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Making the Most of Free

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010 by Santa Fe Red

Having just had a great free viewing experience at the Cleveland Museum of Art, I set out to explore other free art options here in my hometown. While not all museums have the luxury of an endowment that allows for free admission all the time like the Cleveland Museum, most museums do have free hours if one just does the research and has the right free time. The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe opens its doors at no charge on the first Friday of each month, and the New Mexico Museum system is free on Sundays to New Mexico residents. Even the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is almost free, if one understands that the admission fee is a recommended price and not a required one, meaning that struggling artists who love the Met can enjoy hours of museum-going for whatever they can afford.

Claes Oldenberg & Coosje Van Bruggen Free Stamp, 1982 Cleveland, Ohio

Claes Oldenberg & Coosje Van Bruggen Free Stamp, 1982 Cleveland, Ohio

My sojourn in Ohio has been enhanced by the need to stay right downtown, which sent me out to explore some things in the city that came to pass long after I left. A warm and sunny day led me to the Oldenburg-Van Bruggen sculpture that echoed my hunt for free art and was located right in the heart of the city. This oversized piece has all the humor and craftsmanship for which these artists are known. My mission to see for free was hereby officially rubber-stamped and approved!

On a fresh spring morning, by driving a short distance from the Public Square area, I ended up at the Cleveland Museum of Contemporary Art, conveniently at no charge on Fridays. I had known about this museum for many years, but despite many trips “back home,” I had never taken the time to visit. On this occasion, I am very glad I did! You never know when you are going to encounter a fresh artistic vision, but when it comes, it’s a treat! And when the artist works from an entire personal mythology, it’s even better. Having enjoyed the flat, deceptively complex quality of Native painters for years (which you can see in the Wheelwright Museum‘s current exhibit), I was captivated by a show of paintings which also had the same flat brightly-hued qualities. The work was by iona rozeal brown (sic), and what an inventive world she has created!

brown’s spirit beings begin their existence in a metaphysical realm in which they receive their purpose, then enter a pod that will transport them to be incubated and developed before birth as saplings and transport to HEZ (the humanic enterprise zone). Once in HEZ, the saplings are plagued by villains that use materialism and sex to coax them away from their principles. Deities watching from above dispatch various warriors to help the saplings stay firm and cling to a purposeful existence.

Her triptych “all falls down,” from 2008, introduces us to E.I.N. (Everything I’m Not), a ghostly presence that receives orders from unseen dark powers and colludes with demons to tempt and bully female saplings into materialism and promiscuity. Sound familiar? E.I.N. was once a woman and is much like the character of Tolkien’s Gollum, a creature who is transformed into a grasping fiend. E.I.N.’s dark transformation occurred through her insatiable yearning for material goods – this is a mythology for today! In another painting, “amidst black flowers and honky tonk angels, sphinxes run amok,” brown depicts Kaede, a sapling who has sadly fallen off her path and thus, without spiritual guidance or purpose, is alone, miserable and in desperate need of help.

iona rozeal brown: E.I.N. 2008

iona rozeal brown: E.I.N. 2008

In this exhibition, we also meet the good spirits, such as the Unnamed Aid, a warrior who lives on HEZ and watches over the saplings as they mature. The Unnamed Aid resists the material concerns and superficial cravings of everyday life. Kaatchi, the incubator, watches over the saplings as they are injected with “the blues,” which help them resist the adversity and sorrow they are sure to encounter; some saplings receive more or less of these blues, depending on the difficulty of their path.

iona rozeal brown: Kaatchi, the Incubator (detail)

iona rozeal brown: Kaatchi, the Incubator (detail)

ana rogu, sentinel, decked out in headphones to silence noise and improve focus, is an elite divine being who, in a surging pool of water, a “wall of black creativity,”  creates the pods that grow and transport spirits to HEZ. And the warrior Yoshi (yo, she!), is a feisty scrapper in sunglasses and a massive Afro, riding her Big Wheel and projecting the confidence, courage and commitment that brown hopes to impart to her younger viewers.

