Indian Market is Santa Fe’s biggest event of the year. Approximately 100,000 people come from around the world to see more than 1,200 artists from a hundred or so tribes. The rules for entry are strict and the quality, especially among the traditional arts, is high. The best quillwork, jewelry, pottery, baskets and other media are presented directly to the public by the artists.
It’s also a blast. The Plaza is packed starting at six am on Saturday, the mutton and frybread are cooking and participants, buyers and those just looking are dressed to the nines.
Thursday, August 14, 2008 at 3:00 PM
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
Jason Berger is one of the last painter’s painter. On a lovely afternoon this July, I had the chance to speak with this charming, intense eighty-three-year-old while he smoked an old and elegant Meerschaum pipe. As we sat under a tree on the patio of Ernesto Mayans Gallery at 601 Canyon Road (currently featuring Jason Berger – The Master at 80), Berger looked at me quizzically as he decided whether my questions and comments were well-founded or simply silly.
Berger was born in Malden, Massachusetts in 1924. A clever student, he became known early on for his puns and wickedly funny use...
Monday, August 4, 2008 at 4:00 PM
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
Nearly one hundred works of art by the late Fritz Scholder are included in Fritz Scholder: An Intimate Look at the Institute of American Indian Arts Museum, (108 Cathedral Place, July 18, Reception for Indian Market, August 20, 4 – 6 pm). “As one of IAIA’s most illustrious professors from its founding decade, the 1960s,” writes Curator Joseph Sanchez, “Scholder is known for deconstructing the myth of the American Indian, and constantly examining the concept of identity. Considered controversial at first because of his realist take on Indian life, his contribution to the success of...
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
Forrest Moses and Joe Ramiro Garcia at LewAllen Contemporary
129 West Palace Avenue
Reception, July 4, 5:30 – 7:30 pm
On July 4, be sure to go by LewAllen Contemporary before going to a barbeque, to the fireworks or to The Marriage of Figaro at the Santa Fe Opera. Two very different exhibits at the gallery there provide tasty fare for the eyes.
Forrest Moses’ monotypes push the artist’s explorations of nature’s forms and rhythms to the forefront of the image. Moses’ series Forest Impressions distills his marvellously naturalistic renderings of landscape into the sensations that underlie...
Monday, June 30, 2008
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
Lucky Number Seven opens at Site Santa Fe (1606 Paseo de Peralta, Sunday, June 22, 12-5 pm)
Ah! Biennials! Since the creation of the Venice Biennial in 1895, the art world and the Beau Monde have been on a circuit through an increasingly large number of venues. During the 1980s and 90s, the biennial format boomed; all of a sudden, there were biennials not just in Europe and New York but throughout Latin America, in Istanbul, in Taipei, in Shanghai, in Dakkar and, not least in Santa Fe. But, came various arguments from the left, the right and the curatorial classes: Who is shown at these...
Sunday, June 15, 2008
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
On June 6, a First Friday West Palace Arts District evening, be sure to drop in and see the delicious and intriguing jewelry that Charon Kransen has assembled for Patina Gallery (131 West Palace Avenue from 5 – 7:30 pm). Kransen, who is well-respected as an author and curator, travels throughout the world to find the highest quality jewelry and accessories by contemporary studio artists. Choosing freely between artists who are renowned and those whose reputations are just beginning to form, the curator shows a particularly fine eye for judicious and innovative use of materials.
Sunday, June 1, 2008
by Aline Brandauer • SantaFe.com
Tapestry Institute's Fall Workshops for Women
Sound Healing at the UWC’s Dwan Light Sanctuary
Jonathan Schell with Hamilton Fish
Business is built on relationships. A proven method to establish relationships is storytelling.
A series of classes in modern music.
John Kennedy explores the historical innovations and social contexts of New Music