Posts Tagged Education
Dance Guide
Albuquerque International Folk Dance Foundation
The Aspen Santa Fe Ballet (ASFB)
Ballet Repertory Theatre of New Mexico
Fishback’s Studio of the Dance
Marshall’s Performing Arts Conservatory
National Dance Institute of New Mexico (NDI-NM)
The University of New Mexico Department of Theatre and Dance (UNM)
Yjastros Repertory Flamenco Company
The Growing Stage at ABQStages! Fall Classes
FALL SESSION #1 AUGUST 21 – SEPTEMBER 25
Musical Theatre Junior, Musical Theatre Senior, Solo Studio, Improvisation
FALL SESSION #2 OCTOBER 9 – NOVEMBER 13
Musical Theatre Junior, Musical Theatre Senior, Solo Studio, Monologues
All classes meet for six consecutive Saturdays at:
Covenant Presbyterian (9315 Candelaria, west of Eubank)
Culminating with a showcase for family & friends
on the evening of the final Saturday.
To register, please email kari or call 288.1205.
CLASS DESCRIPTIONS
MUSICAL THEATRE JUNIOR
Kids build skills as they work together on a scene & musical number.
Focus is on teamwork & stage skills while having fun.
Ages: 5 – 8 Time: 10:00 – 11:30 Instructors: Reeses & Roth Tuition: $120
MUSICAL THEATRE SENIOR
Kids develop characters & work on performance skills.
Scenes & musical numbers are rehearsed with a project-based learning approach.
Like the Junior class, with more challenging material.
Ages: 9 – 12 Time: 11:45 – 1:15 Instructors: Reeses & Roth Tuition: $120
SOLO STUDIO
Individualized instruction in healthy vocal technique & performance skills.
Like taking private voice lessons, except more affordable and with the support of a group.
A great challenge for serious singers who are ready to “go solo.”
Ages: 9 & up Time: 1:45 – 3:15 Instructors: Reese & Roth Tuition: $120
TEEN IMPROVISATION
Acting without a script is fun and exhilarating, plus it builds important stage skills.
Learn to think fast on your feet with great improv games at TEAM GROWING STAGE.
This class is offered for Fall Session #1 only.
Ages: 12 & up Time: 3:30 – 5:00 Instructors: K. Reese Tuition: $120
MONOLOGUES
Refine a character and work up a comic or dramatic monologue.
Students will work on individual pieces, but with the support of a group.
Occasional guest teachers will help students understand & explore the power of a good monologue.
This class is offered for Fall Session #2 only.
Ages: 12 & up Time: 3:30 – 5:00 Instructors: K. Reese Tuition: $120
The Growing Stage
13170 Central Avenue SE, Suite B #104
Albuquerque 87123
505288.1205
Summer Wings festival
Saturday August 14 from 10 am to 4 pm
The Friends of the Rio Grande Nature Center State Park will present Summer Wings, its sixteenth annual festival celebrating New Mexico’s small but spectacular wildlife: hummingbirds, butterflies, dragonflies, and bees.
Ongoing exhibits throughout the day include Discovery Pond activities; a table featuring small wonders from the bosque; Audubon Society telescopes in the Observation Room; and Wildlife Rescue with live birds.
Refreshments will be available.
The schedule of events is as follows:
8 and 9 a.m. Guided bird walks with a stop at the Rio Grande Bird Research banding station
10 a.m. Guided tours of Mariposaville, the pollinator garden
10 a.m. Guided nature walk
10 a.m. Hummingbird banding demonstration with Bill Talbott, New Mexico-certified hummingbird bander
11 a.m. Dragonfly/damselfly talk by David Kilpatrick followed by their capture, identification and release at the
Discovery Pond
1 p.m. Hummingbird talk
1 p.m. Guided tours of Mariposaville, the pollinator garden
2 p.m. Dragonfly/damselfly lecture by Karen Gaines
Parking for non-members of the Friends is $3; entrance to the all-day event is free.
For more information, e-mail festival chair Dave Hutton, or call the Friends’ office, 505.343-1373.