iona rozeal brown: ana rogu, enstinel

iona rozeal brown: ana rogu, sentinel

These helpful beings exist to aid the newborn spirits who are present in paintings like “…hold on..” from 2009, where we meet ana mei (anime?), a young sapling, i.e., a teenager, who is born with the knowledge and ability she needs for success, but who is inexperienced and easily led astray by dark forces like E.I.N. On first observance, this painting, in particular, reminded me not only of the Japanese art that brown obviously admires, but also of a katchina.

iona rozeal brown: ...hold on... 2009

iona rozeal brown: ...hold on... 2009

The last part of the exhibit demonstrates how brown puts her mythology to use in her own life, with a residency project she organized  in summer 2009. Eight students from the Progressive Arts Alliance RHAPSODY Summer Camp and Shaw High School’s Visual Communications Class worked together to create a mural depicting Yoshi, the hip-hop warrier, clothed in a flowing cape, parts of which were painted by the individual student artists. The detailed landscapes and thoughtful portraits they created are a vivid depiction of the visual interests and cultural life of Northeast Ohio teens.

iona rozeal brown:Yoshi (detail) from the Residency Project 2009

iona rozeal brown:Yoshi (detail) from the Residency Project 2009

So my search for the free led me to a free-spirited vision of the world, courtesy of this talented artist who shares her vision with museum-goers and artists-in-training alike! It’s a good thing to take time to discover places that were always in your own backyard! There’s no place like home, eh, Dorothy?

Santa Fe Paints the Town Red

Thursday, January 28th, 2010 by Santa Fe Red

Like many of our guests, hoteliers these days are staying closer to home themselves, but every now and then, business elsewhere beckons. In combination with the value of experiencing a hotel as a guest, a trip to the Big City reminds hotel professionals of the joys and challenges of exploring a destination that is quite different from home. And there couldn’t be a bigger contrast than that of the City Different and the Big Apple; after all, the population of Santa Fe probably fits in a single NYC block. Add the exhilaration of sheer verticality to someone used to living on the horizontal, and you find Santa Fe ready to paint the town red!

Remarkably, the actual travel experience was quite serene, an on-time arrival and departure, an accommodating and friendly airline staff, a clean plane, an easy ride into the city; a heartfelt thank you . Contrary to all the bad reports, travel today CAN be just fine, so don’t delay a dream.

As a denizen of a sweet little Inn with only 71 rooms, I thought it would be enlightening to expand my horizons by staying in a BIG property. On arrival, the excited buzz of what appeared to be 1000 young girls attending a dance conference made me take a deep breath. But by the time I got to the 27th floor of the Grand Hyatt, it was perfectly peaceful, and I was gratified to find that my room request had graciously been granted, with the historic Chrysler Building right outside my window. Even though we hotel folk always make our guests aware that not every request can be accommodated, we are also cognizant of the delighted feeling that ensues when desires are met, which is why we endeavor to make our own guests happy too.

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Although business brought me to the city, the anticipation of filling some free hours with the many cultural offerings of New York led me straight to the Friday issue of New York Times to plan my outings judiciously. We who travel, yet also welcome travelers, know that overdoing makes everything run together in the mind; that is why we encourage visitors to Santa Fe to stay a minimum of at least three nights. It’s surely one of the reasons  that the Inn’s anniversary special is so popular.

Ballet Shoes

As a die-hard opera fan, I knew the Metropolitan Opera would be on the agenda, along with museums and galleries, and the decidedly more pedestrian pleasures of viewing life on the streets. As much as I wanted to do the Met twice – well, actually, every night – when I learned that Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet would have its last performance of the year at New York City Ballet, that felt like the ideal way to begin this brief romantic interlude with the city. I am not very knowledgeable about dance; I admit I went for the music, and I was not disappointed.

