International Folk Arts Week Schedule July 3-10, 2011
Click here to view events by categorySunday, July 3
The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Natural Disaster - Opening Activities
(Ongoing through July 7. Exhibition is open daily from 10 am – 5 pm)
Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
1-4pm Exhibition Opening, Gallery of Conscience
Explore how folk artists have helped their communities recover from four recent natural disasters: the Haitian Earthquake; Hurricane Katrina; floods in Pakistan and the volcanic eruption of Mt. Merapi in Indonesia. Exhibition opening reception includes live music. Included will be a panel discussion moderated by the curator of the exhibition, Dr. Suzanne Seriff and participating artists at 2pm.
The Arts of Survival features monumental artifacts, poetry, spoken word, along with video and photographic documents that reveal the many ways in which a country’s traditional arts and artists provide comfort, council, prayer, beauty, resources and hope to rebuild and renew. As tragic events are retold through works of art, such as carnival masks, scrolls, paintings, or vodou flags, the events and the pain they brought is made more manageable. When the force of the Earth breaks the world into pieces, the pieces can be collected and sold to bring an artist a step closer to economic recovery. (See daily schedule for continuing public exhibit events.)
MNMFShops Sale for International Folk Art Market Ticket Buyers
(Starts Friday July 2nd through July 10th)
When you purchase your tickets to the Market at any of the MNMFShops, you qualify to purchase any one item in the shop at 15% off. This offer can be combined with a Museum of New Mexico Foundation member discount.
Indigo Treasures from Around the World: A Go Indigo! Window Display
(Ongoing through International Folk Arts Week)
Pachamama Window Display at La Fonda Hotel, 223 Canyon Road
Pachamama’s owner, Martha Egan, will mine her own personal closets and collections to fill the Pachamama display window in the lobby of La Fonda Hotel with indigo woven treasures from around the world.
A Visual Feast of Indigo Dyed Treasures: A Go Indigo! Window Display
(Ongoing through International Folk Arts Week)
Seret and Sons, 224 Galisteo, Phone: (505) 988-9151
Seret and Sons’ display windows will feature collectible cotton indigo blue and white dhurries from Ira Seret’s world class collection. Seret has coats from Afghanistan lined in hand woven, hand dyed indigo cotton and clothing made from indigo turbans traditionally worn by men in one particular town in Afghanistan, the World Heritage teapot dome village of Tashquorgon in northern Afghanistan. These turbans were collected in the mid 70s. Display runs Sunday through the following Friday, July 3-15.
Japanese Folk Indigo: A Go Indigo! Window Display
(Ongoing through International Folk Arts Week)
Spirit Clothing Store, 109 West San Francisco Street, Phone: (505) 982-2677
Spirit Clothing Store will display in their windows their collection of turn of the 20th c. grain bags. Utilitarian and used for storing rice and other grains, the bag’s design technique is called ranru or boro. Along with the bags will hang Japanese indigo dyed kimonos.
Indigo Dye in Navajo Weaving: A Go Indigo! Gallery Display
(Ongoing through International Folk Arts Week)
Shiprock Santa Fe, 53 Old Santa Fe Trail (Upstairs on the Plaza), Phone: (505) 982-8478
Showcasing works from the Classic and Late Classic Eras of Navajo Weaving (c.1840-1880). This is the period of time that Navajo weavers utilized the dye of the indigo plant prominently in their work. With the advent of trading posts and ready made aniline dyes, these traditions ended around 1890-1900, making works such as these incredibly rare.
2011 El Rancho de las Golondrinas Santa Fe Wine Festival
12-6 pm El Rancho de las Golondrinas, (505) 471-2261
Enjoy traditional New Mexican and Mexican arts and crafts, demonstrations, food, wine, and music while picnicking under the towering cottonwoods with friends and family at the historic El Rancho de las Golandrinas Santa Fe Wine Festival. Tour 34 historic buildings and see costumed villagers baking in bee-hive ovens (hornos), carding, spinning and weaving wool, blacksmithing and grinding grain employing traditional techniques brought with the settlers from Old Mexico to New Mexico.
Cooking Class of International First Courses
5:30 – 8 pm (Cost: $65), Travel
Bug, 839 Paseo de Peralta, Phone: (505) 992-0418 or email .
