View
247
Download
3
Category
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
Northern New Mexico's Premier Gallery Guide. A gallery guide devoted exclusively to Taos galleries, museums and artists.
Citation preview
1 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
2015/2016 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
2 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
3 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com3 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
4 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
5 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com5 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
6 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
C O N T E M P O R A R Ya r t & s c u l p t u r e g a r d e n s
3 miles north of Taos Plaza@ the Overland Complex
575-751-1344Kinetic Wind Sculptures by Lyman Whitaker
ENVISIONGALLERY
1103 PASEO DEL PUEBLO NORTE, SUiTE 1 - EL PRADO, NM 87529 (575) 758-3587 WWW.TAOSCRATiNG.COM
7 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com7 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
2015/2016 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
8 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
9 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com9 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
• Shipping Services• Next Day Air • Mailbox/Fax Services• Signs/Pet Tags• Business Cards
• Packing Services• Office Supply• Copying & Binding• Laminating
Make us your resource for:
“I use The UPS Store™ exclusively. Jeanne is great to work with, I would not use anyone else.” –Sigrid Long of Natural Accents Gallery
We’re Experts in Packing & Shipping of Artwork, Collectibles, & Your Valuables…
Your Shipping Source
The UPS Store™
The UPS Store™
1335 Paseo del Pueblo Sur • Taos, NM 87571
575-758-8647 • (fax) 575-758-8667Between Days Inn and Super 8
Locally Owned, Nationally Known
“I spend a lot of time in my “mailing ministry” of sending out books and icons. I appreciate the exceptional service from Jeanne at The UPS Store.™” –Father Bill
“Jeanne at The UPS Store takes the stress outof shipping ceramic art.”— JoAnne and Kevin DeKeuster, Enchanted Circle Pottery
10 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
11 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com11 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
“Blue Figs With Tea” 30 X 30 oil
105 Kit Carson Road • 575.758.8833 • coppermoongallerytaos.com
KATRINA HOWARTH
12 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
“ODE TO GEORGIA O’KEEFFE” RAKU
“IMMACULATE CONCEPCION” 20 X 24 ACRYLIC
105 Kit Carson Road • 575.758.8833 • coppermoongallerytaos.com
SHEENA CAMERON
JIM KEFFER
13 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com13 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
14 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
15 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com15 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
16 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Angie ColemanStudio/Gallery
140 East Kit Carson Road 575-779-4658
angiecolemanfinearts.comacoleman@taosnet.com
Mountain Rio 12”x18” Reduction Wood block Print Edition of 9 2015
17 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com17 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Paintings Glass ArtJewelry Pottery Tin Work Furniture
Something For everyone
Aspen Gallery
T A O S
575-751-3260
www.aspengallerytaos.com
115 EAST PLAZA #4
TAOS. N.M. 87571
aspen gallery cards.cdr
1:1 scale
(500) C2s stock, full-color
black, pms 326 aqua and 130 yellow
ACORN
GRAPHICS
S I G N S & D E S I G N S
219 CRUZ ALTA RD. TAOS, NM
acorn@taosnet.com
575-758-0469
575-751-3260115 EAST PLAZA #4TAOS, NM 87571
www.aspengallerytaos.com
18 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
19 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com19 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Celebrating 30 yearsGraphic Impressions Fine Art Print Making
Group Sessions • Private SessionsPrint making Classes • Art Classes111 Morada Ln Taos NM 87571 • 575-758-8989
prints@kitcarson.net
Michael Vigil Studio & Gallery
20 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
119 Kit Carson Road | Taos, New Mexico 87571575-758-3255
Wilder Nightingale Fine Art
www.wnightingale.com
RoRy WagneR 1950-2010
“Mind of a Child” (detail) 50” x 60” Acrylic on Canvas
21 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com21 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
22 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
jill mcelmurrylandscapes.jillmcelmurry.com
Mission Gallery138 Kit Carson RdTaos 575 578 2861
23 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com23 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
24 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Earth and Spirit Gallery
132 Bent Street, Taos 575-770-3390 • www.earthandspirit.net
Taos Paintings • Jewelry • World and Local Crafts • Guitars • Local Body Products
Hand-painted drums & artwork by Shari Ubechel
GIVE THEM A UNIQUE PIECE OF TAOS!
JOHN HUTSON POTTERYAvailable at Coyote Moon at 120C Bent St. | 575-758-4437
and Taos Artist Collective at 106A Paseo del Pueblo Norte | 575-751-7122
Emily Benoist RuffinGOLDSMITHS
119 Bent Street, PO BOX 1510, taos, new mexico 87571575-758-1061 | ruffin@newmex.com
award winning handmade designs
Stripe Ring® 18K yellow and Pd white golds
(1-2 Ct. dia.)
Stripe Ring® 18K Yellow and PD White Golds (1.68ctw White & Fancy Deep
Yellowish Orange Diamonds)
NMJA Award
Men’s Wrap Ring® Platinum engraved, “Fire Rose Pear Shape” dia. (Fancy Brown 1.86 Ct.) Cut by Gabriel S. Tolkowsky. JA Premier Award, NMJA Enchantment Award
Stripe Ring® 18K Pd. White Gold, (1-2 Ct. total) JA Premier award and First Place NMJA
Retro-Victorian monogrammed buckle, 14ky royal gold, hand constructed & hand engraved with a custom cartouche (AMG&H), 3mm(1.25”) Strap
25 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com25 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
26 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
27 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com27 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
28 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Outdoor festival showcases cutting-edge art in site-specific settings of historic districtBy Yvonne Pesquera ■ Photos by Rick Romancito
Paseo foR the PeoPle
MODERN MOVEMENT“The Paseo,” a free outdoor arts festival, returns to Taos for two days on Sept. 25 and 26, 2015. Visit Paseotaos.org for a complete schedule of events, as well as a walking map.
Its one-day debut in 2014 was a stunning success. Despite a brief, late afternoon rain shower, more than 3,000 people poured out to walk along Paseo del Pueblo Norte, the main artery in Taos. Countless more slowly cruised by in their cars.
To be clear, this outdoor arts festival is not about commerce with booths displaying wares. Rather, The Paseo features large-scale installation, performance, and projection art that are temporarily displayed on a one-mile stretch of the historic district.
J. Matthew Thomas, a Taos architect and urban designer, is responsible for conceiving the idea for The Paseo. He works closely with a full team and advisory board to select participating artists and coordinate the event.
“The Fall Arts Festival has been a Taos tradition for over 40 years,” says Thomas. “We wanted a ‘kick-off’ event where residents could experience Taos again for the first time, and visitors could experience authentic, well-executed artwork from all over the world.”
As the core ethos, The Paseo selects art that is experimental, time-based, ephemeral, participatory, and context responsive.
“This is not art you can hang on a wall,” Thomas points out.
For The Paseo 2014, Los Angeles artist Filipa Valenta created “Filtered Transparencies.” She built a 12’ x 12’ wooden structure and projected video onto hanging fabric scrims. People walked freely among the fabrics –– themselves becoming a part of the display of light and color.
