Site Meter Albuquerque, NM » News

News

A bit of information: Higher education costs ala Jeff Bingaman

Monday, August 25th, 2008

This is New Mexico, and I really appreciate these newsletters which gives us an idea of a few important issues that the Senate are working hard on. Give a hand to communication!

Making College More Affordable

Just one year after Congress passed the largest increase in student aid in more than 50 years, I am pleased to report we have enacted another bill that helps make college more affordable and accessible to New Mexicans.

At the end of July, the Senate passed The Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008, which makes it much easier for New Mexico students to navigate the financial aid process and qualify for financial assistance. It also increases the maximum Pell Grant award and provides those grants year round so students can take courses in the summer.

The legislation requires greater transparency in the costs of attending college, helps reduce the costs of college textbooks and holds colleges accountable for their rising costs. It also reforms the student loan system and provides loan forgiveness, scholarships, and fellowships, and removes barriers for students with disabilities to qualify for financial aid.

I am particularly proud of the increases in funding for minority serving institutions included in this legislation. As a member of the Senate Health, Education Labor and Pensions Committee that finalized the bill, I urged the inclusion of increased funding levels for Hispanic Serving Institutions to $175 million. This funding is used to support two-and four-year Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs); most New Mexico colleges will qualify for such funds.

Also at my urging the bill creates a long-overdue program for graduate students enrolled at HSIs and funds it at $69 million over six years. The graduate program will provide support for fellowships and other services for graduate students. It will also provide funding to improve facilities and for faculty development, as well as for technology and distance education.

In addition to providing aid to HSIs, I was also able to include a provision that authorizes $25 million for Native American Serving Institutions – an initiative that provides funding to nontribal colleges with a student population that is at least 10 percent Native American. Grants of at least $200,000 would support curriculum development and academic instruction, faculty development, the purchase of books and other educational materials, and academic tutoring and counseling. Currently, eligible schools in New Mexico include San Juan College, University of New Mexico-Gallup, and New Mexico State University-Grants.

The Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 also helps students prepare for and succeed in college by strengthening the TRIO and GEAR UP programs and requiring students enrolled in these initiatives to take more rigorous school coursework such as Advanced Placement classes.

This new bill, which I expect will soon be signed into law, comes just one year after The College Cost Reduction Act of 2007 was enacted. That measure increased student aid by more than $20 billion over the next 5 years, of which New Mexico will receive $200 million.

Making sure that our nation remains competitive and continues to be an economic leader in the world is very important. We can retain this position by making sure students have the best and highest levels of education. New Mexico has a tremendous talent pool that, if given the tools, will succeed in becoming the nation’s best doctors, teachers, agriculture specialists, technical specialists, and businessmen and women. This bill goes a long way in helping us achieve that goal.

Housing Crisis

Our flagging economy is affecting millions of American families, many of whom are trying to avoid home foreclosure. To help those families, Congress approved the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 – a measure aimed at stabilizing the housing market and providing relief to hundreds of thousands of Americans who are struggling to keep their homes.

The bill provides assistance for communities devastated by foreclosures, counseling for families in need and also contains programs that assist returning soldiers to avoid foreclosure. It also provides tax benefits for homeowners, homebuyers, and homebuilders aimed at helping the housing market recover. It also modernizes the Federal Housing Administration, implements greater oversight and creates a new program that would help at least 400,000 families save their homes from foreclosure.

One of the most important parts of the bill is the affordable housing trust fund it creates to address the imbalance between the amount of extremely low-income households in our country and the number of affordable rental housing units available to them. The National Housing Trust Fund doesn’t cost the taxpayers because it does not require annual funding from Congress. Instead, it is funded by tapping a portion of the profits that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac make on their mortgage loans, which are estimated to yield at least $300 million a year and perhaps as much as $700 million.

This long-overdue legislation will provide some relief to struggling Americans.

Consumer Protection

As a result of an alarming number of recalls of imported products found to be dangerous to children, Congress has approved and the President has signed consumer protection legislation.

High levels of lead and other poisonous chemicals were found in toys and other imported goods entering the United States. Reports of injuries, and in rare cases even deaths, have eroded consumer confidence in the safety of products coming from overseas.

The Consumer Safety Commission Reform Act takes aim at transforming the commission into a much more effective watchdog. The bill also increases investment so that more safety inspection personnel can be hired and the lab facilities can also be updated. It also protects children from unsafe products by requiring testing and certification of children’s products, and by banning the use of lead in children’s toys. The bill also mandates tracking labels for children’s goods that will enable the purchaser to ascertain the manufacturer, production time period, and other identifying characteristics to help easily identify recalled products.

Express yourself. Leave a comment.

The Santa Fe Complex has more new events…check this out…

Friday, August 22nd, 2008


Here’s the latest news…Mary

Dialogue with the Machine

Santa Fe Complex · 632 Agua Fria · Parking via Romero St.

For more information, contact Don Begley at 505/216.7562 or visit sfcomplex.org

——————————————————————————–

Next Wednesday, August, 27, pioneering digital artist Woody Vasulka opens a two-part conversation at Santa Fe Complex on the changing relationship between art and technology over his four-decade career.

Each of those decades represents a distinct phase in the evolution of that relationship, says Vasulka. “It has been a dialogue with the machine that began in the political environment of the 60s with a time of continual interaction within an art community,” he explains. He explains, “We were looking for images that were not derived from the world in this earlier work. It was a generation of continual interaction between technology and art where we were learning, demonstrating, and building in a community of with a network of interests.”

That almost communal time of social and artisitc experimentation faded as computer-generated graphics overwhelmed art with hyhperrealistic images and an emphasis on the technical rather than the artistic elements of creativity.

As “the idea of realism slowly came to dominate art in the digital era,” Woody says, “the image itself took the dominant function and the contextual information lost its importance.” As a result, art became dominated by computer needs like resolution and color spaces rather than the artist’s vision.

The irrepressible artist believes the hyperrealistic phase is fading. He offers his “Dialogue with the Machine,” which is how Vasulka refers to his coming talks at Santa Fe Complex, as a return to a more collaborative and experimental community.

In fact, he says that technology will expand the artist’s horizons. Asking “is it the tool that limits you?,” Vasulka calls the computer a variation machine that will let artists leap beyond historic constraints. In the 70s, he says, artists asked, “What happens between the frames?” and “Why 24 frames per second and not 1000?” Today, with the variation machine, they can begin to answer those questions and more.

Thw process has begun, according to Woody. Santa Fe artists like Corey Metcalf and David Stout, he says, are heirs to the Vasulka traditions. They show that modern digital processes, once again, allow a reinterpretation of sound and sight.

——————————————————————————–

Woody pioneered video art in the late 1960s. Born in Brno, now in the Czech Republic, he trained as an engineer before studying television and film production at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. He met his wife, Steina Vasulka, in the early 1960s and moved to New York City in 1965, where he worked as a multiscreen film editor, experimenting with electronic sounds and stroboscopic lights while pioneering the showing of video art at the Whitney Museum. Woody collaborated with Don MacArthur and Jeffrey Schier in 1976 to build a computer controlled personal imaging facility called The Digital Image Articulator. The Vasulkas have been based in Santa Fe since 1980. More information is available at http://vasulka.org/index.html

Don Begley
Managing Director
Santa Fe Complex
624 Agua Fria St
Santa Fe, NM 87501

Come Visit Us

Santa Fe Complex is located next to the Railyard Art District and within walking distance of the hotels, restaurants and shops at the plaza downtown. We’re housed in two facilities, the conference area at 624 Agua Fria and the project space at 632 Agua Fria.

The conference area contains meeting rooms and facilities for short-term use associated with on-going complex projects. The project space houses the great room, where we hold events and offer working facilities for laptop users, coffee lounge and work carrels.

While there is parking at 624 Agua Fria, the Romero Street parking lot is more conveniently located for the 632 facility. Romero St. is an old-style Santa Fe ox-cart road just east of the 624 driveway. Follow it until it opens up to two lanes and turn hard right into the parking lot for 632.

