
Where We Meet: Conversations from New Mexico and Beyond
By Taos Center for the Arts

Where We Meet: Conversations from New Mexico and BeyondNov 28, 2023

Miguel Santistevan - On Maize (corn)
Miguel Santistevan is a teacher, farmer and researcher. In this live conversation with Alice Morillon, he reflects on his own path to farming and the central role of maize (corn) in the Americas, at once cultural and for subsistence.
Santistevan earned a Master degree in Ecology from UC Davis and has led, taught and managed many projects and groups in learning about farming in Northern New Mexico.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Corilia Ortega - On Community Organizing in Northern New Mexico
Corilia Ortega, a funding member of the Talpa Community Market and a core member of the 100% Community Initiative in Taos County, shares her perspective and insights on community organizing. In this conversation with Alice Morillon, she reflects on her role in connecting her community members to one another and to opportunities.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

JuanIsidro Concha and Doc The High Hawk - On art as a voice for self and community
In this live conversation, Doc the High Hawk and JuanIsidro Concha talk about their relationship to art. They touch on the Leaf Festival that they performed at in October 2023, and talk of the community work they are leading.
Both Doc the High Hawk & Tha Poet have been performing their respective genres since their youth. Doc has been a part of the Taos Pueblo drum group Hail Creek and the Hip-Hop group Po.10.Cee! JuanIsidro has been performing poetry and competing in Poetry Slams since the 9th grade. Doc was nominated for the New Mexico Music Awards for his work on the Dr. Ph8 track “Let’s Grow.”
This is a live conversation recorded on 11/6. This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Aleya Hoerlein - On her show, The Realm of Possibilities
Aleya Hoerlein is a painter based in Taos, New Mexico. She was raised in Fairfield, Iowa by a creative family in a spiritual community that practiced transcendence. In college at The School of Visual Arts in New York City, she painted both figure and landscape but her attention kept going to the shadows behind the figure or the sky beyond the landscape. She shifted her focus to abstract painting that is grounded by both reference to nature and transcendence. Aleya’s paintings have appeared in publications such as Southwest Contemporary, New American Paintings, I Like Your Work, The Brooklyn Rail, and Hyperallergic, and have been on view in group shows at The Taos Center for the Arts’ Stables Gallery, G2 Gallery in Santa Fe, NM, Site:Brooklyn Gallery in Brooklyn, NY, The Brooklyn Waterfront Artists Coalition, and The National Arts Club in New York, NY. Her paintings are held in private collections in New York, California, Tennessee, Washington, Montana, Arizona, and New Mexico.
Hoerlein is exhibiting her first solo exhibition, "The Realm of Possibilities" in TCA's Encore Gallery from October 13th - November 26th, 2023. The exhibition is free and open to the public. She is a co-founding member of the Taos Abstract Artist Collective (TAAC), a collective of artists from Northern New Mexico that collaborates with local museums and galleries to highlight contemporary art, while honoring the rich history of the arts in New Mexico and beyond.
Website

