The opening reception for Naxon’s BFA exhibition, “Secured,” will be held from 5 to 7 p.m., March 29 in the Southwest Annex Fine Arts Gallery on the SFUAD campus
Alumni Profile: Nathally Botelho...
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SFUAD film alum Nathally Botelho graduated from Santa Fe University of Art and Design in 2016, and has gone on to play a significant role in film production design.
End-of-Semester Events...
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Santa Fe University of Art and Design students prepare for a variety of events as the final month of the Fall 2017 approaches.
Ghost Tour
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Just in time for Halloween, students in the Creative Writing and Literature Department’s Media and Storytelling class at Santa Fe University of Art and Design’s Creative Writing Department take a ghost tour with Al Pacheco and share their...
Glazner Winners 2016
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The winners of the annual Glazner Prize for Creative Writing are featured in Jackalope Magazine this week. The contest for high school students is sponsored by the Creative Writing and Literature Department.
“Black Spaces in the Picture”...
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By Alexa Curnutte Our dark porch lingers in the camera flash. Blue painted slats, red trimming, brick steps. When I look at the picture I imagine Mom taking it. Dad probably wasn’t there. My brother, Chance, and I are grinning down at the camera through the white rise of our cheeks, flushed deep pink from the October cold. It’s Halloween. Chance is Buzz Lightyear. I’m a fairy. My small hands clutch the white plastic end of my wand, iridescent strings floating down my knuckles. Chance’s black mask is crooked. If you look closely you can see that he stands oddly on one leg, shifting his weight off center. The clubbed foot, after surgeries and casts, is still struggling to become normal. My ears stick out like broken egg shells and my calves have already begun to bow outward. Our costumes glow against the small shapes of our bodies. Most Halloweens Dad was deployed. Christmases. Birthdays. The ‘Take 1!’ sign behind us is in Mom’s long cursive. Behind that is a pumpkin mask on the door. It’s eyes are blank, barely feasible in the worn out paper of the Kodak. Life hovered like that, in the background. As children we waited for phone calls, a knock on the door to sneak up on us. Anything that moved suddenly. Autumns like the one in this photograph were quiet, but summers hummed with energy. Distracted us. We survived on Walmart runs, metal carts full of frozen beef and bandaids. I was an army daughter among army sons. The boys had orange tipped plastic guns. On Saturdays they played war, and I became familiar with the sting of Bbs on my legs. We ran through the thick pines, unaware of the cumbersome way our young limbs moved. Under...
“She”
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By Makai Andrews When she was in grade school the boys would make fun of her because her thumbs looked like toes. She painted them orange and dotted them with silver rhinestones to prove them wrong. No one would waste that much time on a foot. Mother was having an affair with the pool boy when she was eleven. He was a young man from Arizona, moved here in hopes that he’d get in with some celebrity housewife who needed a pool cleaning and an actor for her next movie. He wasn’t having much luck, so far. Mother had the gardener drive in a big tree on one of those trucks that are too big to turn at normal street corners. She planted it next to the pool, where she was sure dozens of leaves would fall everyday. She shook a branch to make sure, dumping piles of leaves into the crisp water. Now the pool boy would have to come four times a week, not two. There’s just so many leaves in there, silly me for planting a tree right above it, she tells Father. Oh, but isn’t it just beautiful. Father liked his whiskey. Liked his whiskey with ice. Liked whisky with ice that looked like little islands of glass were floating up from a pool of golden mud. Sometimes she thought if she stuck her finger in the liquid, it would harden around her finger and she’d have a gold-capped nail. She tried it once, but instead of a special finger she got broken glass in her arm and bruises from Father’s hard day at the office. She wiped up the golden mud after he was finished. Brother was born when she was thirteen. He had eyes like hers...
“The Deep End” and “underbridge”...
