The Carrillo Family Revisted
Story
and photographs by Barbe Awalt & Paul Rhetts
Editor’s Note: In 1994, we wrote Charlie
Carrillo:Tradition & Soul. Until July 2003, it has
stood as the only book on a contemporary santero and
frankly said it all. We were also very aware that many
other artists needed the exposure in this magazine. But
now enough time has passed to take another look at
Charlie, Debbie, Roán, and Estrellita. A lot has
happened.
The Carrillo family lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Debbie’s roots are in Abiquiú and as a result the Village
has adopted Charlie and the kids consider it a second
home. During Lent they all spend a great deal of time
there. Charlie is an integral part of the old Abiquiú
Morada and Debbie’s parents are still an active part of
that community.
Charlie’s parents live in a little village south of
Albuquerque called Abeytas. It is rural farmland and
Ralph grows grapes, alfalfa, and vegetables. Charlie
remembers running around the farm and collecting pot
shards with his twin bother in their youth. Charlie’s Mom
comes from the Colorado/New Mexico border. Dr. Carrillo,
the elder, was a principal and a major reason why Charlie
wanted to get his doctorate.
The last few years have been busy, crazy, disappointing,
and exhilarating. Charlie, Debbie, and the kids continue
to collect awards and honors for their art. Charlie makes
bultos, retablos, gesso relief, hide paintings, and
anything else that interests him. Debbie is sought after
for her micaceous pottery and now teaches classes. She
taught the kids to do ramilletes or traditional paper
flowers. Estrellita makes retablos while Ro does bultos
and retablos in addition to stone etchings whenever his
busy schedule permits. Both kids have tried monoprinting
when Charlie participated in Monothon. Estrellita did her
own limited edition lithograph at the Tamarind Institute
with Dad’s help.
Charlie is also passionately distracted by taking
traditional New Mexican images and converting them to
easily affordable and used items. He created a line of
cotton throws and jackets, ornaments, a nativity,
t-shirts, rubberstamps, clocks, notecards, and still has
a million more ideas. He loves to publish books and
articles. He wants to do children’s books, cookbooks,
more products, but time is not on his side.
The biggest emotional roller coaster was the creation of
the Santos of New Mexico store at the Traditions Festival
Marketplace in Budaghers. The concept was great but the
shopping center was not. The space was renovated by the
Carrillos and many helpers and was the largest retail
space for traditional New Mexican art in the New Mexico.
Historic, contemporary, and new directions art were
featured in the space along with group shows. The problem
with the shopping center was that next to no one shopped
there. It was poorly promoted. The Carrillos promoted
their own shows and many people came for those events.
But there were long, dry spells in between.
The relationship at the shopping center quickly
degenerated. The independent owners of the few stores
there, left. The Carrillos felt that after 9/11, tourism
would fall off dramatically — and it did. They closed the
store in November. But turned around immediately and
renovated the studio space in their home to be more of a
gallery space. What they did was successful but without
more aggressive leadership at the Center the
opportunities for growth were not there.
The gallery experience showed the Carrillos that there is
a market for low to high end Hispanic New Mexican art but
the old adage of ‘location, location, location’ is very
important. They now know which artists sell well and what
images are strong for consumers. They also know that
having knowledgeable sales help is important to explain
the traditions to customers.
The Carrillos still do a number of local shows: The Heard
Spanish Market, St. John’s College Show, the Albuquerque
Feria, The Grants Festival, The St. John’s Cathedral
show, The Albuquerque Miniature Show, and Charlie was the
poster artist for the New Mexico Arts & Crafts
Festival in June. Charlie and Debbie were the driving
force behind the Regalos Festival in St. Augustine,
Florida. In 2001 the Carrillos asked a small group of
artists to go with them to St. Augustine and start the
process of making a Market there. In April 2002 the
number grew to fifty artists. The Carrillos believe that
the tradition can not survive without new markets and
customers being exposed to the art. Santa Fe alone will
not support all the traditional artists working now.