Aspen Mirabal - On Birth Work in Northern New Mexico
Aspen Mirabal is a full spectrum doula from Taos Pueblo. In this live conversation, Mirabal talks of the importance of education around birth and motherhood. She also addresses Northern New Mexico communities' specificities and the conversation that needs to be had to respect individuals' choices around their parenting choices.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Contessa Trujillo - On Tourism in Taos, NM
Contessa Trujillo, Community Engagement Facilitator for the Destination Stewardship Plan (DSP) in the Town of Taos is TCA's guest in this episode. The DSP is aimed at promoting responsible tourism practices that promote, preserve, and celebrate Taos’ unique natural and cultural heritage.
In this live conversation, Trujillo talks of the history, challenges and ongoing work related to tourism in Taos.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Enriqueta Vasquez - On Chicano Activism (2)
Enriqueta Vasquez is a Chicana activist, journalist, writer, and artist. She began her work in Denver, CO, and later re-located to San Cristobal, NM. Vasquez was a close collaborator and friend of political leader Corky Gonzales and civil rights activist Craig Vincent. She was involved in the creation of the Chicano school Escuela Tlateloco in Denver, which led her and her husband to move to San Cristobal where the Vincent Ranch became a space for inner city students to learn wilderness and farm skills. Later, with other New Mexican Chicano activists, she funded El Grito del Norte, a bilingual newspaper that covered the Chicano movement and celebrated Chicano culture.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Enriqueta Vasquez - On Chicano activism (1)
Enriqueta Vasquez is a Chicana activist, journalist, writer, and artist. She began her work in Denver, CO, and later re-located to San Cristobal, NM. Vasquez was a close collaborator and friend of political leader Corky Gonzales and civil rights activist Craig Vincent. She was involved in the creation of the Chicano school Escuela Tlateloco in Denver, which led her and her husband to move to San Cristobal where the Vincent Ranch became a space for inner city students to learn wilderness and farm skills. Later, with other New Mexican Chicano activists, she funded El Grito del Norte, a bilingual newspaper that covered the Chicano movement and celebrated Chicano culture.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Roberto Lavadie & Ignacio Peralta - On Santos
Roberto Lavadie and Ignacio Peralta are woodworkers in Taos, NM. They both have studied the history and meaning of Santos.
In this live interview with David Silva, recorded in April 2023, they discuss the importance of the religious art form.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Juanita Lavadie - On the heritage of Comancheros in Northern New Mexico.
Juanita Lavadie is an educator, artist, and historian. Lavadie’s work spans time and space, with a focus on life in Northern New Mexico. Her work incorporates cultural and creative understandings of the traditional Hispano and Indigenous cultures. Lavadie's work is one of imagination and education, illuminating the history of this land.
This show is the recording of a live interview that David Silva and Juanita Lavadie held on 3/13/23.
This show is supported by the Northern Rio Grande National Heritage Area.

Estevan Rael-Gálvez - On Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery (2)
Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery is a research project with the goal of creating a centralized digital repository centered on the lives of the enslaved Indigenous people across the Americas.
Estevan Rael-Gálvez is a Doctor in American Cultures, has worked as Senior Vice President of Historic Sites at the National Trust for Historic Preservation; Executive Director of the National Hispanic Cultural Center; State Historian of New Mexico. In March 2023, he presented his research project Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery, at the Martinez Hacienda. La Coalición de Taos organized the event and graciously agreed to TCA recording the presentation to later air it on the radio. La Coalición de Taos facilitates educational experiences to inspire informed community action that benefits the land and water, people, and historical cultures of the Taos, New Mexico area.
For radio purposes, Rael-Gálvez’ presentation has been edited into two 30 minute episodes. You’re listening to the second one. A video recording of the entire presentation is available online through La Coalición de Taos’ youtube channel.

Estevan Rael-Gálvez - On Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery (1)
Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery is a research project with the goal of creating a centralized digital repository centered on the lives of the enslaved Indigenous people across the Americas.
Estevan Rael-Gálvez is a Doctor in American Cultures, has worked as Senior Vice President of Historic Sites at the National Trust for Historic Preservation; Executive Director of the National Hispanic Cultural Center; State Historian of New Mexico. In March 2023, he presented his research project Native Bound Unbound, Archive of Indigenous Slavery, at the Martinez Hacienda. La Coalición de Taos organized the event and graciously agreed to TCA recording the presentation to later air it on the radio. La Coalición de Taos facilitates educational experiences to inspire informed community action that benefits the land and water, people, and historical cultures of the Taos, New Mexico area.
For radio purposes, Rael-Gálvez’ presentation has been edited into two 30 minute episodes. You’re listening to the first one. A video recording of the entire presentation is available online through La Coalición de Taos’ youtube channel.

