top of page

E Pluribus Unum Mogollon Fundraiser

  • Send a check to:

      Axle Projects

      P.O. Box 22095

      Santa Fe, NM 87502 

 

 

  • Call with a Credit Card:

       505-670-5854

 

  • Stop by Axle Contemporary

 

Contributions are tax-deductible.

Wire or ACH Transfer

For our direct deposit information, please email us, or call (505) 670-5854.

Donate with PayPal

PLEASE SUPPORT

E Pluribus Unum: Mogollon

 

Axle Contemporary will be to be heading across Southwestern New Mexico from late August through mid-October of this year for the sixth and final part of our E Pluribus Unum project that we started in Santa Fe in 2012.

We've already visited most areas of New Mexico, and presented over 4,500 portraits on the exterior of our mobile studio-gallery and in museums and artspaces in each project area. Soon we will have a complete and compelling portrait of the people of New Mexico in our time.

We have some support already in-hand for the project, but we need a bit more to make it happen. Please consider a donation, large or small to support this work. We are hoping to raise an additional $10,000.

E Pluribus Unum: Mogollon will take place in the communities of Las Cruces, Deming, Lordsburg, Columbus, Silver City, Truth or Consequences, Soccoro, Magdalena, Belen, Los Lunas, Pie Town, Zuni, Ramah, Acoma, and Grants. The mobile artspace will be be converted into a  traveling natural-light solar-powered photography studio. Visitors sit for a portrait holding an object of personal which they bring. They leave with a photo portrait, and another is pasted to the exterior of the mobile studio-gallery, creating a growing engaging portrait of the community. By the end of the tour, the vehicle will be covered in many hundreds of portraits. Later the portraits will be gathered in a book and presented in a museum exhibition.

The participatory photo portraiture is open and free for all. Copies of the book are donated to libraries in each of the participating towns. The book is a document of the time and place where the project was created and a  visual testament to the fact that we are unique individuals and also members of a unified whole that is larger than the sum of its parts.

See our past EPU projects at these links:
E Pluribus Unum: New Mexico El Norte (2022) https://www.axleart.com/epu-el-norte
E Pluribus Unum: New Mexico Southeast (2018): https://www.axleart.com/copy-of-epu
E Pluribus Unum: Dinétah (2016): https://www.axleart.com/epu-dinetah
E Pluribus Unum: Albuquerque (2014): https://www.axleart.com/epuabq
E Pluribus Unum: Santa Fe (2012): https://www.axleart.com/epu-santa-fe

Axle Contemporary is a mobile artspace, founded in 2010 by artists Matthew Chase-Daniel and Jerry Wellman, and built in a retrofitted 1970 aluminum bread truck. Axle is an innovative forum for arts presentation and distribution which engages, surprises, and enriches the communities of New Mexico, outside coffee shops, casinos, high schools, community centers, parking lots and on city streets.

Thanks to all of our supporters!

 Our Board of Directors

 

Matthew Chase-Daniel was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1965 and lived in New York City in the 1960s. In the mid and late 1980s, Chase-Daniel studied at the Ojai Foundation in Ojai, California, at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York (B.A.), and in Paris, France, where he studied cultural anthropology, photography, and ethnographic film production (Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes & Sorbonne). Since 1989, he has lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico, making family, and roaming the landscape to make his art. His photography and sculpture have been exhibited across the U.S. and in Europe. He is the co-founder of Axle Contemporary, a mobile gallery of art, founded in 2010. Chase-Daniel serves on Santa Fe’s Railyard Art Committee and is a past member of Santa Fe’s Art In Public Places Committee. He hosts a radio interview show and podcast about the arts in Santa Fe, Coffee and Culture.

Carol Cooper has over thirty years of experience in arts and culture programming, management and capacity building, working with artists; communities; nonprofits; state, federal and international agencies; and as an independent consultant. At New Mexico Arts, she facilitated statewide and grassroots partnerships as a grants manager for emerging nonprofits and rural arts enterprises, and founded/managed the New Mexico Fiber Arts Trails, a cultural tourism partnership with 70 sites statewide. Her previous experience includes ten years as director of education at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, consultancies on rural women’s development with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in Indonesia and Save the Children in Nepal, and regional management and training for the Smithsonian Institution's Reading Is Fundamental (RIF) program. Her MSEd in Adult Nonformal Education and Multicultural Community Development is from VPI&SU.

Raised in the northern New Mexican village of Truchas, Alicia Inez Guzmán has written about histories of place, identity, and land use in New Mexico. Alicia is a former faculty of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design and is currently an investigative journalist at Searchlight New Mexico. Alicia holds a Ph.D. in Visual and Cultural Studies from the University of Rochester in New York and is a recipient of the Creative Capital Arts Writers Grant.

Celebrated for her deeply influential and interwoven work—as author, activist, and curator—Lucy R. Lippard is recognized as one of contemporary art’s most significant critics and as a was an early participant in conceptual, feminist and activist art. Born in New York in 1937, Lippard began her career as a writer in 1962 and subsequently produced numerous groundbreaking exhibitions and 25 books .She was a cofounder of the Ad Hoc Women Artists Committee, Printed Matter, Political Art Documentation/Distribution (PADD), the Heresies Collective and journal, and Artists Call Against US Intervention in Central America. She has received nine honorary degrees and many awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Lannan Literary award, and a lifetime achievement award from the College Art Association.

Jerry Wellman is a Santa Fe based artist whose cultural work includes curatorial projects, performance, writing, video and studio production. Wellman earned an MFA from CalArts. Wellman’s paintings and drawings have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Holly Solomon Gallery in New York City, Pierogi Gallery in Brooklyn, The Downey Museum, and The Orange County Center of Contemporary Art in California, The El Paso Museum of Art, The Revolving Museum in Boston, and The Paseo Project in Taos, NM. His drawings were selected for a traveling show sponsored by the Smithsonian. His work with Axle Contemporary has been exhibited at SITE Santa Fe, 516 Arts in Albuquerque, The. Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock AZ, The Western Heritage Museum in Hobbs NM and the Roswell Art Center in Roswell NM. Awards of note include: Art Matters Foundation Grant, LINE Grant, Puffin Grant, and an NEA grant. Wellman has taught at the Pasadena College of Art and Design, CalArts, and New Mexico State University. He was formerly the head curator at Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art. He is the co-founder of Axle Contemporary artspace.

Visit the webpage of Axle Projects, a 501(c)(3) organization

Visit the website of Axle Contemporary, a mobile artspace

  • Send a check to:

      Axle Projects

      P.O. Box 22095

      Santa Fe, NM 87502 

 

 

  • Call with a Credit Card:

       505-670-5854

 

  • Stop by Axle Contemporary

 

Contributions are tax-deductible.

Wire or ACH Transfer

For our direct deposit information, please email us, or call (505) 670-5854.

Donate with PayPal

bottom of page