Sunday, April 21, 2019

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Plaza del Cerro Oratorio Photos, Chimayo, New Mexico



















How many times have I visited the Santuario de Chimayó in northern New Mexico? I assumed that this was the most historic district since I began visiting in the early 90s. I thought I had photographed everything about this world famous Hispanic region, but the most significant area was actually just down the road between the Santuario and the High Road to Taos. Apparently I hadn't done my research well over the years. My husband and I have stayed multiple times in local Bed and Breakfast Inns, and no one ever clued us in. We had been passing that little right-hand turn more times than I would want to count.

Last August, while I was wandering around in my car hunting for the Chimayó Museum, I stumbled upon the nearly abandoned Plaza de San Buenaventura de Chimayó, known as the Plaza del Cerro, the oldest intact Spanish Plaza in the United States. Begun in the 1700s, this 1.6 acre fortified plaza was built to protect Spaniards from raids by the Apache, Comanche, Navajo, and Ute Indian tribes. I walked the old plaza lanes lined with the crumbling adobe walls of rundown homes, a post office, a general store, and the tiny chapel, known as the Oratorio. It seemed so sad that the plaza was overgrown with weeds. Only a handful of residents still live on the plaza, and one building even offers lodging, if it is still open this year.

Allow me to tour you through this private Oratorio with my own cellphone photos taken last August 2018. This chapel was built around 1830. The wooden altar (reredo) is thought to be painted by José Rafael Aragón, the New Mexican Santero whose altar panels are the distinguishing feature of the world-renowned Santuario de Chimayó, in the neighboring community of Potrero. The inside walls are covered in a mud gypsum mixture known as yeso. It was recently restored by the Chimayó Cultural Preservation Association, which was cofounded by Don Usner, local writer, photographer, who grew up in the area and established the wonderful Chimayó Museum. I believe he is the man who invited us to join his tour of the Oratorio and Plaza. Ask for him at the museum if you should visit there, as the chapel is locked.

Read more about the history of the Plaza del Cerro and its restoration projects at:

Pasatiempo Santa Fe New Mexican.com
Art of Space
A little place I know: Chimayó’s Plaza del Cerro
By Paul Weideman
September 22, 2017











 

Saturday, February 27, 2016

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN MADRE DOLOROSA DRAWING IN LATINO EXPRESSIONS ART EXHIBITION, LINCOLN CENTER GALLERY

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's drawing, Madre Dolorosa: Spanish Veil, was selected for the juried LATINO EXPRESSIONS exhibition at the Lincoln Center this winter in Fort Collins, Colorado. Latino artists from Colorado included: Francisco Castro, Manuel Cordero, Arturo Garcia, Ismael Lozano, Alejandra Lujan, Silvia Montero, Tony Ortega, Daniel Salazar, Carlos Santistevan, Frank Zamora, and guest awards juror Carlos Fresquez. I was most honored to have one of my new drawings exhibited alongside of these well-known artists, santeros, and arts educators from Denver, Colorado.

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa: Spanish Veil drawing on left wall









  

Guest awards juror from Denver, Carlos Fresquez had his work exhibited
in the Latino Expressions exhibition at the Lincoln Center Gallery

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN EXHIBITS MADRE DOLOROSA DRAWINGS AT ARTWORKS LOVELAND NOVEMBER 13-DECEMBER 4, 2015

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa: Spanish Veil graphite drawings



Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa drawings on right-hand wall
Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa drawings on right-hand wall


Ancestors and Heritage exhibit banner displaying Laurie Beth Zuckerman's
Madre Dolorosa drawing, hangs outside the Artworks Loveland Gallery




Artist Laurie Beth Zuckerman was invited by Artworks Loveland to exhibit her drawings in their Ancestors and Heritage: Resonations of Día de Los Muertos exhibition, which opened November 13 in Northern Colorado. Three of my 22"x30" graphite pencil drawings from the "Madre Dolorosa: Spanish Veil" series were on exhibit in the south gallery through December 4.

The exhibition banner hanging on the outside of Artworks Loveland, announcement promotions, and gallery website featured one of my Spanish Veil drawings.

