Do You Know The Way To Santa Fe?
Feb 17, 2007 11:06 AM Filed in:
On The Road
There
are a lot of places I haven't been, but that I'd like to visit
sometime just to check out; San Francisco, Halifax, Nova Scotia,
Savannah, Georgia, Iceland, The Canadian Rockies, Mount
Kilimanjaro, Tortuga and the Caribbean in general, and a big chunk
of New Mexico as well (Albuquerque, Taos, and Santa Fe) to name
just a few. So when I see interesting articles about some of these
places I sometimes stash them away somewhere just to remind myself
of possible future adventures to look forward to. When I first
started working on Little Delving I meant to share these bits and
pieces with you, but I realize that I have actually done very
little of that so far. I'll try to start catching up! Here's one I
found about the art galleries of Santa Fe. Someday...
JB
Santa Fe, With Nary A Cow's Skull In Sight: Diverse Contemporary
Works Find A Welcome Home In The Second-Largest
Art
Market In The Nation.
By
Mimi Avins
Chicago Tribune
September 3, 2006
MANY
a roadside sign boasts of a locale's special quality: the best
river walk in the country, the most scenic village in the
Berkshires. So if those unfamiliar with the abundance of art in
Santa Fe heard that it is the second-largest art market in the U.S.
(after New York), they might dismiss the description as the
hyperbole of local boosters. They would be wrong.
There
isn't just a lot of art in Santa Fe; there is important art. Who
would think a trove of museum-quality, 20th century Abstract
Expressionist paintings would be displayed behind the adobe facade
of a former supermarket? Such discoveries were the reward for
leaving my patio, home of the most bountiful bougainvillea in Santa
Monica, to spend a three-day weekend in July tracking the art scene
in New Mexico's capital, a city that has been a cultural center for
more than a century.
For
anyone easily overwhelmed, the quantity of art in Santa Fe could be
a problem. "You feel you must go into every gallery because you
might miss something," said Jane Egan, director of the Chiaroscuro
gallery. "You can't, or you'll get glazed-eye
disease."
I knew there would be no way to get to the more than 200 galleries
and dozen museums. And I hadn't anticipated how energy-sapped I
would feel my first day. Flatlanders often need time to adjust to
the 7,000-foot altitude.
Focus was my salvation. Here's what barely crept into my peripheral
vision: Native American art, crafts, folk art, photography and
textiles. I concentrated on contemporary art, which in the last 10
years has exploded here, taking its place beside or even eclipsing
the regional and Western paintings and sculpture commonly
associated with Santa Fe. With some research and help from
knowledgeable locals, I culled a list of a dozen galleries and a
few exhibitions that the serious collector and the discerning
tourist would not want to miss.
For a long time, Santa Fe's galleries were concentrated around the
Plaza at the center of town or along Canyon Road, a winding street
of adobe homes originally built by starving artists. The new,
adventurous arts district is the Railyard, a mile south of the
Plaza. Several galleries have sprung up there, some opening as
recently as July.
International
Art Show
THEIR anchor is SITE Santa Fe, a cutting-edge exhibit space in a
former beer warehouse. Host of the only international biennial in
the U.S., SITE Santa Fe is so highly regarded in the art world that
three of the five curators who have overseen it have gone on to
curate the Venice Biennale. SITE's Sixth International Biennial,
which runs through January, attracts collectors and the sort of
art-loving nomads who travel the world to survey the latest in
conceptual works.
One room contains 2 tons' worth of lacquered-wood, stairway-like
sculptures by Wolfgang Laib. A 7 1/2 -minute video of demolition
derbies by Stephen Dean and Jennifer Bartlett's large-scale
paintings of words punched into steel plates are among the other
offerings.
After visiting SITE, the art for sale at the cream of Santa Fe's
contemporary galleries looked almost safe. Not that there's
anything wrong with that.

Artists
from the East and Midwest first began visiting New Mexico in the
late 19th century, drawn by its dramatic landscape, rich
multicultural heritage and a social climate tolerant of artistic
types. The six founders of the Taos Society of Artists, individuals
with established reputations in other cities, banded together in
1915 in a mountain village 70 miles north of Santa Fe. The Santa Fe
Art Colony came together shortly thereafter and blossomed after the
Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1917. The museum, which still
borders the lively Plaza, welcomed newcomers with free studio space
and organized group shows of their work.
In
the 1920s, some of the tuberculosis patients in residence at Santa
Fe's well-known sanatoriums were artists, and many others were
affluent and intellectual. With the addition of wealthy people from
Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona and Kansas who came to town to escape the
summer heat, before air-conditioning, the elements of a patronage
society were in place.
