Santa Fe Travel Guide: Reviews, photos, & videos
With its earth-colored adobe buildings set against burning red hills and a deep-blue sky, the countryside surrounding Santa Fe looks like a Georgia O'Keeffe painting. Wait, it is an O'Keeffe paining. O’Keeffe might have painted skyscrapers during her early years in New York, but it’s for her vibrant canvases of glowing clay structures and lush flowers that she is known. Visit the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, housed in artist’s home and steward to over fifty percent of her work. Santa Fe always has, and continues to, draw and inspire artists. If you visit in July, stop by the International Folk Art Market, where artisans from all over the world sell their arts and crafts.
Along Canyon Road, more than a hundred galleries compete for visitors’ attention and the pueblo revival-style Museum of Fine Arts has a wonderful collection of regional art. At the heart of the city is the Plaza, anchored by the Palace of the Governors, built in 1610. In the shade of the palace archways, Native Americans sell jewelry and pottery, and inside, the museum holdings include a world-class collection of pre-Columbian art. A block east of the Plaza is the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, built between 1869 and 1886 under the supervision of Jean Baptiste Lamy, the real-life archbishop in Willa Cather's 'Death Comes for the Archbishop'. Had enough of art and adobe? Head out to Ski Santa Fe, a ski resort in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, around sixteen miles north of the city. At 10,350 feet, you’ll see more white stuff than dusty clay.




































