| Teresa Neptune
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NEWS-NEWS-NEWS
Come celebrate the grand opening of Teresa Neptune's new Studio/Gallery on Canyon Road in Santa Fe, NM. Reception and Celebration, Saturday, November 22, 2-6 pm, 2008 See photos of the gallery here. Friday, Nov. 21, 5-7pm there will be a reception for the exhibit, "Through The Lens", at The Palace of The Governors, (next to the plaza) in Santa Fe, NM. Teresa Neptune's photograph, "Santa Fe Rail, 2004" was selected to be shown in this exhibit honoring Santa Fe's 400th anniversary. The exhibit celebrates the many photographers who have focused their lenses on Santa Fe, contributing to a visual record of Santa Fe history and adding to Santa Fe's world-famous mystique. Teresa's two new books, Mirare and Flooded Desert are now available through blurb.com. Flooded Desert, July 2007, called the "best show" - The New York Times, Frugal Traveler/Santa Fe. December 23, 2007. December 2007- Three of Neptune's photographs were purchased by the city of Aztec, NM and installed as part of New Mexico's Art in Public Places program. Teresa Neptune is featured in B &W Magazine, Issue 51, May/June, 2007. Spotlight Feature, pages 86 -90. From B & W Magazine, Issue 49, February/March, 2007: MORE ON MONEY by Michael More: Big Money Invisible Gold. "(Neptune) has aquired, more remarkably, whatever it takes to make a picture that transmits what the19th-century critic John Ruskin called 'the invisible gold,' the indefineable value that keeps a work perpetually nourishing and instructive." Teresa Neptune was awarded the 2005 Willard Van Dyke Memorial Grant for Photography by the New Mexico Council on Photography for her portfolio of 10 photographs from the series, "Wind River." "Wind River": Neptune's photographs from the set of the documentary film, "Silent Thunder" shot on the Wind River, Arapaho/Shoshoni Reservation in Wyoming, during five days in June of 2005 "Silent Thunder," Dir: Angelique Midthunder, 2005, funded in part by PBS & NAPT, documents the unique method of gentling wild horses developed by Arapaho elder, Stan Addison; a quadriplegic who has the gift of, "horse medicine." Please visit www.midthunder.com. The photograph, "Bathers, Belize, 2005" was aquired by the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, for their permanent collection, April 2006. |
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©Teresa Neptune, 2001 - 2008. All rights reserved.
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