Although the art colony members maintained friendships for decades,
their styles were so diverse that no single Santa Fe school
developed. Most of the painters in the group produced
representational works with varying degrees of Cubist,
Impressionist, Modernist or Abstract influences. Were they regional
artists? Southwestern? Western? Parsing genres can be risky
business in Santa Fe.
After all, how to categorize Georgia O'Keeffe? At one time, she was
a contemporary artist. Now she is considered one of the greatest
American painters of the last century.
O'Keeffe began spending summers in Santa Fe in 1929 and moved
nearby in 1940. It takes nothing away from her talent to say the
reclusive O'Keeffe had a mystique, which both benefited Santa Fe
and was fed by it. Gallery owner Nat Owings says, "Did living as a
recluse in Santa Fe, a mystic place, help her? Probably. If she'd
moved to Poughkeepsie, I'm not sure it would have had the same
impact. Tourists come here now just to see O'Keeffe."
And doing so enriches the visit. Like some modern art and
hard-edged contemporary architecture, the New Mexican landscape
isn't instantly accessible. At first, a hardscrabble field dotted
by boulders and pierced by prickly shrubs does not evoke the same
romantic response as a lush green meadow dusted with wildflowers.
But looking at the countryside after seeing it through O'Keeffe's
eyes alters the view. Suddenly, the colors and shapes of the desert
and its stubborn vegetation are all the more seductive for the
subtlety of their harsh beauty.
The Museum of Fine Arts has 10 O'Keeffe paintings in its permanent
collection. The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, founded in 1997, rotates
130 of the artist's works. You would also find some at the Gerald
Peters Gallery, her main outlet from 1976 to her death in 1986.
"When she was alive, we never sold more than four paintings a
year," Peters said. "She liked her art better than she liked
money." Peters still deals in O'Keeffes, but the volume isn't close
to what it was in the late '80s, when he owned or controlled 80 of
her works. "At that time, $1 million was a lot for a major
picture." The last O'Keeffe sold at auction in 2001 went for $6.6
million.

Today,
the gold standard in Western art — the Remingtons, Russells
and Taos and Santa Fe masters — is expensive and rarely on
the market, and contemporary works can be a risky purchase. Finding
reputable and knowledgeable gallery owners can make the hunt for
original artworks less perilous. A gallery's inventory can be an
indication of quality, but marquee names are no guarantee, since
second-rate work by first-rate artists can be all that's still
available.
In the most sophisticated galleries, living artists who treat
now-clichéd subjects — adobes, desert scenes, coyotes and
Indians on horseback — in traditional ways are dismissed as
derivative. Neither the Gerald Peters Gallery nor the Owings-Dewey
Fine Art gallery, which sits on the second floor of a historic
building on the Plaza, sells such contemporary Western art. Beyond
categories, many gallery owners follow the principle that good art
is good art. "We have everything from Gilbert Stuart to Jackson
Pollock, with some Agnes Martin and Georgia O'Keeffe thrown in,"
Peters says.
Galleries with a strong point of view tend to survive in the
volatile art market of Santa Fe. Charlotte Jackson, who produces
Art Santa Fe, a biannual art fair that attracts dealers and patrons
from around the world, has operated her gallery for 18 years.
"There have always been lots of galleries here, but they come and
go," she said. "Probably 25 of the galleries that are here now
won't be around next year." Her own gallery specializes in abstract
modernism created since 1989. "There are so many collectors who
have a foot in different styles. They buy monochromatic work from
me, then they walk down the street to Billy Siegel's gallery and
buy phenomenal South American textiles."

Southwest
Style
AFTER
a morning spent cruising the downtown galleries, I was feeling the
so-many-galleries-so-little-time crunch. So instead of taking a
lengthy break for lunch in a restaurant, I bought cold drinks while
my companion got corn on the cob and chicken tamales from one of
the food carts parked on the Plaza. We settled in the grassy park
at the center of the town square and inhaled a delicious, quick,
cheap meal.
From that vantage point, it was easy to see how Santa Fe's
indigenous style continually asserts itself — by way of the
food and the ubiquitous Southwestern architecture. Women who might
visit another town wearing jeans drift around in flowing skirts and
silver-and-turquoise concha belts. So when I stepped inside the
Riva Yares Gallery a short walk from the Plaza, the high-ceilinged,
white-walled rooms lined with huge canvases by such blue-chip
20th-century modernists as Morris Louis, Milton Avery and Helen
Frankenthaler were a surprise. The galleries looked more like
spaces in New York. "Because we're in the Southwest, some people
assume that we show Southwestern art," Dennis Yares said. "The
adobe facade here doesn't dictate what's inside."