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The Deep End by Annalise Lozier The sun bobbed in the sky like a peach in the water. We sunk below the surface and you were the apex of a triangle. With the light slicing past you, I was hidden in your faded glow, a planet in the dusk; and my fingernails, which my dad said made me look like a homeless goth looked to you like worn-down continents hidden in the binding of an atlas. Your face falls apart like tissue paper, dark purple and melting in the past. I can never really picture your nose and I can’t say how often I’ve mistaken your smile with the pointy chin of the man in the moon, but your silhouette still burns on my eyelids. You’ll be relieved to know I don’t love you, cross my heart and burn out my eyes. Your fingers pushed through my chest like it was so much dust, you tapped the metal hatch to ask if anyone was home, but there wasn’t-- it was only me and a few gray teeth. underbridge she had a face like sarcasm, her teachers said she scraped the paint off the walls when she skirted too close to the edge of the room under her shoulder blades she could pull back the muscle and untangle the tendons the tendons wrapped around her bones played with her joints like a rubik’s cube when she spoke she looked towards the windows or at the wormy yarn knit its fingers into sweaters she laughed loudly to cover the cracking sounds her spine made she laughed with her teeth bared she had a face...
Jackalope Summer Break...
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Jackalope Magazine will return for the Fall, 2015 semester. See you then!
“History of Navigation”...
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Emily Zhang’s “History of Navigation” received third place in the 2015 Glazner Prize for Creative Writing contest, sponsored by SFUAD’s Creative Writing and Literature Department. On Atlantic Street a girl lies on the street with vultures in her throat, the moon melting into the eggshell of her eyes melting into me. I don’t know if she swallowed the sky or if the sky swallowed her, but she is spilled like a run on sentence, preserved in past tense and the holy glow of streetlight. An exercise in forbearance. Two months after my grandfather said the name of what would kill him, we spilled salt on our tongues and drank soup too sparse to be unstill. My uncle drove without a seatbelt swathed across his shoulders. He drove until he saw a lake that wrapped its fingers around the sky’s neck and exhaled while the sky inhaled. Until he saw a bird and tried to catch it, but its wings broke off when he grazed it, and he closed his palms over its eyes and pressed, learned that he couldn’t protect anything anymore. Six years ago a man on the telephone told her to put her hands between her thighs and squeeze and she told him nothing. A ritual in reverse. All I know is that we all have the animal want in our stomachs to float, that they are burning newspapers on Atlantic Street now. When the universe was first beginning a bird took a flashlight from a trashcan and dropped it into a beautiful coffin. In five hundred years someone will unearth this moment without the girl, in the wicked heat of June, tucked in concrete like an exhalation. I wish I...
“Hair”
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“Hair” by Joseph Jordan-Johnson received second place in the 2015 Glazner Prize for Creative Writing contest, sponsored by SFUAD’s Creative Writing and Literature Department. Roots I have my father’s hairline. A widow’s jut in the middle of my forehead. I have naps—scalp clumsy. His waves were smooth, current-cut, razor-precise. He never told me how he keeps the gray from creeping in. He is 53, a silver fox smile cutting from ear to ear. My scalp is too oily, lacquered, pore-thick. My hair runs bristle wired, strung, dry and clumped. I have ignored how he taught to keep it clean. Cut They are rigored, the coroner’s faint clipper buzz is a lullaby. There seems to be less hair on the floor each time I cut, less tufts to sweep, less bodies to hide. Shower It is hot, in the way that pain cries. Holy, in God’s new breath, it is His steam that will bring more wrath than Murray’s wave gel, the things my father always used. The things I learned to hate. Shave More scratch than bite— less rough along the grain. The basin of the tub runs black and red, nicks of hair crawling to the drain. I hear them howl, there is wrath in each pull each razor-tear each pore less bloody than the other. They are him, not His. Dry Fresh. Something God has assumed. Something only death can say. I am bulbous, not whitehead, not ready to pop. There are years I have shaved– fifty-three bags all in a pile. The buzz has stopped. The wrath looks less bloody. The zipper closes. Joseph Jordan-Johnson is a senior at...