Here’s a map to our location, a representative shot showing the Railyard District and a sketchup drawing of the facility at 632. For more information, call 505/216.7562 or click here.

Forward email

Short Notice: Santa Fe updates on Obama News (Unofficial)

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Old music to set the mood. From an old DNC

Small town USA. According to Hillary Clinton, it is here, in every small town is where the political action occurs that can change the votes for America. Our personal involvement to get people out to vote, to encourage people to join our causes can make big changes. In New Mexico a few hundred votes made the difference in the last Presidental race.

Classic: Born In the USA….

Have you joined your neighborhood group yet? be bold. Make a difference, blog even, join the wave of Americans who will use the next 70 days to elect our President. (Yes I want you to work for the OBAMA campaign), however everyone’s involvement working for their candidate is very important. We have to keep working for the CHANGES that we need to make to IMPROVE this country. Join your neighborhood group today!

Not convinved? Don’t know how to help out? Go on over to the Obama for America Headquarters on 720 St Michael’s Dr. They have amazing hours so just go.
LIST of things you can do:
1) Phone Banks
2) Bring food for the staff
3) Join a neighborhood group
4) Have a garage sale and donate $$$, or buy more food.
5) Have a bake a cookie party. Oops, I am using creative license again. Like pay for someone’s gas on canvassing days.
6)Volunteer
7) Data Entry
8) Bring 5 friends to help you.
If some of these ideas don’t seem exciting enough, then make up your own too. BOTTOM LINE: VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED NOW!!!! If we all chip in the work will be easier.

Also you don’t have to be active forever. Work at times when you can. Perhaps participate 3-4 times. They need your help. Create a tag team with your friends. Find 10 friends who will pledge to work 4X’s. Do your bit, and then call the next volunteer. REpeat until everyone has kept their committment.

Come Volunteer!

Daniel Cobb is ready to open your eyes, and maybe ears again. Some public service announcements

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Hello,

I am part of a Santa Fe non-profit and am doing a series of presentations
during the month of August. I am hoping that you will use the following as
public service announcements:

************************************************

Dr. Daniel Cobb DOM will discuss how to reverse
heart disease with dietary changes and nutritional supplements
Monday September 1st from 6:30 to 8:00 PM at:

Integrative Holistic Healing Center
826 Camino De Monte Rey
Suite B2
Santa Fe, NM 87505 This presentation is free and is open to the public.
For more information call: 424-9527

************************************************

Dr. Daniel Cobb DOM will discuss how to reverse
osteoporosis with dietary changes and nutritional supplements.
The problems associated with the uses of biophosphonates
(such as Fosomax) will also be discussed.
Monday September 8th from 6:30 to 8:00 PM at:

Integrative Holistic Healing Center
826 Camino De Monte Rey
Suite B2
Santa Fe, NM 87505 This presentation is free and is open to the public.
For more information call: 424-9527

************************************************

Dr. Daniel Cobb DOM will show a DVD titled: Simply Raw: Reversing Diabetes in 30 Days This DVD shows a group of diabetics who all achieved a 100%
reversal of their diabetes (drug and symptom-free) in one month.
Monday September 15th from 6:30 to 8:00 PM at:

Integrative Holistic Healing Center
826 Camino De Monte Rey
Suite B2
Santa Fe, NM 87505 This presentation is free and is open to the public.
For more information call: 424-9527

************************************************

Dr. Daniel Cobb DOM will discuss CODEX Alimentarius
and how this threatens our ability to use nutritional
supplements without a prescription.
Monday September 22nd from 6:30 to 8:00 PM

Integrative Holistic Healing Center
826 Camino De Monte Rey
Suite B2
Santa Fe, NM 87505 This presentation is free and is open to the public.
For more information call: 424-9527

************************************************

Dr. Daniel Cobb DOM will discuss how to prevent
cancer with dietary changes, nutritional supplements, and
environmental controls.
Monday September 29th from 6:30 to 8:00 PM at:

Integrative Holistic Healing Center
826 Camino De Monte Rey
Suite B2
Santa Fe, NM 87505 This presentation is free and is open to the public.
For more information call: 424-9527

************************************************

Thank You,

Daniel Cobb DOM

So you think you’ve heard everything about these issues before. Think again. Show up to his lectures, ask questions, and bring friends. Tell him that Mary sent you. Most are amazed at the relatively easy changes in your diet and perspective that can dramatically change your life. Can’t show up? Call Daniel Cobb and ask for a consultation or a copy of his lecture notes.

Un related music video as a bonus:

Some like it Political: Hillary Clinton will be back in town!

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Hot off the presses. Sunday at 2 PM in Espanola at the Northern NM College doors will open a free event with Hillary Clinton to campaign for Obama! If you want to volunteer for the event you will be guaranteed to get in. Come one hour earlier. Volunteers will sign people in and act as ushers.

I’d love to go as I have never been able to make a Hillary event. Ah, but my car can’t get there from here, it’s a bit old and needs more work. Most of my friends aren’t political. However if you can go do! It’ll be fun and a great way to network. Plus all the politicos from Espanola might like to teach us a thing or two.

I am going to keep this one short. Bring food, have a picnic. There also are terrific restaurants to enjoy afterwards. Or stop at Gabriel’s on the way back. Buffalo Thunder has opened and is a big entertainment center, including a very big casino, or was that a very big bar?

So you could make a day of travel, politics, and fund merge along the highway to Espanola.

Obama himself is suppose to be arriving in NM too, perhaaps for a stop over with Bill Richardson, perhaps elsewhere…the papers did not know. Now if the man reaapears in Santa Fe, this time I may grab my cane and see if I actually could get into see him. Last ssspring it was a madhouse, and while I was at work, I didn’t really miss the backed up traffic literally for miles.

Gossip: Could my dream come true, could Hillary and Obama become running mates? Could Richardson be a VeeP? Either would make me VERY happy. All three converging here or abouts before the convention is not accidental. Keep your ears open. A few thousand Hillary fans wouldn’t hurt. Be there!

How about some classical music to act as a lead in to these mysteries, and to promo a previous blog. Please visit the last 5 or so blogs to get many perspectives of NM NOW! Thanks. Mary MacIntyre

Navajo Weaving Demonstration in Old Town..plus Albuquerque sings..

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Here’s another newsletter! Just another important update for fun and education in the big city. Plus make sure to review the details of the SALSA Festival. I have wriiten several other blogs before this all about stuff to do in NM this weekend. Scroll. And I thought I was going to have time to watch a movie tonight! Ha! Aalso check out some of the free music events around NM during the week. Should keep you dancing often!

Navajo Weaving Demonstration in Old Town
Evelyn Lopez, Navajo weaver, will create a textile on a traditional vertical loom on Saturday. This is part of a special Salsa Artscrawl presented as part of the City’s 4th Annual Salsa Fiesta.
Demonstration Saturday, August 16, noon- 4pm
Shiprock Trading Company
413 Romero St. NW in Old Town
(505) 242-4080
shiprocktrading .com

Silk Painters Exhibition at the Balloon Museum
Over 20 silk banners featuring balloon themes will hang in the soaring spaces of the Albuquerque International Balloon Museum through the end of the Balloon Fiesta on October 12. Entitled The Art of Ballooning-Patterns in the Sky, the exquisite works of art in this juried exhibition have been donated by the artists. Funds raised in a silent auction will be divided between the Museum Foundation and Silk Painters International in support of their educational programs. Admission is free on Sundays from 9-1 and all day on the first Friday of each month.
Ongoing exhibition through October 12, Tue-Sun 9- 5
Albuquerque International Balloon Museum
9201 Balloon Museum Drive NE (north of Alameda)

Harwood Art Center Call for Artists
The Harwood’s outdoor installations seek artists to create site-specific, temporary, outdoor installation on site at the Center. All ideas to be considered must: 1. Entice and engage the community and passersby; 2. Benefit from community involvement; and 3. Be impervious to, or happily engage, destructive forces.
harwoodartcenter.org/ss/land-art-design