My exhibit statement read: 

"Laurie Beth Zuckerman's intricate graphite drawings on paper describe her treasured cast-iron Madonna, drawn from the still-life. Laurie drawings seek to capture the solemn grief of La Madre Dolorosa, drawn from her antique cast-iron statue, which is the Mother of Sorrows figurehead of her altar installation, “Madre Dolorosa: The Spanish Lady.” The Catholic mourning veil references the 1918 influenza pandemic, commonly called "The Spanish Lady." Laurie’s grandmother, Sarah Zuckerman lost her six-year-old daughter Elizabeth to this disease, went mad with despair, abandoned her husband and sons for two years, and never again spoke of her little girl. Laurie’s father George Zuckerman had no memories of his sister, but did recall the horrific wailing of his mother. Laurie’s middle name, Beth, is an homage to Elizabeth."

Last fall I featured this Madonna bust in my altar installation, Madre Dolorosa: The Spanish Lady, at my Memory: Loss and Found exhibit at the Boulder Dairy Center for the Arts. She was also the figurehead of my earlier Madre Dolorosa installation at the Longmont Museum and Cultural Center honoring my grandmother, Sarah Melnick Zuckerman.




The Ancestors and Heritage exhibition included works by 14 artists who each have private studios at Artworks Loveland exciting new complex of workspaces and galleries in Historic Downtown Loveland.

Artworks Loveland is located at 310 N. Railroad Avenue, Loveland, Colorado, 970-663-5555.

More information about the exhibit can be found at: artworksloveland.org

Friday, October 16, 2015

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN ALTAR IN STORYTELLERS DIA DE LOS MUERTOS EXHIBITION at Lola's Fresh Patina Gallery, Loveland, Colorado 2015






Laurie Beth Zuckerman's completed installation of her "The Girl I Left Behind" dollhouse altar at Lola's Fresh Patina Gallery, Loveland, Colorado 2015, for their "Storytellers" Day of the Dead exhibit.




Here's a little more detail in this shot showing some of the antique photos in my dollhouse altar.


Laurie Zuckerman sets up her dollhouse altar at Lola's Fresh Patina gallery as part of the "Storytellers" Day of the Dead exhibit. The altar is in honor of Zuckerman's mom, who died from ovarian cancer in 2001. Copyright: Jessica Benes, reporter for Arts/Entertainment Spotlight, Longmont Times-Call, October 2015.



[Laurie Beth Zuckerman was interviewed by reporter, Jessica Benes at Lola's Fresh Patina in LovelandThis post is excerpted from Benes' Longmont Times-Call and Loveland Reporter-Herald article for Arts/Entertainment Spotlight, October 15, 2015.]


Laurie Zuckerman tucks a black Victorian shawl around the dark wood of the altar. She drapes rosary beads so that they lie in front, a wooden cross just touching the base of the altar. Zuckerman has been designing altars since her mother was stricken with ovarian cancer about 1999.

"It was right after my dad passed away, and once I learned she had ovarian cancer, I knew she wasn't going to make it most likely," Zuckerman said recently while designing the altar at Lola's Fresh Patina in Loveland
After her mother got sick, Zuckerman said, she started collecting old Victorian tintypes, particularly of children.
"I knew I was going to lose my mother and it felt like I was losing my childhood," the Fort Collins resident said.
Zuckerman was attracted to how angelic and innocent they were and wondered what happened to them.
"There's something nostalgic about all these Victorian photographs. Those are some of the first studio photographs that were made," Zuckerman said. "I want to give a sense that these are sort of lost children. Maybe they lost their mother like I was going to lose mine."
She collects baby shoes and women's gloves and childhood dolls, as well as Mexican ornaments and shawls.
"It just helped me to soothe the little girl in me that was about to be an orphan," she said. The "dollhouse" series of altars she started with after her mother's death in 2001 has expanded into larger altars.

Zuckerman doesn't consider herself to be "dark" — she simply is interested in the Victorian era of mourning, the way children and people were immortalized in old photography.

