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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091209T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091209T210000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091126T054555Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175340Z
UID:10001742-1260383400-1260392400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Slideluck Potshow A Global Photography Phenomenon
DESCRIPTION:Center\, Santa Fe’s internationally recognized\, nonprofit\, service organization for gifted and committed photographers\, will bring Slideluck Potshow to Santa Fe for the first time on Wednesday\, December 9\, 2009\, from 6:30-9 pm at the New Mexico History Museum located at 113 Lincoln Ave in Santa Fe\, NM.  \nThe event is free\, and the public is invited. \nSlideluck Potshow (SLPS) was founded in 2000 by editorial and advertising photographer Casey Kelbaugh who\, “wanted to foster a sense of community within the industry while presenting the work in a egalitarian fashion.” Since then\, it has grown from a tiny backyard affair in Seattle\, to a global phenomenon that has brought together members of the photography\, art and media communities for an evening of eating\, drinking\, and sharing work in 40 cities globally. \nThe concept is simple and fun: The evening begins with mingling\, eating and drinking for about an hour. Then the lights are dimmed\, the crowd is hushed\, and a spectacular slideshow of the work of anywhere from 15 to 50 photographers begins. A typical show consists of documentary\, still-life\, architecture\, portrait and fine-art photography\, all presented in a congenial\, non-competitive atmosphere\, accompanied by music\, audio recordings\, interviews and/or live performances. \nAttendees are encouraged to bring light fare or a dessert dish to share and enjoy. In the United States\, Slideluck Potshow has been presented to rave reviews in New York and Los Angeles—and now it is coming to Santa Fe\, thanks to Center. “We wanted to create an environment for the talented and diverse group of photographers working in New Mexico to showcase their work—and have fun while doing it\,” said Laura Wzorek Pressley\, Executive Director of Center. Co-sponsored by the New Mexico History Museum\, home of the Palace of the Governors Photo Archive. For more information\, including how to submit your work for inclusion in Slideluck Potshow\, please visit www.visitcenter.org.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/557-slideluck-potshow-a-global-photography-phenomenon/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/557_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091208
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091209
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090709T015535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175332Z
UID:10001700-1260230400-1260316799@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Displaying New Mexico Photographers Brainpower & Brownbags lecture series
DESCRIPTION:Janet Russek and David Scheinbaum discuss "Recollections — 30 Years as Gallerists Working with Photographers from New Mexico." The lecture series is usually held at the Fray Angelico Chavez History Library\, 120 Washington Ave.; for large crowds\, the event will be moved next door to the John Gaw Meem Meeting Room.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/485-displaying-new-mexico-photographers-brainpower-brownbags-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/485_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091206T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091206T170000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091201T000826Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175313Z
UID:10001598-1260104400-1260118800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Winter Celebration on Museum Hill
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of International Folk Art and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture celebrate the holiday season on Sunday December 6th from 1 to 4 p.m.  Family fun for all ages!  New Mexico Residents with I.D. free every Sunday\, youth 16 and under and foundation members always free!
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/255-winter-celebration-on-museum-hill/
LOCATION:Museum of International Folk Art\, 706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87504\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/255_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Carlyn Stewart":MAILTO:carlyn.stewart@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6641155;-105.9265695
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill Santa Fe NM 87504 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill:geo:-105.9265695,35.6641155
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091206T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091206T160000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091123T233846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001738-1260104400-1260115200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Winter Traditions
DESCRIPTION:  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/551-winter-traditions/
LOCATION:Museum of Indian Arts and Culture\, 708-710 Camino Lejo\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87557\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Rene Harris":MAILTO:rene.harris@state.nm.us
GEO:35.664337;-105.9252387
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 708-710 Camino Lejo Santa Fe NM 87557 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=708-710 Camino Lejo:geo:-105.9252387,35.664337
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091203T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091203T190000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091116T233231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001725-1259863200-1259866800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Lecture by Victoria Sambunaris and Bill Gilbert
DESCRIPTION:Artists Victoria Sambunaris and Bill Gilbert will hold a dialogue about "The Road Trip" as an artistic practice on Thursday\, December 3\, 2009\, at 6 p.m.  \nBill Gilbert is the Lannan Chair and Director of the Land Arts program at the University of New Mexico. As part of his work as both an artist and a professor\, he is often on the road\, traversing the Southwest to live and work in the landscape. Bill Gilbert’s work from his journeys in 2005-2006 are the subject of the University of New Mexico Art Museum exhibition Physiocartography\, on view through November 25\, 2009.  \nVictoria Sambunaris is one of the nine artists featured in the NMMoA exhibition\, Manmade. She too travels the American byways in search of photographic images that often capture human interventions in the landscape\, whether the road itself\, distribution warehouses and other vehicles of manufacturing and commerce\, or the wondrous geological features of Yellowstone National Park. \nThis is one in a  series of lectures presented in conjunction with the museum’s exhibition Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection. Other lectures feature photographer Thomas Joshua Cooper (October 15) and professor David Krakauer (November 19). Sponsored by the Lannan Foundation. \nSt. Francis Auditorium\, New Mexico Museum of Art Santa Fe Plaza\, 107 West Palace Avenue  December 3\, 6 p.m. Free admission.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/537-lecture-by-victoria-sambunaris-and-bill-gilbert/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/537_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091207
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091126T053442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001741-1259798400-1260143999@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Santa Fe Film Festival at the Museum Selected screenings
DESCRIPTION:The Santa Fe Film Festival returns for its 10th seasons Dec. 2-6\, with selected showings in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. For ticket info and a full schedule of films\, go to the festival web site: http://santafefilmfestival.com. \nFilm-goers: Enter through the Museum's Washington Avenue entrance.  \nHere's a schedule of screenings at the museum: \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 10 am: World premiere of "Dream" (documentary\, 120 minutes). Follow the journeys of six ordinary Americans from six very different backgrounds as they attempt to achieve a lifelong dream. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 12:45 pm: "The Nature of Existence" (documentary\, 94 minutes). Filmmaker Roger Nygard interviews spiritual leaders\, scholars\, scientists\, artists\, pizza chefs\, and others who have influenced\, inspired\, or freaked out humanity. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 3 pm: "Unconquered: Alan Houser and the Legacy of One Apache Family" (short documentary\, 33 minutes); and "More From Life" (animation\, 9 minutes). Spanning from the 1860’s through today\, the Houser / Haozous story is a journey exploring the incarceration of a people\, growth brought on by freedom\, and a family’s personal expression of these experiences through art.  \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 5 pm: "The Heretics" (documentary\, 95 minutes); with "Words" (animation\, 2 minutes). "The Heretics" uncovers the inside story of the Second Wave of the Women’s Movement through the eyes of Joan Braderman who arrives in NYC in 1971 to become a filmmaker. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 7:15 pm: World premiere of "Char.ac.ter" (documentary\, 88 minutes). A raw and candid dialogue about the art and craft of acting between longtime colleagues and friends Dabney Coleman\, Peter Falk\, Charles Grodin\, Mark Rydell\, Harry Dean Stanton and including a very special interview with Sydney Pollack – the last he would do in his life.  \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 9:30 pm: World premiere of "The Invocation" (documentary\, 90 minutes); with "A Thousand Suns" (documentary short\, 27 minutes). "The Invocation" is a worldwide exploration of the notion of 'God' and Peace through religion\, spirituality\, science\, history\, politics and arts\, from India to Japan to South America to South Africa to Europe to across the USA. "A Thousand Suns" tells the story of the Gamo Highlands of the African Rift Valley and the unique worldview held by the people of the region.  \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 10:15 am: "Food Fight" (documentary\, 83 minutes). A fascinating look at how American agricultural policy and food culture developed in the 20th century\, and how the California food movement has created a counter-revolution against big agribusiness. \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 12:30 pm: "El Corazon de Santa Fe (The Heart of Santa Fe)" (documentary\, 92 minutes). In the context of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, the film explores the city's fascinating treasures of art\, history\, faith\, lore\, and legend.  \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 2:45 pm: "Mythic Journeys" (documentary\, 94 minutes). A unique fusion of documentary\, animation and story\, starring Tim Curry\, Mark Hamill and Lance Henriksen. Documentary-style interviews are interwoven with a Hi-Def stop-motion animated adaptation of an ancient myth where a noble king is charged with the grim task of delivering a corpse to a mysterious sorcerer. \nFriday\, 5:15 pm: "Cowtown Ballroom: Sweet Jesus" (documentary\, 85 minutes). A documentary film about Cowtown Ballroom\, a legendary concert venue in Kansas City\, Missouri\, that featured an eclectic mix of musicians including Frank Zappa\, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band\, Van Morrison\, B. B. King and Linda Ronstadt. \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 7:30 pm: "The Red Machine (documentary\, 84 minutes); with "Gandhi at the Bat" (short narrative\, 11 minutes). Full of crackling dialogue\, eye-catching visuals and unpredictable twists\, co-directors Stephanie Argy's and Alec Boehm's "The Red Machine" is a charming throwback to the great espionage capers of the 1930s. "Gandhi at the Bat" is a newsreel-style account of the little-known (and totally fictional) incident when Mohandas K. Gandhi pinch-hit for the New York Yankees in 1933. Based on a short story by Chet Williamson that originally appeared in the New Yorker. \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 10 am to noon: Kids First! Awards Ceremony \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 1 pm: "Something Unknown is Doing We Don't Know What" (documentary\, 105 minutes). Filmmaker Renée Scheltema sets out across the US to meet prominent scientists with solid credentials who are doing research into psychic phenomena\, to see if there is any scientific evidence. \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 3:30 pm: "El Corazon de Santa Fe (The Heart of Santa Fe)" (documentary\, 92 minutes). In the context of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, the film explores the city's fascinating treasures of art\, history\, faith\, lore\, and legend.  \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 5:45 pm: "Split Estate" (documentary\, 76 minutes). Split Estate maps a tragedy in the making\, as citizens in the path of a new drilling boom in the Rocky Mountain West struggle against the erosion of their civil liberties\, their communities and their health.  \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 10 am: "Jesus in India (documentary\, 97 minutes). Author Edward T. Martin undertakes a seeker’s quest across 4\,000 miles of India in search of answers and clues about where Jesus was during the “hidden years” from ages 12 to 30\, looking for evidence that has long been reported as existing in India. \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 12:25 pm: World premiere of "The New Sudan" (documentary\, 84 minutes); with "Chasing KEINO" (documentary short\, 28 minutes). The long war is over. Southern Sudan becomes New Sudan. Peace treaties are inked and enemies shake hands. But other wars still rage. The war of awakening hope against the habit of despair. The war of new alliances against decades of mistrust. The war of joyful homecoming against the lack of homes remaining. Above all\, it is a war for the human heart against the heart of darkness. In "Chasing KEINO\," follow six Kenyan nationals\, members of the AmeriKenyan Running Club\, as they train in Santa Fe\, New Mexico in preparation for US marathon racing. \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 2:45 pm: "Made in Pakistan" (documentary\, 56 minutes); with "'48 Generations" (documentary\, 48 minutes). "Made in Pakistan" tells the story of four Pakistani individuals who defy the prevailing stereotype of Pakistanis prevalent in the western media today and put their energies towards the progress of Pakistan. Collecting the family narratives of Jews and Arabs who experienced the West Bank events of 1948 first-hand\, "’48 Generations" represents a street-level effort to document the lived realities and human consequences of the ongoing regional conflict.  \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 5:15 pm: "Girls On the Wall" (documentary\, 61 minutes). When the girls of this Illinois' Warrenville Prison are given a most likely shot at redemption – the chance to write and stage a musical based on their lives – they’re challenged to re-live the events that led up to their crimes\, reclaim their humanity\, and find their own exuberant voices in a first step toward breaking free from the prison system.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/556-santa-fe-film-festival-at-the-museum-selected-screenings/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/556_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091127T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091129T170000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091022T023705Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175337Z
UID:10001728-1259316000-1259514000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Tibetan Folk Art Show & Sale Presented by Museum of New Mexico Foundation Gift Shops
DESCRIPTION:The Museum of New Mexico Foundation Gift Shops invite you to a special show and  sale of Tibetan folk art in the Museum atrium. Shop early for best  selection!
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/540-tibetan-folk-art-show-sale-presented-by-museum-of-new-mexico-foundation-gift-shops/
LOCATION:Museum of International Folk Art\, 706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87504\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Julia Clifton":MAILTO:julia.clifton@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6641155;-105.9265695
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill Santa Fe NM 87504 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill:geo:-105.9265695,35.6641155
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091122T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091122T153000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091117T042640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175335Z
UID:10001715-1258894800-1258903800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Chasing History: The quest for art\, artifacts and heritage The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series
DESCRIPTION:The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series kicks off at 1 pm on Sunday\, Nov. 22\, with a special reception followed by former Palace of the Governors Director Thomas E. Chávez\, speaking on Chasing History: Quixotic Quests for Arts\, Artifacts and Heritage. \nTickets cost $10. Until Nov. 20\, subscribers to all five lectures in the series can get a reduced price of $40. \nChávez\, a contributor to the book Telling New Mexico: A New History\, and a former director of the Palace and of the National Hispanic  Cultural Center\, will draw on stories from his career and his forthcoming book for the lecture. \n “Life working in the humanities and museums can sometimes feel like chasing windmills\,” Chávez said. “History\, the arts and culture are not political priorities – yet they can be a societal priority\, because the benefits exceed our collective imagination. I plan to share some tales that\, now\, have become history.” \nChávez oversaw the Palace for 21 years\, a period when the eventual New Mexico History Museum was conceived and when the state acquired the famed Segesser Hides. The hide paintings\, which illustrate the 1720 Segesser expedition\, were then in Swiss hands. Each of those “quests” involved a mixture of political intrigue\, international diplomacy\, business acumen and dogged work by volunteers and staff. \n“My own career and those with whom I have had the pleasure of working are perfect cases in that sense of chasing windmills\,” Chávez said. “This lecture will be fun\, true and thought-provoking." \nPrior to Chávez’s lecture\, a 1 p.m. reception will honor Marianne O’Shaughnessy and her late husband\, Michael O’Shaughnessy\, who provided funding for the series. Also to be honored are Marta Weigle and Louise Stiver\, editors of Telling New Mexico: A New History. To attend the reception\, come to the John Gaw Meem Community Room via the museum’s Washington   Avenue entrance. \nThe five-part Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series accompanies the book as well as the History Museum’s core exhibition\, Telling New Mexico: Stories from Then and Now. The series will be held in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. Each lecture costs $10. For $100\, participants will be named “event sponsors” and receive a paperback version of Telling New Mexico: A New History\, autographed by the volume editors. \n  To purchase tickets: \nGo to http://www.museumfoundation.org/tellingnm until 4 pm the Friday before each lecture \nVisit the Museum Shops in the Palace and the New Mexico History Museum.    \nOther lectures in the series are at 2 p.m. on the following Sundays: \nJan. 31: Thomas Lark\, curator of Expo New Mexico’s African-American Performing Arts Center\, on the history of African-Americans in New Mexico; and the Rev. Landjur Abukusumo\, president of the Blackdom Memorial Foundation\, on the pioneers of the Blackdom community in Roswell. Special treat: The Afro-Gospel Praise Experience will perform a mixture of Afro-Latin rhythms and traditional gospel. \nMarch 28: Gail Y. Okawa\, professor of English at Youngstown State University in Ohio\, on "Exile from Paradise\, Internment in New Mexico: My Grandfather's Journey\,” an exploration of Santa Fe’s World War II Japanese-American internment camp. \nMay 2: UNM History Professor Ferenc Szasz on New Mexico’s role in developing the atomic bomb. \nAug. 22: Jennifer Nez Denetdale\, associate professor of history at Northern  Arizona University\, on "Din'e/Navajo Women: At the Intersection of Nation\, Gender\, and Tradition\," part of her current book project recounting the stories of Navajo women. \n \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/505-chasing-history-the-quest-for-art-artifacts-and-heritage-the-telling-new-mexico-inaugural-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/505_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091121T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091121T153000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091217T013121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175334Z