Rio Grande Nature Center State Park
2901 Candelaria Road NW
Albuquerque, NM 87107-2965
505.344.7240
Fourth annual Ballet Pro Musica Festival ~ August 13–15
Posted by Jennifer Noyer in Dance on August 1st, 2010
A glimpse of Mexican culture through the prism of chamber music ballet
By Jennifer Noyer
The annual Ballet Pro Musica Festival returns for its fourth year August 13–15 at the National Hispanic Cultural Center (NHCC), in partnership with the National Ballet of Mexico and La Catrina Quartet, as well as pianist Jacquelyn Helin. The festival continues to present a welcome insight into the rich and sophisticated fine-art culture of neighboring Mexico through the new entertainment art form of chamber music ballet, which marries live chamber music performance with classical dance.
La Catrina Quartet is currently the Faculty Quartet-in-Residence at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma calls them “wonderful ambassadors for music,” performing a blend of Latin-American and standard classical repertoire to audiences throughout Mexico and the U.S. Pianist Helin is regularly heard in performance with such groups as Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, Santa Fe Music, Chatter, and the Taos Chamber Music Group.
World premieres
This year the festival will present three world premieres. Guest choreographer Eloy Barragan’s “Porteño” set to music by Argentinean composer Astor Piazzolla reflects passions and emotional perspectives between five couples. Piazzolla originally composed the piece as a paean for piano to the residents of Buenos Aires. “Porteño” means “port,” relative to Buenos Aires, which is home to people from all over the world and their cultures. Barragan’s style is a contemporary one, classical yet reflecting quotidian movements of today’s world.
Alex Ossadnik, a co-founder with Henry Holth of Ballet Pro Musica, has created “Ciao, Mama” to Alberto Ginastera’s String Quartet No. 1. The piece features four men and one woman, plus four chairs. The woman is meant to be both fragile and controlling. The men struggle to escape, experiencing the conflicts of youth leaving home for the first time.
The third premiere, “Haydn in Blue,” also by Ossadnik, is a “classical tutu ballet” to Franz Josef Haydn’s “Piano Trio No. 9 in G Major.” Its rondo finale is known for its Hungarian style. Ossadnik says he is striving in this work for a “very elegant, beautiful and yet simple design.”
A unique intimacy
In describing the nature and attractions of chamber music ballet, artistic director Sylvie Reynaud of the National Ballet of Mexico stresses the benefits of hearing live music with the visual stimulus of dance movement, plus the financial benefits of employing smaller groups of musicians and dancers rather than a full orchestra and large ballet company. Holth emphasizes the intimacy and intensity of the music projected in a small quartet, carried out in space by less than 10 dancers.
Master Classes and Free Children’s program
Wednesday and Thursday, August 11 and 12
Master classes for advanced dance students at the NHCC with the company’s ballet mistress Natasha Lagunas.
There will also be a free children’s program at 10 am at the NHCC featuring a discussion of ballet and a short performance.
Tickets:
Regular prices are $75 to $60, $45 and $30. Red Carpet Lounge, for groups of 10 or more.
Available in person at the NHCC box office, 505.724.4771, and Ticketmaster, 505.883.7800, ticketmaster.com.
People interested in the master classes or children’s program may call Ballet Pro Musica at 505.352.1281.
National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 4th St NW
Albuquerque
505.246.2261
—Jennifer Noyer is a contributing editor to albuquerqueArts.
Dancing different in The City Different ~ auditions & performance
Posted by Jennifer Noyer in Dance on May 31st, 2010
Moving People Dance Summer Dance Intensive promises more than a workout
The 6th Annual Summer Dance Intensive offered by Moving People Dance in Santa Fe
June 13-July 2
Student dancers between the ages of 10 to 25 may choose to attend one to three weeks to train for 30–40 hours per week, in classes that include a core curriculum of ballet, pointe and variations, modern, jazz, repertoire, gyrokinesis and supplemental classes in African, flamenco, tap and hip-hop.
A faculty of eight professional teacher/choreographers from all over the country will guide the students and offer the opportunity to perform in weekly studio showings followed by question and answer sessions.
On July 2nd, students who attend for three weeks may perform repertoire chosen by the guest choreographers at the Greer Garson Theater.
Publicity for the intensive suggests dancers “dance different in the city different.” The educational philosophy of Moving People Dance stresses an overall, very different approach to dance education by creating environments that nurture the unique gifts of each student, facilitating independent thinking, imagination and tenacity. The staff also works with the most current injury prevention techniques, while attempting to build self-esteem and leadership skills.