Performing Arts
Theater, Dance, Lectures, Poetry and more …

A Festival of Native American Theater and Film
N4th Theater presents three plays, selected from among 18 submitted by Native American playwrights in the U.S. and Canada for staged readings. One will be selected for a full production during the 2009 Two Worlds Festival. Friday at 8pm: Little Big Horn, a two-act comedy by Alan Kilpatrick, begins in 1876 at the Battle of the Little Big Horn and moves to an American embassy in the present-day Middle East to tell the story of Marine Cpl. Norman Hayes, born Sioux but adopted and raised by a Jewish couple. Saturday at 4pm: Fancy Dancer, a dark comedy by Canadian playwright Dawn Dumont, taps into Native trickster stories and the public’s obsession with television, but it also tackles a terrifying reality - the disappearance of more than 500 Native women in Canada during the last 15 years. Saturday at 8pm: Asdzani Shash-The Woman Who Turned Into a Bear, is a contemporary retelling of a Navajo legend by Albuquerque native Rhiana Yazzie, set in a convalescent home near the Navajo reservation and in the world of storytelling and myth. ONLY $5 per play, $12 for all three. Next weekend two short films by Native American filmmakers will be screened.
Performances Friday and Saturday, August 15- 16
N4th Theater
4904 4th St. NW
505-344-4542
vsartsnm.org

Rabbit Hole opens at Adobe Theater
Becca and Howie Corbett have everything a family could want until a life shattering accident turns their world upside down and leaves the couple to drift apart. This play charts their bittersweet search for comfort in the darkest places and a a path that will lead them back into the light of day. Winner of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize, David Lindsay-Abaire has crafted a drama that is intensively emotional and searingly honest. Runs through September 7 with performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8, Sundays at 2.
Performance Friday, August 15, 8pm
Adobe Theater
9813 4th St. NW
(505) 898-9222
adobetheater.co m A Light in My Soul (Una Luz en Mi Alma)
Working Classroom and the NHCC present the world premiere of a new drama about an escised chapter of NM history. It was developed in collaboration with the New York-based Tectonic Theater Project, playwright Leigh Fondakowski and director Krista DeNio. The play is a dramatic interpretation of the history and culture of New Mexico’s conversos or crypto-Jews. After its Albuquerque premiere, the play will move to Espanola August 22-23 and Las Vegas August 29.
Performances Fri-Sat Aug 15-16, 8pm, Sun. Aug. 17 2pm
National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 Fourth Street SW
(505) 246-2261
nhccnm.org

Music
musical performances, workshops and festivals

4th Annual Old Town Salsa Fiesta Saturday
Beginning at 2pm until 9pm there will be non-stop entertainment in the Gazebo with music at many of the galleries around Old Town as well. There will be a break from 5-6 when historic San Felipe de Neri Church will celebrate mass. Taste test salsa entries and delicious wines at six locations, enjoy live music and dance throughout Old Town and down Mountain Road. Tickets for the Salsa competition tasting and wine tasting are $3 each or both for $5. Show a receipt for that day from an Old Town Merchant for $25 or more, and the tickets are FREE. A live performance recreating the history of New Mexico will be presented at the Albuquerque Museum’s Amphitheater FREE of charge from 5-7pm and there will be a concert in Tiguex Park by the NM Symphony Orchestra. In addition, there will be children’s activities at Plaza Don Luis that include face painting, an arts workshop and entertainment by children’s groups. Check out the schedule and the Rapid Ride schedules at the web site.
abqsalsafiesta.o rg or call 311

The Church of Beethoven
A group of musicians from the NM Symphony Orchestra present classical music with Felix Wurman on cello, David Felbert on violin, James Shields on clarinet and Chrissy Saari on flute.
Performance Saturday, August 16, 10:30pm
The Filling Station
1024 Fourth St. SW
(505) 890-6593
fillingstationab q.com

Santa Fe Treasure Chris Calloway passes
Singer Chris Calloway lost a decade-long battle with cancer on August 7. Chris Calloway was the daughter of the famous Cotton Club bandleader and international icon Cab Calloway and was heir to an American musical legacy. She began her career on the Ed Sullivan show with an introduction to the world by her Dad, 30 years ago. For 20 years Chris performed with her father and his Hi De Ho Orchestra. Together as a father/daughter team, they toured the U.S., including Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center and Kennedy Center in New York; Europe, South America, Japan and Australia. Her father passed away in 1995.

New Mexico Southwest Sounds wins a Telly Award
The NM Music Commission’s TV show New Mexico Southwest Sounds has won a Telly for overall content and production, taking away the highest honor - a Silver Telly. The 30-minute productions feature performances and interviews with New Mexico musicians along with scenic video provided by the NM Tourism Department. Videos were shot at the National Hispanic Cultural Center. The shows have aired on ABC affiliate KOAT-TV and will continue airing on local affiliates. The videos can also be seen on the Music Commission website’s You Tube link.
newmexicomu sic.org

Globalquerque is coming - Sept. 19-20
17 artists from 5 continents on 3 stages plus a FREE family fun day on Saturday, Sept. 20, workshops, dance classes, art, instrument making, and The Global Village of Craft, Culture and Cuisine. Tickets now on sale at the NHCC box office and Ticketmaster.
(505) 232-9868
globalquerque.c om

Film Arts
art films, films about art, and news from the Film Industry

Indigenous Filmmakers of the Americas
Women in Film International is accepting short film submissions for its upcoming event, A Night to Celebrate: Short Films by Indigenous People of the Americas, to be held at Barnsdall Gallery Theater in Los Angeles on Saturday, October 25th. For more information and an application please email NativeShortLA@yahoo.com or call 908-310-7141 attention Tessa Bell.
Deadline September 12,2008

The Art in Film Series will present Agnes Martin: With My Back to the World in September. This groundbreaking documentary on internationally renowned painter, was shot over a period of four years from 1998 through 2002, Martin’s 90th year. Interviews are intercut with shots of her at work in her studio in Taos and with images of her work from over five decades. It is a venue for Martin to speak about her work, her methods, her life as an artist, and her views about the creative process. She also discusses her film, Gabriel, and reads from her poetry and lectures. In keeping with Martin’s chosen life of solitude, she alone appears in the documentary.
Screening Sat-Sun, Sept. 6-7, 2pm
The Guild Cinema
3405 Central NE
(505) 255-1848
guildcinema.com

Workshops, calls for entry, workshops and more opportunities
A complete listing of auditions and other calls as well as every type of arts event can be referenced at the Arts Alliance website where you can also subscribe to their all new Something to Do Online Newsletter.
.abqwwwarts.org www.abqarts.org

Read on…

The festival ain’t over yet: look at this concert!!!

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Special Concert!
An Evening of Poetry and Music
Featuring Alan Arkin, Jonathan Richards, and guitarist Bruce Dunlap

Words and music unite when actors Alan Arkin, Jonathan Richards and guitarist Bruce Dunlap take the stage. The one-night only event features an eclectic selection of favorite poems that range from works by W.B. Yeats, Carl Sandburg and Elizabeth Bishop to Rumi, Rilke and Dorothy Parker

So who knows what will happen next with this crew? Could be quite astonishing. Previous video, Bruce Dunlap on bass.
Friday, August 15
6 p.m. at St. Francis Auditorium
(West Palace & Lincoln Avenue)

All Seating Levels $25, Full-time students $10

Got clouds, could rain, but that doesn’t matter when SF Complex…

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008
Dance and....

Dance and....

Look familar, well this is just a reminder of tonight’s gala event. Drop everything you are doing and make a plan to get over there ….the Santa Fe Complex on Agua Fria right now! Well at opening time.