UID:10001711-1258812000-1258817400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down A Santa Fe Found lecture
DESCRIPTION:Join Stephen Post\, assistant director of the New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\, for a lecture on the new exhibition\, Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time. This event\, free with museum admission\, will be at 2 pm\, Saturday\, Nov. 21\, at the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. \nPost is a co-curator of the exhibition at the Palace of the Governors\, which explores the lives of the colonists and Native peoples who lived in and around Santa Fe 400 years ago.  \nThe full lecture-series schedule: \n         \nThursday\, Nov. 12\, 6 pm: José Esquibel\, historian and genealogist\, “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate” \nSaturday\, Nov. 21\, 2 pm: Steve Post\, assistant director\, New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\,  “The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down.” Free with museum admission \nThursday\, Jan. 14\, 6 pm: Cordelia Snow\, archaeologist\, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division\, “Luxury Goods Transported over the Camino Real.” Free. \nSaturday\, Feb. 20\, 2 pm: Frances Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors\,”In Her Own Voice: Doña Teresa Aguilera y Roche and Intrigue in the Palace of the Governors.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2 pm: Thomas E. Chávez\, retired executive director\, National Hispanic Culture Center\, and former director\, Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum  of Spanish Colonial Art\, he Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \n     \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe” \n“This exhibition will give visitors a broad perspective of the settling of Santa Fe and the web of cultural influences the Spanish brought with them\,” said co-curator Josef Diaz of the New Mexico History Museum. “The founding of Santa Fe is a big and complex story to tell\, and this show will offer a glimpse of different aspects of Spanish colonial life\, from the domestic to the economic to the political and religious.”   \nPrior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe  Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was.   \n“Surprising to some and not to others\, the New Mexico  History Museum was complex and rich in the information it yielded on 300 years of people living and working behind the Palace of the Governors\,” Post said. “Combined with Dedie Snow’s 1974-1975 excavations within the Palace\, our work gives a unique inside-outside look at a central place in New Mexico history." \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe  Community Convention   Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots. \nSpain's far northern colony of Santa   Fe was reached by a six-month journey up El Camino Real\, a barely mapped and uncertain route that held only hazy promises of water and shelter. Holding together a caravan of 700 people – soldiers\, friars\, men and a few women and children – and the tools and livestock it would take to build a new colony tested the explorers’ abilities and\, sometimes\, their humanity. \nSome of the artifacts show that\, despite the frontier conditions\, fine goods had managed to travel up El Camino Real to homes and missions in the colony. A sampling of the pottery that was found on the digs includes Spanish majolica\, blue-and-white Mexican pottery modeled on examples from the Ming Dynasty in China\, colorful Mexican pottery and Pueblo pottery. Also found were tobacco pipes\, gold earrings\, gunflints and arrowheads. \nA few shards of the pottery found by archaeologists speak to a monumental expedition. Centuries past\, they were parts of delicate Ming vases loaded onto a Spanish galleon at a Chinese port for an ocean journey then a bumpy trip up El Camino Real to the young colony. \n“Considering the Chinese pottery traveled across the ocean and then 1\,600 miles up the Camino Real\, it’s not surprising – and it’s even amazing – that we found only one or two pieces of these vessels\,” Post said. \nFrom these roots grew La Villa Real de Santa Fe\, the Royal City of Santa Fe\, now 400 years old. What do the historical accounts say of the homes they built and the crops they grew? What has the soil yielded of their lives\, the fragile beginnings of a young Spanish colony? \n     \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.  \n      \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/501-the-founding-of-santa-fe-from-the-ground-down-a-santa-fe-found-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/501_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091120T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091120T190000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091110T061748Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001737-1258738200-1258743600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Santa Fe Found Opening Event Join the curators
DESCRIPTION:Join the curators for the grand opening of the New Mexico History Museum’s newest exhibit\, Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, a historical and archaeological exploration of the founding and first 100 years of La Villa Real de Santa Fé. A free reception will be 5:30-7 pm on Friday\, Nov. 20\, in the Palace of the Governors. The event is hosted by the Women’s Board. Visitors can enter through the Palace at 105 W. Palace Ave.\, or the History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Ave. \nBefore construction of the History Museum began\, a two-year archaeological dig uncovered hints of the Native peoples and Spanish settlers who first encountered one another 400 years ago. More than 800\,000 artifacts were unearthed from that downtown Santa Fe site\, joining finds from the Baca-Garvisu site (now the Santa Fe Community  Convention Center)\, the Sanchez site (near El Rancho de las Golondrinas) and San Gabriel del Yungue (on the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh). \nCo-curated by Josef Diaz of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors and Stephen Post of the New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\, Santa Fe Found collects more than 160 artifacts from those sites\, along with maps\, documents\, household goods\, weaponry and religious objects. \nSanta  Fe Found: Fragments of Time was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico   Foundation. \nA lecture series accompanies the exhibit. Each one is in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. The Thursday evening lectures are free; Saturday afternoon lectures are free with museum admission. The schedule: \nThursday\, Nov. 12\, 2009\, 6-7:30 pm  Historian and genealogist José Esquibel\, “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate”  A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture \nSaturday\, Nov. 21\, 2009\, 2-3:30 pm  Stephen Post\, assistant director of the New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\, “  “The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down" — A "Santa Fe Found" lecture \nThursday\, Jan. 14\, 2010\, 6-7:30 pm  Archaeologist Cordelia Snow\, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division\, “Luxury Goods Transported Over the Camino Real”  — A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture \nSaturday\, Feb. 20\, 2010\, 2-3:30 pm  Dr. Frances Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum\, “In Her own Voice: Doña Teresa and Intrigue in the Palace” —  A "Santa Fe Found" lecture \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2010\, 2-3:30 pm  Thomas Chavez\, retired Executive Director of the National Hispanic Culture Center and former director of the Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe”  — A "Santa Fe Found" lecture \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2010\, 2-3:30 pm  Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator of the Museum of Spanish Colonial   Art\, “The Journey of Mayólica” —  A "Santa Fe Found" lecture \nThursday\, May 13\, 2010\, 6-7:30 pm  Joseph Sánchez\, director of the University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center and director of the Petroglyph National Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe”  — A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/550-santa-fe-found-opening-event-join-the-curators/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/550_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091120T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20180801T170000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20200430T084917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175229Z
UID:10001353-1258711200-1533142800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time The archaeological and historic roots of America’s oldest capital city
