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Canyon Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Art district in Santa Fe, New Mexico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Canyon Road, Santa Fe, New Mexicomap
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Canyon Road is an art district in Santa Fe, New Mexico[1] with over a hundred art galleries and studios exhibiting a wide range of art, including Native American art and antiquities, historical and contemporary Latino art, regional art, international folk art, and contemporary art.

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Canyon Road in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

History

Canyon Road is a long, narrow road that leads to the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. It runs parallel to the Acequia Madre ("mother ditch"),[2] an irrigation ditch dating back to 1680. Prior to Spanish arrival, the road was a footpath between the Santa Fe River Valley and Pecos Pueblo.[2]

Canyon Road was once a primarily residential neighborhood.[2] Houses built in the Pueblo Revival style, in accordance with the local Spanish Colonial and Pueblo methods, were constructed with adobe walls and courtyards, often as compounds for extended family.

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Art installations line this street of almost uniformly adobe-colored structures.

Artists were drawn to its beauty, particularly the Los Cinco Pintores in the 1920s.[2] Olive Rush (1873–1966) was a prominent early Canyon Road artist who maintained a studio at 630 Canyon, which she donated to the Society of Friends.[2] It is still a Quaker meeting hall today. Over time, artists created a subculture of artist-run studios and galleries, and as Santa Fe became more of a tourist destination, Canyon Road became known to the wider world.[1]

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Traditions

The area hosts a "Farolito walk" open house event on Christmas Eve that can attract thousands to the area.[3][4]

See also

References

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