Vasulka-Missoula Oblongata Doubleheader Pushes the Envelope
at Santa Fe Complex

Santa Fe Complex · 632 Agua Fria · Parking via Romero St.
For more information, contact Don Begley at 505/216.7562 or visit sfcomplex.org

——————————————————————————–

Greetings!
Samantha Giron started the week with a bang and a full house on Monday night. Now, the baton passes to Woody Vasulka and Missoula Oblongata on Wednesday night, August 13.

The evening begins with a retrospective display of work from a generation of “continual interaction within an art community” that was lost as “the idea of realism slowly came to dominate art in the digital era,” in the words of digital pioneer Woody Vasulka. The irrepressible artist believes the hyperrealistic phase is fading. He offers this exhibit as a bridge between the earlier period it represents and modern trends. Woody’s show begins at 5:00 pm. The Vasulka website, home to the work of Woody and wife Steina, is here.

Missoula-Oblongata, a three-person community that lists the Marx Brothers and Maurice Sendak among their influences, certainly can’t be called hyperrealistic. Instead, long-time friends Donna Sellinger, Madeline ffitch and Sarah Lowry pride themselves on their audacious, roll-your-own approach to writing, staging and acting. They’ll start their program at 8:00 pm. More info on Missoula-Oblongata is here.

Don’t miss this one-of-a-kind evening starting at 5:00 at Santa Fe Complex Wednesday night. Visit our website for more info.

-don

——————————————————————————–

Santa Fe Complex is a nonprofit, community studio creating connections in science, technology and art. Our studio stands on three core activities:

Collaboration to address real-world problems, encourage cooperation and create economic opportunities in applied complexity, urban planning and simulation, and computational arts.

Communication with local, national and international communities about our work in Santa Fe and elsewhere. Whether it’s a live feed or published reports, we broadcast our work - and the role Santa Fe plays in this important effort - to all interested parties.

Education through the principle of learning-by-doing in active projects that lets students be part of, and contribute to, their project team. We offer formal classes, scientific and technology lectures, and internships.

Quick Links
our blog
events calendar

Support the Complex

Support Santa Fe Complex
Click here for info

Blogsville: For almost everything you can imagine…. 451Press.com

Santa Fe Brewing Co. Music Music and some beer!

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

TUESDAY AUGUST 12 7:30 PM $10
T H E L A W S

The Laws are husband-and-wife award-winning singer/songwriters from Ontario, Canada. They have recently recorded their 5th CD of original music and have been touring non-stop throughout Canada, the U.S. and Australia since 2000. Their Americana style songs are an acoustic mix of roots country, bluegrass, folk and pop, delivered with The Laws trademark “tight-as-a-glove” harmony singing. John and Michele Law each sing lead and harmony vocals often switching within songs. John is an expert picker on guitar and mandolin and Michele is a solid bass and acoustic guitar rhythm player.

“ …. begins with this languid, swaying, romantic melody that recalls The Everly Brothers in their prime. Yes, the harmonies really are that good. The mandolin and accordion solos are utterly lovely. Michele adds a third vocal part on “Go Easy” and swings lightly in “Put Some Love In It.” John dazzles with his mandolin instrumental “Texacadia.” They both hypnotize you on “Whiskey and Gasoline” and delight you with finger-popping “Getting Over You.” Heartily recommended.”
Robert Oermann, Music Row Magazine

“John and Michele Law’s songs seem to be the lost essence of country music which has now become so commercial and formulaic sounding.” Randy Bachman

“If Gram Parsons married Alison Krauss their music would sound a lot like John and Michele.” Willie P Bennett
www.thelaws.ca

WEDNESDAY AUGUST 13 7:30 $32 ADVANCE / $36 DOOR
A THIRSTY EAR PRE-EVENT - FEATURING
THE
TAJ MAHAL
TRIO


Taj Mahal is a singer, multi-instrumentalist, composer, ethnomusicologist, Grammy-winner, world-class musical collaborator, musicians’ advocate, fisherman & cigar aficionado. Taj has been playing his own distinctive brand of music - variously described as Afro-Caribbean blues, folk-world-blues, hula blues & folk-funk. Caribbean, Hawaiian, African, Latin, and Cuban sounds mix with folk, jazz, zydeco, gospel, rock, pop, soul, and R&B, layered on top of a country blues foundation. www.tajblues

FRIDAY AUGUST 15 8 PM $10
GREEN MOUNTAIN GRASS

Live acoustic gonzograss from Austin, TX! Eclectic melodies, creative harmonies, explosive jams, and a thoroghly danceable experience. The four band members in GREEN MOUNTAIN GRASS are Dave Wilmoth (29, mandolin), Adam “Pickles” Moss (24, fiddle), Trevor Smith (18, banjo/guitar), and Jesse Dalton (25, upright bass). Together, they are exploring the sounds of traditional bluegrass, gypsy swing, folk, funk, reggae, and jazz to discover their own genre-bending sound. While some listeners haven taken to calling this sound “gonzograss,” the end result is described by the band as “melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic mastery with elements of sarcasm, quotes, humor, and exaggeration.”
Whether they are in front of an attentive listening-room audience, on a tall stage playing to a throng of sun-baked festival-goers, or in a local venue orchestrating a gonzograss dance party for their fans, something exciting and inspiring is always being created. www.myspce.com/greengrassplayers
Saturday August 16 8 PM $5
NO GO KNOW

Tropical concrete zouk space rock direct from Portland, Ore.!www.myspace.com/nogoknow

SUNDAY AUGUST 17 6 PM $30 ADVANCE / $35 DOOR
TOOTS & the MAYTALS

WITH SPECIAL GUESTS
I Y A H
Toots and the Maytals are legends of ska and reggae music. Their sound is an original combination of gospel, ska, soul, reggae and rock, led by Frederick “Toots” Hibbert. The band won the 2005 Grammy award for best reggae album True Love, an album consisting of re-recorded versions of their classics alongside musicians such as Bonnie Raitt, Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton, and Keith Richards, as well as popular artists today such as No Doubt, Ben Harper, The Roots, & Shaggy. www.tootasandthemaytals.com

TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW FOR THESE GREAT SHOWS AT THE PUB & GRILL!
The TAJ MAJAL TRIO WED AUG 13
TOOTS AND THE MAYTALS with Iyah SUN AUG 17
RECKLESS KELLY with SPECIAL GUEST tba THURS AUG 21
JJ GREY & MOFRO with the Hill Country Revue TUES SEPT 9
JOHN HIATT & the AGELESS BEAUTIES with the Sean Healen Duo WED SEPT 10
The SKATALITES TUES OCT 14
PICK UP YOUR TICKETS TODAY AT THE PUB & GRILL AT THE SFBC,
THE LENSIC BOX OFFICE 505.988.1234, OR ORDER ONLINE AT www.ticketssantafe.com

UPCOMING AT THE PUB AND GRILL
WEDNESDAY AUGUST 20 7:30 PM $10
The BELLEVILLE OUTFIT
THURSDAY AUGUST 21 6:30 PM $17 ADVANCE / $20 DOOR
R E C K L E S S K E L L Y
WITH SPECIAL GUEST TBA
FRIDAY AUGUST 22 7 PM $15 ADVANCE / $20 DOOR
THE MIGHTY DIAMONDS
WITH SPECIAL GUESTS
THE YELLOW DUB SQUAD
SATURDAY AUGUST 23 4 PM to MIDNIGHT JUST $10! KID U-12 FREE!
FROGFEST III
CELEBRATING 5 FROGTASTIC YEARS!
8 HOURS OF LOVE & MUSIC!
F E A T U R I N G
HUNDRED YEAR FLOOD GOSHEN
NATHAN MOORE TAARKA
BORIS &the SALTLICKS JOE WEST
XOE FITZGERALD TIME-TRAVELING TRANSVESTITE THE BILL HEARNE TRIO
SUNDAY

Santa Fe Complex has a full week of entertainment and…

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Photo bt Mary MacIntyre

Photo bt Mary MacIntyre

For some great videos: Look up Samantha Giron on youtube.com. Techn diff here….