Join Rebecca Fitzgerald for an evening cooking class at the Travel Bug Café, preparing and eating foods from around the world. We will prepare three First Courses from three different countries; Italy, Vietnam, and France. The night begins with Prosecco aperitifs as we discuss the menu and the foods to be prepared. We loosely divide ourselves into 3 teams with each team preparing a different course. Once completed, we will sit down to taste and enjoy our food with wine and sparkling waters. Everyone receives copies of all three recipes. Call or come by to make reservations.
Monday, July 4
The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Natural Disaster Gallery of Conscience
1-4 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (by admission)
Music and poetry, and American artists’ demonstrations in the Atrium. The program will feature New Orleans style music by Pollo Frito as well as demonstrations by the American artists.
International Folk Art Camp
(Ongoing through July 8)
Santa Fe School for the Arts & Sciences, (505) 438-8585
Artists from all over the world come to Santa Fe to share their unique art at the Folk Art Market. This is your chance to create folk art inspired by artists from Africa, South America, Europe and Asia! Make amazing art out of recycled objects and visit the Folk Art Market. There are three camp sessions this week; one for children entering Preschool/Kindergarten, one for children entering grades 1-3 and one for students entering grades 4-7. Contact Rayna Dineen for more information, registration form available online (financial aid available).
Yoshitaka Hasu Pottery Exhibit
(Ongoing through August 3)
Touching Stone Gallery, 539 Old Santa Fe Trail, Phone: (505) 988-8072
Exhibit of wood-fired pottery by master Iga ceramic artist Yoshitaka Hasu, embodying the Japanese philosophy of “living as art.” (Opening: July 1, 5-7pm)
Tuesday, July 5
The Arts of Survival: Breakfast with the Curators – Collection Tour
8:30-10 am Museum of International Folk Art, $20 Museum of New Mexico Foundation members, $25 Non-members. Call (505) 476-1207 for reservations.
Barbara Mauldin, Curator of Latin American collections and Haitian artists.
The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Natural Disaster Gallery of Conscience
1-4 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (by admission)
Artists demonstrations and hands-on projects, sequined flags and carnival masks.
Display of Indigo Weavings: A Go Indigo! Gallery Display
(Ongoing through July 8)
10:00 am - 5 pm William Siegal Gallery, 540 S. Guadalupe Street, Phone: (505) 820-3300
William Siegal Gallery will feature 16th and 17th century Aymara alpaca textiles dyed with indigo. The gallery will also show a group of pieces from Africa woven in cotton which employed resist dying techniques also using indigenous African indigo. Pre-Columbian textiles from Peru that were woven from as early as 3rd c. AD will also be shown.
SILVER, SILK & INDIGO: A Go Indigo! Gallery Exhibit
(Exhibit ongoing through July 31)
5:30 - 7:30 pm (Opening) Traveler’s Market, DeVargas Center,153B Paseo de Peralta, Phone: (505) 989-7667 (RSVP)
A free lecture & slide presentation on the Ethnic Minorities region of Southwest China by local expert Pam Najdowski. There will be an exhibit & sale of jewelry, textiles & clothing of the region and 10% of the proceeds of exhibit sales will be donated to the Folk Art Market. Refreshments & door prizes following the lecture.
Special collections of clothing and weaving dyed in natural indigo will also be on display and for sale at Traveler’s Market throughout International Folk Arts Week, as part of the Go Indigo! city-wide celebration.
Tuesday, July 5 - Sunday, July 31
Exhibit continues through July 31, including a special collection of Indigo dyed clothing and weaving.
