LAS CRUCES – When I walked into the House of Eternal Return,
Meow Wolf’s Santa Fe sensation that’s attracting international raves and
enthusiastic crowds, there was a sense of déjà vu.
It was a unique experience (read more about it in today’s
SunLife section) but I couldn’t shake the notion that I’d had very similar
surrealistic adventures back home in Las Cruces.
Later, I realized that I’d visited and written about another
Meow Wolf installation called “Glitteropolis” that ran from late 2010 to early
2011 at the NMSU Art Gallery.
And my memories drifted back to earlier times, at
imaginative, interactive Las Cruces experiences with sophisticated multimedia
storytelling adventures, mazes and participatory mystery dramas and assorted weird and wonderful Alma d’arte and
NMSU art student antics.
I thought about our Broadway-caliber costume and set
designers, playwrights, and actors, award-winning filmmakers, fiestas and
museum reenactments, brilliant conceptual performance artists, dancers, and
musicians, all right here in my own querencia.
When I interviewed artist Noah MacDonald, July 10 Artist of
the Week, I remembered his creative installations in Santa Fe, and his project
with an old adobe in Mesilla, a kind of ruin-preservation, resurrection-through-artistic-documentation
project.
And my mind leapfrogged back to the 1990s, when I first met
Georjeanna Feltha. She recreated her childhood home, in an otherworldly,
richly-textured version incorporating tattered fabrics and molten wax, in
evocative rooms at an installation at the NMSU Art Gallery.
My first such experience came even earlier, when Myriam
Lozada-Jarvis, Kelley Hestir and other imaginative regional artists created
ArtForms (a nonprofit artists’ organization that spawned February For the Love
of Art Month). Artistic adventures abounded in the group’s early years, from an
art car parade to multimedia banquets and what strikes me now as a mother of a Meow
Wolf experience. In what was then called a “happening,” artists transformed an
old house somewhere on the Lohmador corridor into a sophisticated interactive
art experience accessible for just one night.
Over the last month, I’ve been pondering Meow Wolf’s
phenomenal success story and wondering if it could happen here, and why it
didn’t happen here first. Actually it did, in many forms, as already noted. Las
Cruces is a kind of moveable Meow Wolf feast, and has been, for a long time.
So what does Santa Fe have that we don’t have? Meow Wolf was
clearly in the right place at the right time. The name value of “Game of
Thornes” creator George R.R. Martin, who reportedly kicked in $3.8 million to
buy an old bowling alley and fund the project, the support of businesses and
other investors and the city of Santa Fe, were crucial factors, of course,
along with international media attention focused on Santa Fe’s rep as an art
mecca.
In the end, was it the passion of the young artists who
experimented and hung together?
“A lot of artists’ collectives get in fights and a lot of
collectives burn out,” long-time Meow Wolf member Golda Blaise-Pickett told me.
“But no matter how tiffy we got, we always came back to our vision for a
special world. Santa Fe needs us and we stuck together.”
We have passionate, energetic young artists, too, who’ve
founded their own galleries and enterprises. And passionate, high-energy, middle-aged
and downright vintage artists, who’ve kept the faith for many decades and
accomplished remarkable things.
We have the talent and the visionaries. Could we find the
right place, the funding, the investors, the celebrity name(s), the city backing
and the persistent, artistic souls to create our own enduring, interactive,
innovative, artistic phenomenon that would both employ and attract millennials
and art lovers of all ages?
If we built it, would they come, and keep coming and stay
awhile to appreciate the other wonders of our territory?
What do you think? Let me know, and I’ll do my best to unite
our creative collaborators with like-minded souls.
S. Derrickson Moore may be
reached at 575-541-5450, dmoore@lcsun-news.com or @derricksonmoore on Twitter.
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