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When:
July 1, 2018 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm
2018-07-01T13:00:00-06:00
2018-07-01T14:30:00-06:00
Where:
St. Francis Auditorium, New Mexico Museum of Art
107 West Palace Ave.
Santa Fe
NM
Contact:
Membership
(505) 954-7203

Cost per person: $10 (for members and non-members)
Speaker:
Christine Mather

SAR administration building, located on the estate known as "El Delirio", former home of Elizabeth and Martha White

SAR administration building, located on the estate known as “El Delirio”, former home of Elizabeth and Martha White.

Local author and architecture specialist Christine Mather will discuss the evolution of Pueblo Revival style in Santa Fe. The style is rooted in concepts of Hispanic and Pueblo architecture, specifically as seen in the Mission churches. The presentation will take place at St. Francis Auditorium at the New Mexico Museum of Art, a Revival-style building constructed in the era of Edgar Lee Hewett’s leadership.

Presentations and panel discussions will take place at St. Francis Auditorium at 107 West Palace Ave. at the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

To register for this event please click here.

SAR will offer the option to take one of two special tours immediately following the public lecture. Each tour can accommodate 30 registrants. Fee for non-members is $15; free to members. To join SAR, click here.

Indian Arts Research Center: Enjoy a docent-led walk through the collection of nearly 12,000 items of Southwestern Native American art, including pottery, textiles, basketry, jewelry, carvings and more. Register here.

Estate Tour: Explore SAR’s historic estate with your guide, SAR Scholar-in-Residence, Nancy Owen Lewis. The estate tour features architecture by William Penhallow Henderson, artwork by Gustave Baumann, blooming gardens and more. Register here.

For more information on how to arrange for general group tours, please call or email Daniel Kurnit at 505-954-7272 or at kurnit@sarsf.org

New Mexico Museum of Art Logo

This program is presented in partnership with the New Mexico Museum of Art in honor of their centennial celebration, SAR’s 110th anniversary, and the 40th anniversary of the Indian Arts Research Center (IARC) at SAR.


New Mexico Humanities Council

Funding for this program is provided in part by a grant from the New Mexico Humanities Council.