I had not seen a full-length story-driven ballet since childhood, and although I am no judge of choreography, I was truly touched by the way Kathryn Morgan managed to combine the virginity of Juliet with a very palpable sexual quality. Dueling, dancing, death and despair, it was all there. What was also there, sadly, was a noticeable number of empty seats; I was happy that I had the opportunity to help pay for keeping dance arts alive in this tough economy. We need to remember this in Santa Fe as well. Although our Aspen Santa Fe Ballet brings us the same joys of movement throughout the year, it also requires our participation to make sure that it not only improves but actually survives. While I don’t expect to see Romero and Juliet here just yet, the Santa Fe Concert Association presents the Moscow Festival Ballet at the Lensic with performances of Coppelia and Sleeping Beauty on February 1 and 2.  And the ASFB company  will be back in March with two nights of exciting dance on March 13 and 14.  There will also be some Santa Fe footwork on the opposite end of the spectrum, as Aspen Santa Fe brings Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo to the Lensic for one performance only on February 9. “Now for something completely different,” as Monty Python used to say!

Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo: Pas de Quatre

Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo: Pas de Quatre

More on this culture vulture’s New York escapade next week…

Pilobolus at Popejoy

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010 by Santa Fe Red
Pilobolus: Brass Scorpion

Pilobolus: Brass Scorpion

Sometimes Santa Fe goes South! To Albuquerque, that is. In the past, when the Pilobolus troupe has had tour dates in the Southwest, our beautifully-restored Lensic has generally been one of their stops. This year, not. I don’t know whether the Lensic was booked or whether this dance company needed the larger venue for larger revenue (completely understandable, if so), but either way, they had their one Northern New Mexico stop at Popejoy Hall on the University of New Mexico campus. Many Santa Feans (I mean me) are notorious for their reluctance to take that quick drive to Albuquerque, but sometimes, ya just gotta go! The Albuquerque venue actually suited us better this time, as our grandson has applied to UNM, and we wanted to give him a sense of the cultural life on campus. We had taken him to see Momix, the Pilobolus off-shoot, some years ago, so we knew this would be a good choice.

What we didn’t realize, however, was that the new semester had not started, so our plan to eat dinner in the Student Union and scope out the college scene before the performance was a bust. That’s where the Frontier came to the rescue. It is hardly haute-cuisine, but it is an Albuquerque institution, and being right across the street from Popejoy, it was a quick save. I had not eaten there is a very long time, so it also gave me a chance to confirm that if someone flies into Albuquerque late, it’s an okay choice, since it’s pretty hard to ruin eggs. And if you get a side of green chile for the hash browns, it’s the real deal – you can still see the roasting marks.  Grandson, newly vegetarian, had the breakfast burrito and was well satisfied. When in doubt, all-day breakfast is a blessing.

Pilobouls: Trevibug

Pilobouls: Trevibug

The production was striking, like all the performances I have seen by this unique troupe of hard-working dancer/athletes.  Talk about core strength, they had it going! The first piece, Red Line (2009), was highly stylized, full of aggressive precise movements and thumping music, with costumes that made it hard to distinguish male from female dancers, especially since we were seated up in the nose-bleed section (that’s what you get when you wait too long to order tickets). The second, Rushes (2007), was a decided contrast, slower-paced and thought-provoking, with inventive participation by a group of chairs, interesting especially because I had seen another unusual use of chairs on a performance by the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet in the fall.   After an intermission that allowed us to mill around and check out the Albuquerque dance aficionados, we were treated to a moving duet from 2009 that was not yet titled, and an older piece, Day Two (1980) choreographed by one of the company’s co-founders, Moses Pendleton, who subsequently founded Momix. It struck me that I had first encountered Pilobolus very early on in Santa Fe, when they began touring; that’s one of the things that is so great about our town, and indeed our state, the well-deserved reputation as a Mecca for artists of all stripes.

Coming to Popejoy: Swan Lake

Coming to Popejoy: Swan Lake

And of course, the drive really is the easiest of commutes – I don’t know why I don’t do it more often, especially since I do appreciate the flavor that the university imparts to the city. Popejoy frequently hosts artists that do not appear in Santa Fe, and in just the next few weeks, there’s An Evening with Groucho, Swan Lake (with Russian ballerinas) and Riverdance (on its final tour). None of these performances are happening in our fair city this time around. Most of the month of January also offers a variety of theatrical events in Albuquqerque, as part of the 10th annual Revolutions International Theatre Festival, organized by the Tricklock Company.