DESCRIPTION:Now 400 years old\, Santa Fe was once an infant city on the remote frontier.  Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, on long-term exhibit in the Palace of the Governors\, explores the archaeological evidence and historical documentation of the City Different before the Spanish arrived\, as well as at the settling of the first colony in San Gabriel del Yungue\, the founding of Santa Fe and its first 100 years as New Mexico’s first capital. \nCo-curated by Josef Diaz of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors and Stephen Post of the DCA/Office of Archaeological Studies\, Santa Fe Found collects more than 160 artifacts from four historic sites\, along with maps\, documents\, household goods\, weaponry and religious objects. Together\, they tell the story of cultural encounters between early colonists and the Native Americans who had long called this place home. \n“This exhibition gives visitors a broad perspective of the settling of Santa Fe and the web of cultural influences the Spanish brought with them\,” Diaz said. “The founding of Santa Fe is a big and complex story to tell\, and this show offers a glimpse of different aspects of Spanish colonial life\, from the domestic to the economic to the political and religious.” \nSanta Fe Found serves as living proof of how the lives of the founders were lived\, including who they married\, the hardships they faced\, the tools they used and the foods they ate. (Hint: Carne Adovada was generations away; turkey\, deer and rabbit were often the dish of the day.) \nPrior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was. \n“Surprising to some and not to others\, the New Mexico History Museum was complex and rich in the information it yielded on 300 years of people living and working behind the Palace of the Governors\,” Post said. “Combined with Dedie Snow’s 1974-1975 excavations within the Palace\, our work gives a unique inside-outside look at a central place in New Mexico history.” \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe Community Convention Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots. \nSpain’s far northern colony of Santa Fe was reached by a six-month journey up El Camino Real\, a barely mapped and uncertain route that held only hazy promises of water and shelter. Holding together a caravan of 700 people – soldiers\, friars\, men and a few women and children – and the tools and livestock it would take to build a new colony tested the explorers’ abilities and\, sometimes\, their humanity. \nSome of the artifacts show that\, despite the frontier conditions\, fine goods had managed to travel up El Camino Real to homes and missions in the colony. A sampling of the pottery that was found on the digs includes Spanish majolica\, blue-and-white Mexican pottery modeled on examples from the Ming Dynasty in China\, colorful Mexican pottery and Pueblo pottery. Also found were tobacco pipes\, gold earrings\, gunflints and arrowheads. \nA few sherds of the pottery found by archaeologists speak to a monumental expedition. Centuries past\, they were parts of delicate Ming vases loaded onto a Spanish galleon at a Chinese port for an ocean journey then a bumpy trip up El Camino Real to the young colony. \n“Considering the Chinese pottery traveled across the ocean and then 1\,600 miles up the Camino Real\, it’s not surprising – and it’s even amazing – that we found only one or two pieces of these vessels\,” Post said. \n   \nFrom these roots grew La Villa Real de Santa Fe\, the Royal City of Santa Fe. What do the historical accounts say of the homes they built and the crops they grew? What has the soil yielded of their lives\, the fragile beginnings of a young Spanish colony? \nCome to the exhibit to find out. \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation. \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/436-santa-fe-found-fragments-of-time-the-archaeological-and-historic-roots-of-americas-oldest-capital-city/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/436_1200.jpg
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091119T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091119T190000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091116T232057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001726-1258653600-1258657200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Lecture by David Krakauer The Scientific Nature and Artistic Culture of Landscape
DESCRIPTION:The Scientific Nature and Artistic Culture of Landscape: Naturalists\, Classifiers and Model Builders  \nDavid Krakauer is a professor and faculty chair at the Santa Fe Institute\, where his research includes\, in part\, the evolution of cultural forms\, the electronic dissemination of images\, and the crossover of mathematical\, scientific and artistic reasoning. In addition to considering visual arts\, Krakauer is collaborating on a project on the cultural evolution of the novel. “We treat the novel as a window into society\,” he describes\, “and consider issues such as the dynamics of titles\, the dimensions of genre\, and the changing structure of concept space.”  \nKrakauer will offer a unique “window” onto the landscape works by some of the artists in Manmade\, as seen through the lens of science. His lecture will take place on Thursday\, November 19\, 2009\, at 6 p.m. \nThis is one in a  series of lectures presented in conjunction with the museum’s exhibition Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection. Other lectures feature photographer Thomas Joshua Cooper (October 15) and artists Bill Gilbert and Victoria Sambunaris (December 3). Sponsored by the Lannan Foundation. \nSt. Francis Auditorium\, New Mexico Museum of Art Santa Fe Plaza\, 107 West Palace Avenue  November 19\, 6 p.m. Free admission.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/538-lecture-by-david-krakauer-the-scientific-nature-and-artistic-culture-of-landscape/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/538_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091118T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091118T140000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090117T002304Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175318Z
UID:10001632-1258545600-1258552800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Let’s Take A Look with MIAC curators
DESCRIPTION:During this time\, curators from The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and The Laboratory of Anthropology are in the lobby of MIAC to look at your unidentified treasures. These curators will attempt to identify and explain any artifact or historic object presented to them. They prefer to work with objects from the Southwest but are willing to take a look at anything that is brought in. If they can not identify an object an attempt will be made to find someone who can. Sometimes\, the discussion among the curators may become as much or more informative than the identification of the artifact  \nThe event is always free and open to the public. \nUpcoming "Let's Take A Look' Events:  \nWednesday\, November 18th \nWednesday\, December 16th   \n  \nFederal and State regulations prohibit the curators from  appraising any artifact.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/325-lets-take-a-look-with-miac-curators/
LOCATION:Museum of Indian Arts and Culture\, 708-710 Camino Lejo\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87557\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
GEO:35.664337;-105.9252387
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 708-710 Camino Lejo Santa Fe NM 87557 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=708-710 Camino Lejo:geo:-105.9252387,35.664337
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091117
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091118
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090709T015255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175332Z
UID:10001699-1258416000-1258502399@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Humboldt and Pike: Mapping New Spain Brainpower & Brownbags lecture series
DESCRIPTION:Reinhartz has written extensively on the history of geography and cartography. He holds a doctorate from New York University.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/484-humboldt-and-pike-mapping-new-spain-brainpower-brownbags-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/484_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091115T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091115T143000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090915T002715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175335Z
UID:10001719-1258290000-1258295400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Jewish Experience in Latin America Ilan Stavans shakes things up
