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Sep. 17—It was Egypt in the 1980s. A swanky event was in full swing. It seemed like all of Cairo's art scene turned out to honor a quartet of renowned Santa Fe artists at a modern art museum in ...
June 19, 2024 at 11:33 PM. Jun. 19—The property that houses nearly quarter-century-old Maria's New Mexican Kitchen, a Santa Fe institution known for its local cuisine and vast selection of ...
Ellen Wilcox Williams Bacigalupa. Andrea (Drew) Bacigalupa (26 May 1923 in Baltimore, Maryland – 22 March 2015 in Santa Fe, New Mexico) was an American liturgical artist. He was a sculptor, painter, illustrator, ceramicist, multi-media artist, designer, and writer. He is known for his Santo tiles; his 1970’s newspaper column, The Coffee ...
Fred R. Kline. Fred R. Kline (November 3, 1939 – September 11, 2021) was an American art historian, writer, poet, sculptor, private art dealer and public gallerist in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He was known for his discoveries of lost art, including paintings, drawings and sculpture by Old Masters as well as 19th and 20th-century American and ...
The Fred Harvey Company was the owner of the Harvey House chain of restaurants, hotels and other hospitality industry businesses alongside railroads in the Western United States. It was founded in 1876 by Fred Harvey to cater to the growing number of train passengers. When Harvey died in 1901, his family inherited 45 restaurants and 20 dining ...
Cafe Pasqual's. / 35.6865; -105.93965. Cafe Pasqual's is an American Southwestern restaurant in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The business was named one of "America's Classics" by the James Beard Foundation Awards in 1999. [1] The cafe is located one block south of the Santa Fe Plaza in an adobe building built in 1905, and founded by Katharine Kagel in ...
Fremont Ellis. Fremont Ellis (1897–1985) [1] was the youngest member of Los Cinco Pintores, a group of early 20th century artists who lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico. [2] Ellis was born and raised in Virginia City, Montana. He was primarily self-taught, and was not formally educated beyond the first grade of elementary school. [2]
Vintage postcard featuring La Fonda. The site of the current La Fonda has been the location of various inns since 1609. It is on the El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, which linked Mexico City to Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo and was the terminus of the 800-mile-long Old Santa Fe Trail, which linked Independence, Missouri to Santa Fe and was an essential commercial route prior to the 1880 introduction ...