Acequias: The Legacy Lives On Post Film Discussion
After the screening of Acequias: The Legacy Lives On, Aracely "Arcie" Chapa (film director), Vicente Fernandez, Miguel Santistevan, and Sylvia Rodriguez, discuss the importance of acequias to water and land use and the preservation of Northern New Mexican culture.

Francisco El Comanche Gonzales - On the history and current practices of Comanches in Taos
Francisco El Comanche Gonzales is a community activist and educator whose practices center on the heritage of the Comanches. With his community, he leads dancing, singing and traditional customs. Los Comanches de la Serna are located in Ranchos de Taos.

Part II: Dr. Hope Kitts and David Fernandez on the counter-educational methods created by La Academia de la Nueva Raza and Paulo Freire
Founded in Northern New Mexico in 1969, La Academia de la Nueva Raza (The Academy of the New Humanity) grew out of conversations between various scholars, community members and activists. La Academia developed its own educational model based on the concept that learning is derived from life and historical experiences - from El Oro del Barrio - and from the analysis of the history and external forces that impinge on people’s lives.

Dr. Hope Kitts and David Fernandez on the counter-educational methods created by La Academia de la Nueva Raza and Paulo Freire
Founded in Northern New Mexico in 1969, La Academia de la Nueva Raza (The Academy of the New Humanity) grew out of conversations between various scholars, community members and activists.
La Academia developed its own educational model based on the concept that learning is derived from life and historical experiences - from El Oro del Barrio - and from the analysis of the history and external forces that impinge on people’s lives. On the first episode of this two-part series, hear about the beginning of La Academia and how critical pedagogist, Paulo Freire, influenced its founding.

AJ from Po.10.Cee on life, art, and hip-hop
AJ, “LifeTracks”, is a founding member of Po.10.Cee, a Native American hip hop group based here in Taos. We hear about how he came to love hip-hop, his relationship to art, and hope.

Dante Biss-Grayson - On how fashion design meets activism.
Dante Biss-Grayson is a Native American Veteran from the Osage Nation, clan Eagle. He is an artist, poet and fashion designer. After learning about the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women epidemic , Biss-Grayson sought to inspire others, give them strength, pride, hope, empowerment, and resilience through his work on his fashion house, Sky-Eagle Collection.

Daniel Barela & David Fernandez on Taos Historic Museums and The Old Taos Trade Fair.
Daniel Barela is the president of the Taos Historic Museums and a third generation Spanish Colonial woodcarver. David Fernandez de Taos is on the board of the Taos Historic Museums and is a writer and speaker with a rich spiritual life. The two discuss what it’s like to oversee two historic properties in Taos and the upcoming Old Taos Trade Fair.

Tamra Carraher - On poetry, creation and publication
Tamra Carraher is a writer, editor and artist. In 2014, she started an independent press, Alexandria Quarterly Press, which would publish collections of written and visual art. In recent years, the format shifted to the publication of books, supporting specific artists’ projects, including collections of poems or short stories. Carraher’s own poetry has been featured in Toe Good Poetry and in Burningword Literary Journal. Her latest book, long been a mortal being, is a collection of poems published in 2022.

Tom Frouge - On working in the music industry and ¡Globalquerque!
Tom Frouge is the founder and director of ¡Globalquerque!, “New Mexico's Annual Celebration of World Music & Culture”. ¡Globalquerque! takes place each September and includes educational workshops, a global dance party, an International Cinema Series with free film screenings, panels, food demos, and performances by local and international musicians.

Ray Sandoval - On Zozobra, the gloom figure of Santa Fe.
Ray Sandoval, the Zozobra Event Chairman, tells us about the origin of Zozobra. Each summer, the gloom marionnette is carefully crafted, at once physically as a structure of wood, wire and paper, and metaphysically, by the gathering of people who contribute their gloom before they burn it to restore hope. Sandoval reflects, in this conversation, on the celebration itself, its significance and its evolution over the past 98 years.