DESCRIPTION:Ilan Stavans\, "the czar of Latino culture in the United States" (New York Times)\, will speak on "The Jewish Experience in Latin America" at 1 p.m. on Sunday\, Nov. 15\, at the New Mexico History Museum. The lecture is part of the week-long festival\, "Celebrate! The Jewish Experience in Spanish-Speaking Countries\," sponsored by the New Mexico Anti-Defamation League. The festival\, which will be held in Albuquerque\, Santa Fe\, and Taos\, is an unprecedented week of film\, music\, art\, theater\, food\, exhibits and lectures highlighting the extraordinary historic and contemporary journey of the Jewish people after their expulsion from Spain in 1492. \nStavans\, a Mexican-American essayist\, lexicographer\, cultural commentator\, translator\, short-story author\, TV personality and teacher\, is known for his insights into American\, Hispanic\, and Jewish cultures. He has been called "the czar of Latino culture in the United States" by the New York Times and "Latin America's liveliest and boldest critic and most innovative cultural enthusiast" by the Washington Post. whose Jewish family emigrated from Poland to Mexico\, is the Lewis-Sebring Professor of Latin American and Latino Culture at Amherst College and the recipient of numerous honors\, including a Guggenheim Fellowship\, the Latino Literature Prize\, the Antonia Pantoja Award\, Chile's Presidential Medal\, and the Rubén Darío Distinction. He earned an Emmy nomination as host of the PBS show La Plaza: Conversations with Ilan Stavans. \nAccording to Harvard's renowned professor\, Henry Louis Gates Jr.: "Ilan Stavans is an inventive interpreter of the contemporary  cultures of the Americas…. Cantankerous and clever\, sprightly and serious\,  Stavans is a voracious thinker. In his writing\, life serves to illuminate  literature—and vice versa: he is unafraid to court controversy\, unsettle  opinions\, make enemies. In short\, Stavans is an old-fashioned intellectual\, a  brilliant interpreter of his triple heritage—Jewish\, Mexican\, and  American." \nStavans will also speak at 4 pm on Sunday\, Nov. 15\, at the National Hispanic Cultural Center; a tapas and wine reception will follow.  \nThis lecture is sponsored by the New  Mexico Anti-Defamation League\, the New Mexico History  Museum and the National Hispanic Cultural Center. \nIn addition to the lecture\, Stavans will be signing copies of his books\, including On Borrowed Words (Penguin)\, The Oxford Book of Jewish Stories  (Oxford)\, Tropical Synagogues (Holmes and Meier)\, The Cross the and  the Scroll (Routledge)\, The Essential Ilan Stavans (Routledge)\,  The Disappearance (TriQuarterly)\, and Becoming Americans (Library  of America).  \n  Major funding for Celebrate! has been provided by the Isaac Liberman Foundation.  Partners who have provided expertise and additional funding include the Mexican Consulate\, the National Hispanic Cultural Center\, the Instituto Cervantes\, Casa Sefarad-Israel\, CLARO at the University of New Mexico\, The New Mexico History Museum\, El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe\,  \, the Ronald Gardenswartz Jewish Community Center of Albuquerque\, The Israeli Consulate\, Working Classroom\, Congregation Nahalat Shalom\,  the Sokolove/Singer/Buchwald families\, and the Santa Fe Society for Jewish Arts and Culture.  \n    \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/509-the-jewish-experience-in-latin-america-ilan-stavans-shakes-things-up/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/509_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091114T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091114T213000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091022T024005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175337Z
UID:10001729-1258223400-1258234200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Una Noche de los Muertos Fundraising Partry
DESCRIPTION:The Folk Art Committee invites everyone to this gala fundraising event! With its  roots in Pre-Columbian Mexico\, Noche de los Muertos is a festive celebration of  life\, family and community. Join us as we recreate one of the most colorful and  vibrant holidays in the Mexican Calendar. You will enjoy lavish foods from Santa  Fe's finest chefs\, a complimentary bar\, music & dancing\, a silent auction  with fabulous offerings and an opportunity to contribute to the Museum of  International Folk Art while having a wonderful time! \nTickets are $125.00 per person. For tickets and information\, please call  505.982.7799 extension 9.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/541-una-noche-de-los-muertos-fundraising-partry/
LOCATION:Museum of International Folk Art\, 706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87504\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/541_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Julia Clifton":MAILTO:julia.clifton@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6641155;-105.9265695
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill Santa Fe NM 87504 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill:geo:-105.9265695,35.6641155
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091114T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091114T133000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090721T224957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175326Z
UID:10001672-1258192800-1258205400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Santa Fe Book Arts Group Flea Market!
DESCRIPTION:These aren't your parents' pop-up books! The Santa Fe Book Arts Group brings its popular Flea Market back to the John Gaw Meem Room for an extravaganza of art materials\, handmade items and intriguing miscellany from the nooks and corners of members' studios and lives. Something wonderful awaits! \nBesides fantastic purchases\, you can study and learn more about the intricacies of marbled papers\, accordion folds and more — while you free your mind from cover-to-cover dogma into a world where books are more than literature but also visual art. \nFor more on the Book Arts Group\, go to www.santafebag.org. \nThe Meem Room is part of the New Mexico History Museum campus. Enter it at 110 Washington Avenue\, just north of the Santa Fe Plaza. The event is free and open to the public.  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/432-santa-fe-book-arts-group-flea-market/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/432_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091112T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091112T193000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091217T012933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175333Z
UID:10001710-1258048800-1258054200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Onate A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture
DESCRIPTION:Join historian and genealogist   José Esquibel for a free public lecture in honor of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary at 6 pm\, Thursday\, Nov. 12\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. Esquibel will speak on   “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate.” \nThe lecture is part of a series\, with subsequent lectures on Jan. 14\, 2010\, and May 13\, 2010. Funding for the series is made possible by the Santa Fe 400th Committee. \nNEW INFO: Seating  is limited to the first 210 people. The doors to the museum's main entrance at  113 Lincoln Ave. will open at 5:30 pm.  \n The lecture series also supports Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, an exhibition at the Palace of the Governors that explores the lives of the colonists and Native peoples who lived in and around Santa Fe 400 years ago. \nThe full lecture-series schedule: \n         \nThursday\, Nov. 12\, 6 pm: José Esquibel\, historian and genealogist\, “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate” \nSaturday\, Nov. 21\, 2 pm: Steve Post\, assistant director\, New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\,  “The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down.” Free with museum admission \nThursday\, Jan. 14\, 6 pm: Cordelia Snow\, archaeologist\, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division\, “Luxury Goods Transported over the Camino Real.” Free. \nSaturday\, Feb. 20\, 2 pm: Frances Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors\,”In Her Own Voice: Doña Teresa Aguilera y Roche and Intrigue in the Palace of the Governors.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2 pm: Thomas E. Chávez\, retired executive director\, National  Hispanic Culture  Center\, and former director\, Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum  of Spanish Colonial Art\, he Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National   Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe” \nPrior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was.   \n   \n  \n“Surprising to some and not to others\, the New Mexico History Museum was complex and rich in the information it yielded on 300 years of people living and working behind the Palace of the Governors\,” Post said. “Combined with Dedie Snow’s 1974-1975 excavations within the Palace\, our work gives a unique inside-outside look at a central place in New Mexico history." \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe Community Convention Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots. \nSpain's far northern colony of Santa   Fe was reached by a six-month journey up El Camino Real\, a barely mapped and uncertain route that held only hazy promises of water and shelter. Holding together a caravan of 700 people – soldiers\, friars\, men and a few women and children – and the tools and livestock it would take to build a new colony tested the explorers’ abilities and\, sometimes\, their humanity. \nSome of the artifacts show that\, despite the frontier conditions\, fine goods had managed to travel up El Camino Real to homes and missions in the colony. A sampling of the pottery that was found on the digs includes Spanish majolica\, blue-and-white Mexican pottery modeled on examples from the Ming Dynasty in China\, colorful Mexican pottery and Pueblo pottery. Also found were tobacco pipes\, gold earrings\, gunflints and arrowheads. \nA few shards of the pottery found by archaeologists speak to a monumental expedition. Centuries past\, they were parts of delicate Ming vases loaded onto a Spanish galleon at a Chinese port for an ocean journey then a bumpy trip up El Camino Real to the young colony. \n“Considering the Chinese pottery traveled across the ocean and then 1\,600 miles up the Camino Real\, it’s not surprising – and it’s even amazing – that we found only one or two pieces of these vessels\,” Post said. \nFrom these roots grew La Villa Real de Santa Fe\, the Royal City of Santa Fe\, now 400 years old. What do the historical accounts say of the homes they built and the crops they grew? What has the soil yielded of their lives\, the fragile beginnings of a young Spanish colony?     \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico   Foundation.  \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/500-the-jewish-converso-lineage-of-don-juan-de-onate-a-santa-fe-400th-anniversary-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/500_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091107T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091107T170000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091009T024021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175333Z