Cuisines of Mexico
10:00 am Santa Fe Cooking School, 116 W. San Francisco St., Phone: 1-800-982-4688 or (505) 983-4511, ($74 per person)
Mexico is country with a very diverse palate. In the long history of cultural assimilation, it has been a major influence on New Mexican food. The Santa Fe School of Cooking is pleased to present classes that allow you to experience the richness and variety of the foods of our Southern neighbor. In this class we will prepare: Corn Tortillas, Rich Black Bean Soup, Jicama, Watercress Salad with Jalapeno Peppers, Roast Pork Loin with Red Chile Mole, and Strawberry Tequila Mousse. DEMONSTRATION
”From Zimbabwe to Santa Fe”, Rough- Cut Screening
6 pm, Tipton Hall, Santa Fe University of Arts and Design The producers of ”From Zimbabwe to Santa Fe,” in collaboration with the Santa Fe Art Institute present the Rough-Cut Screening and Audience Feedback Session for “From Zimbabwe to Santa Fe,” a documentary film which follows the wild journey of three rural Zimbabwean folk artists in search of economic prosperity. Travel along with Matron, Sindiso and Gogo, as these three uniquely appealing women tackle a multitude of unexpected challenges on their way to the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market. Matron, one of the film’s heroines, will be at the screening!
, filmmaker,
(505) 670-6000
Wednesday, July 6
The Arts of Survival: Breakfast with the Curators – Collection Tour
8:30-10 am Museum of International Folk Art, $20 Museum of New Mexico Foundation members, $25 Non-members. Call (505) 476-1207 for reservations.
Felicia Katz-Harris, Curator of Asian and Middle Eastern Collections and Asian artists.
Indigo Event
11 am - 5pm The Ann Lawrence Collection, 927 Baca St., (505) 982-1755 http://www.annlawrencecollection.com
Come see a world of indigo in clothing, pillows, bedcovers, wall hangings and decorative objects d’art, from Japan, China, Mali, Cameron, Nigeria, Indonesia, and other destinations from around the globe.
Indigo Workshop with Market artist Gasali Adeyemo
1:00 - 3:00 pm (Opening) Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Phone: (505) 989-8359
Join Nigerian indigo fabric artist Gasali Adeyemo for an indigo workshop and demonstration.
The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Natural Disaster Gallery of Conscience
1-4 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (by admission)
Artists demonstrations and hands-on projects, narrative scrolls and shadow puppets.
Blue Alchemy: Stories of Indigo - A Go Indigo! Special Event
7 pm Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 West San Francisco Street
Tickets: Lensic Box Office (505) 988-1234
US premier screening of “Blue Alchemy: Stories of Indigo” by NM filmmaker Mary Lance. Filmed in India, Japan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Mexico, El Salvador and the US, this fascinating documentary weaves together visually stunning stories of indigo’s cultural roots, its history, its importance in global trade and the people who are reaching into their past traditions to revive the production and use of indigo for sustainable development. Once again, around the world, indigo is providing a critical source of income and beauty for indigenous cultures and is coloring their arts Indigo Blue. With musical performances by shakuhachi (traditional Japanese flute) composer Kojiro Umezaki of the Silk Road Ensemble and Nigerian drumming by Agalu!
Regular Seating: $20, $15, Full time students: $10
Donor Tickets: $75 ticket includes an invitation to a pre-screening party at the Coyote Cantina, as well as preferred seating at the Lensic. Come wearing your Blues! All proceeds from the event will benefit the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market.
GO INDIGO! Wednesday
All day at participating locations.
A city-wide celebration of Indigo to celebrate the US premier screening of “Blue Alchemy: Stories of Indigo.” Participating storefronts will be featuring indigo-dyed clothing and art. (Wear your indigo Wednesday.)
Things Indigo! Exhibit of Indigo Textiles: A Go Indigo! Window Display and Talk
Talk by Irvin Trujillo, 4pm (Exhibit ongoing through International Folk Arts Week)
Santa Fe Weaving Gallery, 124-1/2 Galisteo Street (downtown) Phone: (505) 982-1737
A major proponent of Things Indigo!, this downtown textile gallery will mount a show of indigo textiles from Kolkata’s Weavers Studio (Darshan Shah), from Luang Probang, Laos-Ock Pop Tok and from Southern California: Doshi Fiber Studio. There will be art textiles, scarves, shawls and a limited number of wearables. There will be a talk by Master Weaver and Dyer, Chimayo-based Irvin Trujillo on Wednesday, July 6 at 4pm, in the intimate gallery, free and open to the public. Display continues through International Folk Arts Week.
CASA – Indigo Textiles
10 am – 5 pm (Open Mon. - Sat.) CASA, 1098 1/2 S. St. Francis Drive, (505) 982-2592
CASA - with an abiding love for indigo textiles, features works from Mali, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, India, China & Japan.