Dynamic faculty and staff
The list of faculty members and directors includes amazing resumes of past and current dance experience, promising an extremely rich environment for the students. Executive Director Layla Amis trained at the New World College of the Arts in Miami and danced professionally with the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Gail Gilbert Dance Ensemble. In 1999, Amis co-founded Moving People Dance Theatre. She teaches ballet, modern dance technique and repertoire. Artistic Director Curtis Uhlemann received a full scholarship to the American Dance Festival at Duke University, where he performed the works of José Limon, Paul Taylor, Gail Gilbert, David Parsons and Mark Morris. He works with Associate Artistic Director Echo Gustafson, a dancer, teacher, and choreographer who danced professionally with the Martha Graham Dance Company and the Pearl Lang Dance Theatre. She is a Gyrotonic and Gyrokinesis Master Trainer, utilizing those techniques in her classes to prevent injuries.
Duncan Cooper is the co-director of the Summer Intensive. Originally from New York City and San Francisco, Mr. Cooper danced with the San Francisco Ballet and the Dance Theatre of Harlem, where he performed such leading roles as Balanchine’s “Apollo,” “Prodigal Son,” and “Agon.” He is the creator and assistant director of a national outreach program for kids at risk called Athletes for Kids.
Karah M. Abiog, from California, has performed and taught since 1995 for the International Dance Seminar of Brasilia. She currently teaches at Alonzo Kings’ LINES Ballet Training Program.
Lydia Roberts Coco began her professional training with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center. After retiring from the Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre in 1997, she taught ballet, modern and jazz in Fairfax, Virginia, and serves on the faculty of the Virginia Ballet Theatre. Most recently, she has been touring with Athletes for Kids as a faculty member.
Catherine Cabeen brings 16 years of experience with Graham technique and Bill T. Jones postmodern style to her classes at the Summer Dance Intensive. Tai Jimenez, from Jamaica, New York, danced 12 years with the Dance Theatre of Harlem. She is a guest artist with companies across the United States and brings a rich repertoire in ballet to her students.
For information and to audition for the intensive:
Contact Moving People Dance at 505.438.9180 or by email.
Moving People Dance
1583 Pacheco Street
Santa Fe, NM 87505-4227
—Jennifer Noyer is a contributing editor to albuquerqueArts.
Santa Fe Art Institute exhibits and classes
1600 St. Michael’s Dr.
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505.424.5050
The Santa Fe Art Institute presents, supports and nurtures art, ideas and artists at the intersections of the contemporary arts and society through residencies, lectures, studio workshops, exhibitions and educational outreach. SFAI is an environment where creativity, innovation, and challenging ideas thrive.
The Santa Fe Art Institute Youth Education & Outreach Program Presents:
All Elements – Youth Exhibition
Exhibition of Student Work, and Celebration of Positive Change
Through May 28, 9 am-5 pm M-F
Celebrate the hard work and creativity of Santa Fe’s youth and the artists and mentors that have guided them throughout the year. Exploring the SFAI’s 2010 theme ELEMENTAL: Earth Air Fire Water – Art and Environment, this exhibition and performance is sure to be an inspiring event. Come see for yourself the creativity that has blossomed from the Santa Fe Art Institute’s youth education and outreach programs. All Elements will include the work of students from DeVargas Middle School, Capshaw Middle School, Tierra Encantada Charter High, SER Career Academy, Capital High School, La Otra Puerta Emergency Youth Shelter, Camino Nuevo Juvenile Correctional Facility, and the Youth Diagnostic and Development Center.
Elemental: Earth Air Fire Water
Art and Environment: An Exhibition
Opening Reception: June 4, 5-7 pm. Show runs through August 27.
Gallery Hours: 9 am-5 pm M-F
This year, as part of the 2010 Visiting Artist Lecture Series, Elemental: Earth Air Fire Water – Art and Environment, the Santa Fe Art Institute has invited artists who focus on environmental awareness, presenting art as a vehicle for individuals, communities and leaders to address environmental concerns. The SFAI’s goal is to reveal the variety of approaches and range of innovations that artists are currently using in conjunction with their creative, scientific and community collaborators. The SFAI hopes that by sharing artists’ sensitivity to the plight of the planet – in works of art ranging from ancient and indigenous objects to contemporary forms and multimedia visions – we can promote a deeper understanding and connection to our natural world. We will focus on artworks created by artists concerned with the state of our environment both locally and globally. Environmental artists can work in various ways:
Artists interpret nature, creating artworks to inform us about nature and its processes, or about environmental problems we face.
