30, reception August 22, 5–7:30 pm, Pablo Milan Gallery, 209 Galisteo, pablomilangallery.com

Pablo Milan, Mystic Warriors, acrylic on canvas, 72 x 48"

David Crane and José SierraSanta Fe Clay, 545 Camino de la Familia

santafeclay.comThrough September 20

Reception August 22, 5–7 pm

With a commitment to creating work that is simultaneously

practical and aesthetically refined, Virginia Tech ceramics professor

David Crane crafts salt-fired stoneware pots (either wheel-thrown or slab-built) inf luenced by Asian,

European, and Native American traditions. Tucson-based Venezuela native José Sierra incorporates the colors of the Andes into both his

porcelain and stoneware pieces, which juxtapose organic, landscape-inspired shapes with

hard-edged geometry.—ET

José Sierra, Geometric Vase, porcelain, 8 x 6 x 6"

Rose B. Simpson: Finding CenterChiaroscuro Contemporary Art702 ½ Canyon chiaroscurosantafe.comThrough August 31Reception August 22, 5–7 pm Santa Clara Pueblo ceramic artist Rose B. Simpson inherited a cre-ative legacy from both her mother, sculptor Roxanne Swentzell, and her father, wood-and-metal artist Patrick Simpson. And while Simpson has pur-sued numerous avenues of expression—including printmaking, drawing, creative writing, music, and dance—she’s best known for her autobiographical sculptural pieces incorporating mixed-media. Her latest body of work features large-scale busts, which can be seen in her exhibition at Chiar-oscuro Contemporary Art.—ET

Rose B. Simpson, Red, ceramic, leather, and metal,

40 x 24 x 16"

100 RingsPatina Gallery, 131 W Palace patina-gallery.com Through August 31 Reception August 15, 5–7:30 pm Artist Peter Schmid presents work from German jewelry studio Atelier Zobel—100 rings in oxi-dized silver, high-karat gold, and platinum—in celebration of Patina’s 15th anniversary. The museum-quality adornments, first shown at the gallery in 2000, have redefined the medium with its sculptural forms, carved gems, and unusual finishes. “My jewelry is so beauti-ful in [Patina’s] space, [which is] so luxurious,” Schmid says.—ET

Peter Schmid, Agate Ring, silver, gold, agate, diamonds

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going greenThis property, nicknamed The Emerald House, is one of only a few LEED Platinum homes in New Mexico. Not one new tree was cut down to build the 4,175-square-foot, three-bedroom, active-solar home, and much of the construction was done using reclaimed and recycled materials. The home, which sits on 1.06 acres in the northwest part of the city with great mountain views, includes an air filtration system; state-of-the-art, water-efficient plumbing fixtures; and water catchment and drip irrigation systems. It produces all of its own energy and was designated with Build Green Emerald status by the State of New Mexico.

List price: $1.950 millionContact: Chris Webster, Sotheby’s International Realty, 505-780-9500, sothebyshomes.com

[on the market]

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Send Santa Fean NOW pictures of your meal (with the info we’ve included here) and we might run them in the magazine! Email [email protected].

Coyote Cafe, Thursday, August 7, 7 pm: Clockwise from top left: Dry-aged prime strip steak over hatch green chile mac-and- cheese with grilled asparagus;

Hawaiian ahi tuna sashimi with wasabi hotcakes; Nantucket diver scallop and pan-seared foie gras over cauliflower velouté with shaved summer truffles.coyotecafe.com

EatingAround

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Dotting fields and roadsides, the hardy and colorful Indian blanket (Gaillardia pulchella) is always a welcome sight. Its daisy-like petals are richly colored concentric rings, and its red-violet center and yellow tips inspired another nickname: firewheel. Indian blanket thrives in drought-prone areas of the country like Texas and New Mexico, and it’s often found amid fields of a similarly hued wildflower called Mexican hat. Cruise along Old Santa Fe Trail for an eye-catching burst of color from this most cherished wildflower.—Amy Gross

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Indian blanket seen along Old Santa Fe Trail

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[on the market]

horse lover’s havenHummingbirds flock to this lush 6.14-acre equestrian estate on Old Santa Fe Trail with towering pine trees and 40-foot aspens. The three-bedroom, four-bathroom home has a grand entry with an 18-foot ceiling as well as an exercise room, an office, and a gourmet kitchen. An outdoor polished-concrete dance floor makes for great entertaining and is close to a covered patio with built-in bancos surrounding an outdoor fireplace and stainless steel grill. Horse lovers will enjoy the four barn stalls, which include running water and individual runs. There’s plenty of room for tack and hay storage, and there’s a 128 x 66” foot fenced riding arena.

