| The
early Spaniards felt drawn to the Canyon Road area by
the Santa Fe River bottom, which offered irrigable land
for their crops and pasturage for their flocks; by a
centuries-old Pueblo Indian trail, which provided a
convenient passageway for mule trains and ox-drawn carretas;
and by the communitys nearby main plaza and governmental
offices, which offered protection from Indian attacks.
They established Canyon Road, only about three quarters
of a mile in length, from the most humble of beginningsa
prehistoric path of dirt and tiny houses of mud; but
they imbued it with an enduring quality of style, character
and charm.
Today,
on Canyon Road, zoned strictly for "residential
arts and crafts," you will find Spanish colonial,
Spanish/Pueblo and American territorial architecture
which has been burnished and mellowed by the passage
of the years. You will discover more than five dozen
galleries with paintings, sculpture, Native American
crafts, traditional Spanish crafts, Santa Fe fashion,
mixed media, photography and antiques literally spilling
out of the doors and windows. You will find world class
food and service laced with the rhythms of Spanish classical
guitar, flamenco, blues and jazz. You can find a quiet
bar enfolded by adobe walls with a warm fireplace on
a cold winter night and have a good heavy red Spanish
wine and a long conversation.
Should
you choose to walk the length of Canyon Road, with its
one-story common-walled structures and narrow sidewalks,
you can see that it has historic roots in ancient village
streets of Mexico, Spain and Moorish Africa. Through
an open gate, you get a glimpse of a courtyard or a
garden which once served as a center for family and
social life and as a sanctuary against outside invaders.
You get a glimpse of exquisite Spanish or territorial
architectural features which helped satisfy a yearning
for beauty. You discover little passageways and alleys
which convey a sense of mystery and sometimes surprise
with a garden of sculpture and blooming roses.
-Jay W. Sharp |