Santa Fe’s Winter Sun
|
Santa Fe’s Winter Sun Santa Fe, N.M. December 12, 2009 – Winter is a good time for a Santa Fe-cation because winter is value season in Santa Fe. All of the city’s historic charm, attractions, and timeless appeal remain, even as lodging is at its lowest cost of the year. Whether skiing in the Southern Rockies just outside of town, exploring the city’s diverse shopping and art districts, or simply taking some time out, Santa Fe’s warm hospitality and bright winter sun are in place to welcome travelers. The past year in Santa Fe saw a number of highpoints; the New Mexico History Museum opened its doors, the city’s 400th Anniversary began 16 months of commemoration, and American Eagle introduced service to the Santa Fe Municipal Airport with 3 daily flights–2 from Dallas and 1 from Los Angeles. With the onset of winter, the city’s relaxed pace slows even more as we welcome the holidays and move into a new year.
If it’s a couple’s escape you’re thinking about, setting the mood for a romantic get away comes naturally to this old town. The city is filled with pampering accommodations, nurturing spas, and perfect tables for two. Santa Fe’s intimate scale embraces every couple and walking is the best way to get around town or soak up the snow-covered mountain vistas. On a day when storms roll down from the Rockies, it can’t get any better than curling up next to a kiva fireplace. Find some time for yourself this winter and let Santa Fe help you get in touch with the inner, relaxed, you. Look for lodging specials and everything that’s going on in town at www.santafe.org. Winter Events: For the coming months Santa Fe’s calendar is full of music, food, art, and seasonal cheer for everyone in search of a winter escape. Here is some of what is planned.
The Holidays December 12-13: Winter Spanish Market is a showcase of Spanish Colonial art and the perfect spot for finding inspired gifts. The 21st Annual Market will feature the work of more than 100 artists, music, foot, and fun. At the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. www.spanishcolonial.org December 13: The traditional Spanish outdoor play, Las Posadas, takes place from 5:30 to 7:30 at the Palace of the Governors. Everyone is invited to join the candle-light procession around the Plaza as Mary and Joseph search for a room on Christmas eve. www.palaceofthegovernors.org December 17 thru the 31: The Santa Fe Southern Railroad offers a variety of special daily–except 12/25 and 29–Holiday trains, some perfect for kids like the Story Book Trains and Santa Trains, and others more suited for adults like the New Year’s Eve Celebration Train. www.thetraininsantafe.com December 20: Annual Holiday Open House at the New Mexico Museum of Art. This family favorite features performances by the Gustave Baumann marionettes among other activities. www.nmartmuseum.org December 20-24 and 26-27: Santa Fe Pro Musica presents A Baroque Christmas, featuring the music of Bach, Vivaldi, Prucell, Handel, and traditional carols. At the intimate Loretto Chapel. www.ticketssantafe.com December 24: The Plaza in Santa Fe is lit with 1,000 farolitos and traditional Christmas lights, refreshments are served, and a procession to the Cross of the Martyrs is held, all beginning at 5:00.
December 24: A Christmas Eve Concert at the Lensic Performing Arts Center featuring the Santa Fe Concert Association beginning at 5:00. www.ticketssantafe.org Get the Latest
2010 Winter Events in Santa Fe January 16: Leo Kottke performs at the James A. Little Theater. www.ticketssantafe.com January 17: Santa Fe Symphony presents “Vienna, With Love” at the Lensic Performing Arts Center. www.santafesymphony.org January 26: Van Cliburn Piano Competition Medalist, Yeol Eum Son performs solo and with the Albers Trio at the St. Francis Auditorium. www.ticketssantafe.com January 30: Santa Fe Souper Bowl XVI – a fundraiser for The Food Depot featuring the best soups from the city’s finest restaurants. At the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. www.thefooddepot.org. February 1: Moscow Festival Ballet: Coppelia. Lensic Performing Arts Center. www.ticketssantafe.com February 2: Moscow Festival Ballet: Sleeping Beauty. Lensic Performing Arts Center. www.ticketssantafe.com February 11: The Acoustic Brotherhood featuring Los Lonely Boys. Lensic Performing Arts Center. www.ticketssantafe.com/
February 26-28: The 13th Annual ArtFeast celebrates with world-class chefs and restaurants, an international array of vintners, original designer fashions and unique homes, along with nationally and regionally prominent artists represented by members of the Santa Fe Gallery Association. The Edible Art Tour on Friday evening showcases 30 of the city’s finest Canyon Road and Downtown art galleries paired up with some of Santa Fe’s best chefs who present their art-inspired foods. www.artfeast.com March 6: A talk by Annie Leibowitz as part of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s “Women of Distinction” series. www.okeeffemuseum.org March 12-13: The Aspen Santa Fe Ballet performs mixed repertory in their signature style including newly commissioned works by Helen Pickett and Nicolo Fonte. www.santafetickets.com