2015 Glazner Contest Winners
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With students from 87 high schools across the country submitting 140 entries to the 2015 Glazner Prize for Creative Writing, competition was fierce. This year’s winners were announced this week, chosen by SFUAD’s Creative Writing and Literature Department co-chairs Matt Donovan and Dana Levin. Named for the founder of the Creative Writing Program, Greg Glazner, the Glazner contest was conceived as a way to engage creative writing high school students across the country with SFUAD’s Creative Writing Department. Winners receive publication of their award-winning writing in Jackalope. Additionally, the first place winner receives an iPad with retina display; second place receives a Kindle Fire; and third place receives a $50 Amazon gift card. And the winners are… Alexandra Spensley is a junior at Avon Lake High School in Ohio. She was named a finalist in the Sierra Nevada College High School Writing Contest, and her recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in Cadaverine, The Postscript Journal, Canvas Lit, and Crashtest. Her writing has also received recognition from the Live Poets Society of New Jersey and Vincennes University. Read her award-winning piece, “Portrait of a City.” Joseph Jordan-Johnson is a senior at Oak Park and River Forest High School in Illinois, who says she doesn’t take herself “very seriously—I’m not entirely sure if this is good or bad. I enjoy long walks on the beach and effective discourse on racial equality in America. I believe the written word is the most raw form of communication, stripping narratives of the language that makes them whole, and creating art within the shells you made. Also, I’m irrationally in love with Beyonce.” Read his award-winning piece. “Hair.” Emily Zhang is a high school junior from Richard Montgomery High School in Maryland. Her writing has been recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, the Poetry Society of England, the Sierra Nevada Review, and Princeton University. She enjoys watching reality television. Read her award-winning piece, “History of Navigation.”...
“Portrait of a City”
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“Portrait of a City” by Alexandra Spensley received first place in the 2015 Glazner Prize for Creative Writing contest, sponsored by SFUAD’s Creative Writing and Literature Department. Part I: Streets & Avenues The city receded like tidewater, brackish. I watched it slide. Metal accepted metal in a blur of ticking steel, urban heartbeats. Sidewalks swallowed themselves: unclean tongues roving through a city scorched sideways. Who will shoulder this weight? I am left with empty husks, the shadows of buildings ashen as roman carpets. Alone, I map my way through the rubbish: slabs of stone, loose teeth, a child’s violin splayed open and bleeding, red-eyed mice twisting in its hollow chest. I hung the city like wallpaper, then tore it in two— and it was not stitched from a paste of broken stars, not submerged in the hot sways of red dresses— no, the city was a cut-glass mobile, enthralling, suspended above a child’s eager hands. Part II: Harvests We knew we were done for when the newspaper said one-fourth of the houses in the eastern district now stood vacant, empty monuments to the past. That same newspaper had voted us best hardware store in the city for three nonconsecutive years—we had their dates on a plaque in the frosted-glass window out front—but who needs a hardware store when there’s no houses left? I started rearranging things. I moved the Phillips screwdrivers to aisle four and put most of the auto parts by the cash register. Nothing worked except positioning the blue paint-thinner jars in front of the window; this spiked sales for a few weeks before my conscience made me move everything back. Soon nearly everyone who came in was trying to tune up their cars for the long drive to a new house, buying gallon jars of oil and gas or trailer hitches for U-Hauls. When I asked them where they were moving to, they all mumbled something along the lines of “Oh, Barb and I are headed west” or “We’re taking the kids up north for high school”—indiscriminate, vague substitutes for “anywhere but here”. Outside, foreclosure signs sprouted like poppies in a pasture. Outside, the rain started. I thought we could struggle by on what we’d saved up from the good years, but when the generator busted ($5,000) and the roof started leaking ($6,000), I had no choice but to close the place down. I used all of our meager revenue from the past four months printing out huge black-and-red EVERYTHING MUST GO signs, hung them out front next to the posters of angry-eyed kids with ‘missing, desperacido‘typed in block letters on top. There were dozens of those missing posters—I pasted each one I found; I just couldn’t stand those kids’ eyes. My wife suggested that we move out after closing shop, let our house become another shuttered tomb in the sea of a dying city. I told her no, I couldn’t release this land after so many years of holding it— so long that it had bloomed roots around my tired wrists. Still, the sight of the grocery on Sunday pierced me: washed-out high school kids, coughing up cigarettes in the parking lot; shelves heavy with a lack of bread; the thick, tangible seep of money right into the greedy earth. Gone. In the end, we couldn’t sell everything in the shop and drove it to the town dump instead; we needed three full pickup beds to move it all. Paradoxically, the dump seemed to be the liveliest place in the city: laughing, tanned men in cutoff shirts, cheerily tossing mountains of metal screws and power drills into the gaping tongue of a trash compressor. The leather of the pickup’s passenger seat stuck tight to my thighs; soon, summer would be here. In the rearview mirror, I watched the men heave trash bags over their shoulders like insect cocoons full to bursting, like a reaping of...