Other 2014 installations were wildly exciting, and loud. Christina Sporrong is a well-known performance artist and metal sculptor in Taos. She created the two-story “Caged Pulse Jets.” Propane-fueled jet engines zoomed around with fire and sound, as visitors “played” it from a control panel like a musical instrument.
“These are pieces the community can engage with. That’s the participatory piece. Context responsive means they are set within the context of downtown, helping us to experience our community,” Thomas explains.
Judging by the turnout –– youth, families, Baby Boomers, couples, hipsters, elders, and babies in strollers –– it is not an exaggeration to say that everyone found something enjoyable along the one-mile stretch.
“Not all of it is ‘challenging’ work,” says Thomas. He refers to Christian Ristow’s “Becoming Human” robot sculpture, as an example in The Paseo 2014. “What was fun about that was bringing a three-story robot into the parking lot of the Kachina Lodge.”
Indeed, The Paseo is a juried festival and the arts displayed (and/or performed) represent the latest advances in robotics and digital technologies. Other examples of cutting-edge art festivals include The DUMBO Arts Festival in Brooklyn, New York and Aurora in Dallas, Texas.
Every single installation is noted on the map and on the street, every installation is outfitted with a large X sign.
29 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com29 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
30 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
“It is exciting to see the latest in cutting-edge art in the soul of the Southwest,” Thomas says.
Here’s how it works: Thousands of maps are printed and made available at different stores and locations throughout Taos, as well as printed in the Tempo Arts & Entertainment Magazine of The Taos News.
Every single installation is noted on the map and on the street, every installation is outfitted with a large orange X sign.
New this year, mobile users can follow an interactive map on their phone. “This will let you know when you are 20 feet away from the next installation,” Thomas explains.
The Paseo does not have a “point A to point B” structure. It is all about exploration and discovery. Some people linger at one installation for a long time, whereas
others cruise by. Highly interactive installations may even have a line to participate.
Some installations will occur in the day, others at night, and some at both times of day. And
the buzz on the street will be palpable. You will hear people saying: “You have to go check out that piece.”
The Paseo is a largely volunteer effort that touches so many aspects of the community: the Taos police, fire, public works, and facilities departments, as well as a number of galleries and businesses who give permission to use their outdoors spaces and parking lots.
“The feedback from the community was so overwhelmingly positive for The Paseo 2014, that we immediately began planning The Paseo 2015 just two weeks later,” says Thomas.
The Taos historic district has seen its fair share of activity over the past 300 years. Originally populated
by the Taos Pueblo Indians, the area became a central
trading outpost for Spanish explorers.
In fact, on Paseo del Pueblo (which means “town
passage”) it is common to see hay trucks ease by at
the lightest of speeds on the narrow road originally
designed for horse and wagon travel.
Markus Dorninger is a projection artist whose site-
specific work has appeared from Bali to Berlin to Brazil,
and many points in between. Using an iPad app (that
he designed and invented), he creates colorful digital art
projects on edifices.
For The Paseo 2014, his futuristic art, “Projecting
Particles,” was displayed on the First Baptist Church
of Taos.
“You just can’t do that anywhere,” Thomas says about
the church’s 1934 pueblo architecture. “Except for
this weekend, this a rare opportunity to experience
that dichotomy between the historical and the
contemporary.”
THE PASEO September 25 and 26, 2015. Paseotaos.org
“THIS IS NOT ART YOU CAN HANG ON A WALL.”
31 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com31 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
32 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
33 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com33 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
34 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Living Light
gaLLery107 kit carson rd
(on the boardwalk)575-737-9150
lennyfoster.comgolenny@lennyfoster.com
Taos’ premier photography
gallery
The eloquent eye of Lenny Foster
“Acequia”
FAMOUS TAOS POP-UP STORE
AFFORDABLE GIFTS BY TAOS HANDS
JULY 3 - JULY 30STABLES GALLERY
(BEHIND THE TAOS INN)
OPEN EVERY DAY10 AM - 5 PM575 779 8568
WWW.TAOSFOLKPOPUP.COMJoin the artisans for a special celebration party
July 3rd 5:00 - 7:00 pm
35 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com35 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
1504 Millicent Rogers Road www.millicentrogers.org 575-758-2462
MRMMILLICENT ROGERS MUSEUM
Explore the Heritage o f
the American Southwest
4 MILES NORTH OF TAOS PLAZA
36 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
37 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com37 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
E.I. Couse (1866-1936)
ROBERT PARSONS FINE ART
131 Bent Street, Taos575.751.0159
www.parsonsart.com
“Call to the Dance” 29’ x 24” Oil on canvas
Early Southwest PaintingsAntique Navajo Blankets
38 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Jerry Jordan
PARSONS GALLERY of the WEST
122 Kit Carson Road, Taos575.737.9200
www.parsonswest.com
“The Sky Rules the Mountains” 14” x 14” Oil
TRADITIONAL TAOS ARTALSO FEATURING: WALT GONSKE • JULIAN ROBLES • DON BRACKETT DON WARD • MARY DOLPH WOOD • RON BARSANO • TRACY CONCHA
WILLIAM HOOK • RICHARD ALAN NICHOLS
39 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com39 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Series of the Taos Fall Arts Festival.
People can also attend monthly gallery talks, “Learning the Collections,” which is one of the museum’s most popular programs.
In “Taos Art on Saturdays” (TAOS), local Anglo, Hispanic, and Pueblo artists lead participants through their studio techniques in a series that spans the range of artistic expression.
The Taos Art Museum at Fechin House also produces an annual gala art auction.
“We publish a nationwide Call for Artists who find inspiration in Fechin’s legacy,” said Fisher. “The submissions are juried and we mount a summer exhibition of the winners. The artwork is then sold at the benefit auction, this year on Aug. 29. This year’s juror is Nedra Matteucci of Matteucci Galleries in Santa Fe.”
The Taos Art Museum at Fechin House is located at 227 Paseo del Pueblo Norte, Taos, New Mexico 87571. 575-758-2690 taosartmuseum.org
Like many other prominent artists, Russian-born painter Nicolai Fechin first visited Taos at the invitation of Mabel Dodge Luhan in 1926.
Fechin, his wife Alexandra, and their daughter Eya had left Russia in 1923, after enduring the devastation wrought by the Russian Revolution. They lived for two years in New York, where Fechin taught and exhibited, and then settled in Taos.
“He lived here only six years but his influence endures,” said V. Susan Fisher, executive director and curator for the Taos Art Museum at Fechin House. “He rebuilt the adobe house and did all the woodwork by hand—cabinets, doors, furniture, all of it.”
In both his home and his art, Fechin drew inspiration from the Pueblo culture and traditions, which reminded him of the native tribes around his native city of Kazan.
Divorced in 1933, Fechin moved with his daughter to California.