More of What’s Going on in
Museum of International Folk Art: Material World opens December 20 and presents a stunning look at the museum’s textile collection through 138 rarely seen items from everyday household articles to elaborately detailed ceremonial wear. Multiple Visions: A Common Bond – The museum’s remarkable Girard Foundation Collection includes toys, traditional arts, village scenes, textiles, and popular art pieces from more than 100 countries displayed at eye level for visitors from 2 to 102. It is one of the country’s most fascinating folk art collections. www.internationalfolkart.org/ SITE Santa Fe: Opening February 6, 2010, One on One, a suite of solo shows by Terry Allen, Hasan Elahi, McCallum & Tarry, and Kaari Upson, each examining the life of one person through video, painting, drawing, installation, and computer dialogue. www.sitesantafe.org/ Georgia O’Keeffe Museum: Opening January 22, 2010. Susan Rothenberg: Moving in Place. An exhibition of Rothenberg’s work, who, like Georgia O’Keeffe, left New York at mid-career to make New Mexico her primary residence. www.okeeffemuseum.org/ Museum of Contemporary Native Arts: The only Museum in the United States that is devoted solely to the exhibition of contemporary American Indian art forms. The Museum delivers on-going and changing exhibitions that feature a diverse range of artists from leading figures in contemporary Native art, including periodic exhibitions by IAIA Students, Alumni, and Faculty. The Museum also hosts major traveling exhibitions of Native American art. www.iaia.edu/museum/index.php New Mexico Museum of Art: Opening January 29, 2010, Museums in the 21st Century: Concepts, Project, Buildings. Exploring current transformations in architecture, as museums redefine their roles as cultural centers that have many functions. Opening February 12, 2010, New Arrivals: Works from the Collection, featuring more than 25 works of art introduced for the first time as additions to the museum’s collection. www.nmartmuseum.org
Museum of Indian Arts & Culture: Through February 10, 2010, Native Couture II: Innovation and Style, discovering the history of Native fashion from hand-made clothing and accessories of the 1880s that influenced the development of Santa Fe Style, to today’s contemporary Native couturiers. Through June 6, 2010, A River Apart. How two major rivers and their tributaries – the Colorado River and the Rio Grande – have shaped both the landscape and the distribution of indigenous villages. www.indianartsandculture.org/ Museum of Spanish Colonial Art: Home to the most comprehensive compilation of Spanish Colonial art of its kind, the museum has 3,000 objects in its collections including work that spans centuries in art, place, and time. Combined, the collections represent the artistic history and ongoing evolution of Hispano culture in New Mexico. www.spanishcolonial.org/
New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors: Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time: The archaeological and historic roots of American’s oldest capital city: Now celebrating its 400th anniversary, Santa Fe was once an infant city on the remote frontier. This exhibition explores the archaeological evidence and historical documentation of Santa Fe before the Spanish arrived, the first colony in San Gabriel del Yungue, the founding of Santa Fe, and its first 100 years as New Mexico’s first capital. Also, through April 14, 2010, Fashioning New Mexico: What We Wore to Mark Life’s Passages, featuring the clothes we wore over nearly two centuries of life’s milestones – christenings, weddings, military service, opera openings and more. A variety of interactive stations challenge visitors to tie a corset or check out a virtual image of themselves in one of the collection’s outfits. The clothing and accessories have been collected for the last century. This exhibition marks the first time they have been on display. www.nmhistorymuseum.org Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian: Through Their Eyes: Paintings from the Santa Fe Indian School. Long considered the birthplace of contemporary Native American easel painting, this exhibition focuses on paintings from the Charlotte G. Mittler collection created by students who attended the Santa Fe Indian School between 1918 and 1945. Until April 18, 2010. www.wheelwright.org For more about Santa Fe during the winter or any season and to receive a free 2010 Santa Fe Visitors Guide contact the Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau; scenter@santafe.org , 800-777-2489. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Keep in touch with everything going on in Santa Fe at http://www.santafe.org |
|||||||