Shihoko Fukumoto: MOONLIGHT: A Go Indigo! Gallery Display
11 am - 5 pm Bellas Artes, 653 Canyon Road, (505) 983-8558
Shihoko Fukumoto is an internationally acclaimed artist whose work is included in museums worldwide including the Museum of Arts and Design in New York. Bellas Artes will be showing small indigo –dyed works which abstractly refer to the night sky.
Indigo Blues/A Selection of Fine Textiles: A Go Indigo! Gallery Display
(Exhibit ongoing through July 11)
12 - 5:30 pm (Opening) John Ruddy Textiles and Ethnographic Art & Taylor A. Dale Fine Tribal Art, 129 West San Francisco Street (Second Floor), Phone: (505) 989-9903
Indigo has long played an important role in the textile traditions of indigenous peoples throughout the world. On display will be a range of exquisite, natural indigo-dyed antique textiles from a variety of cultures, including Japan, China, Indonesia, SE Asia, Africa and South America.
At the Artist’s Table: Folk Art and International Cuisine
Benefit for Partners in Education Foundation and Santa Fe Arts Commission Artist Exhibit/ Education Program
6 pm Santa Fe Cooking School, 116 W. San Francisco Street
Tickets: $250 per person. Reservations: (505) 983-4511 or (505) 474-0240
Artist Geoffrey Gorman and award-winning Chef Ahmed Obo of Restaurant Jambo will create a warm and dynamic evening for even the most well-traveled soul. Enjoy an evening of food inspired from the diverse influences of Morocco, the Mediterranean, the Caribbean and Kenya, conversations with the chef and artist about their work, and take home a limited edition print by Geoffrey Gorman.
Thursday, July 7
The Arts of Survival: Breakfast with the Curators – Collection Tour
8:30-10 am Museum of International Folk Art, $20 Museum of New Mexico Foundation members, $25 Non-members. Call (505) 476-1207 for reservations.
Dr. Bobbie Sumberg, Curator of Textiles and Costume and representatives from Pakistan Quilt.
Traditional Spanish Market Artist Self-Guided Tour
10 am - 4 pm Studio Tour
What better time for Spanish Market artists to invite the public into their studios than during a week celebrating art from across the world. Experience the artists at work in their studios, producing traditional Spanish Colonial art forms such as Bultos (3D carvings), Colcha embroidery, Precious Metals, Retablos (paintings on wood), Tinwork, Straw Appliqué, and Woodcarving. The studio tour is a self-guided tour and a map of the locations, and artist information can be found on the Spanish Market Artists link. (free)
WWW: The Wonder of Warp and Weft - A Go Indigo! Gallery Exhibit
(Exhibit ongoing through August 31)
5 - 7 pm (Opening) Casa Nova Gallery, 530 S. Guadalupe, Phone: (505) 983-8558
This is an extensive exhibition showcasing the designs, patterns and techniques of ethnic textiles from throughout the world: woven, dyed, painted and printed. Our featured artist will be the renowned Malian, master Indigo artist, Aboubakar Fofana. Fofana uses the traditional Malian vegetable and mineral dyes and hand spun fibers to create elegant textiles rooted in the Malian tradition of mudcloth and indigo. Additionally, the exhibition will include a wide range of Indigo dyed textiles, primarily from Africa, including Yoruba attire, the tradition featured in Mary Lance’s film, Blue Alchemy. Gallery exhibit is ongoing through August 31, 2011.
COMMUNITY CELEBRATION: 50th Anniversary Peace Corps Commemoration and Artist Procession
5:00 – 9.00 pm The Santa Fe Railyard Park Both a birthday party for the Peace Corps and kick off party for the 2011 Market at Santa Fe’s Railyard Park. There will be international food carts, a story-telling tent, global music and dance performances from participating countries, including a spectacular group of folk dancers and musicians from Oman. At the center of the festivities will be the Annual Market Artists Procession beginning at 6:40 pm. The headline band is the all-star filled West African Highlife Band will begin at 7:30 pm and will play into the evening (see below). The event is free and open to the public.