“But he always loved Taos,” Fisher said. “He never built another home like this one.”
After Alexandra Fechin died, the house went to Eya, who lived there until her death in 2002.
Following Eya’s death, her daughter (Fechin’s granddaughter) sold the house to the Taos Art Museum, which needed a new home for its collection of art by the Taos Society of Artists and their followers.
“That’s how it came to be the ‘Taos Art Museum at Fechin House,’” Fisher said.
Fechin’s descendants have loaned many paintings to the museum on a long-term basis. The museum
is therefore able to show Fechin’s art along with that of his contemporaries. The exhibition schedule for 2015 highlights the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Taos Society of Artists, starting in May with a loan exhibition of paintings by Ralph Meyers, a Taos original: self-taught artist, first trader with the Taos Pueblo, friend and outfitter of the Taos Society artists– a story that will appeal as much to children and lovers of adventure as to art audiences.
Fechin’s legacy: beyond painting
“Not only were Fechin’s paintings collected internationally, but his woodwork and his home design were very influential, too,” said Fisher. “His synthesis of Pueblo, Russian, Hispanic, and Art Deco styles remains integral to an understanding of Southwestern design. We keep his entire legacy alive, through weekly docent tours and special presentations.”
staying current
“Fechin followed all the art movements of his time,” Fisher said. “He would have wanted the museum to stay current, in service to artists and to the community, and this is what we do.”
Besides exhibiting individual artists in solo shows, the museum hosts the Distinguished Achievement Award
ENDURING INFLUENCE:By Teresa Dovalpage ■ Photos by Katharine Egli
Nicolai Fechin’s creative legacy in the heart of Taos
1
2
40 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Series of the Taos Fall Arts Festival.
People can also attend monthly gallery talks, “Learning the Collections,” which is one of the museum’s most popular programs.
In “Taos Art on Saturdays” (TAOS), local Anglo, Hispanic, and Pueblo artists lead participants through their studio techniques in a series that spans the range of artistic expression.
The Taos Art Museum at Fechin House also produces an annual gala art auction.
“We publish a nationwide Call for Artists who find inspiration in Fechin’s legacy,” said Fisher. “The submissions are juried and we mount a summer exhibition of the winners. The artwork is then sold at the benefit auction, this year on Aug. 29. This year’s juror is Nedra Matteucci of Matteucci Galleries in Santa Fe.”
The Taos Art Museum at Fechin House is located at 227 Paseo del Pueblo Norte, Taos, New Mexico 87571. 575-758-2690 taosartmuseum.org
“That’s how it came to be the ‘Taos Art Museum at Fechin House,’” Fisher said.
Fechin’s descendants have loaned many paintings to the museum on a long-term basis. The museum
is therefore able to show Fechin’s art along with that of his contemporaries. The exhibition schedule for 2015 highlights the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Taos Society of Artists, starting in May with a loan exhibition of paintings by Ralph Meyers, a Taos original: self-taught artist, first trader with the Taos Pueblo, friend and outfitter of the Taos Society artists– a story that will appeal as much to children and lovers of adventure as to art audiences.
Fechin’s legacy: beyond painting
“Not only were Fechin’s paintings collected internationally, but his woodwork and his home design were very influential, too,” said Fisher. “His synthesis of Pueblo, Russian, Hispanic, and Art Deco styles remains integral to an understanding of Southwestern design. We keep his entire legacy alive, through weekly docent tours and special presentations.”
staying current
“Fechin followed all the art movements of his time,” Fisher said. “He would have wanted the museum to stay current, in service to artists and to the community, and this is what we do.”
Besides exhibiting individual artists in solo shows, the museum hosts the Distinguished Achievement Award
ENDURING INFLUENCE: MUSEUM SPOTLIGHT
1 - Nicolai Fechin, Alexandra on the Volga, 1912, oil on canvas, 31 3/4” x 26 3/8”
2 - Herbert “Buck” Dunton, Study: McMullin Guide, circa 1934, oil on canvas, 15” x 15”
3 - E. Martin Hennings, Cottonwoods, not dated, oil on canvas, 30” x 30”
V. susan Fisher was a practicing artist herself for many years and has a background in art history and literature. She studied at the Louvre Museum and worked for the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Georgia O’Keefe Museum before coming to the Taos Art Museum at Fechin House, which she has directed for two years.
March 14 to June 28Charles Stewart: Taos Paints Taos, “portraits” of the homes of Taos Society of Artists members
May 22 to october 4Living the West: Ralph Meyers and the Taos Society of Artist Paintings by the Taos artist, trader, and guide for Taos Society of Artists, Ralph Meyers (1885-1948).
Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House TSA Exhibits
3
2
41 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com41 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
42 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
PASE
O D
EL
PUEB
LO N
ORT
E
PASEO D
EL
PUEBLO
SUR
KIT CARSON RD.
TAOS PLAZA
LEDOUX ST.CAMINO DE LA PLACITA
N.
RANCHITOS RD.
246 A, Ledoux Street(next to the Harwood)
Taos, NM87571
512-417-0116www.lindarauchartist.com
118 Camino de la PlacitaSuite D
Taos, NM87571
512-922-1183www.lindarauchartist.com
TWO AT LEDOUX
Linda Rauch Gallery
Sundown Designs
43 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com43 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
44 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Claudette Barker Daybreak watercolor 7x5”
Gary roller Three Pueblo Dancers
pastel 9x11”
Cathy Carey Cloud Access Stairwayoil 20x24”
Mary doolittlePicuris Pueblo Church
oil 12x16”
119a kit Carson road | taos, new MexiCo | 575.741.0052theranchattaos@hotmail.com
The Ranch aT TaosupsCale ranCh art
44 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Tracy Turner sheppard
river of Gold, oil 18 x 18”
119a KiT carson road | Taos, new Mexico | 575.741.0052theranchattaos@hotmail.com
The Ranch aT Taosupscale ranch arT
45 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com45 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
46 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
J. CHRIS MORELs t u d i o
Las Trampas Church 30x40” oil on linen
Come visit me at my new studio just south of Taos on NM Hwy 518 (the “High Road”). Please call for directions and appointment.
575 737 1042 575 587 0359 5330 HWY 518 Vadito, NM 87579 (one mile north of Sipapu)
info@morelart.com www.morelart.com
47 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com47 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
sashameyerowitz.com 303. 817. 5529
FINE ART LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
Web and print design for businesses, individuals, and non-profits.
creative maneuver
creativemaneuver.com
DESIGN &COMMUNICATION
48 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
TATJANA KRIZMANIC STUDIONEW IN TAOS
418 Valverde St. Taos, NM • 720. 235. 2905 by appointment
tatjanastudio.com
“Taos Farm Market” 36” X 51” pastel on paper
Tatjana’s paintings reside in numerous private collectionsand museums. Her work is shown in galleries in the USA, Canada, Europe and Japan. She recently opened a studio in Taos, NM, and divides her time between the Croatian Adriatic and the Sangre de Cristos.
