Where We Meet: Conversations from New Mexico and Beyond

Taos Center for the Arts

On Where We Meet, we share stories reflecting the human experience, weaving connections of space, place, land, and time from New Mexico and beyond. Thoughtful interviews and conversations about the richness of the histories, traditions, borders, art, movements of change, and beauty connected to New Mexico. Where We Meet comes from Taos Center for the Arts in Taos, New Mexico.

  1. 09/22/2025

    Tierra, Agua, y la Gente: On Acequia Culture in northern New Mexico (Part 2)

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente is a Taoseño movie series. It showcases films and conversations about the land, water, and people of Northern New Mexico, curated in collaboration with Alianza Agri-Cultura de Taos, Taos Valley Acequia Association, the NMSU Taos County Extension, and Taos Center for the Arts.  The Milagro Beanfield War was the second film in this series: a tale of how one man’s decision to water his beanfield sparks a community uprising, in the tiny village Milagro in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Filmed mostly in Truchas, this beloved 1988 film blends magical realism, northern New Mexican culture, and timely ecological themes. On August 17th 2025, it screened at TCA to a completely sold-out auditorium filled with laughter, clapping, gasps and overall shared resonance. Will Jaremko-Wright, Taos County Cooperative Extension Agricultural Agent, introduced the film and moderated a panel conversation between Dr. Sylvia Rodríguez, Olivia Romo, Dr. Soledad Garcia, and Yolanda Silva Lewis.  Dr. Sylvia Rodríguez is a native Taoseña, professor emerita of anthropology and former director of the Alfonso A. Ortiz Center for Intercultural Studies at UNM. She is a commissioner on the Acequia de San Antonio in Valdez and a member of the TVAA board of directors. She works collaboratively with acequia organizations and researchers.  Olivia Romo is a farmer, poet, water rights activist, and proud Taoseña. She has dedicated her work to educating and mobilizing New Mexicans around the risks and uncertainties of their natural resources.  Soledad García, Ph.D. is a cultural anthropologist, a graduate of UT Austin 2016, and a musician who reflects on the public spaces and cultural movements related to land-based knowledges in the US southwest / northern Mexican borderlands. Born in the Española Valley, they and their family have been parciantes on the Acequia de los Salazares for more than 6 generations, where they grow various crops in their hoop house and apple orchard.  Yolanda Silva Lewis, is a fifth-generation farmer from Arroyo Seco and mayordoma for the Acequía del Rebalse in Des Montes. Yolanda grows and harvests hay for her cattle, continuing long-standing agricultural traditions in the area. This program is made possible, in part, thanks to support from the New Mexico Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    31 min
  2. 09/22/2025

    Tierra, Agua, y la Gente: On Acequia Culture in northern New Mexico (Part 1)

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente is a Taoseño movie series. It showcases films and conversations about the land, water, and people of Northern New Mexico, curated in collaboration with Alianza Agri-Cultura de Taos, Taos Valley Acequia Association, the NMSU Taos County Extension, and Taos Center for the Arts.  The Milagro Beanfield War was the second film in this series: a tale of how one man’s decision to water his beanfield sparks a community uprising, in the tiny village Milagro in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Filmed mostly in Truchas, this beloved 1988 film blends magical realism, northern New Mexican culture, and timely ecological themes. On August 17th 2025, it screened at TCA to a completely sold-out auditorium filled with laughter, clapping, gasps and overall shared resonance. Will Jaremko-Wright, Taos County Cooperative Extension Agricultural Agent, introduced the film and moderated a panel conversation between Dr. Sylvia Rodríguez, Olivia Romo, Dr. Soledad Garcia, and Yolanda Silva Lewis.  Dr. Sylvia Rodríguez is a native Taoseña, professor emerita of anthropology and former director of the Alfonso A. Ortiz Center for Intercultural Studies at UNM. She is a commissioner on the Acequia de San Antonio in Valdez and a member of the TVAA board of directors. She works collaboratively with acequia organizations and researchers.  Olivia Romo is a farmer, poet, water rights activist, and proud Taoseña. She has dedicated her work to educating and mobilizing New Mexicans around the risks and uncertainties of their natural resources.  Soledad García, Ph.D. is a cultural anthropologist, a graduate of UT Austin 2016, and a musician who reflects on the public spaces and cultural movements related to land-based knowledges in the US southwest / northern Mexican borderlands. Born in the Española Valley, they and their family have been parciantes on the Acequia de los Salazares for more than 6 generations, where they grow various crops in their hoop house and apple orchard.  Yolanda Silva Lewis, is a fifth-generation farmer from Arroyo Seco and mayordoma for the Acequía del Rebalse in Des Montes. Yolanda grows and harvests hay for her cattle, continuing long-standing agricultural traditions in the area. This program is made possible, in part, thanks to support from the New Mexico Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    29 min
  3. 06/24/2025

