Tres Piedras, New Mexico. Pink Schoolhouse Gallery. |
When I was in high school, I read a book that made me laugh out loud many times. It's about a kid who moves from Alabama to this foreign, inter-cultural community in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico circa 1945.
The book was Red Sky at Morning.
Taos, New Mexico. Holy Trinity Park. |
Author Richard Bradford's characters were vividly drawn, as was the geographical stage of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains on which all of the events played out. The images of a fantastical New Mexico that Mr. Bradford planted in my mind took root.
It wasn't until many years later that I first set foot in New Mexico. Since then, in 1999, I've visited New Mexico two or three times more.
Montezuma, New Mexico. Scarecrows. |
In some locations, I relished the sensation of having been there before, because they so strongly evoked Red Sky at Morning:
- At the Chama Visitor Center, talking to a volunteer who explained that although she and her parents and grandparents and great-grandparents were New Mexico natives, English wasn't her first language.
- In a wooded lot in Taos, the Holy Trinity Park, decorated with that New Mexican outsider art that fuses Roman Catholic iconography, naturalism, magic, and perhaps a dash of schizophrenia.
- In Tres Piedras, the Old Pink Schoolhouse Gallery (sadly gone now), a cacophony of bright color and media in the middle of nowhere
- Desperate hope, visible through cruciform prayer offerings left at the Santuario de Chimayo.
- The mountain-hugger road between Las Vegas and Tucumcari.
Desperate prayers left at Santuario de Chimayo, New Mexico. |
New Mexico is American, but it's also a foreign land. There are layers of language, ethnicity, traditions, religion, art, climate, geography, and light that I haven't found anywhere else in the U.S., and I feel drawn to it.
And it's got the Spaceport, you know.
Road from Las Vegas to Tucumcari, New Mexico. |
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