49 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com49 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
50 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Studio: (575) 770-7826Ammann Gallery
Taos, NM
Reinagalleryreina.com
51 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com51 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
52 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com52 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
53 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com53 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
54 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com54 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Aspen Gallery Taos115 E Plaza #4Taos NM 87571Studio: By Appt.575-751-1309maureentibbs@gmail.com
Maureen Tibbs
RG FINE ARTA Collector’s Gallery
QUALITY ARTWORK OLD and NEW
222 Ledoux St (Dunton Studio) Taos, New Mexico 87571
rgartconsulting.com 575-770-4405
Law
renc
e B.
Sal
ande
r, oi
l on
canv
as, 1
4 x
10 (2
001)
55 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com55 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
56 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com56 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
beyondtaos art calendarArt and Cultural Goings-Onin Taos and Northern New Mexico
On your computer, iPhone, or delivered by email: taosartcalendar.comFrom Webb Design Inc.
57 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com57 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
58 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Stephen Quiller “Rena & Nikita”
Birger Sandzen “Midsummer: Smoky River”
Wesley Rusnell “Ranchos Aerial”
MISSION GALLERY138 KIT CARSON ROAD TAOS NM
(575) 758-2861 | renarose.taos@gmail.com
Celebrating 53 years
58 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Celebrating 53 years
Jill McElmurry “Hwy 71” Mary Hoeksema “Wandering Companions”
Ron Hoeksema “Aspen Spirits”
MISSION GALLERY138 KIT CARSON ROAD TAOS NM
(575) 758-2861 | renarose.taos@gmail.com
59 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com59 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
60 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
finally, estate taxes have to be paid, and a way of getting money for that is selling art.”
Taos’ fuTure as an arT desTinaTion
Parsons is very active in his support of many local museums like the Harwood, the Millicent Rogers, and the Taos Art Museum at Fechin House, among others.
He feels quite optimistic about the future of the art scene in Taos.
“Good things are going on,” he said. “Now that we are celebrating the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Taos Society of Artists, I am hopeful that Taos will continue to live up to its name as a great art destination for both artists and art collectors.”
roberT Parsons Gallery 131 Bent St., Taos, NM 87571 (800) 613-5091 taosfounders.com
Parsons Gallery of The WesT 122 Kit Carson Road # D, Taos, NM 87571 (575) 737-9200 parsonsart.com
The original artists might have been attracted by the light and the deep blue sky of Taos, but they did more than reproduce its natural beauty in their paintings. They set the tone for Taos as a creative environment and made it a place where artists felt welcomed and respected.
“Artists have been coming to Taos for many years because, thanks to the early masters’ legacy, it was, and still is, acceptable to be an artist here,” said Robert Parsons, owner of Robert L. Parsons Gallery. “In other places, artists are not considered important: to state that you are an artist means as much as saying that you are out of work. If it weren’t for the art colony, Taos would be a different town today.”
The early masTers
The Robert L. Parsons gallery is located in the historic Ferdinand Maxwell house, on Bent Street. It has been in business for 23 years and its primary goal is to represent the artists of the Taos and Santa Fe colonies from the early to mid-20th century.
The gallery carries paintings by Oscar E. Berninghaus, E. Irving Couse, Nicolai Fechin, Victor Higgins, Barbara Latham, William Herbert Dunton, E.L. Blumenschein, and Joseph Henry Sharp, among others.
Nineteenth-century Navajo weavings, rugs and Pueblo pottery are displayed alongside paintings to recreate the early Southwest atmosphere. They also sell bultos by woodcarver Patrocinio Barela.
“La Loma Chapel” by Ernest Blumenschein is among the exhibited paintings. La Loma was an early center of Taos, built long before Taos Plaza.
“Blumenschein’s style is characterized by the use
of deep, rich colors as well as spatial geometry and rhythm,” Parsons said. He also comments on a distinguishing trait of the early masters.
“These painters studied and practiced for a long time before they considered themselves artists,” he said. “Today, artists don’t allow themselves enough training; they want to sell right away.”
The livinG masTers
Parsons has a second location that works as a showroom for living traditional painters. The Parsons Gallery of the West is located on Kit Carson Road, in a building that first housed the old Taos Bookstore and later an emblematic gallery, The Blue Door.
The role of GallerisTs
Gallery owners provide professionally designed places to show art. They interact with collectors and talk to them about art value and money—two subjects artists aren’t always comfortable with.
“We not only assess the qualities of artwork, but also know how to better display them and show their merit. We understand the art market, after evaluating hundreds of pieces without the emotional attachment that an artist can feel for his or her own work,” Parsons said.
Death, divorce and taxes are the three main ways in which antiques in general, and historic art among them, are dispersed and redistributed.
“That’s how we gallerists get art quite often,” Parsons said. “A passionate collector passes away and the next generation is not interested in that particular form of art. A couple separates and they divide and sell common belongings, divvying up houses, cars and antiques. And
—over a century of traditional representational artBy Teresa Dovalpage ■ Photo by Katharine Egli
RobeRt L. PaRsons
60 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
61 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com61 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
finally, estate taxes have to be paid, and a way of getting money for that is selling art.”
Taos’ fuTure as an arT desTinaTion
Parsons is very active in his support of many local museums like the Harwood, the Millicent Rogers, and the Taos Art Museum at Fechin House, among others.
He feels quite optimistic about the future of the art scene in Taos.
“Good things are going on,” he said. “Now that we are celebrating the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Taos Society of Artists, I am hopeful that Taos will continue to live up to its name as a great art destination for both artists and art collectors.”
roberT Parsons Gallery 131 Bent St., Taos, NM 87571 (800) 613-5091 taosfounders.com
Parsons Gallery of The WesT 122 Kit Carson Road # D, Taos, NM 87571 (575) 737-9200 parsonsart.com
of deep, rich colors as well as spatial geometry and rhythm,” Parsons said. He also comments on a distinguishing trait of the early masters.
“These painters studied and practiced for a long time before they considered themselves artists,” he said. “Today, artists don’t allow themselves enough training; they want to sell right away.”
The livinG masTers
Parsons has a second location that works as a showroom for living traditional painters. The Parsons Gallery of the West is located on Kit Carson Road, in a building that first housed the old Taos Bookstore and later an emblematic gallery, The Blue Door.
The role of GallerisTs
Gallery owners provide professionally designed places to show art. They interact with collectors and talk to them about art value and money—two subjects artists aren’t always comfortable with.
“We not only assess the qualities of artwork, but also know how to better display them and show their merit. We understand the art market, after evaluating hundreds of pieces without the emotional attachment that an artist can feel for his or her own work,” Parsons said.
Death, divorce and taxes are the three main ways in which antiques in general, and historic art among them, are dispersed and redistributed.
