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During the festival, the Santa Fe Plaza is filled with arts & crafts and food booths, and mariachis play throughout the city. Fiestas concludes with mass at the St. Francis Cathedral followed by a candlelight procession to the Cross of the Martyrs.
The Market was founded by businesswoman Judith Espinar, together with Thomas Aageson, executive director of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation and former executive director of Aid to Artisans; the former Market executive director, Charlene Cerny, formerly director of the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, and Charmay Allred, a community philanthropist.
The Santa Fe International Film Festival runs Oct. 16 -20 and is opening with Malcolm Washington’s “The Piano Lesson” and closing with Amber Sealey’s “Out of My Mind.” The festival ...
New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico. An arts town (also called a arts city, or with art singular) is a settlement that is dedicated to and recognized as having art as a central feature to its cultural identity. Arts towns generate a good portion of their economy, their existence, and their tourism from establishing a culture of the ...
Opening night will feature director Malcolm Washington’s “The Piano Lesson,” fresh off its Telluride debut, followed by a special gala at SITE Santa Fe. On Saturday, October 19, Bryan ...
Oct. 3—The Santa Fe International Film Festival is now recognized by the Academy of the Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences as an Oscar qualifying festival. The winners of the Best Animated Short ...
The first Indian Market, called the annual Southwest Indian Fair and Industrial Arts and Crafts Exhibition, [4] was part of Fiesta de Santa Fe sponsored by the Museum of New Mexico. [5] Kenneth M. Chapman credits art advocate Rose Dougan (life partner of Vera von Blumenthal) for first suggesting the idea of a competitive Native American art fair.
Zozobra (also known as Old Man Gloom and sometimes branded as Will Shuster's Zozobra) is a giant marionette effigy constructed of wood, wire and cotton cloth that is built and burned on the Friday of Labor Day weekend prior to the annual Fiestas de Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States. It stands 50 ft 6 in (15.39 m) high.