An Artisan Market on Tucson Summer Nights

Jessica Melrose Art

 

The Summer Night Market is starting up again, so I’ve updated the links and info in this post. There are now over 60 participating vendors! The Market happens from 6-10pm the last Friday of the (Tucson) summer months – May through September.

2023 dates are May 26, June 30, July 28, August 25 + Sept 29.

—S


Jordana Saletan of Little Rabbit Jewelry
Jordana of Little Rabbit Jewelry

Tonight is the monthly Summer Night Market at the Mercado San Agustin (MSA) Annex here in Tucson. (You may have seen it on the summer Happenings List.)

Dramaburger x Melrose Art collab
Emily lighting up the Melrose Macramé booth (more of Jessica’s macramé and Emily’s lights in the top/featured photo)

A few dozen vendors bring their handmade goods and set up around the shipping container shopping center – along with food trucks and a DJ. Of course, the regular shops, restaurants, and bar stay open too.

Ricuras de Venezuela food truck
Ricuras de Venezuela food truck
Tap and Bottle pop-up Bar
Rebecca tending the Westbound pop-up bar

I wrote about all the food and beverage options over on Tucson Foodie, so I  hope you’ll go check that out!

moxie and sassafras booth
Moxie and Sassafras booth

For now, I thought I’d share a few photos from the Night Market in June.

BYNDbooks booth
Nicole and her friend Paola at the BYNDbooks booth

MSA Annex Night Market

Pottery booth
Joanna Hennigan Pottery

Updated May 2023.
Originally posted July 2021.

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Stolen de Kooning Painting Restored to Tucson Museum

University of Arizona Museum of Art (UAMA) entrance
University of Arizona Museum of Art today.

 

“The art heist went down without a hitch in only 15 minutes.”

Maria Woodie, ArtistsNetwork

The Crime: Tucson 1985

The University of Arizona Museum of Art (UAMA) wasn’t even open yet the morning after Thanksgiving 1985, when an employee arrived to find a man and a woman already waiting outside. The gregarious couple managed to talk their way in, following the employee into the building.

University of Arizona Museum of Art in 1982
University of Arizona Museum of Art in 1982 via Gannett.

The woman, wearing a red jacket and a scarf in her hair, chatted up a security guard, while her mustachioed partner went upstairs toward one of the museum’s most important works.

staircase at UAMA

Woman-Ochre had been in the museum’s collection since 1958. It was unceremoniously taken off exhibit when this Black Friday visitor hacked the canvas out of its frame, rolled it up, stuffed it under his jacket (or somewhere), and made a hasty exit with his accomplice.

Continue reading “Stolen de Kooning Painting Restored to Tucson Museum”

 The Agave Heritage Festival’s Sweet Return

agaves at library

Agave has been cultivated in the Tucson area for hundreds of years.

agave at Mission Garden in Tucson

While tequila might be the most widely known product made from agave (a.k.a. the century plant or maguey), it’s certainly not the only one! Different species of the plant are distilled into different spirits, collectively called mezcal.

mezcal noche buena

Native peoples would also use agave to make food, medicine, and even rope. They developed farming techniques to maximize the plant’s adaptability and drought-resistant qualities, so they could grow it where other crops wouldn’t thrive.

 

Mural of Mayahuel, the agave goddess, by Rock ‘‘CYFI’’ Martinez
Mural of Mayahuel, the agave goddess, by Rock ‘‘CYFI’’ Martinez.

Agave Heritage Festival

The annual Agave Heritage Festival in Tucson celebrates the plant’s natural and cultural significance. It includes special agave-centered menus at local restaurants, gardening demonstrations, concerts, lectures, mezcal tasting events, hikes to ancient agave roasting pit sites, and a re-creation of the traditional way agave hearts were cooked underground.
Continue reading ” The Agave Heritage Festival’s Sweet Return”

Drive-Through Rodeo Parade Museum

When the Tucson Rodeo Parade Committee realized they’d have to cancel the 2021 parade, they came up with a creative alternative to the usual crowded streets and packed grandstands – they’d turn the parade inside out!

Tucson Rodeo Parade drive-thru

Wagons and buggies would be pulled out of the Rodeo Parade Musuem and set up along a winding route through the rodeo grounds in South Tucson. For one day, you could drive through it, passing by the floats and entertainment that would normally be passing you by.

Tucson Rodeo Parade drive-thru

In lieu of charging admission, they’d accept donations for Casa de los Niños, a local organization that promotes children’s wellbeing by supporting families. You could drop off school supplies for them in a rodeo bucking chute set up in the Museum parking lot.

Rodeo chute for Casa de Niños donations

We tied a bandanna on Quijote and headed to the rodeo grounds to check it out.