“That’s how we gallerists get art quite often,” Parsons said. “A passionate collector passes away and the next generation is not interested in that particular form of art. A couple separates and they divide and sell common belongings, divvying up houses, cars and antiques. And
—over a century of traditional representational art
GALLERY SPOTLIGHT
62 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
RemaRkable Design
exceptional cRaftsmanship
110 paseo del pueblo norte, taos, nm
575.758.4795twobirdsjewelers.com
twobirdsjewelers@gmail.com
Two Birds Jewelers
63 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com63 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
64 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Sage Fine ArtNine Great Taos Artists in One Great Gallery
Barbera Bartels Troy Brown Joe Ciaglia Bob CooleySal Giglio Elizabeth Jose Lynn McLain R. J. Pfammatter Pat Pollard
115C East Taos Plaza 575 758 9396 www.SageFineArt.com
Be sure to visit our memorial museum featuring items collected byOuray’s parents Ralph and Rowena over the last 100 years.
Ouray’s Fine Arts103 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte • Taos • ouraymeyers.com
575.737.9292 • 575.758.1132
“Autumn Stroll”
65 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com65 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
66 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
67 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com67 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
68 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
69 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com69 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
70 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com70 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Taos celebrates the 100-year anniversary of the Taos Society of ArtistsBy Yvonne Pesquera
Capturing the light
In the summer of 1915, six artists joined together to form the Taos Society of Artists: Oscar Edmund Berninghaus, Ernest Leonard Blumenschein, Eanger Irving Couse, William Herbert Dunton, Bert Geer Phillips, and Joseph Henry Sharp.
By deliberately combining their individual efforts for the common good, they were the founding fathers of the Taos arts colony we still enjoy to this day.
In those days, there were no art galleries. Unable to sell art locally, the Taos Society of Artists organized traveling exhibitions of their paintings to the major cities of Boston, Chicago, New York, and San Francisco.
Robert R. White edited the authoritative history of the group in, “The Taos Society of Artists” (September, 1998).
White notes that “from World War I until the mid-1920s, hardly an issue of El Palacio appeared that did not contain a reproduction of a painting by one of the Taos artists, mention of the artists’ activities, or the news of the sale of a major by work one of them.”
Some of the members were self-taught artists, whereas others were highly educated in the Art Student League of New York, Académie Julian in Paris, and other storied institutions.
Regardless of their backgrounds, they were now painters of the Southwest. They used bold brushstrokes of sumptuous paint, capturing the famous “Taos light” that glows at this high altitude.
They approached their paintings with thick representations of architectural elements and traditional dress, using rich, warm colors to convey a sense of peacefulness.
White writes that “the success of the Society was immediate and brought critical recognition for the artists and fame to the town in which they lived. In the following years, the Society increased in size with the addition of other artists who had been attracted by the growing reputation of the Taos Society of Artists and who had been inspired by a unique and beautiful country.”
Capturing the lightPAST AND PRESENT
Founding members of the Taos Society of Artists (left to right): B.G. Phillips, W.H. Dunton, J.H. Sharp, O.E. Berninghaus, E.I. Couse and E.L. Blumenschein, 1915. Photographer Unknown, Courtesy Palace of the Governors Photo Archives (NMHM/DCA), 40399Permission also granted from The Couse-Sharp Historic Site, couse-sharp.org.
“...bold brushstrokes of sumptuous paint, capturing the famous “Taos light”
71 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com71 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
72 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Sharp had been the first to visit Taos in 1893. But he returned to the New York and Paris.
A few years later, Blumenschein and Phillips were travelling through the Southwest on a painting expedition when a transportation incident proved to be the hand of fate.
According to White, the story goes like this:
“In 1898, Blumenschein and Phillips were traveling through the mountains about 20 miles north of Taos. Their wagon slid into a deep rut and the left rear wheel collapsed.
“Taking the broken wheel to Taos for repair, Blumenschein and Phillips arrived in Taos together. The delay caused by the broken wheel had given both of them time to look at the country and to decide that Taos was as far as they wanted to go.”
This history has since led to the creation of the proverbial “broken wheel” story. It is not uncommon to meet many people who were “passing through” Taos, but some event caused a delay (such as sickness or car
breakdown), giving them time to fall in love with Taos and move here permanently.
White notes that Blumenschein and Phillips’s decision to stay in Taos was based on the beautiful scenery, clear mountain air, and native inhabitants (referring to the Taos Pueblo Indians and Hispanic New Mexicans).
The duo talked about gathering artists in Taos “like the group of Barbizon painters and writers,” referring to the early 19th century French arts colony.
Phillips was the first “resident artist” of Taos, staying on permanently after Blumenschein returned to New York after three months. He willingly took on the role of founder of the Taos arts colony, encouraging others to come to Taos and tirelessly promoting the idea.
In 1902, Phillips was elected to the Society of Western artists, which at the time, only stretched as far west as St. Louis. When that group disbanded in 1914, it gave Phillips a model for organizing traveling exhibitions of Taos artists.
The Taos Society of Artists lasted from 1915-1927. White points to the fact that they had chartered, held meetings, and kept secretarial minutes which tells of their dreams and aspirations.
All told, there would eventually be 21 members of the Society in the active, associate, and honorary categories. But the core group of six gentlemen settled in Taos and lived here long after the Society was just a memory. Their work and their influence is still with us.
Blumenschein sitting beside the wagon with the broken wheel, 1898. Photo by Bert PhillipsPhotographer Bert Phillips, Courtesy Palace of the Governors Photo Archives (NMHM/DCA), 40377
EXHIBIT LISTING PG. 74
72 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
JD Challenger art, Silver bits Custom McCall saddlesand many more high quality items
Taos Tack and PeT suPPly710 Paseo del Pueblo Sur Taos • 575.737.9798 • taostack@taosnet.com
www.taostackandpetsupply.com
73 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com73 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
74 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
February 5 to June 1 Taos Center for the Arts Exhibits at The Historic Taos Inn · Ephemeral Moments Photographs by Carol Farmer
March 12 to april 27 Taos Center for the Arts Encore Gallery Of Men: Strength and Vulnerability Photographs by Zoe Zimmerman
March 14 to June 28Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House Charles Stewart: Taos Paints Taos, “portraits” of the homes of TSA1 members
March 27 to June 28Millicent Rogers Museum New Mexico is My Home (maps, historical objects, textiles, and more).
april 17 to July 17Taos Town Hall · Past, Present and Future: A Celebration of Taos Art Colony · Artists of Northern New Mexico respond to a quote by Ernest Blumenschein, a founder of TSA*
april 30 to July 6 Taos Center for the Arts Encore Gallery · Art of Non Violence · Youth project with Nonviolence Works Inc
May 22 to october 4Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House Living the West: Ralph Meyers and the TSA1 · Paintings by the Taos artist, trader, and guide for TSA1, Ralph Meyers (1885-1948).
May 16 to SepteMber 7The Harwood Museum of Art An Enduring Appeal: The TSA1 Rarely seen works of art gathered from private collections and the museum’s collection.
