Dennis Hopper Day In Taos
“Dennis Hopper Day in Taos” is a guest post by Robert Cafazzo, owner of the Two Graces Gallery in Ranchos.
“Dennis Hopper Day in Taos” is a guest post by Robert Cafazzo, owner of the Two Graces Gallery in Ranchos.
This weekend is truly the start of the summer season here in the Land of Enchantment.
Shelbee Mares has shown at the Michael McCormick Gallery for over a decade.
Lee Clockman has been photographing professionally since 1971, when he worked for Academy Award-winning cinematographer Haskell Wexler in Hollywood.
“I was born in Dodge City, Kansas, on a farm, in 1936. I followed the light changing on the horizon” Dennis Hopper
One of the highlights of last weekend’s performance of Thumbelina by the Taos Youth Ballet at the TCA, was the grand pas de deux, with classical choreography from Sleeping Beauty and music by Tchaikovsky.
Janet Webb was born and raised in Los Angeles.
If you live in Taos or have visited over the past week or so, I’m certain you’ve seen the green horse and (resting) rider on the front of the building across from Smiths.
Taos Youth Ballet presents Thumbelina, a full-length ballet adapted from Hans Christian Anderson’s classic, at the TCA this weekend.
The sub-title of Bill Whaley’s new book, Gringo Lessons, published by Nighthawk Press, is Twenty Years of Terror in Taos.
Born in New York in 1943, Ron Cooper grew up in Ojai, California, before attending the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles from 1963 to ‘65, where his life-long friendships with Larry Bell, Ken Price and Ed Ruscha among others were formed.
Today, I’m going for a hike.