Artists interact with environmental forces, creating artworks affected or powered by wind, water, lightning, even earthquakes.
Artists re-envision our relationship to nature, proposing through their work new ways for us to co-exist with our environment.
Artists reclaim and remediate damaged environments, restoring nature in artistic and often aesthetic ways.
Artists included:
Amy Franceschini/Futurefarmers is a group of artists and designers working together since 1995. Their design studio serves as a platform to support art projects, an artist in residency program and various research interests. They are self-described teachers, researchers, designers, gardeners, scientists, engineers, illustrators, people who know how to sew, cooks and bus drivers with a common interest in creating work that challenges current social, political and economic systems.
Amy Franceschini calls herself a pollinator who creates formats for exchange and production that question and challenge the social, cultural and environmental systems that surround her. She received her BFA from San Francisco State University and her MFA from Stanford University. Amy is a professor of Art + Architecture at the University of San Francisco and a visiting artist at California College of the Arts Fine Arts Graduate program.
With the solid belief that art can help heal the earth, multi-disciplinary environmental artist, Patricia Johanson has been initiating large-scale projects utilizing city planners, engineers, scientists and citizens’ groups to create artworks that blend the radical and practical. She designs sewers, parks, and other elements of modern urban infrastructure to marry the needs of the local flora and fauna to the people living in the area. Johanson’s work reclaims nature, using its structures as a model for thinking and functioning in unison with the environment.
Jennifer Levonian is a Philadelphia-based artist who creates cut-paper and watercolor animations that explore the ambivalence of everyday life by focusing on things which go unnoticed and transforming them into bizarre and uncanny events. Levonian graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) with her master’s in fine arts in painting. She had been creating watercolor paintings that were narrative, but felt something was missing. Her last winter at RISD, she took a class in animation which inspired her to turn her watercolors into animation. She cut up her paintings and made stop-motion films to give her narrative a context, a pace and more depth.
Jennifer Monson has been pursuing an original approach to experimental dance forms in NYC since 1983 when she graduated from Sarah Lawrence College. In that time she has created a wide body of work that incorporates well-developed collaborative relationships with many artists. Her current artistic concerns have brought her back to the urban environment and in 2004 she founded iLAND- Interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art Nature and Dance. iLAND investigates the power of dance, in collaboration with other fields, to illuminate our kinetic understanding of the world. iLAND, a dance research organization with a fundamental commitment to environmental sustainability as it relates to art and the urban context, cultivates cross-disciplinary research among artists, environmentalists, scientists, urban designers and other fields.
Trevor Paglen is an artist, writer, and experimental geographer whose work deliberately blurs lines between social science, contemporary art, journalism, and other disciplines to construct unfamiliar, yet meticulously researched ways to see and interpret the world around us. He holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a PhD in geography from the University of California at Berkeley, where he currently works as a researcher. Paglen is the author of three books and his photography and other visual works have been shown at numerous museums and galleries around the country.
Victoria Sambunaris photographs the American landscape with a neutrality that allows for both natural and manmade structures to be seen equally, focusing on roads, houses, freight cars and the like, poking out of the landscape as if natural occurrences. These elements are sculptural, either representing the ever changing environment, land formations, and weather or the inventions and movement of humans into the dwindling wild landscape. Her photos simultaneously show the vast expanse of the land and the increasing encroachment of progress. She captures the beauty and tragedy of such encroachment, but also the technology required by today’s living standards as a part of our contemporary landscape.
Janet Koenig and Gregory Sholette frequently combine their graphic design and sculptural skills to produce extensively researched collaborative projects typically focusing on issues of class, history, and social justice. Their projects include subway posters for Group Material, an installation for the Brooklyn Army Terminal, and REPOhistory, a public art and activist collective whose mission focused on site-specific street signs “repossessing” lost of forgotten histories of New York City. Their work was recently included in Moving Targets an exhibition of posters on the Berlin-Poznan Deutsche Bahn rail line in Germany.