5 pm: Picnic with your family in the Railyard. International foods available for purchase
6:10 pm: Kevin Quigley, President of the National Peace Corps Association
6:40 pm: International Folk Art Market Artists Procession
7:30 – 9 pm: West Africa Highlife Band and Meet & Greet with Market artists. The West African Highlife Band (free concert)
The West African Highlife Band brings a distinguished group of West African music veterans together for a celebration of the “highlife” and “Palmwine” dance hits of the 50s, 60s and 70s. Highlife music ruled the West African club scene before the disco era, and this special band pays homage to the lilting harmonies and infectious rhythms that roused the feet of generations of West African youth.
Friday, July 8
Patina Gallery Breakfast Reception
10 am Patina Gallery, 131 West Palace Avenue
Join Patina Gallery owner and international folk artist Ivan Barnett for an intimate conversation about his relationship with the world-renowned collector Alexander Girard. Ivan is the only living artists included in the Girard Collection at the International Museum of Folk Art here in Santa Fe.
Tom Maguire, former Director of Arts and Cultural Tourism for the City of Santa Fe, will also give a brief talk on the rich history and culture of the City Different. Showing wonderful footage of past International Folk Art Markets, the film, based on the Navajo Beauty Way, is an audio-visual presentation that conjures up the wealth of vibrant experiences in and around Santa Fe.
(10% of each sale made during the event will be donated to the International Folk Art Market.)
How Things Are Made: Korean Paper Making Demonstration Art Santa Fe and Park Fine Art
(Ongoing through July 10) Santa Fe Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy
As part of Art Santa Fe weekend, watch five artists from South Korea demonstrate the traditional art of making Korean paper, known as Hanji. The paper making demonstrations will continue all day each day throughout the weekend.
CIRCO
(Starts July 8)
The Screen, 1600 St. Michaels Drive at the Santa Fe College of Art and Design, Phone: (505) 473-6494 (call for show times)
Gorgeously filmed along the back roads of rural Mexico, CIRCO follows the Ponce family’s hardscrabble circus as it struggles to stay together despite mounting debt, dwindling audiences, and a simmering family conflict. Tino, the ringmaster, is driven by his dream to lead his parents’ circus to success and corrals the energy of his whole family, including his four young children, towards this singular goal. But his wife Ivonne is determined to make a change. Feeling exploited by her in-laws, she longs to return to her kids a childhood lost to laboring in the circus. Through this intricately woven story of a marriage in trouble and of a century-old family tradition that hangs in the balance, CIRCO opens the viewer to the luminous world of a traveling circus while examining the universal themes of family bonds, filial responsibility, and the weight of cultural inheritance.
Nagakura Kenichi Exhibit
(Ongoing through July 22)
5 pm (Artist reception on July 8) TAI Gallery, 1601B Paseo de Peralta, Phone: (505) 984-1387
TAI Gallery is proud to present a new body of bamboo sculpture by Nagakura Kenichi. Nagakura began his career splitting bamboo decades ago for his grandfather, a bamboo artisan. Once he mastered the basics, he began creatively exploring and developing his own unique visual vocabulary. Nagakura’s works are in the collections of the New York’s Museum of Art and Design, San Francisco Asian Art Museum and the Clark Center for Japanese Art & Culture.
Market Opening Party, A Global Gathering Under the Stars
6:30 - 9 pm Museum Hill
Shopping, dancing, international music, food and drink! Artists’ booths will be open, lighted, and ready to sell! $125.00 per person ($75 tax-deductible) tickets on sale May 2nd.
Saturday, July 9
EARLY BIRD MARKET
7:30-9 am Museum Hill (offsite parking)
Get an early morning start! $50 Ticket includes all day Saturday.
SATURDAY MARKET
9 am – 5 pm Museum Hill (offsite parking)
$15 Advance Sales, $20 at the gate. Children 16 and under free.
