Archive for the 'Santa Fe' Category

Cowgirl’s Getaway to Santa Fe, Bishop’s Lodge & Resort

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Cowgirl’s Getaway to Santa Fe

Santa Fe, N.M., August 2, 2010 — The Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort and Spa announces the Cowgirl’s Getaway to Santa Fe package.  The resort, nestled on 450 acres and only minutes from the Santa Fe Plaza, is the ideal setting for a girl’s getaway.

Package includes:

  • One custom massage per adult
  • One hour group horseback ride per adult
  • Full breakfast each morning
  • Welcome bottle of Bishop’s Lodge Heritage Collection Wine
  • Resort Fee (including daily fitness classes, art tour, chapel tour, pool and spa access, scheduled shuttle service to the plaza and WIFI)

Starting at $212.25* per person, per night

*Price is based on double occupancy with a two night minimum beginning at $424.50 per person. Single occupancy and multiple people occupancy available.  This package is available for deluxe accommodations to private, luxurious 2 to 3 bedroom Villas.  Black-out dates and restrictions may apply.

This year Santa Fe is ranked as the fifth most popular travel city in North America by Travel + Leisure Magazine.  With weekly gallery crawls throughout the city’s art districts, nightly musical and theater performances, a new Thursday evening schedule for the Farmers Market at the Railyard, art markets, sales, fairs, and expos, some blockbuster museum exhibits, summer is the perfect time to plan a trip to Santa Fe, and The Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort and Spa.

About Bishop’s Lodge:

Bishop’s Lodge is a secluded sanctuary nestled on 450 stunning acres in the Tesuque Valley of Northern New Mexico. The resort, with mountain forest surroundings, is located only minutes from the historic Santa Fe Plaza and considered among the best retreats in America by Travel & Leisure Magazine.

Meeting spaces include four conference rooms totaling 8,000 square feet, fully wired with high-speed Internet access. Outdoor spaces are available for receptions and activities.  Business support services are available, as well as catering and culinary planners.

Ranked by Travel & Leisure magazine as one of America’s premier retreats, Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa is managed by Prism Hotels & Resorts, whose clients also include Marriott, Hilton, Radisson, Doubletree, and Holiday Inn.  To make a resort or spa reservation, call 800-732-2240 or visitwww.bishopslodge.com

For press inquiries, please contact:

Kelley Coughlan
kelley@ballantinespr.com
Ballantines PR
Tel: +1.310.454.3080
Fax: +1.310.943.1978
www.ballantinespr.com

Farm to Restaurant, Cook with the Chef programs at Santa Fe Farmers Market

Monday, June 21st, 2010


Santa Fe Alliance presents the 2010 Farm to Restaurant project
and Cook with the Chef program at the
NEW Thursday Santa Fe Farmers Market

Santa Fe, NM, June 21, 2010 - The Santa Fe Farmers Market has been recognized as one of the top local markets in the country and is a popular spot for locals and visitors during its Saturday and Tuesday market days. After polling local restaurants, an additional market day was selected to better serve busy Santa Fe chefs wanting to support the Santa Fe Alliance’s growing Farm to Restaurant initiative.

Beginning on June 24, 2010, the Santa Fe Farmers Market will be open on Thursdays from 3 to 7 p.m. to allow chefs, and the public, to shop for locally produced foods. In addition, the Thursday markets will feature Cook With the Chef from 5:30 to 6:30, when Santa Fe chefs prepare and share a signature dish made from locally sourced, seasonal ingredients. Cook with the Chef takes place each Thursday through September 30. Fifteen of Santa Fe’s best known chefs will take part, talking about their recipes, their choice of local food sources, preparing a dish, and answering questions.

Cook with the Chef is just part of the Santa Fe Alliance Farm to Restaurant project, which was recently honored with the Sustainable Santa Fe Award for best Food System Project. The Farm to Restaurant project highlights the relationship between chefs and New Mexico farmers, bringing together Santa Fe restaurants that are committed to supporting regional farmers by purchasing sustainably grown produce, meat, poultry, eggs and other food products.

The project was also given a USDA grant from the Farmers Market Promotion Program to fund a value-chain approach to a food distribution pilot project, further linking farmers with the Santa Fe community. The value chain approach insures farmers receive a fair market price while restaurants–and their customers–receive the freshest of local ingredients.

Cook with the Chef schedule at the Santa Fe Farmers Market

  • June 24 – Michael Giese, Flying Star Cafe
  • July 1 – Peyton Young, Harry’s Roadhouse
  • July 8 – Carmen Rodriguez, Bishop’s Lodge
  • July 15 – Andy Barnes, Dinner for Two
  • July 22 – James Campbell Caruso, La Boca
  • July 29 – Louis Moskow, 315 Restaurant & Wine Bar
  • August 5 – Sancho Soeiro, Dish n’ Spoon Café & Gifts
  • August 12 – Rocky Durham, SF School of Cooking
  • August 19 – Lorin Parrish, BODY of Santa Fe        
  • August 26 – Roland Richter, Joe’s Restaurant
  • September 2 – Patrick Lambert, Cowgirl BBQ & Western Grill
  • September 9 – George Gundrey, Atrisco Café and Bar
  • September 16 – Patrick Gharrity, La Casa Sena
  • September 23 – Jennifer Nelson, Annapurna’s World Vegetarian Cafe
  • September 30 – Ahmed Obo, Jambo Café
  • October 7 – Megan Tucker, Amavi