UID:10001709-1257598800-1257613200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Beneath the City Different: The Archaeology of Santa Fe Friends of Archaeology symposium
DESCRIPTION:Deepen your understanding of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, as well as the new exhibit\, Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, at this special symposium\, 1-5 pm\, Saturday\, Nov. 7\, at the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. Admission is $10; call 505-954-7200 for tickets. \n"Beneath the City Different: The Archaeology of Santa Fe" is sponsored by the Friends of Archaeology (a support group within the Museum of New Mexico Foundation) and the School for Advanced Research — two institutions founded by Edgar L. Hewett\, a leading archaeologist and anthropologist and the first director of the Museum of New Mexico. The event features seven archaeologists speaking on different periods of Santa Fe's history\, from ancient to modern times. \nThrough recent archaeological excavations in the downtown Santa Fe area\, these researchers have given us new information about a recently discovered past — a past not yet covered in history books. The archaeologists will begin with a look at Santa Fe’s first seasonal residents\, nomadic hunters and gatherers who came to pick wild plants and piñon nuts. Then they will talk about the later Pueblo people who built several large villages and survived by farming. The severity and luxury of Spanish Colonial life will also be discussed\, as well as the economic and social changes brought by the Santa Fe Trail. Finally\, the archaeologists will examine the agricultural and later industrial use of the recently developed Santa Fe Railyard area. \n     \nTickets cost $10 and seating is limited. To purchase a ticket\, call 505-954-7200 or mail your name\, mailing address\, phone number\, email address\, and payment to: \nBeneath the City Different  School for Advanced Research  P.O. Box 2188  Santa Fe\, NM 87504 \nFor a complete schedule\, go to http://sarweb.org/index.php?symposium_santa_fe_archaeology \nThe scheduled speakers: \n  \nStephen Post\, deputy director of the Office of Archaeological Studies\,"6\,500 Years of Living Light on the Landscape: Archaic Hunter-Gatherers and the Dawn of Agriculture in the Santa Fe Area" \nCheri Scheick\, program director and owner of Southwest Archaeological Consultants and president of the nonprofit Rio Grande Foundation for Communities and Cultural Landscapes\, "The City Different: Variety and Change in the 12th and 13th Centuries" \nDouglas Schwartz\, former SAR president\, on the development and nature of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo \nJason Shapiro\, member and chair of the city of Santa Fe's Archaeological Review Committee\, "Chain of Cultural Custody: The IDentifiers\, Promoters\, and Keepers of Santa Fe Archaeology" \nCordelia Thomas Snow\, historic sites archaeologist and historian\, "The Archaeology of Early Colonial Santa Fe" \nRon Winter\, independent contract archaeologist\, "The Santa Fe Trail" \nJessica Badner\, Office of Archaeological Studies\, on what excavations at the Santa Fe Railyard revealed about foundations and infrastructure built by the Atchison\, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway in the early 1880s \n     \nSanta Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, on view at the Palace of the Governors\, explores the lives of the colonists and Native peoples who lived in and around Santa Fe 400 years ago.  \n Prior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was. \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe Community Convention Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots.   \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico   Foundation.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/499-beneath-the-city-different-the-archaeology-of-santa-fe-friends-of-archaeology-symposium/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/499_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091025T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091025T160000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20161018T235306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175337Z
UID:10001727-1256479200-1256486400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Gamelan Demonstration in conjunction with Dancing Shadows\, Epic Tales
DESCRIPTION:Gamelan Demonstration by Professor Sumarsam» Master Gamelan Musician from Wesleyan University with New Mexico’s Gamelan Encantada».
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/539-gamelan-demonstration-in-conjunction-with-dancing-shadows-epic-tales/
LOCATION:Museum of International Folk Art\, 706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87504\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/539_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Rebecca Ward":MAILTO:rebecca.ward@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6641155;-105.9265695
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill Santa Fe NM 87504 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill:geo:-105.9265695,35.6641155
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091023T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091023T190000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090723T040912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175329Z
UID:10001687-1256320800-1256324400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Exalting Eye: Photography and the Myth of Santa Fe The final Through the Lens lecture
DESCRIPTION:A wave of publicity during the 1980s projected Santa Fe to the world as an exotic tourist destination–America's own Tahiti in the desert. Chris Wilson's The Myth of Santa Fe goes behind the romantic adobe facades and mass marketing stereotypes to tell the fascinating but little-known story of how the city's alluring image was quite consciously created early in this century\, primarily by Anglo-American newcomers. \nBy investigating the city's trademark architectural style\, public ceremonies\, the historic preservation movement\, and cultural traditions\, Wilson unravels the complex interactions of ethnic identity and tourist image-making. Santa Fe's is a distinctly modern success story–the story of a community that transformed itself from a declining provincial capital of 5\,000 in 1912 into an internationally recognized tourist destination. But it is also a cautionary tale about the commodification of Native American and Hispanic cultures\, and the social displacement and ethnic animosities that can accompany a tourist boom. \nAccording to reviewer Martin R. Kalfatovic\, Smithsonian Inst. Lib.\, Washington\, D.C.: "Using architecture as a touchstone\, Wilson outlines the architectural\, historical\, and cultural story of Santa Fe. He delivers a brilliant portrait of a complex and rich cultural heritage\, tracing it from its Pueblo and Spanish roots\, through its brief but influential Mexican period\, to contributions from what he terms the American melting pot. The intricate relations between the ethnic groups that call Santa Fe home are explored in detail and with sympathy for all concerned. Wilson also offers a fascinating nutshell account of the historic preservation movement in America and how it influences the current view of Santa Fe. Through a discussion of the history of Santa Fe's annual Fiesta celebration\, he shows how civic boosters have crafted a public image that bears little resemblance to historic reality." \nThe book won the 1997 Gaspar Perez de Villegrá Award from the Historical Society of New Mexico and the 1999 Abbott Lowell Cummings Prize from the Vernacular Architecture Forum. \nCurated by photographer and educator Krista Elrick and Palace of the Governor Curator of Photography\, Mary Anne Redding\, Through the Lens: Creating Santa Fe\, examines the history of Santa Fe through the visual record created by internationally respected photographers.  \nSince the 1850s many of the most recognized names in photography have focused their lenses in and on Santa Fe. Through their creative efforts they have documented a particular place and its visual history. They helped create that "place" and the mystique of Santa Fe. Photography has long been significant in the construction of notions of space and place\, landscape and identity\, and especially in Santa Fe\, however malleable visual meaning may be\, has helped define the geographical imagination.  \nThe exhibition is on display in the Palace of the Governors until Oct. 25.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/463-the-exalting-eye-photography-and-the-myth-of-santa-fe-the-final-through-the-lens-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/463_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Felicia Katz-Harris":MAILTO:felicia.katz-harris@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091021T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091021T140000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090117T002149Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175318Z
UID:10001631-1256126400-1256133600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Let’s Take A Look with MIAC curators
DESCRIPTION:During this time\, curators from The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture and The Laboratory of Anthropology are in the lobby of MIAC to look at your unidentified treasures. These curators will attempt to identify and explain any artifact or historic object presented to them. They prefer to work with objects from the Southwest but are willing to take a look at anything that is brought in. If they can not identify an object an attempt will be made to find someone who can. Sometimes\, the discussion among the curators may become as much or more informative than the identification of the artifact  \nThe event is always free and open to the public. \nUpcoming "Let's Take A Look' Events:  \nWednesday\, October 21st \nWednesday\, November 18th \nWednesday\, December 16th   \n  \nFederal and State regulations prohibit the curators from  appraising any artifact.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/324-lets-take-a-look-with-miac-curators/