May 16 to SepteMber 7Blumenschein Home and MuseumCatching the Light, watercolors by TSA1 Members
May 23 to SepteMberHacienda de los MartinezThe Lighter Side of Taos: Historic Photographs from the Archives
July 1 to auGuSt 8Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House · Gala Auction Exhibition A national juried show of art inspired by Taos for Silent Auction.
July 1 to January 29Millicent Rogers Museum · Margaret Tafoya: Santa Clara Pueblo Potter
July 5 to SepteMber 30Couse-Sharp Historic SiteItaly to Taos: Rolshoven and the TSA1
July 9 to auGuSt 24Taos Center for the Arts Encore Gallery The Taos Now Exhibition · A juried exhibition celebrating the legacy of TSA1 by showing what is happening NOW in Taos
July 21 to noveMber 7Taos Town HallTaos and Beyond: Studio Tour Artists
auGuSt 14 to January 29Millicent Rogers MuseumStepping Out: Traditional Hispanic and Native American Clothing
auGuSt 27 to SepteMber 24Taos Center for the Arts Encore Gallery Beautiful Midden, project exhibition
auGuSt 22 to october 4San Francisco de Asis Church Parish Building · 200th Anniversary Exhibit of Historic Material
SepteMber 19 to January 24E.L. Blumenschein Home and Museum · Prints by Ernest Blumenschein and Helen BlumenscheinA Pressing Through Time Exhibit
SepteMber 19 to January 24The Harwood Museum of Art · Works from the Collection: Early PrintsA Pressing Through Time Exhibit
SepteMber 25 to october 4Taos Fall Arts Festival: Taos Selects and Taos Open
SepteMber 26 to January 3Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House · Jonathon Sobol Evolutions: 1984 – 2004, retrospective of a contemporary Taos artist
october 1 to January 18Taos Center for the Arts Encore GalleryContemporary Taos, A Juried ExhibitA Pressing Through Time Exhibit
october 15 to January 30Taos Art Museum at the Fechin House Historic Prints and Contemporary Prints: A Juried ExhibitTwo Pressing Through Time Exhibits
october 16 to February 19Millicent Rogers Museum · Native American and Hispanic PrintmakersA Pressing Through Time Exhibit
october 2 to 22The Couse-Sharp Historic SiteJoseph Henry Sharp PrintsA Pressing Through Time Exhibit
noveMber 13 to FebruaryTaos Town Hall · Under a Common Sky invitational exhibit honoring 100 Years of Taos Art
*as of 03/10/15
Find more art exhibits at taosartcalendar.com/exhibits
1Taos Society of Arts
2015/16 Taos arTExhibtions
75 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com75 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
The Hi s t o ri cJOHN DUNN HOUSE SHOPS
Locally Owned... Globally Unique 20 friendly shops line a beautiful pedestrian walkway linking Bent Street and the historic Taos Plaza. www.johndunnshops.com
ZEN ARTESGallery Gift & Home
zenartes.com
109 Paseo Del Pueblo NorteTaos
76 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
77 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com77 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Hand Artes GalleryDaylight to Sunset
Or by AppointmentP.O. Box 417 Truchas, NM 87578
Phone 505.689.2443Toll-Free 800.689.2441handartes@la-tierra.com
www.handartesgallery.com
“Cathedral Mountain”Artist- Norbert Voelkel
60x48 inches, mixed media including encaustic
OLD
MER
CA
NTI
LE, O
IL, 1
6 x
20
Sally Delap-John Gallery
87 County RoaD 75, tRuChaS nM 87578 SallyDelap-John.CoM ∙ 505 689-2636
Open Year-rOund
78 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
79 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
80 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
81 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
82 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com82 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
83 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com83 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com83 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
84 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
85 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com85 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com85 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Felt Happy
575.758.1241 . 218A Paseo del Pueblo Nortewww.moxieyarn.com
575.758.1256 . 216B Paseo del Pueblo Nortewww.taosmoxie.com
86 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
ARTIST INDEX Artists listed alphabetically by surname. Corresponding number represents either the gallery representing the artist or the artist’s personal advertisement.
Abblett Ginny 85 Abeyta Tony 64 Adair Mark 58, 59 Agius Jim 2 Ahlgren Karen 18 Alexander Lorraine 12, 13 Alvarado Mary 81 Anderson Carolyn 2 Anderson David 36 Andrews Eric 52 Anglada Carla 21 Apke Sunny 85 Archer Amber 12, 13 Archuleta Michael 35 Arnett Joe Anna 16 Asher James 16 Autumn Christine 21 Avery Lyn 16 Baciotti Cameron 6 Backus Susan 36 Bahe Alan 36 Baker Bill 16, 35 Barbee James 16 Barker Claudette 44, 45, 46,47 Barker Jim 21 Barker John 52 Barkley Barbara 6 Barlock Carolyn 2 Barnes Nadina 66 Barnett Rickie 34 Barsano Ron 39 Bartels Barbera 64 Batson Robert 16 Batterton Robert 16 Baucom Margaret 16 Baumann Steven 46 Beasley Nancy 21 Beck Marie 66 Beilfuss Kevin 2 Bell Larry 52 Bell Susan 9 Bella Sue Martin 36 Benoist Emily Ruffin 25 Benrimo Thomas W. 52, 58, 59 Bensusan Kitty 21 Berry John 16 Binette Dawn 85