Riverdance Swings into Popejoy on its Final Tour

Riverdance Swings into Popejoy on its Final Tour

For us Santa Fesinos, well, I guess we just “gotta git outta Dodge” now and then. And for travelers to Santa Fe who find themselves in Albuquerque for a night before or after, an evening at Popejoy can definitely be an enjoyable part of the itinerary. This will be a whole lot easier in the fall of this year, when the new Hotel Parq Central opens its historic doors, just a short distance from UNM and all that the university has to offer.

Holiday Spirits

Monday, December 21st, 2009 by Santa Fe Red

Have you been to Keshi? If you’re like me, the answer is “yes,” many times over. Whenever I need a unique  gift for a special person, this quiet little shop is the first place that comes to mind, and the holidays are no exception.

Winter at Zuni Pueblo

Winter at Zuni Pueblo

Zuni Pueblo, several hours west of Santa Fe, is nestled in a scenic valley on the western slopes of the continental divide. Founded by Zuni Pueblo school teachers back in 1981, Keshi is a direct outlet for Zuni artisans, renowned and respected for their fetishes, carvings that represent the guiding spirit of certain animals revered for their powers by the A:Shiwi (The People). Established roots in the Zuni community allow Keshi to offer authenticity along with the beauty of the works displayed here. The aim of Keshi has always been to provide a fair value to both artisan and collector, and they honor this mission by maintaining personal connections with their artists and their public.

Fetishes have been used by the Pueblo People for over a thousand years to honor individual animals and their special medicine, and in doing so,  to summon similar attributes within for meditation and discovery. The value of a fetish lies in the spirit of the animal, not the object itself.  There are numerous texts about the use and care of fetishes, and the staff at Keshi is also well-equipped to provide guidance in reading about Zuni culture.

A pair of bushy-tailed fetishes

A pair of bushy-tailed fetishes

Many animals and birds are represented in the Zuni fetish world, with six major directions, each acknowledged and assigned a color and animal. At the top of the food chain is Yellow Mountain Lion, whose medicine focuses on setting good examples and boundaries and who represents the North.  Red Badger, known for his grit and tenaciousness, marks the South and provides guidance  in accomplishing a specific goal or purpose. White Suski of the East, the Wolf (bushy-tail), offers medicine that is involved with gathering information and finding new pathways for the clan. The West is the territory of the Blue Bear, a principal Pueblo animal whose hibernation reminds one of the value of going within, especially for strength, healing or protection;  Bear aids mothering and is an excellent guide for women. Black Mole, guardian of Mother Earth, marks the Nadir, and his blindness reminds us to trust what we feel, not just what we see. The Many-Colored Eagle stands for the Zenith, the Heavens, bringing extraordinary vision and an ability to see the whole picture.

deer-canteen-v2

A Deer Canteen

Beyond these major archetypes are other creatures who each bring distinct powers to aid those in a quest for clarity or guidance. The knowledgeable staff at Keshi is always accessible to help in selecting a fetish for a specific purpose, and they are endlessly patient as one assesses the individual feeling of each carving. Each fetish you select is carefully wrapped, the carver and the material are identified, and a small bag of blue corn powder mixed with turquoise with instructions for feeding the fetish is included. And of course, if you see something else that strikes you, such as distinctive pottery or jewelry, you’ll know the item’s provenance before you leave with it in hand.

If you or a loved one need some help from the other world, this is one of the best places in Santa Fe to find yourself finding yourself! Make a stop at Keshi part of your New Mexico journey…you’ll be sure to say El-lah-kwa (thank you).

Western New Mexico

Western New Mexico

20 Years and Still Cookin’

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009 by Santa Fe Red

Have an hour to spare this Saturday afternoon? On December 19th, from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m., the Santa Fe School of Cooking celebrates its 20th year of welcoming locals and travelers alike into their kitchen for a taste of New Mexico home cooking. There will be cooking demonstrations, wine tastings, tamale making and even cookie decorating for kids. Rumor has it that Santa Claus will be making an appearance in all his holiday glory around 3:30 p.m. See you there?