I love newsletters! Some of this has happened. There was a large thunder storm last night and I chose to read instead. So here’s the update. Wish I had the foresigt to remember the dance event tonight. I watered my garden instead, and it really needed it even after the rain last night. Guess it was hotter than I thought. This place is rocking with sophiticated ideas and dialogues. Love science? Love art? Show up.

Complex News § August 10, 2008
Week of August 11 Brings Dance, Art, Theater,
Mathematical Music to the Complex
Samantha Giron, Woody Vasulka, Missoula Oblongata Head Full Week

Santa Fe Complex · 632 Agua Fria · Parking via Romero St.
For more information, contact Don Begley at 505/216.7562 or visit sfcomplex.org

——————————————————————————–

Greetings!
Next week is an exciting week for us at Santa Fe Complex. In addition to our regular Wednesday night blender, we are honored to host two groups that came to us through our town’s rich network of artists & scientists. Both — Samantha Giron on Monday night and Missoula Oblongata on Wednesday night — are last-minute scheduling opportunities that we are fortunate to have. They also epitomize the spirit of Santa Fe Complex in our quest to create and explore connections across science, technology and art. We hope to see you there and to see you at the other events this week at the complex.

-don

——————————————————————————–

Samantha Giron Dance Project will be presenting work from two distinct shows on Monday, August 11 at 8:00: a premiere entitled Quickly Going Somewhere and Back, and two excerpts from Women and War, called Fire Diary and Interrogations.

Women and War explores the human experience of war from different perspectives than those typically presented to us. War is usually focused on men who play the heroic roles of killing, being killed, being captured and tortured. Physical bravery is shown as a male trait.

Quickly Going Somewhere and Back represents a new approach for Samantha Giron Dance Project. When Christianson and Giron were invited to perform at San Francisco’s COLLABORATION Festival, they set out to co-create a dance and music performance. Christianson wrote the score first and provided Giron with some imagery and narrative context. Giron then set to work responding to the score. Since then, the two have continued to adapt their own contributions to the performance. Christianson performs his original violin score on stage in Quickly Going Somewhere and Back.

The performance is free though contributions to support the tour are appreciated.For more information, visit the Santa Fe Complex web site. Samantha Giron Dance Project’s web site is here.

Woody Vasulka Offers a Retrospective

Pioneering digital artist Woody Vasulka brings a retrospective exhibit and three work sessions to the complex in August and September. His show opens on Wednesday, August 13 at 5:00; his workshops will follow through the next month.

The retrospective revisits a generation of “continual interaction within an art community,” according to Woody, which was lost as “the idea of realism slowly came to dominate art in the digital era.” Vasulka believes the hyperrealistic phase is fading once again and offers this exhibit as a bridge between the earlier period it represents and modern trends.

Woody pioneered video art in the late 1960s. Born in Brno, now in the Czech Republic, he trained as an engineer before studying television and film production at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. He met his wife, Steina Vasulka, in the early 1960s and moved to New York City in 1965, where he worked as a multiscreen film editor, experimenting with electronic sounds and stroboscopic lights while pioneering the showing of video art at the Whitney Museum. Woody collaborated with Don MacArthur and Jeffrey Schier in 1976 to build a computer controlled personal imaging facility called The Digital Image Articulator. The Vasulkas have been based in Santa Fe since 1980. More information is available at their website.

Details will be posted on the complex website in the next few days.
The romance of vaudeville, the adrenaline of punk,
and the playfulness of the Children’s Television Workshop
Missoula Oblongata is coming, Meow Wolf is moving, the Process held firm and Santa Fe Complex is ready.

The three-person theater company’s visit was in danger when Meow Wolf had to move. Christian Hagy of The Process stepped in to sponsor the show, turning to Santa Fe Complex for a venue at Meow Wolf’s suggestion.

Thanks to their work and Missoula Oblongata’s support, the show goes on. They’ll alight in Santa Fe Wednesday night, August 13 at 8:00, after its Monday night show in Ft. Worth and before moving on to Phoenix, Tucson, LA, San Francisco and points beyond. Long-time friends Donna Sellinger, Madeline ffitch and Sarah Lowry are the core of the company, which travels light to perform in any venue with electricity and space. St. Louis Magazine says they have the “romance of vaudeville, the adrenaline of punk, and the playfulness of the Children’s Television Workshop;” Thanks to the efforts of many supporters, Santa Fe will get a chance to taste this eclectic mixture.

The performance is free though contributions to support the tour are appreciated. For more information, visit: Santa Fe Complex, Meow Wolf or Missoula Oblongata

Santa Fe Complex is a nonprofit, community studio creating connections in science, technology and art. Our studio stands on three core activities:

Collaboration to address real-world problems, encourage cooperation and create economic opportunities in applied complexity, urban planning and simulation, and computational arts.

Communication with local, national and international communities about our work in Santa Fe and elsewhere. Whether it’s a live feed or published reports, we broadcast our work - and the role Santa Fe plays in this important effort - to all interested parties.

Education through the principle of learning-by-doing in active projects that lets students be part of, and contribute to, their project team. We offer formal classes, scientific and technology lectures, and internships.

Quick Links
our blog
events calendar

Support the Complex

Support Santa Fe Complex
Click here for info There’s more!

Music Is Mathematics.
Or, Was that Mathematics Is Music?

Mathematician Jack Douthett and music theorist John Clough wrote the book on music theory and mathematics, so to speak, in their 2008 publication titled, curiously enough, Music Theory and Mathematics: Chords, Collections, and Transformations. Douthett visits Santa Fe Complex on Thursday night, August 14 at 6:00 to review the theory of maximally even sets, an algebraic structure initially designed to model musical scales and chords, with an emphasis on visualization. For more information, click here.

WedTechs Reborn & Expanded

We’re reviving and expanding a community tradition that existed before Santa Fe Complex was born: the Wednesday afternoon tech talk on matters complex. Each Wednesday we’ll open the Complex to a community forum on the Internet, 3D- and agent-based modeling or any other topics that pique the interest of technology experts and novices alike. The sessions run from 1:00 to 3:00 at sfX, 632 Agua Fria. Lunch is available for a $7.00 contribution to defray costs.

WedTech’s technical talk tradition will continue as well. This Wednesday, August 13 at 1:00, we’ll be joined by Larry Kilham entitled Original Thinking, Innovation and Imagination in the Complex World. Larry is an entrepreneur and engineer with three patents to his name and an IR-100 award (developer of one of the 100 most significant technical products in 1986) for his work in optical and video processing.

On tap at the complex . . .
Sharpening the Artistic Vision

All other things being equal, the simplest solution is the best, or so said William Oakham back in the 14th century. Somehow, that became Occam’s Razor and set the standard for evaluating scientific explanations and theories.

Albert Einstein saw the risk of excessive simplicity, though, and countered by saying, “Things should be as simple as possible but not simpler.”

What does that have to do with Santa Fe Complex’s first juried art show? It’s up to the artists, who can explain their ideas here. We’ll be happy with a cabinet of curiosities, a science fair, an art exposition, and a three-ring circus of brilliant and fun interpretations of the wisdom of Messrs. Oakham and Einstein. For more information, click here. Entry concepts are due September 2; the opening date is October 18.

Come Visit Us

Santa Fe Complex is located next to the Railyard Art District and within walking distance of the hotels, restaurants and shops at the plaza downtown. We’re housed in two facilities, the conference area at 624 Agua Fria and the project space at 632 Agua Fria.

The conference area contains meeting rooms and facilities for short-term use associated with on-going complex projects. The project space houses the great room, where we hold events and offer working facilities for laptop users, coffee lounge and work carrels.

While there is parking at 624 Agua Fria, the Romero Street parking lot is more conveniently located for the 632 facility. Romero St. is an old-style Santa Fe ox-cart road just east of the 624 driveway. Follow it until it opens up to two lanes and turn hard right into the parking lot for 632.