Olivia Romo - On storytelling, the land, and the Manito experience.
An American poet, spoken word artist, subsistence farmer, and water rights activist from Taos, New Mexico, Olivia Romo addresses the deep and rich history of Northern New Mexico.

Dr. Ivan Deutsch - On physics, the second quantum revolution, and the establishment of New Mexico as a quantum state.
Dr. Ivan Deutsch’s background is in atomic physics and optical physics and he has been working at the University of New Mexico for over 25 years within the Physics and Astronomy department. Currently the director of the Center for Quantum Information and Control (CQuIC), which is funded by the National Science Foundation, Deutsch is responsible for one of the longest standing centers for fundamental research in quantum information and technology.

Julia Reinhard Lupton - On exploring connections between the works of William Shakespeare, life and society.
Julia Reinhard Lupton teaches English at the University of California, Irvine, where she co-directs the New Swan Shakespeare Center and serves as Interim Director of the UC Humanities Research Institute. In this conversation with Colette LaBouff, Lupton shares how her academic and community work explores connections between William Shakespeare and a diversity of life elements. She works with community members, including religious entities and national experts, to explore the writer’s work and engage with wide audiences.

Sharon Erickson Nepstad - On social activism and progressive movements arising from within the Catholic Church.
Dr. Sharon Erickson Nepstad is a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of New Mexico. Her research spans the globe focusing on social movements, non-violent movements, and the role of religion, specifically, Catholicism, in social movements. In this conversation we hear about solidarity organizations founded by missionaries in Central America as well as in the United States, the influence of priests and nuns on US foreign policy, the spirit of service in religious traditions, and how movements engage with religion to promote social change.

Tania Hernández Velasco, Victor Sicard, and Ryan Brown - On the one-act opéra-comique, Gretry’s Silvain, an Opera Lafayette production
Written in 1770 by André Grétry, Silvain, is restaged in the 19th century American Southwest through Opera Lafayette’s interpretation. Written in 1770 by André Grétry, Silvain addresses land right issues between peasants and landowners back in 18th century France. Opera Lafayette’s current production sets the plot in San Luis Valley, CO and the conversation today addresses the relevance of this topic.

Tina Cordova - On the impact of the Trinity Test Site on communities in New Mexico and justice for the victims of the first nuclear weapon detonation.
Tina Cordova, the granddaughter of a resident of Tularosa during the first atomic bomb, is the co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, an organization that seeks to bring attention to the victims of the first nuclear blast.
Music Credit:
The Reckoning by AERØHEAD: https://soundcloud.com/aerohead
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/the-reckoning-aerohead
Music promoted by Audio Library: https://youtu.be/NQk5C6Z_WOA

Bob Arellano - On innovative ways of working with digital networks to expand the potential of written work.
Bob Arellano is a Cuban-American author, musician, and educator. Arellano’s literary production includes pioneering work in electronic publishing, graphic-novel editions, and six novels.

David Rocchio - On screenwriting and filmmaking for emerging independent artists.
David Rocchio is an attorney, writer, and Emmy-nominated filmmaker. Through his organization, Stowe Story Labs, David provides opportunities for people to break into film, advance their work, and break down industry barriers. Stowe Story Labs is currently partnered with the New Mexico Film Office in launching a new training program for emerging New Mexican screenwriters.

Joshua Aragon, Montserrat Oyanedel Tolmo, Ryan Brown, Ava Collignon and Sonya Vitalia Silva Baca - Reflecting on Taos.
On this show we hear from five people who agreed to lend their thoughts about Taos to TCA’s microphone. Joshua Aragon, Montserrat Oyanedel Tolmo, Ryan Brown, Ava Collignon and Sonya Vitalia Silva Baca. Each one of them has a singular relationship to Taos, having ancestral roots in this land or simply passing through. In sharing their perspective with us, they create a small mosaic, reflecting some of our community.