Dog in a bandanna

When we arrived, cars were backed up from the entrance, up one side of the street, curled around the dead end, and down the other side. We inched forward, idling in front of a tortilla factory.

Carriage from Tucson Rodeo Museum

Once we were through the front gate, we caught a glimpse of 5 beautiful black draft horses taking a snack break. Apparently, these are Shire horses, a breed that’s supposed to be from Britain, but I suspect may have actually originated in Middle Earth.

Shire draft horses

Some of the horse-drawn wagons along our route were decorated by local businesses who were sponsoring the event.

Little Mexico restaurant float

Others had been used by early Tucson firefighters and police, and still others were used for ranching, mining, or making deliveries. We even passed a replica of a steam calliope and an old circus wagon with rodeo scenes painted on the side.

Tucson rodeo parade Horse drawn jail wagon

We continued on to see the Modelos y Charros de Arizona, a non-profit group dedicated to preserving their Mexican heritage.

Modelos y Charros exaggerated dress

The Modelos (models) were wearing super-sized versions of their trademark Mexican folklorico dresses. Since this would probably be the one year they wouldn’t need to be able to actually walk in their embellished hoop skirts, they could really go next level.

Modelos y Charros Roping

They were interspersed with Charros (distinctively-dressed riders of Mexican rodeo – or charrería) demonstrating trick roping.

Rogers from Tucson Boys chorus

Also showing off their roping skills were members of the Tucson Arizona Boys Chorus, who swung lassos while recordings played from past choir performances.

Folklorico dancers at Tucson rodeo grounds

High school folklorico dancers performed in front of closed ticket windows.

Tucson rodeo museum film wagons

We drove through a section of wagons from movies and television.

A lot of classic westerns were filmed at Old Tucson Studios and on location in Southern Arizona. The Rodeo Parade Museum often provided antique vehicles for their shoots, like fringe-topped surreys (carriages) for the movie Oklahoma. Or the simple buckboard wagon that retired from working on a farm and went on to appear in the TV series High Chaparral and the film McLintock!

Tucson rodeo museum carriage from Oklahoma!

Farther down, the band Gertie and the T.O.Boyz played their signature Waila (old time dance music) tunes.

Gertie and the T.O. Boyz band

The final section was devoted to wagons made by F. Ronstadt Wagon Works, founded by Linda Ronstadt’s grandfather.

Rodeo

After that, we exited the west gate and went to get lunch. The band kept playing, the draft horses’ tails flicked away flies. But, like those antique wagons, we were history.

BK tacos

– More Tucson, Rodeo, and Parade Info –

  • La Fiesta de los Vaqueros 2022 will be held February 19-27 (with the parade on February 24).
  • 2020 Parade: Pre-pandemic photos that include many of the same wagons and carriages we saw, except with people in/on them!
  • 2021 Drive-through Parade
  • For more on charreada, “Mexico’s original rodeo,” check out this Q+A with painter Edgar Sotelo. (He also explains the difference between a charro and a vaquero.)
  • Wild Ride: The History and Lore of Rodeo by Joel H. Bernstein: Book they gave away copies of at the drive-through event and a great resource about rodeo history!
  • Why Tucson has a Rodeo Parade Museum: Basically Part 1 of this post.

Mission San Xavier del Bac

While you’re in the South Tucson area…

  • Visit the Rodeo Parade Musuem at 4823 S. 6th Avenue, Tucson. It’s open Thursdays through Saturdays. Admission is $10/adults, $2/children.
  • Alejandro’s Tortilla Factory storefront is located at 5330 S. 12th Avenue, Tucson. You can buy freshly made tortillas and chips and/or order breakfast or lunch from La Cocina Lorena (menu).
  • You’ll be in the heart of the Best 23 Miles of Mexican Food (north of the border, of course). Nearby 12th Avenue is full of places to get Sonoran hot dogs, tacos, birria, and all kinds of deliciousness!
  • We picked up food at BK Carne Asada + Hot Dogs after the Rodeo Parade Drive-through. Both the carne asada and the Sonoran dog were excellent!
  • South Tucson is also known for its abundant murals and mosaics, so keep your eyes open!
  • Mission San Xavier del Bac is about 10 minutes away. Visiting is currently  limited. However, it’s a really beautiful 18th-century Spanish Mission style building, and it’s worth checking out the architecture, even if it’s only from the outside.
  • The San Xavier Co-op Farm is a cooperative of Tohono O’odham landowners growing traditional crops. They sell honey, dried beans, mesquite flour, and other products in their farm store at 8100 Oidak Wog, Tucson. It’s closed Sundays and Mondays.

Veterans float