Branch Beverly 4 Brett Dorothy 38 Beyond Taos / Art Calendar 56 Binger Bill 16 Birnbaum Sheela 6 Bisttram Emil 52, 58, 59 Black Elizabeth 9 Blakelock Ralph 54 Blanchard Pamella 6 Blaustein Sharyn 6 Bleifeld Stanley 2 Blumenschein Ernest 38 Bocchicchio Nate 16 Bolen Vicki 34 Boren Evelyne 15 Borts-Medlock Autumn 16 Brackett Don 39 Bradford Suzan 16 Brandt Les 9 Brendin Jemison 6 Brennan Kathleen 16 Brett Dorothy 52, 58, 59 Briner BJ 21 Brisson-Stahl Jacquelene 34 Britt Meredith 46, 47 Brokeshoulder Randy 36Brown Daniel 46, 47 Brown Sweet Marcie 3 Brown Troy 16, 64 Brusselback Harry 81 Buck Delbert 36 Buckman Anne Maria 6 Bundy Chris 62 Bunn Timothy 3 Burnham Julie 6 Burninghaus Oscar 38 Burns Burke 18 Bustos Hector 16 Cafazzo Robert 22 Calcagno Lawrence 52 Calhoun Magi 6 Cameron Sheena 12, 13 Candelaria Doug 9 Canencia Jose 35 Carey Cathy 44, 45, 46, 47 Carlson George 2 Carter Don 9
Carter Patric 16 Castagnet Alvaro 2 Catusco Louis 52 Challenger J.D. 73 Chavez Alonzo 34 Chavez Pedro 34 Cheng Paul 2 Chernoff Lisa 46, 47 Chinni Peter 81 Chrisman Michelle 21, 31 Ciaglia Joe 64 Clark Michael 16 Clarke Wendy 66 Cochran Jeff 16 Coffin Barry 6 Cohn Kerrielynn 34 Coleman Angie 17 Coley Kemper 21 Collins Charles 3 Concha Tracy 39 Cone Bill 2Cook Howard 52, 58, 59 Cookie Murraye 4 Cooley Bob 64 Cooper Ron 52 Coriz Rodney 36 Cornelius Ray-Mel 12, 13 Corning Alice 58, 59 Couse E.I. 38 Craft Sharon 9 Curry Ben 34 Curtin Laura 16 Curtis Edward S 58, 59 Daggett Ken 12, 13 Dahl-Bredine Chris 16 Daniels Lori 9 Dant Joyce 18 Dasburg Andrew 58, 59 Davies Ab 54 Davis Audrey 9 Davis Jonan 12, 13 Davis William C. 9 Dawson Doug 2 Day Stephen 21 De Feo Julie 12, 13 De Fremery Diane 19, 81 De La Noe Adeine 21
De Marinis Carol 81 De Nicola Issa 16 De Puy Isabel 52 De Puy John 52 De Souza Diane 34Dedee 6 Dekeuster Joanne 92 Dekeuster Kevin 92 Dewitt Tom 36 Disbrow Rene 16 Dixon Tom 52 Dixon Deby 16 Donahey Kathy 35 Doolittle Mary 44, 45, 46, 47 Dubont Karyn 21 Dukepoo Michael & Cassandra 36 Dunlap Jane 81 Dunlap Roy 81 Eagle Black 16 Ebben Steven 6 Eger Diane 81 Egri Ted 6, 16 Eilshemius Louis 54 Elliott Ken 2 Ellis Bob 52 Ellis R.C. 52 English Kim 2 Epp Phil 21 Evans Keith 65 Ewing Charles 12, 13 Ewing Louie 58, 59 Fahrney Marianne 34 Faires Jerry 36 Farr Cathy 6 Fechin Nicholai 38 Fick Jorge 58, 59 Fitch Robert 16 Forbes Anne 36 Foshee Clara 34 Foster Lenny 16, 34 Frates Dennis 16 Fremont Ellis 38 Friedman Arnold 54 Fryer Gillian 34 Fullbright John 16 Furlow Malcolm 35 Gaddis Jess 34
87 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com87 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com87 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Gagne Aimee 62 Ganthiers Louise 52 Garcia Lydia 36 Garcia Meredith 21, 68 Garel Leo 52 Garick Camille 75 Garoutte PJ 21 Garrett Dan 9 Garvey Joseph 62 Gentry Judy 21 Gersh Bill 52 Giglio Sal 64 Gillis Doug 12, 13 Glanz Daniel 2 Goebels Ron 32, 33Goldman Richard 16 Gonzales Damien 2 Gonzalez Olgateresa Baigas 16 Gootgeld Steven 12, 13 Gorman RC 35 Grant Coni 21 Graves Valerie 21 Green Lance 12, 13 Griffey Peggy 81 Gusterson Leigh 1, 67 Guthrie Arlo 3 Haddaway Ed 91 Hahn Dave 16 Hall Lane 2 Haller Helga 66 Halsey Jeanne 18, 34 Hamil Joyce 9 Hanrahan Mary 16 Hansen Peter 21 Hargis Nancy & Mark 9 Hartman Cami 34 Hauer Pam Lujan 12,13 Hawkes Mari 34, 66, 81 Hawley Richard 65 Hawley Tupper 21, 65 Hayes Arlene LaDell 12,13 Heartwell Lee 9 Heckman Andrea 16 Hegener John 6 Heil Greg 9 Heitzman Roger 9 Hendricks Kit 18 Hendrix Brenda 9 Hennings E. Martin 38
Hensley Michael 21 Herbert Dunton 38 Hess Alicia 21 Hettinger David 2Hewitt Rick 43 Hicks Kent 9 Hills Jeffrey 34 Hoeksema Mary 58,59 Hoeksema Ron 58,59 Hoffman Frank 38Hollingshead Mat 21 Horst Mark 9 Howard Cook 38 Howarth Katrina 12,13 Howell Frank 35 Huston Ann 16 Hutson John 16, 24 Immel Peggy 21 Immel Steve 21 Jacobs Dan 65 Jadu Design 36 James Jonna 14, 18 James Kino 16 Jaramillo Yavanne 18 Jasper-Vogel Lynda 81 Jay Elle 6 Jirby Inger 91 John Ann 52 Johnson Douglas 52 Johnson Olivia 66, 81 Jojola Tony 12,13 Jonson Raymond 58, 59 Jordan Jerry 39 Jose Elizabeth 4, 64 Joy Elizabeth 16 Keffer Jim 12, 13 Keheley Kristine 6 Kelsen Don 36 Kennedy Danielle 21 Kennedy David Michael 15 Kilgore Rosa Linda 46, 47 Kloss Gene 54 Kobayashi Milt 2 Kuhn Walt 54 Lage Joel 21 Lambridis Cathleen 34, 36 Lamkin JK 2 Lampl Dorothy 21 Landau Jeremy G. 16
Larimore Ron 69, 81 Larson Peggy 16 Latham Barbara 38 Lee Jivan 15, 16 Leffel David A. 2 Lenwell Josie 85 Lerner Sandra 52Leustig Issy 16 Leustig Jack 16 Liang Weizhen 2 Libin Claire 52 Liermann Geraldine 18, 34, 66 Lippincott Janet 52 Liu Huihan 2 Lockhart Tom 9 Lockwood Ward 52 Lohrding Ron 18 Long Connie And Tim 34 Lopez Kate 58,59 Lopez Ron 52 Loretto Glenda 36 Lovelace Suzanne 18 Luftig Dennis 81 Luftig Sylvia 81 Lujan Antonia 4, 36 Lujan Ira 36 Luther MC 21 Lyman Whitaker 6 Mabe Dean 16 Machaud Al 16 Macias Marissa 34 Mackrill Perru 18 Macpherson Kevin 16 Mahka Ron 58,59 Maho Garrett 36 Mallegni Jacqueline 12,13 Malott Lori 65 Mandelman Beatrice 52, 54 Mangatt Terry 36 Manno Lois 12,13 Mannschreck Rebecca 9 Manzo Tony 16 Marchese Ciancio Ron 6 Mares Shelbee 35 Markeson Bobbie 9 Marquez Christa 16, 21 Marsha Fawns 16 Martin America 52 Martinez Antonio 36