Here’s a map to our location, a representative shot showing the Railyard District and a sketchup drawing of the facility at 632. For more information, call 505/216.7562 or click here.

Don Begley
Managing Director
Santa Fe Complex
624 Agua Fria St
Santa Fe, NM 87501

Blogsville: 451Press.com

Forward email

Just in time: Samantha’s Dance at SF Complex

Friday, August 8th, 2008

OK, I got this message just in time. AS the rains bless us with their tears, for all that need compassion and renewal…rain is sweet here in the desert, here’s a dance troupe that’ll stir up your hearts, and perhaps more….read on….
Samantha Giron Dance Project
Brings Two Shows to Santa Fe Complex
Monday, August 11
Starts at 8:00 pm at 632 Agua Fria St.
Admission is free · Donations Welcome
August 6, 2008
For more information, contact Don Begley at 505/216.7562 or visit sfcomplex.org

Samantha Giron Dance Project in Town for One Night Only

Samantha Giron Dance Project will be presenting work from two distinct shows: a premiere entitled “Quickly Going Somewhere and Back,” and two excerpts from “Women and War,” called “Fire Diary” and “Interrogations.”

“Women and War” seeks to explore the human experience of war from different perspectives than those typically presented to us. The representation of war in our culture is usually focused on men; men play the centrally-depicted, heroic roles of killing, being killed, being captured and tortured. Physical bravery is shown as a male trait.

“Quickly Going Somewhere and Back” is a new kind of project for Samantha Giron Dance Project. Usually Giron approaches Christianson once she has a clear idea for a dance piece, and he composes new work that best fits her ideas for the project. However, when Christianson and Giron were invited to perform at San Francisco’s COLLABORATION Festival, they set out to truly co-create a dance and music performance. This time, Christianson wrote the score first and provided Giron with some imagery and narrative context. Giron then set to work responding to the score. Since then, the two have continued to adapt their own contributions to the performance. Christianson performs his original violin score on stage in “Quickly Going Somewhere and Back,” and even performs some of the choreography alongside dancer LeTania Kirkland!

For more information, visit the Santa Fe Complex web site. Samantha GIron Dance Project’s web site is here.

Santa Fe Complex is a nonprofit, community studio creating connections in science, technology and art. Our studio stands on three core activities:

Collaboration to address real-world problems, encourage cooperation and create economic opportunities in applied complexity, urban planning and simulation, and computational arts.

Communication with local, national and international communities about our work in Santa Fe and elsewhere. Whether it’s a live feed or published reports, we broadcast our work - and the role Santa Fe plays in this important effort - to all interested parties.

Education through the principle of learning-by-doing in active projects that lets students be part of, and contribute to, their project team. We offer formal classes, scientific and technology lectures, and internships.

Quick Links
our blog
events calendar

Support the Complex

Support Santa Fe Complex
Click here for info

——————————————————————————–
About Samantha Giron Dance Project
Samantha Giron Dance Project, a contemporary dance company, was founded in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2001. Artistic director Samantha Giron earned an MFA in Choreography from California Institute of the Arts in 2006 and a BA in Dance from Mills College in 2001. She has performed the choreography of Mark Morris, Tere O’Connor, and Scott Wells, and her choreography has been staged at over a dozen venues throughout California. She co-choreographed the dance film Hotel Scopeli, which won a Kodak Grant award; music video credits include “The Kids” by People.

“. . .Giron shined in a solo that accumulated force through an expanding web of delicately folding and unfolding limbs.”
–L.A. Times, re: “Fire Diary,” choreographed & danced by Samantha Giron
——————————————————————————–

On tap at the complex . . .

blogsville: scroll down as far as you can and see lots of 451Press.com sites. Please leave comments.

More from the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Please read the few previous blogs to get the full gist of this story. I was so enamored with last night’s performance, I decided to see if any tickets were left for another artist I wanted to hear. I got one, there are very few left. Listen to this amazing musician/singer and perhaps you could get in to one of her concerts. Kaija Saariaho… of course there will be other premieres as well, look at the following invitation.

Concerts Selling Out in First Week of 2008 Season

If you haven’t already ordered your tickets, act now!

The 36th season of the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival is off to a strong start – great music, great artists and capacity audiences! Several of Week One’s concerts were completely sold out, attesting to the popularity of this season’s programming and guest artists. Some tickets are still available for next week, so don’t hesitate – order your tickets now!

A sample of the phenomenal music offerings next week include:

The renowned Orion String Quartet performs their long- awaited for second installment of the Beethoven String Quartet Cycle on August 6th, 7th, 10th, and 11th. Last year’s concerts were completely sold out, so don’t miss this great quartet playing some of the sublime music ever written.

On Saturday, August 9th pianist Benjamin Hochman performs Bach’s Goldberg Variations.

In addition to Bach and Beethoven, you can also participate in three world premieres. The premiere of Musical America’s 2008 Composer of the Year, Kaija Saariaho’s Festival Co-Commission, Serenatas, will be played by the celebrated ensemble Real Quiet on August 3rd, 4th and 6th. Don’t miss this – the composer allows the musicians to choose the performance order of the movements – each of the three performances could be completely different!

The premiere of Huang Ruo’s Festival Commission, Real Loud, also performed by Real Quiet is on August 6th.

August 5th features the world premiere of Festival artistic director and composer/pianist Marc Neikrug’s Piece for Pro Piano Hamburg Steinway Model D & Marimba One, performed by Mr. Neikrug and Drew Lang playing a huge, five-octave marimba.

Of course, there’s much more – call, go online or stop by the box office for more details. See you next week!

To order your tickets, please call 505.982.1890 or visit www.santafechambermusic.com.

Don’t miss out, this is an incredible season. Both concerts I have attended were packed and really exciting! Plus being downtown on the plaza in the early evening is really romantically marvelous. It’s Santa Fe Charm that has a way of catching you off guard even after years of living here. Last night, after the concert, we listened to another concert on the plaza by Po Girl. We then went to Ortega’s for appetizer and two musicians from the Hoo Doo’s were playing. We went to LA Fonda for a biger bite to eat and presto Bill Hearne a famous fellow from here was playing. AS we left the restaurant to go home, a latin band was playing music on the sidewalk. Bravo!

A cool breeze, the starry night, surrounded by beauty. Ahhh! Get some chamber music tickets and go deep into the profound soul of mystical music. It’s your chance now to catch these amazing shows!

There’s always something buzzing at the Santa Fe Complex.

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Photo by Mary MacIntyre

Photo by Mary MacIntyre

Art and science. Mix them up and tumble them around. If you love both attend the events, become connected and perhaps even participate! Check this out and earlier blogs on the complex.

On tap at the complex . . .
August 6: Aequias of Taos County

The acequias of Taos County create a rich network of physical and social features. Join Michael Cox as he describes his work mapping and understanding the acequia network of Taos County. Additional speakers will be added to the event and posted here.

August 8: Unruly Data Makes for a Bad Hair Day
Traditional structured database tools are limiting because they require pre-defined structures and fields. Chris Feola, president of xextPression and named one of the 50 most influential people in new media by Online Journalism Review, describes the ins-and-outs of information overload in the computer culture. In particular, he will discuss imposing order of data to extract meaningful information from it. Light refreshments will be provided. Admission is free but donations to defray costs are appreciated. More information is available here.

Come Visit Us

Santa Fe Complex is located next to the Railyard Art District and within walking distance of the hotels, restaurants and shops at the plaza downtown. We’re housed in two facilities, the conference area at 624 Agua Fria and the project space at 632 Agua Fria.

The conference area contains meeting rooms and facilities for short-term use associated with on-going complex projects. The project space houses the great room, where we hold events and offer working facilities for laptop users, coffee lounge and work carrels.

While there is parking at 624 Agua Fria, the Romero Street parking lot is more conveniently located for the 632 facility. Romero St. is an old-style Santa Fe ox-cart road just east of the 624 driveway. Follow it until it opens up to two lanes and turn hard right into the parking lot for 632.