Charlie is also excited about doing research on the
historic santeros. He and José Antonio Esquibel, the
genealogist, have found compelling information to
identify previously unknown or wrongly identified
santeros.
His first book, Hispanic New Mexican Pottery, was such a
success that he has hopes of doing more. The pottery book
was an expansion of Charlie’s doctoral dissertation from
the University of New Mexico that he received in 1996. He
was read the riot act by Debbie and Father Tom Steele to
complete the dissertation or forget it. It had been in
the process for twelve years. But after hiding out in
Albuquerque for weeks it was completed and the book soon
followed. The book by LPD Press is virtually sold out —
there are only about 2 dozen copies left.
Running a gallery full-time illustrated clearly to
Charlie and Debbie that time is very valuable and there
are a lot more interesting things that can be done with
their time than standing in an empty store. But they
still have hopes of opening a gallery in Santa Fe if the
right space was available and the economy was more
stable.
Another 1996 event in the Carrillo household was the
nativity controversy — now in retrospect looking mighty
silly. Charlie contracted with Midwest of Cannon Falls to
make a cast of one of his original nativities and mass
produce them at an affordable price. Charlie realized he
was under increased pressure to do affordable pieces for
many people and one of a kind bultos just couldn’t be
kept at a low price. So for about $200 you got a stable,
baby Jesus, Mary, Joseph, a small angel and three large
angels. After countless, rejected prototypes production
began. The pieces were delivered to local stores
sporadically, and never with enough figures to match the
number of stables. Charlie complained that people
wouldn’t just buy a stable — they wanted the whole set at
the same time.
Quality control was also an issue. The large angels were
constantly having their wings break off and eventually
were discontinued. The rest of the pieces, made in the
Philippines, had good and bad shipments. Midwest also did
not handle the complaints by storeowners well. They
eventually were sold to a Japanese firm and production
stalled for a period of time. But the real problem came
when a front page article in the Albuquerque Journal
proclaimed that santeros were unhappy with Charlie and
his mass-produced nativity. Three people in the article
were quoted as being terribly upset by the nativities.
One of which was Santa Fe storeowner Ed Berry who was
also on the Spanish Colonial Arts Society Board of
Directors.
In the article, Berry said he would never carry something
like Midwest’s Carrillo nativities in his store. Today he
does indeed carry them. The two other people later
complained that they had been misquoted — one a Market
artist and the other was Hispanic leader Concha Ortiz y
Pino de Kleven. Later Concha begged Charlie to get her a
nativity. The article was bogus and many complained to
the Journal. The headline proclaimed that many artists
were upset but that was in fact untrue. But the article
did result in major publicity and there was a feeding
frenzy for the nativities. To this day there is more
demand than nativities. The most dependable supplier of
nativities has been Susan’s Christmas Shop in Santa Fe.
She gets shipments a few times a year and maintains a
waiting list.
In 2001, Charlie designed his first limited edition glass
Christmas ornament through LPD Press. The image of the
Holy Family was the cover art for the December issue of
Tradicíon Revista. The ornaments were made in Roswell,
New Mexico. They were a sell-out. The ornaments were
featured in an article in the Albuquerque Journal that
caused a feeding frenzy. The image for the 2002 ornament
was the Baby Jesus. This year’s image will be the Madonna
and Child. The image will be available from LPD Press/TR
starting in July/August.
Charlie wants to do more licensing of images. He thinks
that the long history of major artists licensing their
images for mass market items should extend to the
Hispanic artists of New Mexico. There are very few
examples of this. Licensing images does not demean the
art but actually brings the images to new audiences. As
long as the item is not portrayed as an original, Charlie
has no problem so long as the item is a quality product.
So the age old question arises, why do you sell “holy
art?” Isn’t it sacrilegious? Charlie answers that the art
is not holy until it is blessed or until it is used for a
holy purpose. Many of Charlie’s pieces have been bought
for churches, chapels, and other places of worship. Then
the pieces take on a “holy” purpose and Charlie believes
it would be wrong to sell it then.
Charlie does irritate museum curators on a regular basis.