The Snowy Sangre

Monday, December 14th, 2009 by The Santa Fe Naturalist
New snow on Tesuque Ridge above Santa Fe

New snow on Tesuque Ridge above Santa Fe

Winter is here in Santa Fe, and the ski bunnies were rushing up the mountain on Saturday for the official opening of Ski Santa Fe, with its 29 inch base, newly freshened late last week, as you can see in the picture above.

On Sunday I made a somewhat shorter drive up the mountain, to Hyde State Park, 8 miles up the road to Ski Santa Fe, which is about half the distance to the official skiing. Nevertheless, I soon wished I’d rented some snow shoes:

A walk in Hyde State Park

A walk in Hyde State Park

Hyde Park sits squarely in the heart of the mixed conifer belt that I’ve mentioned earlier when  I wrote about the Chamisa Trail. It’s one of New Mexico’s oldest State Parks, a cool and refreshing escape in summer, and a popular stop in winter to enjoy the less strenuous winter sports like ice skating and snow tubing. It’s also a good place to rent snow shoes and cross country skis if you are on your way up to Aspen Vista or the Nordic Ski Area.

dscn1872-hyde-park-sign

My goal was to visit the little-known waterfall that cascades down a shoulder of granite on the east side of the park. I’d never seen it in the winter, and since it’s a short walk from the picnic area, I thought it would make a nice winter hike.

dscn1856-waterfall-sign

This was about the place I wish I’d rented those snowshoes. With about 8 inches of snow under the trees, it was slow going and I was rapidly getting damp boots. But since it’s not a long trek, I pressed onward and soon found myself at the cascade, which was entirely frozen over:

dscn1858-waterfall

As you might guess from the scene above, my other goal – that of describing the interesting foliated granite that outcrops along this creek – was thwarted and will have to wait until a warmer day. Hyde Park happens to occupy the transition from the high foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the more lofty and more rounded ridges of the Santa Fe Range, and there is a subtle geological reason for this that you can explore on both sides of the park. But not when it’s all buried in snow.

So I contented myself with some of winter’s smaller beauties:

Wild rose hips in the snow

Wild rose hips in the snow

and soon made my way back down to Santa Fe to warm up. And ask Santa for snowshoes.

Nutty for the Nutcracker

Thursday, December 10th, 2009 by Santa Fe Red
A Magical Moment in Aspen Ballet's Nutcracker

A Magical Moment in Aspen Ballet's Nutcracker

Snow is on the ground, Christmas lights are twinkling in the crisp air, and it’s time for the Sugar Plum Fairy! While it’s easy to think of the Nutcracker as a hoary old chestnut, it’s a fact that this ballet is many young dancers’ first introduction to the wonders of the dance world. And even for those who never aspire to a life en pointe, the Nutcracker is still one of the delights of the holiday season. In addition, these annual productions often provide ballet companies, even the largest and most renowned, with a large percentage of their annual box office, no small feat given how hard cultural institutions have to work to survive.

Santa Fe is lucky to have the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet bring their Nutcracker back to the Lensic Center each Christmas season, especially since the dancing of this regional troupe gets better and better each year. What a pleasant experience it was this fall to see Twyla Tharp’s work Sue’s Leg exactingly performed by ASFB right here in Santa Fe, then listen to the poetic music of John Cage in a memorable ballet by Itzik Galili entitled Chameleon. I knew my grand-daughter was growing up when I realized she enjoyed these two works as much as she enjoys the Nutcracker. And the gals in our family DO love the tradition of Marie and Herr Drosselmeyer, which began some years ago with my daughter and now includes her daughter too!

Santa Fe kids and Grown-ups alike enjoy The Nutcracker ~ from the audience and the stage!

Santa Fe kids and Grown-ups alike enjoy The Nutcracker ~ from the audience and the stage!

No matter how many times I see a production of this holiday ballet, I always find Tchaikovsky’s music thrilling. And there is something really special about walking out of the cold and into a warm theater full of chattering excited little ones that makes the more fretful moments of the holiday season just drop away. So let adult cares drift away for an hour or so, and have the spirit of the season dance into your heart with a visit to this winter ballet wonderland.

Performances: Saturday, December 12, 2:00 pm and 7:30 pm; December 13, 1:00 pm and 5:00 pm
Tickets are available at the Lensic Box Office

jumping-nut

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