Featuring Juanita J. Lavadie, Jill Hartke & Alicia Inez Guzmán
Artist Juanita J. Lavadie and digital archivist Jillian Hartke in conversation with
exhibition co-curator Alicia Inez Guzmán, PhD, will share two distinct histories
of commerce in New Mexico. In the 20th-century, trade shows and agricultural
fairs were integral to the exchange of goods, services, and knowledge. They
were also events where people came together across cultural lines to share
what their communities produced. Jillian Hartke shares images of such events
from the Albuquerque Museum’s Photography Archives and speaks about
how they shaped New Mexican identities.
In her installation, Ciboleros & Comancheros, Juanita J. Lavadie created four
Spanish Colonial personas, each of whom embodies an element of an 18th- and
19th-century trading expedition to the Comancheria. The expedition included
a buffalo hunter, a converso who barters, a notable son destined for politics
or the clergy, and a talented negotiator whose showmanship and ability to
reach across cultures bolstered the expedition’s success. Together, they took
the community’s goods to trade with indigenous peoples and other settlers.
Lavadie will unpack these personas and speak about what we can learn from
them that applies to contemporary life in New Mexico.
Discussion
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