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente: On the Historic and Cultural Presence of Sheep in northern New Mexico (part 2)

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente is a Taoseño movie series: films and conversations about land, water, and people of Northern New Mexico are curated in collaboration with Alianza Agri-Cultura de Taos, Taos Valley Acequia Association, the NMSU Taos County Extension and Taos Center for the Arts. And Now Miguel was the first film presented as part of this series. Filmed in Taos in the village of Los Cordovas in 1953, the movie follows 12-year-old Miguel Chavez, who dreams of joining the men in his family on their annual sheep drive into the high mountain pastures of the Sangre de Cristos. Will Jaremko-Wright, Taos County Cooperative Extension Agricultural Agent, moderated the conversation between Tobias Martinez, Patricia Quintana and Roberto Chavez.  Tobias Martinez was born and raised in Ranchos de Taos as a sheep rancher and graduated from NMSU with a degree in Range Management. He is the founder of Alianza Agricultura. Patricia Quintana is the owner of Rancho La Fina Lamb and Wool and De La Tierra Consulting LLC. She holds a master’s degree in Agriculture from NMSU. Her career has focused on higher education, water and agricultural policy, advocacy for the conservation of agricultural communities, and organizational development, emphasizing empowerment of rural communities in agriculture, through agricultural cooperative and business capacity building. Roberto Chavez is a member of the Chavez family featured in the movie. Chavez has taught Science at the Taos High School for years and is a long time shepherd. This program is made possible, in part, thanks to support from the New Mexico Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    30 min
  4. 06/18/2025

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente: On the Historic and Cultural Presence of Sheep in northern New Mexico (part 1)

    Tierra, Agua y la Gente is a Taoseño movie series: films and conversations about land, water, and people of Northern New Mexico are curated in collaboration with Alianza Agri-Cultura de Taos, Taos Valley Acequia Association, the NMSU Taos County Extension and Taos Center for the Arts. And Now Miguel was the first film presented as part of this series. Filmed in Taos in the village of Los Cordovas in 1953, the movie follows 12-year-old Miguel Chavez, who dreams of joining the men in his family on their annual sheep drive into the high mountain pastures of the Sangre de Cristos. Will Jaremko-Wright, Taos County Cooperative Extension Agricultural Agent, made a quick introduction before the showing of the movie, which you’ll hear first. Coming up after is the conversation between Tobias Martinez, Patricia Quintana and Roberto Chavez.  Tobias Martinez was born and raised in Ranchos de Taos as a sheep rancher and graduated from NMSU with a degree in Range Management. He is the founder of Alianza Agricultura. Patricia Quintana is the owner of Rancho La Fina Lamb and Wool and De La Tierra Consulting LLC. She holds a master’s degree in Agriculture from NMSU. Her career has focused on higher education, water and agricultural policy, advocacy for the conservation of agricultural communities, and organizational development, emphasizing empowerment of rural communities in agriculture, through agricultural cooperative and business capacity building. Roberto Chavez is a member of the Chavez family featured in the movie. Chavez has taught Science at the Taos High School for years and is a long time shepherd. This program is made possible, in part, thanks to support from the New Mexico Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    32 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

On Where We Meet, we share stories reflecting the human experience, weaving connections of space, place, land, and time from New Mexico and beyond. Thoughtful interviews and conversations about the richness of the histories, traditions, borders, art, movements of change, and beauty connected to New Mexico. Where We Meet comes from Taos Center for the Arts in Taos, New Mexico.