Manhattan
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Gov. Susana Martinez visited the SFUAD campus on March 5 to announce the WGN America series “Manhattan,” premiering in July.
And the winners are…
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More than 90 high school students participated in the inaugural Glazner Prize for Creative Writing. The top three winners were chosen by SFUAD’s Creative Writing Department co-chairs Matt Donovan and Dana Levin.
Alumni Profile
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Photographer, teacher and alumni Mike Webb talks about his experiences making art and in the...
SFUAD at Zozobra
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Writers and photographers from Jackalope joined 25,000 other Santa Feans at the Sept. 5 Zozobra celebration at Fort Marcy park to check out the annual ritual burning of Old Man Gloom, and talk to officials and attendees about the ritual. Check out their stories: Arianna Sullivan investigates the security at the event. Brandon Ghigliotty considers the meaning of gloom. Maria Costasnovo and Sandra Schonenstein talk to attendees about Zozobra’s meaning. Charlotte Martinez looks at the way the event has changed. Nick Martinez and Christopher Stahelin delve into Fiesta food. Amanda Tyler documents the Historical/Hysterical Parade. Shayla Blatchford captures the spirit of Fiesta in words and...
SFUAD on Santafe.com
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SFUAD writing and photography students have been contributing for several years to the online magazine SantaFe.com in advance of the launch of Jackalope. Stories have included coverage of Japanese Master Shodo Harada Roshi’s visit to Santa Fe, a photo essay of last year’s Snow Poems project, on-the-scene reporting from the annual ARTFeast tour and much, much more. Check out SantaFe.com’s SFUAD publishing page...
SFUAD at SITE
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In Spring, 2013, students from the Jackalope pre-cursor class Collaborations toured several exhibits at Site Santa Fe, producing writing and photography that was then published by SITE as a gallery guide. View the guide online here. Photography student Sandra Schonenstein also created an audio visual piece interview with SITE intern Diana Padilla: And photography student Shayla Blatchford also created an audio visual piece with Linda Mary Montano, whose show, “Always Creative,” was part of the SITE...
SFUAD in SFR
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During the Spring of 2013, SFUAD writing and photography students worked with and published a variety of articles in The Santa Fe Reporter newspaper as part of the coursework leading up to Jackalope magazine. How to Spy a Turquoise Lie by Charlotte Martinez/ photos by Shayla Blatchford Skies the Limit by Brandon Ghigliotty/ photos by Michelle Rutt Silly Rabbit by Nick Beckman/ photos by Amanda Tyler An Alternative Space by Mark Feigenbutz/ photos by Tim Kassiotis The Personal Touch by Arianna Sullivan/ photos by Luke Montavon Trash Talkin’ by Natalie Abel The Bright Outdoors by Clara Hittel/ photos by...
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