Martinez Joseph 6 Martinez Maria 36 Martinez Mathew 6Martinez Miguel 35 Marshall Jake 26 Matthews Mary 18 Mayer David 2 McAfee Ila 38 McCarthy Kay 65 McCullough Susan 21 McElmurry Jill 23,58,59 McGivern Peggy 9 McHorse Jacquelene 66 McKinzie Wayne 2 McLain Lynn 5,64 McNeil Ted 16 Mercuri Liz 16 Messick Scott 16, 18, 81 Meyer Edgar 21 Meyerowitz Sasha 48,49 Meyerowitz Tajana 48,49 Meyers Ouray 65 Mieshiel 6 Miller Charlotte 4 Miller G.L. 9 Miller Sandra 34 Milosevich Debra 21 Minks Louise 21 Mirabal Aaron 36Mongiell Ginger 16 Montgomery David 12,13 Moore Jan & Jo 2 Moore Jeri 9 Moore Marion 11 Morel Chris 47 Morris Iva 9 Moulthrop Matt 9 Mullican Lee 52 Murray John 6 Mynarcik Jill 21 Narrie Toole 4 Navratil Greg 15 Nemo 21 Nes Margaret 21 Nestoria Coriz 36 Neumann Jeffrey L. 16 Nevaquaya Tim 35 Newberry Sarah 34 Nez Teresa 36
88 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
89 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com89 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Nichols Richard Alan 39 Nichols Jean 85 Nicki Mark 6Nielsen Valerie 34 Norman Bruce 16 Northcutt Charlotte 16 O’Connor Paul 16 Okonkwo Nnamdi 9 Osborne John Phillip 2 Parsons Pamela 16 Pascarella Paul 16 Pasquarelli Susan 16 Paulk Joanne 18 Peina Claudia 36 Peirce Betsy 46, 47 Perkinsm Jeffrey 58, 59 Perkinson Tom 2 Pfammatter R.J. 64 Phillips Bert 38 Phillips John David 2 Pintki 6 Piper Lydia 9 Pollard Pat 64 Pollis Kimberly 66 Porter Dean 58, 59 Potter Joan 2 Price Cheryl 81 Price Gwen 81 Price Janet 81 Price Brad 65 Price Ken 16 Prince Victoria Sojourn 16 Pulos Cris 21 Quiller Stephen 58, 59 Quilligan Laura 34, 81 Quinn Jan 46, 47 Rane Bill 16, 35 Rane Judith 66 Rauch Linda 43 Ray Lovato 36 Ray Robert 52 Reed Doel 58, 59 Reina 16, 50 Renwick Robert 21 Reto Messmer 6 Reyna Tony 56 Reynolds Robert 4 Rial Michelle 12, 13 Ribak Louis 52, 54 Richel Shaun 52
Rickert Paul 2 Riedel David 2 Rink Madison J 21 Robertshaw Gloria 16 Rubio Domingo 6 Robles Julian 39 Robles-Shaw Catherine 36 Rocche Domingo 35 Rodriguez Anita 16, 81 Rogers Tom 52 Roller Gary 46, 47 Rusnell Elizabeth 34, 58, 59 Rusnell Wesley 58, 59 Russell Gail 66 Russell Sally 65 Sahmie Rachel 36 Salin Wendy 9 Salsbury Abby 34 Sander Sherry 2 Sandifer Rosie 2 Sandoval Ed 16 Sarinova Summer 12, 13 Schaller Thomas W. 2 Schiff Karen 52 Schlam Carolyn 34 Schneider William A. 2 Scholder Fritz 52 Schoonover Beverly 58, 59 Scullu Jenna 18 Segura Juanjo 16 Seibert Kim 36 Sharp Joseph 38 Sheppard Tracy Turner 44,45,46,47 Shimonek Mick 21 Shinovich Michael 4 Shorty Eddy 58, 59 Shroyer Charlotte 4, 57 Sice Troy 36 Siebert Kim 34 Sievers Holly 22 Sihvonen Ab 52 Silverman Burton 2 Smith Cletus 9 Smith Geraint 16, 90 Smith Kathleen 19, 21 Sobol Jonathan 21 Solomon Lindsy 16 Soule Siri 34 Sparks Joseph 35 Spei Martin 52
Spellman Steven 12,13 Spencer Keith 9 Spencer Ken 2 Stan Cobb 4 Stapper Cindy 12, 13 Stratton Mary 21,46, 47 Stribling Judy Ann 65 Stroh Earl 52, 58, 59 Stroh-Miller Judith 21 Strong Charles 52 Strong Mark 52 Suazo John 36 Sullins David 6, 16 Sutton Elaine 34 Swiatek Vick 9 Tacang Brian 34 Takayama Michio 35, 52 Talbot Josh 6 Taos Founders 58, 59 Taos Moderns 58, 59 Teeguarden Adrienne 91 Teitelbaum Adam 6 Teitelbaum Tracy 6 Thomas Katie 85 Thompson Cami 16 Thompson Kay 12, 13 Thompson-Smith Shirley 2 Tibbs Maureen 18, 54, 81 Tobey Rebecca 2 Tollardo Frank 36 Traynor Pattie 21 Tredwin Kelley 34 Treiber Kim 46, 47 Trenchard Stephanie 12, 13 Two Hawks Brian 91 Ubechel Shari 24 Valencia Adrian 6 Valencia Gloria 46, 47 Van Nattar Gene 3 Vaughan V 9 Veda Wyatt 26 Vega Raphael 18 Velarde Shelden Nunez 36 Victor Gabriel 36 Victor Higgins 38 Vielehr Bill 52 Vigil Dan 21 Vigil Michael 20 Vigil Veloy 35 Vinella Ray 21
Vito Teresa 21 Wagner Rory 21 Walbye George 65 Waldis Venja 58, 59 Waldrum Harold 52 Wallis Scott 21 Walt Gonske 39 Walter Ufer 38 Ward Don 39 Warner Mary Ann 9 Wasowski Sally 16 Waszak Krysteen 66, 81 Webb Janet 56 Weddle Jen 35 Wesley Ron 36 Wheeler Thom 7, 12, 13 Wheelock Seymour 9 White Charles 6 White Chris 34 White Minna 34 White Randy Lee 35 Wilbanks Mary 6 Wild Annie 34 Wilde Teruko 2 William Hook 39 Williams Cheryl 6 Williams Roger 12, 13 Wilms Jurgen 2 Winnubst Hubertus 6 Wolf Pattie 21 Wood Mary Dolph 39 Woodall Katie 6 Woods Jack 65 Worman Dinah 9 Wu Zhaoming 2 Wyatt Kenneth 26 Wyatt Marshall Jill 26 Wyndham Ann 81 Wyndham H. Ann 19 Yates Marilyn 2 Yazzie Angie 36 Yeager Doug 21 Youn Seung 65 Youngbuck Jason 34Yungotsuna Elmer 36 Zaring Barbara 2
89 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
90 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
91 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com91 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com91 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
ENCHANTED CIRCLE
POTTERYWOOD-FIRED
POTTERY & SCULPTURE
26871 EAST U.S. HWY 64
LOCATED IN TAOS CANYON between Taos and Angel Fireand mile markers 268 & 269
dekeusterclay@gmail.com575-737-9640
http://enchantedcirclepottery.com
92 • www.galleryguideoftaos.com
Recommended