Dr. Corrine Sanchez for Tewa Women United - On co-creation, jewels of knowledge, the releasing of “trauma rocks”, and story sharing.
Since its inception in 1989, as the only independent Native women’s non-profit organization, Tewa Women United provides advocacy and prevention services to women and youth in the community. In this show, Executive Director, Dr. Corrine Sanchez speaks to healing, relation in action, releasing trauma, and how we end violence against women, girls, and Mother Earth.

Tim Hill - On the creative synergy of the Santa Fe Opera and the 2022 summer season.
Since 1957, the Santa Fe Opera has drawn people from around the world to its adobe theater that overlooks the high desert landscape in northern New Mexico. This season at the Santa Fe Opera visitors can experience Carmen, The Barber of Seville, Falstaff, Tristan und Isolde, M. Butterfly, and the apprentice scenes. We hear from Tim Hill, the Director of Marketing, about the unique apprenticeship opportunities at the Santa Fe Opera, intricacies of planning seasons, and the 2022 season.

Dr. Phillip (Felipe) Gonzales - On ethnic identities and politics experienced by Nuevomexicanos after the mid 19th century.
Dr. Philip Gonzales is a doctor in sociology at the University of New Mexico. Dr Gonzales’s work explores ethnic identities and politics that were experienced by Mexican descendants after 1848. Dr. Gonzales also explores what it means to be a “cultural citizen”, and how Nuevomexicanos expressed their ethnic identity post WWI.

Roanna Shebala - On bringing native voices to public places and the power of writing.
Roanna, or Rowie, Shebala is a Native American of the Dine (Navajo Tribe) and Shiwi (Zuni Tribe) writer, poet and performer. Shebala shares her intentionality in bringing native voices in spaces where they are not always heard. Shebala also reflects on her writing processes and the place of performance in her work.

Anakeala Trujillo and Isabella O’Donnell Silfverberg - On the role of performing arts in one's development and creative spaces for youth.
Anakeala Trujillo is a musician. In 2021, she put together an EP of 7 songs. Isabella O’Donnell Silfverberg is also a performing artist and an active community member. She is part of True Kids One and has participated in many events, leading conversations with local political figures.
In this conversation, we reflect on places available for youth to create and gather. We interrogate the role of performing arts in developing one’s confidence and ability to meaningfully contribute to its circles.

Laura Metcalf and Rupert Boyd - On breaking down barriers to chamber music.
Rupert Boyd and Laura Metcalf are partners in life and music as a dynamic guitar and cello duo. The couple arrange much of their repertoire themselves, drawing inspiration from artists across all genres. Boyd and Metcalf share their eclectic mix of musical arrangements from Debussy and Bach to Radiohead and Beyoncé in this episode recorded after a rehearsal for their recent performance in Taos.

Sarah Parker, Jai Knight and Jack Lorang - On the Lost Sunshine Cinema Collective and community-making through art.
Three artists, Sarah Parker, a printmaker and digital artist, Jack Lorang, a musician, and Jai Knight, an interdisciplinary artist, reflect on the recent creation of The Lost Sunshine Cinema Collective. They share insights on the nature of the collective and the potential for collaboration and connection through art.

Steve McFarland - On creating spaces for artistic voices in Taos
Revolt Gallery’s owner and founder, Steve McFarland, shares his insights on creating a space for new artistic voices in Taos. Since 2017, Revolt Gallery has become a place where a diversity of artists present their work - a place for community that is rooted in art.

Leo Vicenti - On supporting Indigenous Cultures through the practice of Visual Communication Design.
Leo Vicenti is an enrolled member of the Jicarilla Apache Nation, who identifies creatively as a human, an artist, educator and visual communication designer. In this conversation, he reflects on his knowledge and work surrounding design.

David Fernandez - On his life as an abuelo de Taos.
David Fernandez de Taos is a writer and a participant in the spiritual, cultural, historical, and political aspects of life in Taos and beyond. As a Native Taos New Mexican, with both Spanish and Navajo family heritage, he is interested in the advancement of the spiritual and conciliation among the cultures and peoples of the Northern Rio Grande region and beyond.

