National Features >

  • Village Voice

    Musto Fabulous!

    Our gossip columnist and noted fashion plate serves up a year's worth of unforgettable images.

    By Michael Musto

  • Miami New Times

    Hog Huntin'

    Lost art or horrible slaughter? It's all in the eye of the slayer.

    By Natalie O'Neill

  • The Pitch

    A Miscreant's Christmas

    An ex-con's surprising blog celebrates a city's dark places.

    By Justin Kendall

The Gardener of Eden

Painter’s works cultivate the Southwest’s hushed beauty

By Nina Carapetyan

Published on January 23, 2008 at 4:01am

In our salad days, many of us used the desert as a safe haven to carpet-bomb our brains into oblivion. We’d drive into the night like frontiersmen of coked-out glory, veering off-road into the scorching abyss. Darkness would resonate around us, as if it were more tenor than color. We were too blitzed to take note of these intricacies, of course, or to rejoice in the vastness of our surroundings.

With the help of Ellen Wagener’s art, we may be able to gain a newfound appreciation for Southwestern landscapes. Her pastels uncover the variety of the region’s scenery, ranging from farmland to monsoon settings, but they aren’t mere photographic imitations. The skies and cloud formations that dominate her pieces add a distinctly moody quality to the panoramas, revealing the artist’s state of mind during their rendering. Her landscapes often appear otherworldly, as they promote a silence that we aren’t accustomed to.


Tuesdays-Saturdays, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Starts: Jan. 2. Continues through Jan. 31, 2008