"I knew I was going to miss her before she was even gone and then I missed her so much. I didn't have anyone to nurture me anymore, so I kind of nurtured myself by making these altars," Zuckerman said.
She has displayed her altars at the Loveland Museum/Gallery in the past and even built a large altar at Virginia Tech in 2008 for its Day of the Dead celebration, a year after the shooting that occurred there.
………………

For a little more background on this altar, here is my exhibit statement:

"The Girl I Left Behind," from my series of “dollhouse” altars, showcases Victorian photography and dolls, religious figurines, and miniature paraphernalia, displayed in stacked wooden boxes, shrouded in mourning shawls. They were begun in 2001 during the final months of my mother’s losing battle with ovarian cancer. In nervous anxious anticipation of becoming “orphaned,” I was drawn to collecting Victorian photographs of “angelic” girls. This altar houses cabinet cards, carte vistas, and tintypes of stoic young girls, each hardened “old souls."

Blanche Kleid Zuckerman died in June 2001 and the altar memorials began pouring out of me from grief and loneliness. First the dollhouses, then home altars, then memory jugs, and finally the room-size installations, all in honor of my mother. Fourteen years later, my mother is still the primary focus of my altar work, which expanded in scope to include other Russian-Jewish relatives who were mothers. The Mother of Sorrows–La Madre Dolorosa–is the overriding theme I continue to explore.

………………

[Jules Gillen, Lola's Fresh Patina gallery director, was also interviewed by reporter, Jessica Benes for this article.]
Lola's Patina is hosting a Day of the Dead exhibit, "Storytellers," through November 7, 2015.
Dia de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is celebrated Nov. 1 throughout Latin America and many other countries to honor and remember loved ones who have died.
"It's traditionally a Mexican holiday," said Julie Gillen, Lola's Fresh Patina gallery director. "Now more cultures celebrate it, so we're coming at it from a different perspective using storytelling as a way of remembrance and celebration."
She said the event will include pieces from more than 10 local artists, as well as a community altar where community members can include their own pieces as a remembrance.

"It's important to celebrate where you came from and where you're going," Gillen said. "It's an amazingly beautiful way to share with other people your histories about Loveland.

"Maybe you have a grandmother or grandfather that you didn't get to know so by installing that altar you get to pull things out and share with your other family members and friends."
She said the imagery of skeletons as used for Day of the Dead are not like the scary Halloween images.
"They're always happy, they're laughing, a celebration," Gillen said.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN RADIO INTERVIEW ON KRFC FM IN FORT COLLINS Sponsored by Noosa Yogurt's "Support Local Culture"



Support Local Culture is sponsored by Noosa Yogurt. Each week KRFC radio station in Fort Collins airs interviews with Northern Colorado artists. This week KRFC is airing Laurie Beth Zuckerman's interview with Michelle Venus, and tastefully edited by Ric Reed. You can listen to Laurie's October 2015 interview at this KRFC radio link:




You can also visit KRFC's website directly to see samples of Laurie's artwork and read her biography at this link:

https://www.krfcfm.org/support-local-culture-laurie-zuckerman/#comment-2538


Saturday, September 19, 2015

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN EXHIBITS MEMORY JUG JURIED BY DEAN SOBEL IN THE ANNUAL CONTEMPORARY ART SURVEY, Fort Collins Lincoln Center Art Galleries






Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Tarnished Angels memory jug is on exhibit in the fifth Annual Contemporary Art Survey show at the Lincoln Center Art Galleries. It is such an honor to be selected for this national competition by Guest Juror, Dean Sobel, Executive Director of the fabulous Clyfford Still Museum in Denver, Colorado. This is also the second year I have had my memory jugs selected for these national juried exhibitions at the Lincoln Center in Fort Collins, Colorado.

The Annual Contemporary Art Survey offers a thought-provoking and eclectic array of painting, sculpture, fiber art, photography, mixed media, and installations. The exhibition is meant to be a survey—an overview of contemporary art across the country. 34 artists from 15 states were chosen from more than 600 works of art by artists in 30 states, including 7 from Fort Collins and Masonville. The exhibit opened on Friday, August 28 with an excellent gallery lecture by Dean Sobel, and a packed artists' reception.