List price: $1.3 millionContact: Emily Medvec, Keller Williams, 505-660-4541, kw.com

August 14, 2014 NOW 27

style Haciendas—A Parade of Homes

BACK IN THE DAY, Haciendas—A Parade of Homes might have showcased three or four dozen homes over two weekends. While that number certainly reflected a booming housing market, it also made seeing every home a challenge. This year, the Parade features 19 homes—a number easily managed over one focused weekend—spread all over Santa Fe, from Old Las Vegas Highway and

the Cerrillos corridor to Monte Sereno and Sundance Ridge. The majority are custom

built and currently owned.Although you’ll find traditional

Southwest, Territorial, and even Tuscan designs on the Parade, a preponderance of contemporary and soft contemporary homes marks this

year’s event. “Clean contemporary lines represent an evolving theme in Haciendas—A Parade of Homes,” says Kim Shanahan, executive officer of the Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association. “Builders and designers are staying true to the spirit of iconic Santa Fe–style vernacular, but there’s a certain edginess that looks like it’s here to stay.”

All judged homes compete for the coveted best in show award, called the Grand Hacienda; the Grand Green award recognizes excellence in green building. Shananan has witnessed green judging becoming more competitive every year. “Even homes that are not choosing to be judged are touting their green attributes,” Shanahan notes. “When the least expensive

home (Habitat for Humanity’s, at $180,000) and the most expensive (Satzinger Design’s, at $2.295 million) could be battling for the Grand Green, we know we have achieved both market saturation and market maturation.”

For more information, check newsstands for a free copy of Haciendas—A Parade of Homes, which details each entry and includes maps and directions to the homes.

Haciendas—A Parade of Homes, August 15–17 and August 22–24, 11 am to 6 pm. Some homes will also be open during the Twilight Tour, held on August 22 from 4 to 9 pm. Tickets are $15 and available through sfahba.com or at any of the participating homes.

Borrego Construction

area builders and designers showcase their best new

and remodeled homes

by Amy Gross

“Builders and designers are staying true to the spirit

of iconic Santa Fe–style vernacular, but there’s a certain

edginess that looks like it’s here to stay,” says Kim Shanahan, executive officer of the Santa Fe

Area Home Builders Association.

Palo Santo Designs

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On August 2, Texas rock/folk-rock musician James McMurtry drew one of the biggest crowds ever to the three-year-old Railyard Concerts & Movies series. “Santa Feans really respond to James McMurtry,” says Jamie Lenfestey, director of Heath Concerts, which presented the show. “He’s wry, sardonic, and a little political. He’s an amazing storyteller and one of the best songwriters out there. Santa Feans are savvy and sophisticated so they appreciate him,” he adds. McMurtry and his band played plenty of danceable tunes throughout the night, including Choctaw Bingo, one of his most famous and popular songs. The opening act featured up-and-coming Oklahoma folk-rocker Jonny Burke, who’s currently touring with McMurtry.—Emily Van Cleve

James McMurtry

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| L A S T LO O K |

James McMurtry

museum of indian arts and culturepresents

Museum of Indian Arts and Cultureon Museum Hill710 Camino Lejo (off Old Santa Fe Trail)505-476-1269 indianartsandculture.org

2014 SUMMER PROGRAMS

All are free with paid admission, 16 and under always free. New Mexico residents with ID always free on Sundays.

sunday, August 17th, 1:00–2:00 pmartist lecture & demonstration

Steve LaRance, Assiniboine/Hopi, and Marion Denipah, Navajo/Oh-kay Owingeh, create jewelry, paintings, and sculptures as individu-als and as partners. Their tufa-cast silverwork creates jewelry that are tiny sculptures, set with precious and semi-precious stones,

including high-grade turquoise. They use traditional Native design to make pieces that feel creatively contemporary.

wednesday & thursday August 20th & 21st, 1:00–2:00 pm

artist lecture & demonstrationDawn Jackson’s, Saginaw Chippewa, painting style refl ects the bold

and colorful imagery of classic animation, using cel vinyl paint and painting in reverse on layers of clear acetate to create striking

depth and dimension.

wednesday, August 20th southwest pottery artist demonstration

1:00–4:00 pm Native artists from different Southwest tribes, will discuss and demonstrate different techniques, clays and styles of pottery. Sharon

Lewis, from Acoma Pueblo, will be our featured artist.

let’s take a look12:00–2:00 pm Curators from the Museum of Indian Arts and

Culture and the Laboratory of Anthropology will be in the lobby of MIAC to look at your treasures and attempt to identify and

interpret artifacts and historic objects. Free and open to the public. Federal and state regulations prohibit the curators from appraising any artifact.

Top left: Marion Denipah. Bottom left: Steve LaRance. Right: Dawn Jackson.

Just as HDTV revolutionized our television viewing with its huge leap

in picture quality, High-Res Audio is doing the same for the music we

listen to. Come listen and learn about High Resolution Audio (HRA)

and how Sony is leading the way in gear and music.

OPEN TUESDAY—SATURDAY 9 AM—5 PM 215 N GUADALUPE · SANTA FE, NM 87501

505.983.9988 · CONSTELLATIONSANTAFE.COM

SONY and High Resolution Audio, Want to Hear More?

Saturday, August 16 @ 10AM

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621 Canyon Road

830 Canyon Road

Read a profile about Jane Filer in the current issue of the Santa Fean

Jane Filer, Riding the Big White, acrylic on canvas, 46" x 40"

[email protected]

BillHesterFineArt.com

(505) 660-5966

Walter Horak Troupe, bronze