Workshop with the West African High Life Band
Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
11 am (MOIFA Auditorium)
The Four Disasters (Gallery Talk)
12:00 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
Gurupada Chitrakar, scroll painter, Bina Shahani, translator & Dr. Suzanne Seriff, Curator
Mountain of Fire: Eruption of Mt. Merapi Volcano, Indonesia (Gallery Talk)
2:00 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
Tri Suwarno, shadow puppet maker & Dr. Suzanne Seriff, Curator
Workshop with the Al Najoom Troupe, Traditional Music and Dance from the Ja’alan Bani Bu Ali region of Oman)
3 pm (MOIFA Auditorium)
Stacey Edgar – author of Global Girlfriends Book Signing
2-3:30 pm Museum of International Folk Art Book Store
STACEY EDGAR started Global Girlfriend in 2003 as a way to provide economic security for women in need by creating a sustainable market for their products. Stacey has been honored by the Microsoft Corporation as a recipient of the company’s “Start Something Amazing” awards, and is a sought-after speaker on the topics of women in the global economy, fair trade, sex trafficking, market and enterprise development, cause marketing, entrepreneurship, and parlaying your passion into your career. She lives in Colorado with her family.
Brilliant Soil, documentary film screening and Q&A
4 pm (Also 8 pm Sunday, July 10) Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Phone: (505) 982-1338
In Galatea audio/visual’s compelling, inspiring film, Herlinda, an indigenous Purepecha potter, challenges one custom—the use of toxic lead-based glazes in pottery—and begins a new one. But she finds it more difficult to find a market for her unconventional pieces. Could an unexpected trip revitalize her career, and help make traditional pottery a safer one for all? Followed by a Q&A. Watch the trailer: www.brilliantsoil.org(U.S.-Mexico, 98m, HD)
“Nigerian Indigo and Oshogbo Art: A Go Indigo! Talk”
5 pm Travel Bug, 839 Paseo de Peralta, Phone: (505) 982-0418 Slide show and talk by Victoria Scott The indigo-dyed textiles of the Yoruba people of Nigeria were an inspiration and foundation for a grassroots folk art movement known as the “Oshogbo artists”. Some younger Oshogbo artists are showing their work at the Santa Fe International Folk Art Market. Art historian and collector, Victoria Scott documented the formative years of the Oshogbo movement; she will talk about the art and textiles and share stories about the people and places.
Sunday, July 10
SUNDAY MARKET – Family Day
9 am – 5 pm Museum Hill (offsite parking)
$5 Advance Sales, $10 On Market Day
Children 16 and under free.
Children’s Passport Program
After receiving a passport, children collect flag stickers from each country they visit, to put in their passports. This program strives to awaken children’s awareness about the many countries and cultures represented at the Market. > Download Flyer (.pdf)
My Sisters Made of Light (Book Reading)
11:00 am Travel Bug, 839 Paseo de Peralta
Jacqueline St. Joan will be reading and discussing her novel, My Sisters Made of Light, a finalist for the Colorado Book Award in literary fiction. The story follows two generations of a Pakistani family as they make their way through life in the political, social and religious maze that is their motherland. It pulls readers into the fascinating, heartbreaking, and often terrifying world of honor crimes and the human rights workers who oppose them.
A Slow Tsunami: Floods in Pakistan (Gallery Talk)
11:00 am Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
Surendar Valasai, Lila Handicraft Cooperative manager and his wife Naina, ralli quilt maker, Tricia Stoddard, Lila Handicraft Cooperative owner, Sayeda Shaista Bibi, Artist, Poetic Threads of Pakistan, S. Mansoor Badshah, translator & Dr. Suzanne Seriff, Curator
Seisme!: Earthquake in Haiti (Gallery Talk)
2.00 pm Museum of International Folk Art, (505) 476-1200
Onel Bazelais, papier maché mask maker, PascaleFaublas, ADASE Representative, Mireille Délismé, vodou flag maker, MireilleBernardin, translator & Dr. Suzanne Seriff, Curator
Brilliant Soil, Documentary Film Screening and Q&A
8 pm Center for Contemporary Arts, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, Phone: (505) 982-1338 In Galatea audio/visual’s compelling, inspiring film, Herlinda, an indigenous Purepecha potter, challenges one custom—the use of toxic lead-based glazes in pottery—and begins a new one. But she finds it more difficult to find a market for her unconventional pieces. Could an unexpected trip revitalize her career, and help make traditional pottery a safer one for all? Followed by a Q&A. Watch the trailer: www.brilliantsoil.org(U.S.-Mexico, 98m, HD)