Public artist, Mierle Ukeles’ work reminds us that when we need our spaces cleared of snow, garbage, or other inconveniences, we don’t will it all to be gone – other people take care of it for us. Ukeles re-conceptualizes this first world perk into an active learning process that brings discussions of politics, environment, and society to the forefront. Through her work, she creates a springboard for rethinking urban ecology and the consequences of our current actions, both toward the environment and society.
Will Wilson was born in San Francisco and moved permanently to the Navajo Reservation at the age of 10. He attended the Bureau of Indian Affair’s Tuba City Boarding School from 1978 to 1983. He holds a bachelor’s degree in art history and studio art and a master’s of fine art in photography. Wilson has worked in a variety of media and has produced large-scale multi-media installations that incorporate photography and sculpture, monumental art pieces and intimate photo essays. Most recently Wilson’s work provides a glimpse into the complex contemporary negotiation with a land we have become alienated from, our dis-ease in understanding who we are, and possible paths for healing.
The Yes Men - With self-proclaimed expertise, these social and political satirists don the identities of spokespersons for prominent organizations in an effort to expose the dehumanizing effects of these corporations’ policies. As the Yes Men are interviewed in the guise of these spokespeople (at conferences and symposia, on the internet and television) they respond with often outrageous ideas. For example, while posing as ExxonMobil representatives, they commented on the “worst case scenario” of transforming billions of people who die into oil to keep the oil industry running. The Yes Men practice “identity correction,” with the goal of bringing publicity to the global issues affecting us today.
Nancy Reyner
Acrylic Painting w/ New Digital Imagery Workshop
June 7-11, 2010 @ 10 am-4 pm
$495 – generous need-based scholarships available
Give your art an exciting contemporary edge! Print images onto unusual papers, foils and actual layers of acrylic paint (called paint skins), then collage and overpaint, to transform, seal and combine into unique paintings. New acrylic painting techniques, surfacing, paints and products will also be explored. All levels are welcome. Printers and printing inks will be supplied. Golden provides free paint samples and product samples for experimenting. Additional supplies are needed – list is available upon registration.
Nancy Reyner is a painter of more than 30 years experience who exhibits, lectures and teaches locally and nationally. Born and raised in Philadelphia, PA, Nancy received a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA from Columbia University.
Her varied experiences add technical expertise and originality to her work. She lived in New York City in the 80’s, holding various jobs and positions such as creating costumes and sets for Broadway and off-Broadway theater and film (including a Madonna film), coordinating public arts programs for the state of New York, and directing and performing with the Ragabash Puppet Theater. Nancy was selected for a two year painting and drawing residency for the Phoenix Center in Arizona. There she exhibited, curated, taught and produced new work. Her expertise has led to a position as technical consultant for the acrylic paint company Golden Artist Colors, Inc. This association allows her the opportunity to use the latest in acrylic paint technology creating original and unique effects in her paintings.
Nancy has written two painting books with publisher North Light Books; Acrylic Revolution and Acrylic Innovation as well as a DVD, Acrylic Revolution: Watercolor & Oil Effects with Acrylic Paint, demonstrating several painting techniques from the books. She has appeared on television for HGTV’s “That’s Clever”. She now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Click here for current gallery representation and contact information
Sound/Recording Workshop and Performance with Steven M. Miller
Saturday, May 29
This workshop will introduce some of the techniques and equipment for composers, sound artists, and audio production/post-production professionals dealing with location-based audio. Basic info on microphones, recording formats, and storage media will be combined with hands-on considerations of aural perspective, aesthetics, and production values.
Workshop from 3-6 pm
$25-30 – includes admission to performance and dinner
Performance at 7 pm
Suggested $10 donation at the door
High Mayhem Studio
2811 Siler Lane, Santa Fe NM
Registration is limited to 10 participants.
To register please email
OR register the day of the workshop.
Payment must be made the day of the workshop.
Museum Guide
The Albuquerque Museum of Art & History
Curator’s Conversations first Wednesdays of the month at 11:00 am.
Join Andrew Connors, Curator of Art, for engaging discussions on select works in the exhibition.
A free Wednesday event, no admission required.