Here’s a map to our location, a representative shot showing the Railyard District and a sketchup drawing of the facility at 632. For more information, call 505/216.7562 or click here.

Don Begley
Managing Director
Santa Fe Complex
624 Agua Fria St
Santa Fe, NM 87501

Forward email

Update Profile/Email Address | Instant removal with SafeUnsubscribe™ | Privacy Policy. Email Marketing by

Santa Fe Complex | 624 Agua Fria | Santa Fe | NM | 87501

There is more to art than life or music

Friday, July 25th, 2008


Don’t worry, it is the weekend and I won’t get heavy on the philosphy of these matters. However as you wander through Albuquerque’s galleries, and listen to great concerts, by the way SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL will have several concerts in Albuquerque this year: at the KIMO theater, July 30th, and August 6 and 7th…save gas and get tickets near home!

Visual Arts
Art Exhibits, Studio Tours, and more…

Maria Moya’s solo show at Mariposa Gallery
Maria Consuelo Moya has a solo show upstairs at Mariposa, opening First Friday as part of the First Friday Artscrawl events across the city. Moya is a prolific artist displaying collage, vessels, shrines, nests, bundled offerings and dolls for this beautiful installation. Her work can be intricate and delicate but always amazing. Downstairs will be the work of Kenyon Thomas and daughters Mary Thomas and Sarah Siltala, one of New Mexico’s most talented families.
Reception Friday, August 1, 5-8pm
Mariposa Gallery
3500 Central Ave. SE
(505) 268-6828
mariposa- gallery.com

Take Back at THE LAND/gallery
Take Back is the second manifestation of a proposal, submitted in the form of a poem, sent to THE LAND/an art site, by three women in Maine: Constant Albertson, Susan Camp and Andy Mauery. The work focuses on the translation from the work completed on-site at THE LAND to the gallery’s white walls and ceiling. THE LAND maintains both an in-town gallery space and a 40-acre outdoor site devoted exclusively to site- specific, environmentally low-impact, land-based art. Artists include installation artists, sculptors, painters, video and sound artists, musicians, dancers, architects and engineers, and writers.
Reception Friday, July 25, 5-8pm
THE LAND/gallery
419 Granite Ave. NW
(505) 242-1501
landartsite.org

Pottery Demonstration at Petroglyph Monument
Josephine Fragua makes pottery based on old traditions. She collects natural clay and white sand from the Jemez Mountains just as her mother and grandmother showed her years ago. She will talk about her pottery and demonstrate how it is made this Saturday and Sunday.
Demonstrations Sat-Sun, July 26-27, 10-4
Petroglyph National Monument
6001 Unser Blvd. NW
(505) 899-0205
nps.gov/petr

Remembering Barbara Pfaff
Exhibit 208 will host a show of work by Albuquerque artist Barbara Pfaff who passed away in 2006. Her friends and family have put together a collection of her work from 1980-2006.
Reception Friday, August 1, 5-8pm
Exhibit 208
208 Dartmouth Drive NE
(505) 266-4292
exhibit208.com

Hall-Strauss, Lohan and Redman at Coleman Gallery
Christina Hall-Strauss, Erica Lohan and Don Redman open at Coleman Gallery with acrylic paintings (Christina), acrylic and graphite works (Erica) and steel sculpture (Don). Coleman Gallery Contemporary Art is an Albuquerque favorite for art by New Mexico’s (mostly) abstract artists.
Reception Saturday, August 2, 3-5pm
Coleman Gallery Contemporary Art
4115 Silver SE
(505) 232-0224
colema ncontemporary.com

Performing Arts
Theater, Dance, Lectures, Poetry and more …

Document This! a workshop
In conjunction with the Trappings exhibition, 516 Arts is hosting a two-part workshop series in documentary filmmaking and oral histories led by Sarah Wentzel- Fisher and Basement Films. Students will generate and synthesize oral histories into a finished collaborative video art piece, learning basic concepts of documentary filmmaking and digital editing. A culminating FREE public screening of the finished work will take place Saturday, August 2 at 9pm. The workshop is open to teens and adults (high school and up). Space is limited - advance registration required. $20 fee covers both sessions.
Video Art Workshop Sat. July 26 and Aug. 2, 10am- noon
516 Arts
516 Central SW Downtown
(505) 242-1445, Bryan Kaiser
516arts.org

The Madness of King Georgie Bush at N4th
An exploration of current events and a parody of the current administration set in the Elizabethan era and written in iambic pentameter. This play by Richard B. Edwards takes a unique look at contemporary politics. Directed by Lou Ann Graham. Runs through July 27. All tickets $10.
Performance Fri-Sat July 18-19 8pm, Sun July 20 2pm N4th Theater and Gallery
4901 Fourth St. NW
(505) 702-7692 or 344-4542 vsartsnm.org

The Ballet Pro Musica Festival at NHCC
Dancers from the Mexico-City based National Ballet of Mexico along with the Felbert Chamber Virtuosi led by violinist David Felbert will perform at National Hispanic Cultural Center next weekend. The performance will include Apollo (Mendelssohn/Balanchine), Miroirs (Ravel/Godden) and Concerto Grosso (Bach/Ossadnik). There is a special FREE children’s program Friday July 31. Check web site for other festival events.
Performances Fri-Sat, Aug.1-2 8pm, Sun, Aug.3 2pm
National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 Fourth St. SW
(505) 352-1281
balletpromusic a.org

Music
musical performances, workshops and festivals

Salsa Nuevo Mexicano Nosotros at the El Rey
Join the folks at the historic El Rey Theater for an evening of Salsa with local favorites Nosotros. A special treat will be dance lessons from Arthur Murray Studios. This is a 21+ event.
Performance Friday, July 25, 8pm
Historic El Rey Theater
624 Central Ave. SW Downtown
(505) 242-2353
elreytheater.com

Summer Fun and Music in Placitas
Join the folks at Rockin’R and enjoy The Bill Hearne Trio plus Auge Hays on steel guitar under cool Placitas skies on Sunday. Bring your own chairs, food and drinks.
Performance Sunday, July 27, 7pm
Rockin’ R Gallery in Placitas
north on I-25, right at exit 242 (Highway 165) go 2 miles. Just past Homestead Village on the left.
(505) 867-9595 for reservations and information

Third Annual New Mexico Jazz Festival
Performances at the Outpost Performance Space as well as other Albuquerque and Santa Fe venues continue through July 28 with the one and only Preservation Hall Jazz Band wrapping things up Monday at the Lensic in Santa Fe. The Preservation Hall Jazz Band gets its name from Preservaton Hall, the venerable music venue located in the heart of New Orleans’ French Quarter since 1961. The band has been referred to as a bridge across the ages, a link between the present day and the heyday of traditional New Orleans music. On this tour the band is Mark Braud (trumper and vocal), Clint Maegden (vocal), Elliott Stackman Callier (reeds), Frederick Lonzo (trombone), Rickie Monie (piano), Walter Payton (bass and vocal) and Joseph Lastie Jr. (drums). Check out dates, times, ticket information and details at the Outpost’s website.
Performances July 25-27
Santa Fe and Albuquerque locations
(505) 268-0044
outpostspace.org

2008 Women’s Voices Festival
An annual tribute to the outstanding women vocalists in New Mexico which began in 1993. On Friday enjoy Charmed, Dianna Hughe, Patti Littlefield, Kari Simmons and Hillary Smith. Saturday - The Buckarettes, Jenny Marlow, Busy McCarroll, Madi Sato and Susan Clark. Doors open at 6:30 and all concerts occur rain or shine. The Cooperage offers a fine selection of grilled entrees, salads, desserts and a full-service bar. A portion of the proceeds from their sales benefits the NM Jazz Workshop Institute of Music.
Performances Fri-Sat, July 25-26, 7-10pm
The Albuquerque Museum Amphitheater
2000 Mountain Road NW
(505) 255-9798
nmjazz.org