The contemporary works shown in the better galleries aren't priced
like souvenirs, and cost can also be a clue to what's considered
good. A visitor not in the market for the sort of $5-million
Charles Russell oil to be found at the Peters Gallery might acquire
a major work by 90-year-old New Mexican Elmer Schooley at the
Meyer-Munson Gallery for less than $100,000. Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen owns more than a dozen of Schooley's abstract
landscapes, and the Museum of Modern Art recently added one to its
collection.
But even without such a pedigree, a $20 landscape watercolor
purchased from an artist camped out on the Plaza is also a valid
piece of original art. And the hope lives that the artist will
become the next Georgia O'Keeffe.
Savoring
Santa Fe's Finest
GETTING THERE:
From Albuquerque it's an easy one-hour drive north on Interstate 25
to Santa Fe.
WHERE TO STAY:
Inn of the Anasazi,
113 Washington Ave.; (505) 988-3030. This hotel offers a modern
interpretation of Santa Fe style. Among its beautiful public rooms
is a cozy library, stocked with books on Southwestern art, history
and culture. Doubles $325-$550.
La Posada de Santa Fe Resort &
Spa,
330 E. Palace Ave.; (505) 986-0000. Adobe-style rooms and suites,
many with fireplaces, plus a pool and spa on 6 landscaped acres.
Doubles from $219-$249 in September, plus $15 daily resort fee.
Rates vary by season.
Hotel St. Francis,
210 Don Gaspar Ave.; (505) 983-5700. Built in 1923, the St. Francis
is the only Santa Fe hotel on the National Register of Historic
Places. Afternoon tea is served daily in the charming lobby.
Doubles $142-$269 in September.
WHERE
TO EAT:
Santacafé,
231 Washington Ave.; (505) 984-1788. A historic 19th century house
is the setting for this elegant but not stuffy bistro.
People-watching on the courtyard is as good as the food. Entrees
$19-$34.
La Mancha at
the Galisteo Inn, 9
La Vega Road, 20 miles from Santa Fe; (505) 466-8200. The
restaurant at the 1705 hacienda that houses the inn provides a
relaxing escape from the crowds and busyness of downtown Santa Fe.
Chef Enrique Guerrero's continental dishes are best enjoyed
outdoors on the patio. Entrees $22-$30.
The Shed,
113½ E. Palace Ave.; (505) 982-9030. This family-owned New Mexican
restaurant is a local institution. Reservations are accepted for
dinner only but the wait for lunch, when most people go, isn't
usually long. Closed Sundays. Entrees $6.75-$8.25.
GALLERIES:
Many galleries are closed Sundays and Mondays. Art VanGo, a free
shuttle service, operates between downtown, the Santa Fe Railyard
and Canyon Road every 10 minutes, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. daily.
1. Gerald Peters Gallery,
1011 Paseo de Peralta; (505) 954-5700. Classic Western art, Taos
Society and Santa Fe Art Colony, Georgia O'Keeffe, 20th century
American modernism, photography, sculpture.
2. Linda Durham Contemporary Art,
1101 Paseo de Peralta; (505) 466-6600. An avant-garde gallery with
paintings, sculpture and mixed media by New Mexico artists.
3. Owings-Dewey Fine Art,
76 E. San Francisco St.; (505) 982-6244 and Owings-Dewey North, 120
E. Marcy St.; (505) 986-9088. Offering 19th and 20th century
American paintings and sculpture.
4. Charlotte Jackson Fine Art,
200 W. Marcy St., Suite 101; (505) 989-8688, charlottejackson.com.
Monochrome, light and space, modernism, color field and photography
since 1989.
5. Riva Yares Gallery,
123 Grant Ave.; (505) 984-0330. Museum-caliber modern and
contemporary art.
6.
LewAllen Contemporary Art,
129 W. Palace Ave.; (505) 988-8997. Formerly the Horwitch Gallery.
Internationally known and emerging artists in painting, sculpture,
photography, prints, ceramics, jewelry, tapestry, glass. Open every
day.
7. James Kelly Contemporary,
1601 Paseo de Peralta; (505) 989-1601. A pioneer in the Railyard
area. American and European contemporary art from established
artists.
8. Evo Gallery,
554 S. Guadalupe St.; (505) 982-4610. Innovative young artists and
contemporary artists with national and international
reputations.
9. Box Gallery,
1611-A Paseo de Peralta; (505) 989-489. Emerging New Mexico
artists.
10. Chiaroscuro,
558 Canyon Road and 439 Camino del Monte Sol; (505) 992-1100.
International midcareer abstract artists and sculptors.
11. Meyer-Munson Gallery,
225 Canyon Road; (505) 983-1657. The gallery showcases
representational art with an edge.
12. Dwight Hackett Projects,
2879 All Trades Road; (505) 474-4043. A 10-minute drive from
downtown. Well-established contemporary artists such as Charles
Arnoldi and Richard Tuttle as well as emerging artists in a variety
of media.