He is constantly visiting collections and telling those
in charge they have the wrong identification on pieces of
New Mexican devotional art. He gets rabid when books come
out with misinformation on historic santos. Those who are
on the receiving end of his wrath find that he can
support his statements with examples and other research
information. He even was the victim of bad information.
The recent Museum of Spanish Colonial Art book says that
he and Jimmy Trujillo are brothers in law. Not true.
Jimmy is Debbie’s uncle and Charlie has tried to
eliminate the error.
What is in the future for the Carrillos? First Roán has
graduated from high school and is off to college next
fall; he will also have to try and jury into Spanish
Market as an adult next year. Estrellita is a college
graduate exploring the world of dentistry and is in
Market for retablos and ramilletes. Debbie is finding
time and space for her pottery and hopes that the new
renovation of the studio will give her just enough space
to do her work.
As for Charlie — he has a new project with Roberto
Gonzales of Albuquerque. After the successful nativity,
Charlie is convinced other images like a Guadalupe or
Dolores would sell well. So Roberto will make a cast and
do a limited edition of Charlie’s work. They even have a
national distributor. Roberto has been successfully
marketing his own bultos as limited edition castings.
Charlie’s most recent project is the new altar screen in
the addition to Santa Maria de la Paz, his parish church
in Santa Fe. The altar was blessed on March 2, 2003 by
the Archbishop. The altar took almost three months. The
iconography was designed by Felipe Mirabal and the wood
work was done by Carrillo and Roberto Montoya, also of
the Santa Maria de la Paz parish; it was painted by
Charlie, Roán and Estrellita Carrillo, and Nicholas
Otero.
Charlie will also be taking over Father Tom’s University
of New Mexico college courses as Tom phases out his
teaching load. Charlie was very active on a number of
local of boards and gives talks for groups like Oasis,
Elderhostel, and visiting college groups. Charlie was
recently a member of the NM Arts Commission appointed by
Governor Johnson. Charlie and Debbie are also a voice to
be contended with at artists meetings for Spanish Market.
Charlie books up very far in advance and is tired of
shows trying to organize at the last minute and hope he
has work to sell. There is little time for vacation in
the Carrillo house but Debbie still hopes to take the
family to Sea World in San Diego — she has been talking
about it for years.
Since the book came out on Charlie a lot has changed but
a lot has stayed the same. Charlie was awarded the
Governor’s Award, the Mayor of Santa Fe’s Achievement in
the Arts Award, and the Zia Award by the University of
New Mexico Alumni Foundation. Just before 9/11 Charlie,
Debbie, and a few other New Mexico artists were
privileged to meet the First Ladies of the U.S. and
Mexico at the opening of Arte Latino in Chicago. Charlie
spoke when the exhibit came to Santa Fe in 2002. Both
Charlie and Debbie were represented in the Ahora exhibit
at the National Hispanic Art Center in Albuquerque.
Charlie also had work in the inagural exhibit of the
Museum of Spanish Colonial Art in Santa Fe.
Charlie and Nick Herrera are planning for a two-man show
at the Museum Cultural de Santa Fe in October of 2003
called Compadres. This is part of the promotion for the
new book on Nick. Charlie has written one of the essays
in the new book which is now available. Charlie is happy
that Nick can follow in his footsteps.
But with all the honors, praise, awards, and new projects
some things remain the same. The Carrillo house is always
filled with people, noise, and chaos. Charlie and Debbie
take more pleasure in the kids winning awards then when
they win. Charlie will forever irritate museum curators
pointing out the errors in their identifications. Charlie
is always behind in filling his many commissions. And
there is always a new adventure on the horizon. And as
eveyone knows, the Carrillos are never dull or bored —
there is too much to do.
Barbe Awalt and Paul Rhetts are the co-publishers of
Tradición Revista. They have written or published over 35
books, almost 2 dozen of which deal with the Hispanic art
& culture of the Southwest.
First published in Tradicion Revista, Volume 8, No. 2,
Summer 2003.
Copyright 2003. May not be reproduced in any form without
written permission.