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THE magazine
THE magazine is a 15-year old visually oriented, free periodical concentrating on the local, regional, national, and international art scenes, as well as featuring articles, reviews and interviews on the visual arts, performing arts, books, films, music, fine wines, dining, and important cultural issues of the day.
THE magazine has done articles and/or interviews with: Agnes Martin, Christo, Robert Miller, Jenny Holzer, Adam Fuss Dave Hickey, Thomas Krens, R.C. Gorman, Mike Kelley, Lucy Lippard, Jasper Johns, Sigmar Polke, Magdalena Abakanowicz, kim MacConnel, Louis Grachos, Alexander Liberman, John Nichols, Marc Chagall, David Ross, Joel-Peter Witkin, Patrick Nagatani, Duane Michaels, Isabel Allende, James Turrell, Kiki Smith, Miguel Gandert, Ingrid Sischy, Rick Dillingham, Harmony Hammond, David Michael Kennedy, John Marion, Willis Hartshorn, Tony Price, William Burroughs, Thomas Ashcraft, Nan Goldin, Paul Sarkisian, Ross Bleckner, Larry Bell, James Enyeart, Linda Durham, Willem de Kooning, Robert Hughes, Douglas Kent Hall, Rosa Martinez, John Baldassari, Fritz Scholder, Ed Ruscha, Allan Houser, Wes Mills, Laura Carpenter, Albert Watson, Allen Ginsberg, Donald Judd, Tom Joyce, Picasso, Judy Chicago, Marina Abramovic, Herb Lotz, Dave Hickey, Misha Gordon, Patrick Oliphant, Meridel Rubenstein, Dale Chihuly, John Grimes, John Trudell, & Herb Ritts to name only a few...
Read more about Guy Cross, the publisher and creative director of THE magazine.
Mark Spencer: Drawn and Tempered
by Editor • THE magazine
Oct 1, 2009
October 16 to October 30
Skotia Gallery, 150 West Marcy Street, Suite 103, Santa Fe. 820-7787
Opening reception, Friday, October 16, 5:30 to 7:30 pm.
One of Santa Fe’s best-kept secrets among long-time connoisseurs of local painting, Mark Spencer has never been prolific at producing canvases for commercial consumption. Finally, Skotia Gallery has coaxed some two dozen new works out of Spencer for his upcoming solo exhibition, Drawn and Tempered. The artist describes his work as “Neoclassical Surrealism;” viewers may call it what they wish, but it is easily recognized as formally brilliant and undisputedly rich in its physical presence, as well as its layered content
Dime con Quien Andas
by Editor • THE magazine
Nov 1, 2009
November 23 to December 30
Parks Gallery, 127 Bent Street, Taos, 575-758-0343
Opening reception Saturday, November 28, 4 to 6 pm
Arthur Lopez, acknowledged as a gifted contemporary artist working in the Spanish colonial santero tradition, is joining with two of his equally well-respected artist friends, Gustavo Victor Goler and Nicholas Herrera, to present Dime con Quien Andas, a group exhibition of works by the three wood carvers.
From Ruins to Resurrection
by Editor • THE magazine
Nov 1, 2009
The Sacred Landscapes of Michael Roque Collins
October 30 to December 30
LewAllen Galleries at the Railyard, 1613 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, 988-3250
Opening reception, Friday, October 30, 5:30 to 7:30 pm.
While the artist cites his upbringing in the sweltering Gulf Coast of Texas and its scenic opposite, the art of the Hudson River School, it is not a stretch to note as well the muscular authority of painters Anselm Kiefer and Gerhard Richter in the work of Michael Roque Collins.
November Art Openings
by Editor • THE magazine
Nov 1, 2009
View the November 2009 art openings in Santa Fe.
Recycle Santa Fe Art Festival
by Editor • THE magazine
Nov 1, 2009
November 13 to 15
El Muséo Cultural, 1615 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, 603-0558
Friday, November 13, 5 to 9 pm; Saturday, November 14, 9 pm to 5 pm; Sunday, November 15, 10 am to 5 pm.
For eleven years now, Santa Fe’s trashiest artists and fashionistas have been treating those in the know to fantastic recycled art.
The Charles Heidsieck Non Vintage Brut Réserve
by Joshua Baer • THE magazine & One Bottle
Nov 1, 2009
Jackson Pollock was born on January 28, 1912, in Cody, Wyoming. His father, LeRoy Pollock, was a land surveyor for the federal government. Jackson was the youngest of five brothers. He grew up in Arizona, and later in Chico, California. After being expelled from high school in 1928, he enrolled in Manual Arts High School, in Los Angeles, and got expelled again. After the expulsions, Pollock accompanied his father on a series of surveying trips through the Southwest.

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