Museum Hours: Tuesday – Sunday, 9 am to 5 pm
Museum admission: $4 Adults ($1 discount to NM residents w/ ID)
$2 Seniors (65+)
$1 Children 4‐12. Children 3 and under are free.
Free admission first Wednesday of each month and Sundays until 1 pm
Saturday Family art workshops – Ongoing 1 – 2:30 pm
2000 Mountain Road NW
Albuquerque NM 87104
505.243.7255
The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center
2401 12th St NW Albuquerque, NM 87104
505.843.7270 | Toll Free: 866.855.7902
National Hispanic Cultural Center NHCC
Dedicated to the preservation and promotion of Hispanic Art and Culture at the local, state, national and international levels. The Center is a division of the Department of Cultural Affairs.
1701 4th St SW 1701 (on the corner of 4th Street and Avenida César Chávez)
Albuquerque, NM 87102-4508
505.246.2261
South Broadway Cultural Center
The SBCC is a multi-cultural, visual, performing and literary art center, that promotes, preserves and educates the community about the cultures and ethnicities that define Albuquerque.
Hours: 8 am – 5 pm – M-F
Art Gallery Hours : 8 am - 6 pm – M-F
Event Ticket Sales: 8:30 am – 4:30 pm
1025 Broadway SE
just 3 blocks north of Avenida Cesar Chavez
505.848.1320
The University of New Mexico (UNM) Art Museum
Located on the main campus of UNM within the Center for the Arts building.
Parking at the Visitors Parking Lots east of the Center for the Arts at Central and Stanford.
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque
505.277.4001
Taos
Harwood Museum of Art
Benefit – National Dance Institute of New Mexico Gala Celebration: “It’s A Small World”
Friday, May 7th at 6:30 pm
Join the National Dance Institute of New Mexico at our annual gala to benefit Albuquerque’s children!
This exciting night begins with a performance featuring 500 Albuquerque public school students.
The show celebrates vibrant music and dance styles from around the world.
A festive Gala celebration will follow featuring music from The Pleasure Pilots.
Tickets: $100 adult and $25 child (12 & under).
Contact: call Nicole Neumann, 872-1800 ext. 1107 or email
About:
National Dance Institute of New Mexico (NDI-NM) is founded with the knowledge that the arts have a unique power to engage and motivate children. The purpose of our distinctive programs is to help children develop discipline, a standard of excellence, and a belief in themselves that will carry over into all aspects of their lives.
In 2008-2009, NDI-NM programs will reach more than 6,700 children and public school teachers in urban, rural and Native American communities throughout the state.
Further information is available at National Dance Institute of New Mexico website
or call 505-983-7646.
Location:
The National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 4th Street SW
Albuquerque, NM 87102
505.246.2261
The Painting Experience with Stewart Cubley a Weekend workshop – May 14-16
Stewart Cubley of The Painting Experience returns to Santa Fe after a five-year hiatus to facilitate a workshop in expressive painting.
His work has carried him throughout the world, facilitating groups to access the potential within the human heart and imagination. Originally a scientist, Stewart has facilitated painting workshops for more than 30 years. He co-authored the highly acclaimed book Life, Paint and Passion: Reclaiming the Magic of Spontaneous Expression.
Using only the simple tools of brush, paper, and paint, Stewart’s workshops encourage the awakening of a wild vein of passion that won’t go back to sleep. The potential is to tap into the vibrant, driving force of one’s creative spirit. The goal is free expression, with the emphasis on the creative process rather than technique.
Everyone is a beginner at these workshops. Even those who have never picked up a paintbrush are welcome. The Painting Experience is an opportunity to embark on the greatest of all human adventures—embracing one’s own path and confidently following it.
Sarah Oblinger will assist Stewart.
The cost is $395 plus a $25 studio fee, with all materials provided.
Scholarships, discounts, and CEUs are offered.
Affordable accommodations are available at the retreat center.
This workshop is of interest to people from a wide variety of disciplines, including art, education, counseling, medicine, social change, and meditative practices.
Weekend workshop on May 14-16
Location:
Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat Center
50 Mount Carmel Rd
Santa Fe, NM 87505-0352
(505)988-1975
For information and registration call 888-639-8569
or visit The Painting Experience website








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