This weekend, SFUAD Performing Arts Department presents Dangerous Liaisons, directed by Jon Jory.
The Trojan Women
posted by Luke Montavon
This weekend, 21 members of the Performing Arts Department, directed by Joanne Camp Sobel, will present The Trojan Women, a Greek tragedy, written by Euripides, recounting the day after the invasion of Troy.
Asking Questions
posted by Luke Montavon
Kevin O’Connell’s photography exhibit “Everything Comes Broken,” currently featured in the Marion Center for Photographic Arts, isn’t a political statement, nor should it be considered activism. O’Connell’s photographs are a platform for an ongoing dialogue regarding the future of energy.
Hearing Stories
posted by Luke Montavon
Aural historian Jack Loeffler discusses the influences that drew him to recording and storytelling.
Stuck At Home in the Snow
posted by Luke Montavon
SFUAD photography major Luke Montavon captures snowy scenes of winter in Santa Fe.
For the Love of Eggs
posted by Luke Montavon
Meet Martha Eichenlaub-Padget, the master of Hungarian Eastern Eggs.
Dead Man’s Cell
posted by Luke Montavon
By Sarah Ruhl; directed by Performing Arts Department senior Corbin Albaugh In an age of nearly infinite technological convenience and possibility, rarely do we stop and think of associated consequences. Dead Man’s Cell Phone is the story of Jean, a middle-aged woman, who is forced to encounter her own internal truths after the discovery of a dead man at the café at which she was dining. In turn, this surrealist comedy forces us to confront our own fixation with digital technology and the reality from which it disconnects us. Performances run Nov. 1-2 at 7 p.m. and Nov. 3 at 2 p.m in the Weckesser...
Art and Community
posted by Luke Montavon
Nicholas Chiarella, a Santa Fe based artist and contributing faculty member at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, moved into his loft apartment on Santa Fe’s west side in November of last year. Within five weeks, Chiarella was hosting “Sit Wherever You’d Like,” a house-show of the sort that seems to be at the heart of Santa Fe’s community of young and emerging artists.
Night of Illumination
posted by Luke Montavon
By Luke Montavon Night of Illumination was the Feb. 22 culminating event for The Snow Poems project, featuring locally created poetry in public space. A complete map is...
The Art of Homes
posted by Luke Montavon
By Nick Martinez/ Photos by Luke Montavon Last weekend, ARTfeast was in full motion, including the gorgeous Art of Homes tour. The Art of Homes tour brought locals and visitors alike to check out some of Santa Fe’s most beautiful homes that are currently on the market. Arranged throughout these homes is artwork from local Santa Fe galleries. Before the tour commenced, there was a committee in place with the interesting challenge to decide which gallery would be paired with which house. “There are a lot of art collectors, from in and outside of Santa Fe,” said real estate agent Efrain Prieto. “It’s funny, because I’m a painter and have actually sold houses with my own paintings before.” If you took the tour in order, the first stop was at a lovely 3-bedroom, 2-bath, mid Century Modern estate on Camino Encantado. The home featured artwork from Beals & Abbate’s Fine Art gallery, including various cast stone statues. The gallerys are tasked with combing through the artwork from their galleys and combining them with the artwork already hung up by the home owners. “It’s nice to take a look at how they’re already decorated, then decorate yourself,” said Bobby Beals, owner of the gallery. Further along the tour was a 3-bedroom, 2-bath, El Torreon home on El Caminito, formerly owned by country music star Randy Travis. While there are many reasons why this home is beautiful, two features that stand out are the tower that the home was originally built around, which due to the lack of a bathroom I would suggest turning into a studio, and the metal tin work on the cupboards. The home featured artwork from the Worrell Gallery downtown, and the terra-cotta sculptures went hand in hand with the more storied...
Water
posted by Luke Montavon
By Luke Montavon After nearly two semesters of hard work, Water is finally here. Water is the story of the village of Agua Fria and their struggle for existence after losing their water rights to the city of Santa Fe. The play is split into two parts. Part one encompasses how different cultures celebrate having water as a resource. Part two details the story of the villagers of Agua Fria, a people without water as a resource. Water raises the question of “what happens both as an individual and a community when a basic natural resource is taken away?”. The play was created entirely from found written documents and transcripts taken from interviews conducted by students of the documentary theater...
Behind the Reece Act
posted by Luke Montavon
By Nick Martinez/Photos by Luke Montavon On Sept. 2, 2002 Reece Nord was riding his bike home when he was stuck and killed by a drunk driver. The driver, Justin Mishall, was later charged with several counts, including vehicular manslaughter, and served 3 1/2 years in prison. Part of his sentence was also to pay restitution to the Nord family $15,390 for medical and funeral costs. More than a decade later, Mishall has paid $750 of the total sum he owes. Due to a loophole in New Mexico law, once a criminal completes his or her parole they no longer have to legally pay the restitution the courts originally demand that they pay. Families can take these criminals to civil court, though that brings plenty of expenditures on its own Nord’s family, not wanting to deal with Mishall any longer, penned a letter that eventually reached Gov. Susanna Martinez, who made sure that a bill was drafted. State Sen. Mark Moores, R-Bernalillo, sponsored the Criminal Restitution Act, also known as The Reece Act, which was recently tabled until the next legislative session. “The current loophole lengthens the criminal process, it causes more expense to the family because they have to hire another attorney,” said Moores. “It just clogs up our court system with these civil lawsuits.” While the civil courts may be clogged, the financial report regarding SB 207 indicates that the judicial courts don’t currently have the resources to support tracking down defendants who refuse to pay restitution, and providing those resources may prove too costly. With the state unwilling to pay, it leaves the family in charge of tracking down their restitution, prolonging their relationship with the people who wronged them. This prolongation is exactly what Barbara Nord, Reece’s mother, is trying...
Snow Poems
posted by Luke Montavon
Story and photos by Luke Montavon Creative Writing Seniors’ Arianna Sullivan and Chelsea Alden had the opportunity this winter to be a part of the community initiative Snow Poems project. Snow Poems is an ongoing project created by the Cut & Paste Society of Santa Fe with partnership from the Santa Fe Art Institute to involve the community with making “living books” in their own community (See About for more details). Alden and Sullivan were responsible for stenciling the selected poetry with non-toxic spray on the windows fronts of dozens of participants (businesses, government buildings, schools, and other locations around the city). While Alden and Sullivan are done with their part of the project, both plan to continue with involving the community in art projects in the future....
The Story of Water
posted by Luke Montavon
Story and photos by Luke Montavon Since last fall I have been following Victor Talmadge and his documentary theater class on their journey to create the show Water. Water is the story of a little known Santa Fe village of Agua Fria and its ultimate demise, as it lose its most precious resource to the city. However the story is not only about what happens when a community loses a resource, but also how the community members celebrate having a resource. The following images reflect the first 20 minutes of the play, how we celebrate having water. Talmadge’s students have created a symbolic, cross-cultural journey, with the use of silk cloth to reflect this...
The Story of Water
posted by Luke Montavon
Story and photos by Luke Montavon Since last fall I have been following Victor Talmadge and his documentary theater class on their journey to create the show Water. Water is the story of a little known Santa Fe village of Agua Fria and its ultimate demise, as it lose its most precious resource to the city. However the story is not only about what happens when a community loses a resource, but also how the community members celebrate having a resource. The following images reflect the first 20 minutes of the play, how we celebrate having water. Talmadge’s students have created a symbolic, cross-cultural journey, with the use of silk cloth to reflect this...
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