The Santa Fe Alliance is a non-profit coalition of independent businesses, organizations and community members dedicated to supporting locally based economic development and preserving a strong sense of community.www.santafealliance.com

Contacts:
Kathleen Chambers,
programs@santafealliance.com,
670-2341 

Vicki Pozzebon,
vicki@santafealliance.com,
989-5362

For more information Please contact:
Steve Lewis
steve.lewisnm@comcast.net
Locas Communications
1916 Camino Lumbre
Santa Fe, NM 87505
Phone 505-473-9002
Fax 505-473-3899

SF Museum of International Folk Art: Empowering Women – Artisan Cooperatives

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Empowering Women:
Artisan Cooperatives That Transform Communities


Kenya


Lao PDR


Morocco

Santa Fe, NM, May 27, 2010 — A quiet revolution is taking place around the world led by women artisan cooperatives. Taking the initiative to collectively produce, manage, and market their crafts, they have enriched their lives and become powerful forces in their communities. On July 4, 2010 the Museum of International Folk Art inaugurates its’ “Gallery of Conscience,” a space dedicated to exploring contemporary issues affecting folk art production and consumption.

Empowering Women: Artisan Cooperatives That Transform Communities kicks off the first annual International Folk Arts Week – a week of demonstrations, lectures, folk music, performances, and other programs held in conjunction with the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market running July 9 through July 11, 2010.

Focusing on ten cooperatives that illustrate how the power of such grassroots collaborations transform women’s lives, the exhibit brings together first person quotes, stellar photos, and stunning examples of the cooperatives’ handmade traditional arts to tell stories of how women folk artists are working cooperatively to:

  • Preserve and reinvigorate their traditional arts.
  • Generate steady livelihoods for their families.
  • Give back to their communities.
  • Become leaders in public life.
  • Overcome domestic violence.
  • Develop literacy programs for themselves and their children.
  • Heal the traumas of war.
  • Sustain their natural environments.
  • Save for the Future

The featured cooperatives are drawn from three continents and ten countries including India, Nepal, Swaziland, South Africa, Rwanda, Kenya, Bolivia, Lao PDR, Peru and Morocco. Featured folk arts include embroidered story cloths, hand dyed sisal baskets, beaded neck collars, hand carded and dyed wool weavings, cultivated bromeliad bags, and folk paintings of village life.

“As the largest folk art museum in the world we have a responsibility to create a forum to discuss current issues that folk artists are facing around the world. This ‘Gallery of Conscience’ will be devoted to the examination of issues that threaten the survival of the traditional arts, bringing them to the attention of our visitors,” says Marsha Bol, Director of the Museum of International Folk Art. “We intend to address, over the course of the next few years, such issues as: the ecological implications of the acquisition of materials used in producing folk arts, the impact of political conflict and war on folk arts, and various economic and social issues that threaten to disrupt folk arts. We will also exhibit examples of successful solutions to such circumstances.”

There is a strong connection between this exhibition and the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market which has; “.always [been] a supporter of cooperatives, recognizing their power to bring both cultural and economic sustainability to communities,” said Folk Art Market Director Charlene Cerny, “Most of the cooperatives at the Market involve women.”

When anthropologist Dr. Suzanne Seriff was asked to guest curate an exhibition on women’s artisan cooperatives at the Museum of International Folk Art she had a unique perspective as head of the Folk Art Market’s Selection Committee. Seriff was; “.struck by the large numbers of women’s cooperatives applying to the Market, and their incredible stories how working collaboratively changed their lives. In this exhibition I wanted to bring some of these larger stories to the public, to give the women a chance to speak for themselves-in their own words about their work and their lives and how women all over the world are improving their lives, families and communities with the power of cooperatives.”

Nicholas Kristof recently wrote in the New York Times how these women’s artisan cooperatives are change agents in the developing world. One Moroccan woman teaches a village to read. An embroideress from Gujarat takes out a loan for the first time at the local bank. A Hutu woman from Rwanda works side by side with a Tutsi to make the peace baskets that are working to heal their war-torn country. In Swaziland, the village women use profits from the sale of their handwoven sisal baskets to feed and educate the hundreds of children in their village orphaned from AIDS. In Bolivia, displaced Ayorean women learn to cultivate the bromiliad plants that were once native to their jungle habitat and from which they weave their native dress and hand dyed bags. Women artisans from all over the world are using the power of artisan cooperatives to reach new markets and transform their lives. Two representatives from each cooperative featured in the exhibit will participate in a full week of demonstrations, discussions, lectures, and artist-led exhibit tours beginning with a facilitated roundtable discussion with the curator during the opening on July 4, 2010 from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. The opening will be hosted by the Women’s Board of the Museum of New Mexico from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.

Empowering Women: Artisan Cooperatives That Transform Communities runs July 4, 2010 through January 2, 2011. High resolution exhibition images may be downloaded from the media center.

Museum of International Folk Art
www.internationalfolkart.org
On Museum Hill
706 Camino Lejo
Santa Fe, NM 87505
(505) 476-1200

Media Contacts

Suzanne Seriff,
Ph.D, Sr. Lecturer,
Dept. of Anthropology,
University of Texas at Austin,
Guest Curator,
“Empowering Women: Artisan Cooperatives that Transform Communities”
seriff@aol.com
512 459-3990

For more information please contact:
Steve Lewis
steve.lewisnm@comcast.net
Locas Communications
1916 Camino Lumbre
Santa Fe, NM 87505
Phone 505-473-9002
Fax 505-473-3899