Fishtank Ensemble
A unique and truly wordly musical experience, this band evokes the spirit of a past age and the sounds of tomorrow. This lively and unusual group consists of extremely talented musicians mastering their respective instruments: violin, saw, accordion, shamisen, flamenco guitar, contrabass, percussion and voice. Romanian folk music forms the bulk of the material with a healthy helping of flamenco, Swedish folk music, klezmer, Gypsy jazz, other folk sources as well as original songs. An AMP production.
Performance Wednesday, July 30, 7:30pm
The Cooperage
7220 Lomas Blvd. NE
(505) 232-9868
Buy tickets on-line through Brown Paper Tickets or by phone: 1-800-838-3006
abqmusic.com

Film Arts
art films, films about art, and news from the Film Industry

NM Short Film wins Best of Show in Utah
Things We Do For Love won the Best of Show Grand Jury prize as well as Audience Favorite awards at the 2008 Fear No Film Festival in Salt Lake City. The short film was written and directed by NM filmmaker Don Gray and was shot in conjunction with the NM Film Technician Training Program at Northern New Mexico Community College in El Rito. It is about how far one family is willing to go to show their love for one another. Set in a small town in Northern New Mexico - coffins, fresh graves and a parade of odd funerals provide the backdrop for the story. The film was shot over five days in El Rito, Ojo Caliente and Abiquiu.

Civic Cinema on Civic Plaza
Watch a classic film under the stars. Popcorn, beverages and more will be available. Some seating is available but blankets and chairs may be brought for your comfort. No alcoholic beverages or glass containers are allowed. Pets must be on leash. So bring the kids and Rover and have a great time sharing in the magic of movie classics. The season ends August 1 with the movie voted #1 by Albuquerque residents.
Friday, July 25 - Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) with Audrey Hepburn.
Friday, August 1 - Young Frankenstein (1974) with Gene Wilder and Madeline Kahn.

The Art in Film Series will return August 2-3 with The Treasures of Long Gone John. This is a documentary about the eccentric art and musical obsessions of indie record producer Long Gone John. He compulsively amassed a vast collection of art and pop ephemera. Using interviews with artists, collectors, gallery owners and musicians, this is an exciting trip through the fascinating world of art, music and popular culture.
The Guild Cinema
3405 Central NE
(505) 255-1848
guildcinema.com

Workshops, calls for entry, workshops and more opportunities
A complete listing of auditions and other calls as well as every type of arts event can be referenced at the Arts Alliance website where you can also subscribe to their all new Something to Do Online Newsletter.
www.abqarts.org

Read on…

Blogsville: www.myitthings.com, www.about-sandiegoca.com, www.squidoo.com/makinart (check other pages by this author) countrymusicherald.com,

Science and Art? Learn how the two are a work in progress.

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

‘ >Colors of fractals

It\'s all about possibilities

It's all about possibilities

This is one of the most exciting projects in Santa Fe right now. There’s plenty of ways to learn, interact. erase boundaries of thought and artisitic protocols. Results can be inclusive and wide open. If you are in Santa FE stop by and see for yourself. Don’t worry, it’s not boring either. Brainstorming is active constantly. Participate.

Fractals, Acequias, and a
Journalist’s View of Data
Coming Events at Santa Fe Complex

July 23, 2008
Don’t Forget
Dinosaurs are on the loose tonight, July 23, at Santa Fe Complex
6:00 - 9:00 pm at 632 Agua Fria St.

Santa Fe Complex is a nonprofit, community studio creating connections in science, technology and art. Our studio stands on three core activities: Collaboration to address real-world problems, encourage cooperation and create economic opportunities in applied complexity, urban planning and simulation, and computational arts. Communication with local, national and international communities about our work in Santa Fe and elsewhere. Whether it’s a live feed or published reports, we broadcast our work - and the role Santa Fe plays in this important effort - to all interested parties.
Education through the principle of learning-by-doing in active projects that lets students be part of, and contribute to, their project team. We offer formal classes, scientific and technology lectures, and internships.

Quick Links
our blog
adobe wiki
events calendar

Support the Complex

Support Santa Fe Complex
Click here for info

August Begins with Fractals

Fractals are infinitely complex, self-similar patterns. They are also often extraordinarily beautiful and intriguing. Explore the exciting field of fractals in an engaging interdisciplinary presentation that demonstrates their enormous potential for inspiring interest in science and math. Covering the art and science of fractals, we explore the fractal patterns in nature, seen at scales from the microscopic to the galactic. The simple, repetitive natural processes that give rise to fractals all around us can also be harnessed by computer simulations to generate mathematical fractals, which are simple to explore and breathtakingly beautiful. Learn to create fractal art yourself using available free software. The presentation includes dazzling animated zooms, choreographed with original music, into infinitely deep mathematical fractals, which can be seen as objects much, much larger than our universe.

Jonathan Wolfe, Ph.D. is the Executive Director of the Fractal Foundation, a New Mexico nonprofit that uses the beauty of fractals to inspire interest in science, math and art. With a scientific background in visual neurophysiology, and an international reputation as the artist behind the flying fractal hotair balloons, Dr. Wolfe is ideally situated to promote both the beauty and the intellectual impact of fractals. Since 2003, he has taught over 21,000 children and 10,000 adults about fractals, and he is the creator of the extremely popular First Friday Fractals show at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

For more information, visit the Santa Fe Complex home page.

Aequias of Taos County

The acequias of Taos County create a rich network of physical and social features. Join Michael Cox as he describes his work mapping and understanding the acequia network of Taos County. Additional speakers will be added to the event and posted here.

Unruly Data Makes for a Bad Hair Day
Traditional structured database tools are limiting because they require pre-defined structures and fields. Chris Feola, president of xextPression and named one of the 50 most influential people in new media by Online Journalism Review, describes the ins-and-outs of information overload in the computer culture. In particular, he will discuss imposing order of data to extract meaningful information from it. Light refreshments will be provided. Admission is free but donations to defray costs are appreciated. More information is available here.

Come Visit Us

Santa Fe Complex is located next to the Railyard Art District and within walking distance of the hotels, restaurants and shops at the plaza downtown. We’re housed in two facilities, the conference area at 624 Agua Fria and the project space at 632 Agua Fria.

The conference area contains meeting rooms and facilities for short-term use associated with on-going complex projects. The project space houses the great room, where we hold events and offer working facilities for laptop users, coffee lounge and work carrels.

While there is parking at 624 Agua Fria, the Romero Street parking lot is more conveniently located for the 632 facility. Romero St. is an old-style Santa Fe ox-cart road just east of the 624 driveway. Follow it until it opens up to two lanes and turn hard right into the parking lot for 632.

Here’s a map to our location, a representative shot showing the Railyard District and a sketchup drawing of the facility at 632: For more information, call 505/216.7562 or click here.

Don Begley
Managing Director
Santa Fe Complex
624 Agua Fria St
Santa Fe, NM 87501

Forward email

Santa Fe Complex | 624 Agua Fria | Santa Fe | NM | 87501

Blogsville: about-tulsaok.com

About Albuquerque, NM

Albuquerque, NM: One of the most exciting cities in the Southwest. A fast growing city that promotes innovative environmentally friendly technology provides opportunity and a Great place to live in. Albuquerque has lots of diversity, fine neighborhoods, entertainment, and opportunities. The Duke City also is a terrific launch location for visitors. Enjoy the fine hotels, restaurants, and other attractions before you venture out to the rest of beautiful and exciting New Mexico. Albuquerque also hosts conventions, retreats and workshops that people attend every year. It truly is a hotspot for the southwest! Don't forget to try some of our chile: red or green? In this site I will show you some of the "wonders" of Albuquerque and New Mexico. Occasionally I will take a few diversions about other topics or events that seem to be rattling in my mind. Come and enjoy and participate in this blog.

Albuquerque, NM Author(s)
    » Mary-MacIntyre