Liz Przybylski - On ethnomusicology, sound, and sovereignty.
Dr. Liz Przybylski is as ethnographer and a interdisciplinary scholar of popular music, specializing in hip hop practices in Canada and the United States, with a focus on Indigenous popular music. She is an Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of California, Riverside. Her 2020 book, Hybrid Ethnography: Online, Offline, and In Between develops an innovative model of hybrid on- and off-line ethnography for the analysis of expressive culture.

Dr. Lillian Gorman - On language and identity in northern New Mexico.
Dr. Lillian Gorman is a researcher, Spanish heritage language learner and teacher, and a proud Chicana and Nuevomexicana from Albuquerque. In this conversation, we speak with her about language, pride within Spanish heritage language learning, language and identity in northern New Mexican families, and the dialogue between nuevomexicanos and other Latino communities in the US.

Anita Rodriguez - On the invisibilization of La Raza and the power of art.
Anita Rodriguez is a mother, a painter, a construction worker, an enjarradora, and a writer from Taos. In this conversation, cultural representation, historic trauma and community work all play a part in informing the understanding of the current Northern New Mexican culture.

Tomas Van Houtryve - On approaches to photography and documentary work.
Tomas van Houtryve is a Paris based artist, photographer and filmmaker whose major works interweave investigative journalism, philosophy and metaphor. One of van Houtryve’s latest works confronts America’s collective historic amnesia, bringing stories of the “Far West”, that are often untold, to the light. The conversation with Tomas van Houtryve explores the processes related to his documenting work.

Joanna Keane Lopez - On working with adobe architecture and sculpture.
Joanna Keane Lopez is a multidisciplinary artist whose work brings together large scale installation, adobe architecture and sculpture as a reimagining of landscape and place. By working with materials of adobe, alíz, paper and natural dyes her practice acts to address conceptions of sculpture in engagement with land.

Delinda VanneBrightyn of Taos Search and Rescue - On rescue work and the relationship between humans and dogs.
Delinda VanneBrightyn is the President of Taos Search and Rescue. For almost 20 years, she has been helping find missing persons and strengthening the structure of the organization itself. She shares her expertise on the rescue process and her unique understanding of dogs as working companions.

Bianca Manuelita Encinias - On oral histories of Wagon Mound, in Mora County, NM.
Bianca Manuelita Encinias’ research addresses and deconstructs inaccurate historical images, perspectives, and interpretations of Mestiza, Mexican, Spanish, and Nuevamexicana women from northeastern New Mexico in the field of planning. She is the owner of El Chante: Casa de Cultura, a community gathering space in Albuquerque, New Mexico with an emphasis on community-based economic development focusing on the promotion and development of local artists, art, and crafts. She is also the Executive Director of the South Valley MainStreet, which is a grassroots economic development organization that assists the South Valley community in revitalizing its commercial district.

Sandy Rodriguez - On methods and materials of painting across cultures and histories.
Sandy Rodriguez is a Los Angeles-based artist and researcher.
Her Codex Rodriguez-Mondragón is made up of a collection of maps and paintings about the intersections of history, social memory, contemporary politics, and cultural production. The series pays homage to Indigenous artists and the history of migration between the Americas and raises awareness about immigration injustices. She was raised in San Diego, Tijuana, and Los Angeles. Rodriguez has exhibited at a number of museums and cultural institutions, including current exhibitions at Denver Art Museum, The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Garden, The Amon Carter Museum of American Art and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Christine Barber and Cindy Jaramillo of Street Safe: On advocating for women living on the streets.
Street Safe is an all-volunteer, non-profit striving to reduce the harmful consequences associated with life on the street. Most of the women served have been victims of sex-trafficking, while others have struggled with homelessness and addiction. Please note that this episode contains depictions of violence that some people may find disturbing or difficult to listen to.