Friday, April 26, 2019

Gallery of Photos: More on the Santa Fe Art Scene



I'm always taken with the art I find in Santa Fe.  For one thing it seems accessible.  Nicely representational. And regional.  (And since I am enamored of the Southwest, that appeals to me.)

Here are some photos I took during my last trip--February 2018.  The first batch is from the Nedra Matteuci Gallery on Paseo de Peralta. It's in a lovely adobe house with gardens and a large collection of Western and Southwestern art including silver, coral, and beaded jewelry, plus paintings by Hurd, Cassidy, Fechin, Higgins, and O'Keeffe among others many of whom were members of the Taos art colony.  Along with the toad (below), the gallery's gardens feature a wide assortment of sculpture.



"Le Toad" by Dan Ostermiller


Decorated kiva fireplace inside the gallery

On cold days, the gallery's fireplaces can be found to be burning beautifully scented cedar logs.



"San Geronimo--1820 Taos" by Catherine Maziere (sterling silver)



One of two interior doors covered with "milagro" ("miracle") charms



The other, just opposite



Another kiva fireplace


And the following photos are from the New Mexico Museum of Art on West Palace Avenue.


"Cui Bono?" by Gerald Cassidy, ca. 1921



One in a series of interior courtyard paintings by Will Shuster



"View of Santa Fe Plaza in the 1850's" by Gerald Cassidy, ca. 1930



Varqueño and chair by Verne Lucero, ca. 2007


And the following painting depicts the burning of 50-foot-high Old Man Gloom, also called Zozobra, the Spanish word for "anxiety."  This event kicks off the Santa Fe Fiesta each year.  It dates from 1924 when Santa Fe artist and marionette maker, Gustave Baumann, constructed the first Zozobra and, along with his friend, Will Shuster, burned it during that year's fiesta.




"Viva la Fiesta (Zozobra)" by Luis Tapia, 1996

An added note about Gustave Baumann.

Baumann was a world-class multi-color-wood-cut printmaker.  Pomegranate puts out a beautiful annual calendar of his work called "A Small Untroubled World" with woodcut reproductions including scenes of New Mexico, the Grand Canyon, California, and Maine.  I get one of these calendars each year--with a different scene for each month--and never tire of looking at the serene landscapes.

Look him up; he did amazing work.



Wednesday, April 10, 2019

More on Santa Fe

Art Gallery, Canyon Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico


Let it be said:  this New England where I live is one of the most beautiful parts of an already beautiful country.  Think May when it is a rich vibrant green with long gorgeous vistas and flowering trees to perk up any soul ... and then October with its stunning colors that vibrate across the land.  But then there are too many gloomy days the rest of the year, too much cold, sleet, ice, freezing rain, or heat and humidity for me to put an A+ on its report card.  An A+ for May and October but the rest of the year, you'll have to judge for yourself.

Spring time




Residence along Camino del Monte Sol



New Mexico has its "lesser" times of year, too, but it tends to be sunnier, dryer, better temperatures (both summer and winter), less gloomy, all of which attracts me and makes me want to return for longer periods.  So, why do I keep returning to New Mexico?  (Though I missed going this past winter.)

Okay, here goes:

It has pizzazz
Sunshine
An interesting altitude (7,000 feet)
A dry, non-humid climate
Gorgeous landscapes
High mountains
Wide vistas
Sunsets to die for
A fabulous combination of three cultures:  Native American,
     Spanish, Anglo (as everyone else is called)
Innovative art
Kiva fireplaces
Fabulous restaurants, great diversity of food
A highly interesting architecture, much of it pueblo style
Thunderstorms in the summer
Sunshine in the winter (with snow on the mountains)  (most years)
Color everywhere you look
The magical incense-like aroma of  local piñon pine and cedar
     burning in fireplaces
People in silver belts and cowboy boots
Bathrooms, kitchens, stairways designed with tiles from Mexico
A Japanese style spa called 10,000 Waves
A climate that is neither too hot nor too cold
A climate that does justice to all four seasons
A place that inspired Georgia O'Keeffe
A place that feels as if you are in a totally different country
Pink and orange earth colors, blue blue skies


One of the town's favorite restaurants



On up Hyde Park Road




Same scene a few months later



Conversely:

The altitude of 7,000 feet can make having more than one margarita totally
     unwise ... and necessary to catch your breath if going upstairs
Juniper pollen season (early spring) can do a number on you
The skies are rarely the blue blue of old but often have a whitened haze
     over them, as most geoengineered skies nowadays
The chile, whether red or green (and, yes, they spell it that way), can be a bit
     spicy and is now found in more and more dishes
Escalating costs have made it necessary for several of my favorite shops and
     eateries to move to a less charming part of town or go out of business
There seems to be a tax on everything including massage treatments.  Once
     some years back when I went to a lecture, it had a tax on it, too

**

I first saw New Mexico, northern New Mexico, when I was seven and my family and I took a camping trip there just after the war ended.  My father, an Easterner, had driven through around 1921 on his way west in his old "flivver" (as he called it) and had fallen in love with the place.  So when gasoline became available after the war, when we no longer needed coupons to buy it, we headed out for the Land of Enchantment. Once in all that melange of childhood, my parents considered moving there.  But we stayed in Southern California, instead.  Another lovely part of the world in that less crowded day.

Typical scene of hollyhocks and blue windows


Randall Davey House



On up the road, by Ghost Ranch




Next time:  More on the Santa Fe Art Scene