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Tuesday
Nov222011

Traveling Back Through Time in Taos

by Susanna Starr

 

Although Starr Interiors, the gallery that I’ve had for decades, has been housed in what was once the home of one of the founding artists of Taos, New Mexico, E.I. Couse, only recently have I gotten entranced with the history of the building. I’ve known about it, but it’s always been in the abstract. My deed was signed under the presidency of Abraham Lincoln, but the building which was originally constructed as a private home, existed long before that. I’d never given much thought to the previous owners and the part they played in the colorful history of Taos.

Since making a connection with Virginia Couse and her husband, Ernie Levitt, who have the Couse Foundation, I’ve become inspired to do some of my own research into this historic building. They’ve been good enough to provide us with some photos when Virginia’s grandfather and his wife, the first Virginia, lived in the house, from 1906-1909, calling it Las Golondrinas. It was there that her grandfather built his studio by opening up the roof and adding on what looked like a greenhouse to provide him with the northern light he needed to paint by.

He also often painted in the courtyard. This courtyard was beautiful then, as now, and a photograph caoturs Couse sitting in the doorway at his easel with a handsome young model from the Pueblo standing in front of him. In another, we see him sitting in the courtyard on one of the rocking chairs with his wife stretched out on the grass, hollyhocks and Virginia creepers lining the sides of the courtyard.

The hollyhocks and Virginia creepers are gone now. The courtyard has been closed in with a portal (entryway) and a wrought iron gate. It has gone through many transformations over the hundreds of years. I have just as strong a connection to plants as the original Virginia had and the courtyard, since the 1970’s when we moved in, has been the most photographed in Taos.  Now the abundance of plants and flowers surround and provide a backdrop for the weavings and pillows that are housed in five showrooms of the now restored Las Golondrinas.


Although the building has gone through extensive restoration, conscious efforts have been made to retain all that we could of the original historic quality. The slightly sagging large vigas that support the ceiling are original. The only doorway left from the time it was built remains as well, although because I’m five feet tall, I’m one of the few persons who can walk through it without ducking. The skylight that Couse installed was taken away when he and his family moved a few blocks away.

Last month, when we went to visit Virginia and Ernie at the “Couse House” (in the family since 1909), we sat chatting about the history of Couse and his family, in rocking chairs under their portal. Just outside were the extensive gardens put in by grandmother Virginia. It was a lovely Taos setting. The rocking chairs were the very same chairs that appeared in the photographs of the Las Golondrinas courtyard more than one hundred years ago! That was the continuity that I found so stirring.

For me the chairs were a symbol, not only of times gone by, but of what Taos was like when these sophisticated artists relocated there to make their lives and their art. It was a time when someone who made a chair made it to the best of their ability, taking pride in each piece they produced. Unlike so many of today’s commercial, churned out, low-cost items that are massed-produced, this was an era when things that were hand made were designed to endure.

I’ve lived pretty basically at times in my life. I learned a lot, but it was hard. I was more than willing to pay the price, but it certainly isn’t a way I would choose to live again. However, the value of that which is hand made, which has the stamp or thumbprint of it’s maker, is that which I value the most. The business that I’ve been in these 40 years and the house that I’ve lived in for that same amount of time reflect that. The artwork, mostly folk art, that I’ve collected, reflect that as well. Maybe that’s why sitting on the rocking chairs at the present Couse house that were carried over from the house which I’ve been so much a part of for all these years, has so much meaning to me. That feeling of continuity, especially in an age of “right now,” is a reminder that there are some things that do really endure.

 

 

Susanna Starr is an entrepreneur, photographer, speaker, artist, writer, and traveler and holds a degree in philosophy from Stony Brook State University of New York. Susanna has over twenty years experience in the hospitality business as owner of Rancho Encantado, an eco-resort and spa in Mexico. She has lived in Northern New Mexico for more than thirty five years and has lived in and traveled throughout Latin America. Susanna is the author of the book: Fifty and Beyond: New Beginnings in Health and Well-Being her blog is here.

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Reader Comments (4)

Great story Susanna!

November 22, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJohn Lamkin

This is wonderful, we've posted a link to it on the Harwood Museum of Art's Facebook page. Thank you!

November 23, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterHarwood Museum of Art

Lovely images and great story Susanna. A good read worth sharing. Thanks!

November 23, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterKurt Whitner

A great way to revisit the past.

November 27, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterNancy King

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