The legendary exhibition designer, Jack Curfman, arranged this show and gave me a personal tour of his curating philosophy after I had completed installing my memory jug. I had been fortunate to work with Jack last year at the Global Village International Museum in Fort Collins on an exhibit of vintage Mexican Folk Art, where I created a large altar installation of antique Mexican dolls and saltillos. Jack assigned me a very nice space in the front area of the Lincoln Center Art Gallery for my memory jug. Below are exhibition photos from different vantage points in this beautiful glass-enclosed gallery run by Jeanne Shoaff.


The Annual Contemporary Art Survey exhibition will close October 10, 2015. Stop by if you are in Fort Collins!









Fort Collins artists Jennifer Davey (middle), Anne Bossert (right), 
and Joe Coca (third from right) have their artwork shown in my photo above.



Lincoln Center Art Gallery, shown above, is open Tuesdays-Saturdays: 12-6pm. Free admission. 
Galleries are open most evenings during the center's music and theater performances.  
417 West Magnolia Street, Fort Collins, CO 80521, (970) 416-2737

Friday, December 5, 2014

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN'S BLACK MADONNA ALTAR INSTALLATION at Boulder's Dairy Center for the Arts during Día de los Muertos

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa altar installation
at the Boulder Dairy Center for the Arts 2014



Laurie Beth Zuckerman's altar exhibition at the Boulder Dairy Center for the Arts was on display from October 15-November 4, 2014. Here are a few closeup photographs from my Black Madonna altar installation, Madre Dolorosa: The Spanish Lady. I dedicated this altar to my grandmother, Sara Melnik Zuckerman and her six-year-old daughter, Elizabeth Zuckerman, who died in the Spanish Influenza pandemic of 1918, in Brooklyn, New York. The entire altar is built from antique furniture, Victorian mourning apparel, vintage pottery from Mexico, and a multitude of other old objects collected in antique store, flea markets and thrift shops around the country.


Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa Altar

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa Altar

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Madre Dolorosa altar installation
in her exhibition at the Boulder Dairy Center for the Arts,
entitled Memory: Loss and Found


Please see my earlier post Assemblage artists Laurie Beth Zuckerman and Susan Wechsler.html for more photos from our two-person exhibition at the Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder, Colorado, in October-November, 2014.



Thursday, December 4, 2014

LAURIE BETH ZUCKERMAN EXHIBITS SHADOWBOX ALTARS at the Historic Carnegie Building's Community Creative Center, Vivid Conversations Show, November 2014


Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Nuestra Senora del Monte Carmelo,
shadowbox altar, 2001-2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Nuestra Senora del Monte Carmelo,
shadowbox altar, 2001-2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's shadowbox dollhouse altars were on display in the "Vivid Conversations" exhibition at the Historic Carnegie Building's Community Creative Center in Fort Collins, Colorado. This November 2014 show was curated by artist Lili Francuz, who invited ten local artists to be included. Each artist was given their own wall and I displayed several new altars.


Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Nuestra Senora de la Soledad altar 2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Breaking the Mold I
dollhouse altar 2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Breaking the Mold II
dollhouse altar 2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
shadowbox altar 2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's The Girl I Left Behind
dollhouse altar 2009/2014

Laurie Beth Zuckerman's exhibit of shadowboxes and dollhouse altars
at the Community Creative Center in the Historic Carnegie Building


My husband, Thomas Mathies, also exhibited his religious folk art crucifixes in this exhibition. Carved from tree roots and painted with traditional gesso and egg tempera, Tom's work looked spectacular in this historic building. Below are a few photos of his display.


Installation photo of Vivid Conversations exhibition in November 2014
at the Historic Carnegie Building's Community Creative Center in Fort Collins.
My husband, Thomas Mathies' crucifixes are hanging in the rear of this photo.


Installation photo of Vivid Conversations exhibition in November 2014
at the Historic Carnegie Building's Community Creative Center in Fort Collins.
My husband, Thomas Mathies' wooden crucifixes are hanging in this photo.
The wooden altar nicho, with a statue of Saint Francis, at the right of the upper photo were both built and carved by Tom, and painted by Laurie Beth Zuckerman.