LOCATION:Museum of Indian Arts and Culture\, 708-710 Camino Lejo\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87557\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
GEO:35.664337;-105.9252387
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of Indian Arts and Culture 708-710 Camino Lejo Santa Fe NM 87557 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=708-710 Camino Lejo:geo:-105.9252387,35.664337
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091015T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091015T190000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091116T233505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001722-1255629600-1255633200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Lecture by photographer Thomas Joshua Cooper
DESCRIPTION:Introduction by Kate Ware\, Curator of Photography\, New  Mexico Museum of Art   \n Thomas Joshua Cooper will discuss his epic project “An Atlas of Emptiness and Extremity\,” which he has been working on  since 1990. With an 1898 field camera\, Cooper has traversed  the extreme edges of the entire Atlantic Basin\,  photographing the points where land and sea meet\, and the  moments of human history which have transpired at those  sites yet which remain hidden beneath the surface. His  large-scale selenium and gold chloride-toned gelatin silver  prints record the sublime beauty of the Atlantic Ocean\, the  body of water that has mediated the collision of Old and New  Worlds. He has said of his artistic practice\, “The pictures  describe an encounter\, exploration and experience with a  recognizable but unidentifiable space that might accurately  be called a ‘Terra Incognita.’” \n Thomas Joshua Cooper was born in San Francisco in 1946. He  attended Humboldt State University as an undergraduate and  received his Master’s degree in Photography from the  University of New Mexico in 1972. Today he lives in Glasgow\,  Scotland\, where he teaches at the Glasgow School of Art. His  photographs are included in numerous public collections on  both sides of the ocean\, including  Art Institute of  Chicago; Bibliotheque Nationale\, Paris; Center for Creative  Photography\, Tucson; International Museum of Photography\,  George Eastman House\, Rochester; J. Paul Getty Museum\, Los  Angeles; Los Angeles County Art Museum; The Modern Art  Museum\, Fort Worth; Museum of Fine Arts\, Houston; Museum of  Contemporary Art\, Chicago; Museum of Modern Art\, Oslo\,  Norway; National Gallery of Canada\, Ottawa; New Mexico  Museum of Art\, Santa Fe; Philadelphia Museum of Art;  Princeton University Art Museum; Scottish National Gallery  of Modern Art\, Edinburgh; Tate Gallery\, London; University  of New Mexico Art Museum; and Victoria and Albert Museum\,  London. \nThis lecture is made possible through the generosity of the  Lannan Foundation. An exhibition of Thomas Joshua Cooper’s photographs will open at the Lannan Foundation\, 313 Read  Street\, Santa Fe\, on Friday\, October 16\, 5-7 p.m.  \nThis lecture is one in a series presented in conjunction with Manmade. Other lectures are by professor David Krakauer (November 19) and artists Bill Gilbert and Victoria Sambunaris (December 3). \nView the website: Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection  \nCaption: Thomas Joshua Cooper\, West—The Mid-North  Atlantic Ocean\, Punta de la Calera\, The Island of La Gomera\, The Canary Islands\, Spain\, 2002 (The West-most point of the Island\, and\, most likely\, the last “Old World” landfall to be seen by Columbus and his men on their first voyage of discovery in search of “The New World”)\, selenium and gold chloride-toned gelatin silver print\, 28 x 36 inches.  \nLecture\, Thursday\, October 15\, 6 p.m.  St. Francis Auditorium\, NM Museum of Art  Free admission.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/513-lecture-by-photographer-thomas-joshua-cooper/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/513_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091014T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091014T130000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090723T040837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175331Z
UID:10001698-1255521600-1255525200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Colliding Cultures in the Pueblo World Brainpower & Brownbags lecture series
DESCRIPTION:Jason S. Shapiro is author of "Before Santa Fe: Archaeology of the City Different" and "Fingerprints on the Landscape: Space Syntax Analysis and Cultural Evolution in the Northern Rio Grande." He holds a PhD from Pennsylvania State University.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/483-colliding-cultures-in-the-pueblo-world-brainpower-brownbags-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/483_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091009T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091009T193000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091008T222956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175332Z
UID:10001702-1255109400-1255116600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Opening Reception for Manmade Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection
DESCRIPTION:Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection features the work of nine artists whose work is an exploration of man and the landscape—not landscape in its most literal sense\, but landscape as a construction of meanings and relationships that are always morphing\, growing\, decaying\, and exploding. These various facets of landscape include the natural\, the cultural\, the social\, and the political.  \nThe Lannan Foundation works related to landscape are never of the sort that is a celebration purely of a sublime or pristine nature; rather they are of the terrain inscribed with all manner of human interaction\, including manmade creations meant to guide our way through the oceans\, earthworks\, human-aided natural disaster\, and the theatre of war.  \nThe artists in the exhibition are Debbie Fleming Caffery\, Thomas Joshua Cooper\, Olafur Eliasson\, Roni Horn\, An-My Lê\, Sarah Pickering\, Victoria Sambunaris\, Robert Smithson\, and James Turrell.  For more information on the Lannan Foundation and their Visual Arts Program\, visit http://www.lannan.org/lf/programs/art/.  All works Collection Lannan Foundation. \nReception is 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Refreshments provided by the Women's Board. \nThis exhibition is made possible through the generosity of the Lannan Foundation\, Friends of Contemporary Art (FOCA)\, Doug Ring and Cindy Miscikowski\, Jacqueline and Richard Schmeal\, Pat and James Q. Hall\, and Marjorie R. and William J. Salman.  \nView the website: Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/488-opening-reception-for-manmade-notions-of-landscape-from-the-lannan-collection/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/488_thumb.jpg
GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091009
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100111
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091009T060000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230627T201358Z
UID:10001358-1255046400-1263167999@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Manmade: Notions of Landscape From the Lannan Foundation
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/manmade-notions-of-landscape-from-the-lannan-foundation/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091009
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100111
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20091008T222042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175135Z
UID:10001074-1255046400-1263167999@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Manmade: Notions of Landscape From the Lannan Foundation
DESCRIPTION:The work of nine artists will be featured in Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection. Landscape is often thought of as a pristine wilderness\, uninhabited and unmarred by human presence\, despite the fact that for many decades now landscape has in practice been represented as incontrovertibly interconnected with mankind and the land itself has been the very material of artmaking. \nManmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection\, an exhibition primarily of photography including two significant installations\, one by James Turrell and the other by Robert Smithson. The exhibition will be on display at the New Mexico Museum of Art October 9\, 2009\, through January 10\, 2010. \nOne of the threads that runs through the Santa Fe-based Lannan Foundation collection is an exploration of man and the landscape—not landscape in its most literal sense\, but landscape as a construction of meanings and relationships that are always morphing\, growing\, decaying\, and exploding. These various facets of landscape include the natural\, the cultural\, the social\, and the political. Everywhere human presence\, for good or bad\, is evident and our relationship to our environment is always under negotiation.  \nThe Lannan Foundation works related to landscape are never of the sort that is a celebration purely of a sublime or pristine nature; rather they are of the terrain inscribed with all manner of human interaction\, including manmade creations meant to guide our way through the oceans\, earthworks\, human-aided natural disaster\, and the theatre of war. \n“For over 20 years\, Lannan Foundation has supported the creation and maintenance of important land art projects such as James Turrell’s Roden Crater\, Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty\, Michael Heizer’s City Complex\, and Walter de Maria’s Lightning Fields\,” states Lannan Foundation Program Director for Art Christie Mazuera Davis. “Our collection\, which numbers over 800 works of art\, features a significant amount of photography\, much of which focuses on the land or manmade environments. While the Foundation has not established a specific criterion to collect landscape-oriented artwork\, it is this medium that has perhaps best captured the many-faceted relationship between man and the environment in recent decades.”  \nThe photo-based works that will be on view in Manmade: Notions of Landscape from the Lannan Collection includes post-Katrina photographs of a ravaged landscape by Debbie Fleming Caffery; images of the meeting of land and sea that have been witness to historic moments by Thomas Joshua Cooper; a typological grid of lighthouse photographs by Olafur Eliasson; the confessional water images of Roni Horn; nighttime photographs of wars acted out in the desert by An-My Le; “portraits” of explosions in the landscape by Sarah Pickering; and photographs of the contemporary industrial landscape by Victoria Sambunaris. \nTwo well-known Earthwork artists are also represented in the exhibition. The Lannan Collection has rich holdings of James Turrell’s work\, including hand-worked aerial views of Roden Crater\, an extinct volcano outside of Flagstaff\,  Arizona\, that the artist has been “sculpting” into a monumental earthwork since 1979. Also on view in the New Mexico Museum of Art’s galleries will be Robert Smithson’s 1969 sculptural masterwork Map of Broken Glass (Atlantis)\, an example both of his early work with earth and glass or mirrors and of his reconsideration of the nature of sculpture. \n“This is the museum’s first exhibition of works from the Lannan Foundation collection\,” states Curator of Contemporary Art Laura Addison. “There is a tremendous consistency of vision between the Lannan Foundation’s collecting interests and their broader mission. The works in Manmade may take landscape tradition as its point of departure\, but there is nothing ordinary about the artists’ approach to their subject matter. These are not simply pretty pictures of the environment. There is a strong sense of purpose that underlies the photographs\, in keeping with the Lannan Foundation’s ethos of social responsibility and critical engagement. Each of the artists in Manmade single-mindedly pursues a particular question or problem with respect to the man/land relationship or in terms of art historical paradigms from Minimalism to New Topographics. In some instances that pursuit will take an artist to the ends of the earth\, literally.” \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/manmade-notions-of-landscape-from-the-lannan-foundation-2/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building 107 West Palace Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=107 West Palace Avenue:geo:-105.9381003,35.6878097
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091005T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091005T210000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090918T025559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001720-1254765600-1254776400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Advanced Screening of Craft in America "Origins" episode\, featuring Teri Greeves
DESCRIPTION:The New Mexico Museum of Art will host an advance screening of a new episode of the Peabody Award-winning and Emmy nominated PBS series CRAFT IN AMERICA.  \nThe reception and screening will take place in the Museum’s St. Francis Auditorium 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. on Monday\, October 5\, 2009.  \nThe new episode\, entitled “Origins\,” features five artists\, including Santa Fe resident and Kiowa beadworker Teri Greeves. The screening will be preceded by a reception and followed by a question-and-answer period with Greeves.   \nThe critically acclaimed series CRAFT IN AMERICA\, which premiered on PBS in 2007\, documents the history\, artists and techniques of our nation’s rich craft culture. On October 7\, 2009\, KNME will air the “Origins” episode\, along with a second new episode\, “Process.”  “Origins” focuses on the roots of the American craft movement and features artists who tie their work to early craft techniques that they pass to others in a continuum of creativity. The episodes will reference the traditions\, tools and techniques developed millennia ago to explore how today’s artists put them to use in their work and reflect upon our national roots and heritages.  \nIn addition to Teri Greeves\, the program features South Carolina blacksmith Philip Simmons\, North Carolina potter Vernon Owens\, weaver and UCLA teacher Jim Bassler\, and New Jersey glass artist Paul Stankard.   \nThe New Mexico Museum of Art’s October 5 screening party has been generously funded by the Dobkin Family Foundation. Admission is $15. Tickets are payable in advance by calling 505-476-5069 or at the door. Proceeds will benefit the New Mexico Museum of Art’s contemporary art programming.  \nAbout Teri Greeves   \nAbout Teri Greeves Teri Greeves is a beadworker who both follows and updates the Kiowa tradition of beadworking. Teri uses her talents to tell the story of the American Indian\, both contemporary and historical. Through her beaded books and jewelry\, and her signature beaded high-top sneakers\, she continues the tradition of story-telling\, considering native life in modern society. She lives and works in Santa Fe.   \nTeri burst onto the contemporary Native American art scene in 1999 when she won Best of Show at SWAIA’s Indian Market for a beaded parasol that depicts an Indian parade. Since then she has won numerous other awards at the Heard Museum Fair\, Indian Market\, and Eight Northern Pueblos Arts and Crafts Show. In 2003\, she was the School for Advanced Research’s Eric and Barbara Dobkin Fellowship recipient. Her work is included in numerous public collections\, including the New Mexico Museum of Art\, Brooklyn Museum of Art\, Denver Art Museum\, Heard Museum\, British Museum\, National Museum of the American Indian\, Museum of Arts and Design\, and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture.     \nTeri Greeves\, Yee Tah-lee\, 2006\, tennis shoes (size 13)\, cut-glass beads\, seed beads\, 6 x 12.25 x 4.25 inches each.   Collection New Mexico Museum of Art. Gift of the Dobkin Family Foundation\, 2006.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/511-advanced-screening-of-craft-in-america-origins-episode-featuring-teri-greeves/
LOCATION:New Mexico Museum of Art- Plaza Building\, 107 West Palace Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
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GEO:35.6878097;-105.9381003
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091003T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091003T160000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090506T032030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175327Z
UID:10001678-1254564000-1254585600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Sun Mountain Gathering
DESCRIPTION:Sun Mountain Gathering has been held annually since 2002\, is an exploration of Southwestern archaeology and celebrates over 12\,000 years of cultural heritage in New   Mexico. Native American dancers and musicians will perform throughout the day on spectacular Milner  Plaza.  \nSun Mountain Gathering has activities for every age and interest. Visitors can learn about archaeology and the ancient technology and traditional arts of Native peoples in the Southwest.  Exhibits on archaeology and native foods are planned\, along with demonstrations of Native crafts\, including pottery making\, flint-knapping\, friction fire-starting\, stone axe use\, traditional gardening\, and a mock archaeology dig\, to name just a few. Visitors will also have an opportunity to learn about traditional arts by trying their hand at forming a coiled pot\, making rope from yucca\, making and painting a replica of a parfleche\, using a traditional pump drill\, or making a gourd rattle.  \nRepresentatives of Wild Spirit Wolf Sanctuary will be returning to the Sun Mountain Gathering again this year\, affording participants with an opportunity to see and pet a real wolf.  In addition\, Hawks Aloft will be on hand to present raptor education. \nAnother main attraction is the Atlatl Range.  The atlatl and dart were the first true and natural weapons system of the human race\, invented thousands of years before the bow and arrow and used longer by humans than any other weapon system yet developed.  Festival visitors may stop by the Atlatl  Range to try their hand at spear throwing using replicas of prehistoric atlatls.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/444-sun-mountain-gathering/
LOCATION:Museum of Indian Arts and Culture\, 708-710 Camino Lejo\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87557\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
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GEO:35.664337;-105.9252387
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091003T023000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091003T050000
DTSTAMP:20260619T143832
CREATED:20090909T000648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175335Z
UID:10001717-1254537000-1254546000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Origins and Symbol of the Labyrinth in the Southwest Lecture and Labyrinth walk
DESCRIPTION:Join noted English scholar Jeff Saward for The Origins and Symbol of the Labyrinth in the Southwest\, exploring the use of the labyrinth symbol\, most notably the "man in the maze" design\, by Southwestern Native people.  The lecture is followed by a labyrinth walk. This event is free and does not include admission to Museum galleries.  This event is presented by the Santa Fe Labyrinth Resource Group\, and is part of the Santa Fe 400th anniversary celebration.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/507-the-origins-and-symbol-of-the-labyrinth-in-the-southwest-lecture-and-labyrinth-walk/
LOCATION:Museum of International Folk Art\, 706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87504\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Julia Clifton":MAILTO:julia.clifton@state.nm.us
GEO:35.6641155;-105.9265695
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Museum of International Folk Art 706 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill Santa Fe NM 87504 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=706 Camino Lejo\, on Museum Hill:geo:-105.9265695,35.6641155
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR