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Jarred Santos, Keeping Reno Grimey with his Art

Reno-raised former collegiate boxing champion, Jarred Santos, 24, has a corner of his apartment dedicated to his art.  

Reno-raised former collegiate boxing champion, Jarred Santos, 24, has a corner of his apartment dedicated to his art.  

From the Ring to the Drawing Board

"You’re not a wimp growing up here for sure," Jarred Santos said as he showed some of his recent art. "But it’s changing. The Cal Neva steak deal used to be 2.99 for steak and eggs and now it’s 5.99 which is still cool.  But I don’t want it to be $13.99 when I’m 30 …" 

Santos, a 2015 national collegiate boxing champion at 132 pounds and member of the UNR team which won the overall national championship after a two-decade drought, now spends hours alone working on drawings, many of them depicting a seedy Reno -- motel kids who hop around, drug users, castaways, gamblers and the like.

“My art is agressive cartooning that’s not super well structured or traditional at all," he said. "I use bright colors and I have a lot of greens. I model some of my stuff off of old skateboard art, punk rock posters, album art."

Santos also wants to instill pride and awareness in a Reno he finds is being pushed away rather than helped.

Representing Reno as he sees it: "If you look at the history of Reno, it’s always been a small town with a history of gambling, organized crime, prostitution. It’s always been the Wild West.  You have good gun rights. You can go to a whorehouse…

Representing Reno as he sees it: "If you look at the history of Reno, it’s always been a small town with a history of gambling, organized crime, prostitution. It’s always been the Wild West.  You have good gun rights. You can go to a whorehouse if you want. You can smoke weed. The bars are open until five in the morning.  I think that history has had a lot of negative impacts on the community but it’s also a reality the community has to face and realize we can’t cover up things by building new bars or the university expanding, by trying to polish without addressing the actual issue, which is the crime, the drug use, the prostitution, the all-around roughness of the city due to low income and addiction.  That needs to be addressed more and it gets lost with people trying to build a new Tesla here and having a bunch of people coming over who can afford these higher priced homes, because they came from an area where wages were higher, so they had money saved up and it’s cheap for them, but then the locals here can’t afford their rents anymore because everything is going up. At the same time, income for locals isn’t going up," Santos said, explaining his art and his thought process on a changing Reno and some of its long time residents now feeling unwanted and left behind.

A Struggling Artist with Reno Pride

Santos graduated with an art degree from UNR with a minor in psychology, but for now he says he works for a cleaning and restoration company to pay the bills.  He’d like to live off of art and wants to get into computers more to design logos. 

Like other effective movements such as the Keep Tahoe Blue drive, he wants to create one for Reno pride. "I grew up with everyone wanting to leave Reno. And when California kids come here to study, they all talk about how cool it’s to be from California. But I like that I’m from Reno," he said.

He has an Instagram where he promotes his art, but doesn't believe he'll cash in through that platform anytime soon.  His Instagram bio is: Reno Struggling Artist. "There’s not a lot of money in art but it’s something that I’ve always wanted to do," he said. "And I still want to eventually live off of it. But I do another job to get by, even if I don’t get paid well there either, so I am struggling." 

"I was born and raised here. Reno is a rough place," Santos, a former Nevada amateur boxer of the year,  said. "A lot of my art ... I think intelligent people are going to laugh at it and get a good kick out of it and people that are stupid are…

"I was born and raised here. Reno is a rough place," Santos, a former Nevada amateur boxer of the year,  said. "A lot of my art ... I think intelligent people are going to laugh at it and get a good kick out of it and people that are stupid are going to be offended.  It’s in your face.  A lot of it is also to poke fun at people who are uptight."

Sticking to Simple  

Even if he is thinking of using computers more, he still relies mostly on pen, pencil and paper, as well as color markers and Sharpies. 

"Simple is better," he said.  "Why fix it if it’s not broke? I don’t think art should become fully based off of computers and having to know that craft, because there is a whole separate craft that is also involved in it, that I don’t think should be lost in the transition."

He'd like to paint but says it's too expensive. "When I was going to school, I would get discounts and coupons to go to the art store. It made it easier. Going to the arts store now you can drop a couple of hundred dollars on paint, and that’s why I don’t paint," he said. 

"If there’s any place you are going to see tattoos on girl’s necks and stuff like that it’s going to be here," Santos said. 

"If there’s any place you are going to see tattoos on girl’s necks and stuff like that it’s going to be here," Santos said. 

Gentrification in Progress

He says change is coming quickly to Reno, but that some of it to him is just inhumane, especially when old motels are razed to the ground, reducing options for affordable housing.

"There are tons of kids who grew up in those motels, who would hop from room to room," he said.  "For people to just assume they need to tear them down because it’s an eyesore or because there’s hookers or whatever, it’s also going to affect the community in a negative way. We’ll have even more homeless kids.  If we are tearing those down, to put up a Whole Foods, I think that’s stupid… And also sometimes maybe in five years there still will be nothing there."

"That says oil ... for weed extracts. It’s supposed to replicate the Virgin Mary religious drawings.  So I just put a bong there. It symbolizes how for so long everybody said weed was bad, and then now it’s coming out that it’s got all these po…

"That says oil ... for weed extracts. It’s supposed to replicate the Virgin Mary religious drawings.  So I just put a bong there. It symbolizes how for so long everybody said weed was bad, and then now it’s coming out that it’s got all these positives attributes," Santos said.

A Question of Perspectives

With the so-called fight on blight, Santos says too much emphasis is put on eliminating the blight, rather than thinking of what might have caused the blight and how to help people living in the blight.

But he says, as an artist, he can only get people to think.

"We as a community need to stay educated on everything and look at things at face value and look at what affects what. It’s going to take everybody period," he said. "Do we allow heroin drug motels all over the place and embrace it or do we tear it down? We need to address the problem that led to the heroin problem."

Interview with Our Town Reno in March 2018

Monday 03.05.18
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Fine Motor, Rocking for Our Center

In the wake of the appalling Pulse nightclub mass killing, which left 49 people brutally murdered at a gay nightclub in Florida two years ago, Reynolds School of Journalism Assistant Professor Ben Birkinbine felt compelled to give back with a benefit concert for Our Center, a local LGBTQA community space.

When the Wells Avenue locale was attacked by a rock throwing vandal earlier this year, his determination to help only grew stronger. So this past Saturday, Birkinbine and the band he is a part of Fine Motor followed through on their pledge with a solemn evening concert at the Holland Project, with proceeds going to Our Center.

“It’s kind of the punk rock mentality of sense of community," Birkinbine (second from left) said.

“It’s kind of the punk rock mentality of sense of community," Birkinbine (second from left) said.

Fine Motor and other bands held the benefit concert this past Saturday at the Holland Project to help with repairs estimated to cost up to $10,000. Above photo provided to media by Our Center, which also posted this below video to Facebook after the…

Fine Motor and other bands held the benefit concert this past Saturday at the Holland Project to help with repairs estimated to cost up to $10,000. Above photo provided to media by Our Center, which also posted this below video to Facebook after the January second attack: https://www.facebook.com/OurCenterReno/videos/1774797669230893/

20-year-old Erin Miller, a student at TMCC who goes by the stage name Surly, was the opening act.  “I’m a firm believer in doing whatever you can to help,” she said.

20-year-old Erin Miller, a student at TMCC who goes by the stage name Surly, was the opening act.  “I’m a firm believer in doing whatever you can to help,” she said.

Photos and reporting by Jordan Gearey for Our Town Reno

 

 

 

 

 

Monday 01.29.18
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Debi, Leaving Art Message Rocks around Reno

If you have ever seen rocks painted with ornate designs hiding around Reno, you may have just seen artwork painted by Debi Handrich-Walker. Walker is a founder of a Facebook group called Reno Painted Rocks dedicated to painting rocks with desig…

If you have ever seen rocks painted with ornate designs hiding around Reno, you may have just seen artwork painted by Debi Handrich-Walker. Walker is a founder of a Facebook group called Reno Painted Rocks dedicated to painting rocks with designs and hiding them in random spots across the city. Walker started the group in December 2016 after seeing a similar Facebook group called Whidbey Island Rocks based in Washington. “I think that painting or having an outlet does allow for stress relief. If I’ve had a rough day at work, I go in and I paint and I feel better,” Handrich-Walker said.  Photo and Reporting by Kevin Sheridan shared with Our Town Reno.

Art Abandonment

Handrich-Walker said that part of what drove her to start the Facebook group "Reno Painted Rocks" was a love of art abandonment, or leaving artwork somewhere for others to find.  The group has over 1,500 members, dispersed all over the world, from Reno to South Korea.

People who find the rocks take pictures of them and post them to Facebook to have their find shared with the group. Walker, who works in a bakery, said she “loves” Reno and described the art scene in the city as up and coming. “(The up and coming ar…

People who find the rocks take pictures of them and post them to Facebook to have their find shared with the group. Walker, who works in a bakery, said she “loves” Reno and described the art scene in the city as up and coming. “(The up and coming art scene) is a big draw for me, I love the arts, so (Reno has) got nice culture.” 

An Outlet and Smiles

Handrich-Walker, who also works in a bakery, said she “loves” Reno and its arts and culture scene, which she described as up and coming. While also serving as an outlet for her, she said she likes the fact that the rocks can make someone else happy.

“If I can paint a rock and know that it's going to bring somebody a smile, that is soothing to me," she said.

Handrich-Walker, who says she has planted hundreds of rocks around Reno since the group was founded, added that the time it takes to paint a rock depends on its size.  She said it can take anywhere from one to two hours or several minutes. Phot…

Handrich-Walker, who says she has planted hundreds of rocks around Reno since the group was founded, added that the time it takes to paint a rock depends on its size.  She said it can take anywhere from one to two hours or several minutes. Photo and reporting by Kevin Sheridan shared with Our Town Reno.

Handrich-Walker said some of what she uses for her rocks includes acrylic paint and watercolor pencils, while others in the group have used melted crayons and Sharpie pens to add color to the rocks.  “(The mediums are) endless,” she said. “If you can write with it, you can draw a rock with it.” 

Why don't you join the movement, make a rock, hide it, and go look for someone else's decorated one?  More instructions are on the Facebook page. Photo by Kevin Sheridan shared with Our Town Reno.

Why don't you join the movement, make a rock, hide it, and go look for someone else's decorated one?  More instructions are on the Facebook page. Photo by Kevin Sheridan shared with Our Town Reno.

Photos, Audio and Reporting by Kevin Sheridan shared with Our Town Reno

 

 

Wednesday 01.17.18
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Little Comes Before Big When It Comes To Truck Vendors

Photos, Infographic and Reporting by Candice Vialpando and Breanne Standingwater 

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Britton McKain Murdock, owner and creator of Reno’s first mobile fashion truck, The Biggest Little Fashion Truck. Murdock purchased the truck in June 2016.

Going Nimble on Wheels

Starting a new business can come with many challenges. People starting new business ventures in Reno are discovering that sometimes it pays to start small with a street operation or mobile business.

 One of the most common and well known street vendors in Reno is the food truck. Summer food truck events are especially popular. One of the biggest events is Reno Street Food which entered its sixth year in 2016. Every Friday in the summer over 30 trucks will gather in Idlewild park Park to serve gourmet food, desserts, and craft beer to customers. In 2015, Steve Schroeder who helps put on the street food events estimated to the Reno Gazette Journal, that 70,000 food grazers spent more than $1 million over 20 Fridays.

Food trucks dominate, but more and more other business models are going mobile on wheels.

Unique Benefits

Starting a new business venture is challenging and expensive. Having a mobile business plan allows entrepreneurs some unique benefits. The cost of opening up a business can vary, but overall opening up a small mobile business will run someone between $5k-100k according to Food Truck Empire while a brick and mortar storefront can cost on average $13k-600k according to Forbes.

 Mobile businesses are able to build their brand and customer base before investing in a storefront. They are also able to test out different locations to see where their customer base is strongest.

In the summer, the truck will park in a driveway or street or wherever is available. Murdock will open the doors and make an outdoor boutique full of racks, tables with accessories, as well as shopping inside the truck. It is a unique and fun experience. 

Although food trucks make up the bulk of Reno’s street vendors, the Biggest Little City now has its very own, first mobile fashion truck, The Biggest Little Fashion Truck. The pink mobile boutique is able to travel around the Reno, Carson, and Tahoe areas selling chic clothing and accessories.

The owner of The Biggest Little Fashion Truck, Britton McKain Murdock, 27, is a former athlete turned female entrepreneur.

Britton has always had a love for retail. It’s in her blood too. Her grandfather owned Murdock’s Clothing Store for thirty years in Carson City and Reno. She always wanted to carry on the family tradition but knew she would have to evolve with the times.

Empowering Women

Fashion trucks are huge in big cities like Los Angeles. According to the American Mobile Retail Association, there are a total of 19 fashion trucks in Los Angeles, with a national total of 500.

Murdock said that she is mixing in a lifestyle brand into her company so that she can empower women, and encourage them to find what makes them happy.

Murdock said fashion trucks are out to change the way women shop. They are evolving stores on wheels that can go to just about any location and accompany different types of trucks and events. There is also a sense of urgency when shopping from a truck. An opportunity to buy an interesting piece of clothing may disappear when the truck travels to its next location.

Murdock said that when she was researching the retail businesses, she immediately knew that the fashion truck would be her stepping-stone to one day owning her own store, similar to what Wood and Watnes have done.

“Right now we don’t have the foot traffic for a brick in mortar store, but in the future I would love to own stores as well as a fleet of trucks,” Murdock said.

Inventory for the fashion truck is always changing and there is a wide variety of clothing and accessories to chose from. 

Mobility and Versatility

The beauty of a fashion truck event is that they are all different. The clientele changes with the location. The inventory is customized for each event. Murdock sets up in all different venues: houses, front yards, inside homes, outside restaurants, and more.

 Murdock is generally known in the community for two kinds of events, a private event and a public event.

“In the summer I will park in the driveway or street or wherever is available. I will open the doors, I have stairs that drop down, and I will make an outdoor boutique full of racks, tables with accessories, as well as shopping inside the truck,” Murdock said.

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Fashion trucks are huge in big cities like Los Angeles and New York. Murdock said that when she was researching the retail businesses, she immediately knew that the fashion truck would be her stepping-stone to one day owning her own store.

Sipping Wine and Shopping for Clothes

Women sip on their wine and shop from the truck. It is an intimate, convenient and comfortable shopping experience.

The public events that Murdock hosts are like festivals downtown whereby she sets up in a similar way.

“At those events, I get a different crowd which helps with exposure,” Murdock said.

 Murdock said that one of the biggest questions she has asked herself throughout this journey is ‘who is my target market?’ Murdock said that when she opened The Biggest Little Fashion Truck, she was aiming for women aged 15 to 40 years-old. However, her whole plan has changed, as her clothing now appeals to all age groups. “This is an opportune time to be in the Biggest Little City. We are growing and booming. There is an energy in the city that you can feel,” Murdock said.

“I think this is a good time to be in Reno. Having four tires that make you mobile is also a good thing,” Murdock said.

Photos, Infographic and Reporting by Candice Vialpando and Breanne Standingwater 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday 12.15.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Connor Fogal, Painting and Making Toys for Children with Special Needs

Text and Photos by Natalie Van Hoozer for Our Town Reno

Amid the sculptures and other creations under construction in the art co-working space known as The Generator in Sparks, there is an area dedicated to Creative Potential, a company where adults with special needs can work on a commission basis to design and create non-toxic toys for children with disabilities.

“A lot of people think people with disabilities can’t do anything at all,” says 23-year-old Creative Potential artist Connor Fogal. He has limited use of his arms and legs due to cerebral palsy.

Proving People Wrong

“I like to prove people wrong about what they think about people with disabilities,” he says. He pursues his passion for painting by using a paintbrush attached to a headset to create his work, some of which is on display in restaurants and offices around Reno.  

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a disabled person is twice as likely to be unemployed as a person who is not disabled. 

Striving for Financial Independence

One of Connor’s main goals is to find a job with a competitive wage which will allow him to financially support himself. As a person with disabilities, generating this income is an uphill battle.

Fogal recently worked at a job which paid $8 per hour. However, he says he was only given one hour’s worth of work each day, despite the fact that he was available at the work site and willing to work for six hours every day.  

The Reasons Behind Creative Potential

Observing this type of treatment is part of what drove artist and educator Spencer Allen to start Creative Potential. In order to promote competitive wages, Allen designed the company so the artists keep 80 percent of the earnings made from their products.

On Creative Potential: “It shouldn’t be a company where its main motivation is profit,” says Allen. “It should exist to create opportunities to employ other people with disabilities.”

 

An Inclusive Art Space

Creative Potential is also designed to be an inclusive work space, which means people with and without disabilities work in the same workplace.  Since that workplace is in The Generator, Fogal and Allen have been taught to use the facility’s equipment, like lasers, to further develop their artwork.  

“People’s perception is that [The Generator] is just about Burning Man, but there is an element here that is socially conscious and is aware that what we are doing is a benefit to Reno,” says Allen.

Never Give Up

In the future, Fogal and Allen would like to see Creative Potential grow, with more artists contributing and more people assisting with production.

Fogal would like to show his work in galleries in large cities like San Francisco, L.A. and New York.

All in the Family

Another artist who works with Creative Potential is Fogal's niece 16-year-old Ashleigh Fogal. She likes to play the piano and created this “monster” while her uncle painted.

Fogal’s own passion for art started with an interest in mixing different colors of paints. He is currently working on a painting series about his family members.

Follow His Journey

Fogal has his own website Mylow, short for 'My Life on Wheels', where you can look at more of his art and also purchase it.  Also to find out more about Allen and Fogal's Generator project to make safe toys for children with disabilities start by clicking on   http://creativepotential.guru/

Text, Reporting and Photos by Natalie Van Hoozer for Our Town Reno

 

Sunday 10.23.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Pirates, Knights and Witches of Reno, Helping the Homeless

The so-called "Pirates of Reno", members of a caring culture who dress and act the part, have a long tradition of feeding the homeless on a weekly basis on Record Street, as part of the We Care Volunteers program.  The pirates were front and center at the recent Reno-Sparks Pagan Pride day. 

Photos and Reporting by Ashley Andrews

Flogging, water torture, accepting bribes to issue warrants, drenched survivors told to "go forth and sin some more," and auctions for We Care Volunteers were part of the festivities as pirates and witches invaded Idlewild Park.

George (right), a father of four and grandfather of one, now living on the streets, recognized the Pirates of Reno from their weekly feeding.

A Knight of the Favor Jar gave George some cheer and bottled water.

The Knights, like the Pirates, perform volunteer work. Knights volunteer their time to help others do just about anything. Knights will shovel snow, move furniture or sit and talk. When the Reno-Sparks Pagan Pride Day 2016 came to a close, Knights helped clean up. Gathering flowers used in the Mabon pagan ritual ceremony of thanks for a bountiful harvest, this Knight struck a pose.

Photos and Reporting by Ashley Andrews for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 10.12.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Thriving Despite the Odds: the South Town Tattoo Collective

Amid rising rents in downtown and Midtown Reno and lots of competition among tattoo parlors and tattoo artists, the South Town Tattoo Collective is living up to its name: collegial, giving, socially conscious and accessible in a shared space without prohibitive costs. Artists from the collective also work on community gardens and hold weekly potlucks for people living without a roof over the heads.

Photos, Interviews and Captions by Candice Vialpando

 “The main purpose for starting a ‘collective’ tattoo shop was the idea of breaking down hierarchy,” says founder and tattoo artist Jay Dee Skinner.

Jay Dee Skinner has been tattooing since 2010. He is best known for his portraits, photo realism, black and grey colors, and custom lettering tattoos.

“Reno is an art town. It is overwhelmed with tattoo shops. We have so much to benefit from being a collective,” says Nichole Moore, one of the tattoo artists at the South Town Tattoo Collective.

Moore is booked out with about three, four customers a day. This back Mandala piece (many times defined as a geometric figure representing the universe through symbolism) has so far taken her 24 hours, and will be completed after another 8 hours of work. 

"Custom, one of a kind tattoos with deep meaning, in a safe space is the demand we provide for the people," Skinner says.“Sharing a bond with the person walking through the door and becoming old friends, and quick, is my favorite part of the art (...) Our people offer up a lot of trust that we take very seriously. Our goal is to always honor that and give our very best back to the people."

Photos, Interviews and Captions by Candice Vialpando

 

Thursday 10.06.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Jack Ryan, An Artist Who "Pops Color Wheelies"

It’s almost showtime for Jack, one of the chosen for the “Artisans in the Secret Garden” show tomorrow Saturday, an all-day Artown event showcasing the work of local artists, clothiers and jewelry makers.

“I might not be a genius, but I have the hair of a genius” Jack says, in front of some his art at the Potentialist Workshop in Reno on July 8, 2016.

At his corner space at the 2nd street Potentialist Workshop, Jack, who says he likes to “pop color wheelies”, and who was encouraged to become a painter after being a local theater revelation, is figuring out logistics and which of the eight to 12 pieces he says he will be displaying.

Jack traces some of the inspiration behind his recent work to growing up in Hawaii and spending time at Pyramid Lake and Black Rock City.

Known by friends for his unique, self-taught paintings, full of dazzling color combinations and Swiss cheese cut out canvasses as well as his way with words, Jack shared some of his philosophies of life and lessons learned from painting for the past “four and half years” with Our Town Reno.

Any pre-show nerves?

“Oh no, I’m fully open to it. I’m really going to show the world what I am capable of. It’s really nice. They deserve this… I’ll be bringing some cosmological etchings and actually entire ages frozen in time. What else? And some minimal pieces.  I hear people sometimes like minimal things.  I used to be a minimal criminal, until that name got taken off the Internet.”

How would you describe your style as artist?

“This has been an exploration of technique revealing itself while I’m able to be patient. This is the first time I’ve had a relationship in the physical world where there’s been tangible results, I think.  Although the jury is still out on that. I play music but this seems to be easier on people. Imagine what this sounds like, it might be too much."

“I like the motion. I like how it fits into my vision of showing transformal objects. You may see a symbol in there that you may not recognize, but that your DNA definitely recognizes."

Some of your pieces have cutouts on the edges. What’s the idea there?

“I’m trying to emulate time-coded tablets. I’m actually trying to throw lines of totems and tikis. I grew up in Hawaii and spend a lot of time in Pyramid Lake, and I’ve been exposed to human spirit aspects. I’m trying to let my DNA breathe those experiences. I’ve also gone to Burning Man quite a number of years and that city taught me how to throw a line. I have to throw a line where I do my art that would fit in the pantheon of that city of how much beauty I’ve been shared with. I have to fire back or else I am not doing what an artist should. And also, you could strap (my paintings) to anything in Burning Man and get shade.  That’s also why the design is cut out. You can rope them. You can tape them. You can clip them. They’re made for function. They can be cheese trays. You know people eat cheese."

Jack's piece is the one in the middle on the top of one the Potentialist walls: “It’s really a crazy pornographic piece, but apparently nobody else can see it because somebody told me to put it on the wall. I’m greatly honored because it really captures the transformal look I’m trying to go for, with the depths, the perspectives and the twists, and, of course, the outright beauty.”

How does painting help you?

"The frozenness, to have that one moment of frozen is kind of important in this day and age as we see image upon image upon image. We’re just inundated with images. Me having a relationship with a frozen moment is something that my soul hasn’t been able to find in another place and it’s kind of nice to be helped in this way. I never imagined it. I’ve lost weight though since becoming an artist.  I even lost 30 pounds at one point, but I've regained some."

From the floor of his corner space: “That is the symbol of our age, the container for water. It’s not the water itself, it’s the bearer of the water.  As a human earthling, I was actually recently declared, I have to have a relationship with water. It’s rough in our age. “

Is it really difficult to be an artist?

As an artist, they’re not kidding. They’re the lowest rung on the ladder of society for a reason. They just couldn’t make it as humans. That’s really the only reason I became an artist. I couldn’t make it as whatever is going on around here.   But these four and a half years, I’ve learned what an artist is not. Maybe after a couple more months, maybe I’ll learn what an artist is. I’ve been stretched to my limits. I’ve lost everything, but it’s ok. There’s no other way out.

The free to access Saturday July 9th Artown event Artisans in The Secret Garden will be from 9 am to 4pm at 751 Marsh Ave. Reno, NV 89509.

Note: Questions and answers were trimmed. Interviews and photos for Our Town Reno on July 8, 2016.

Friday 07.08.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

I.B. Funny, the Balloon Maker

Story and Photo by Taylor Burnett for Our Town Reno, June 2016

Local balloon artist, I.B. Funny, poses for a picture while making balloon creations for kids at Idlewild Park. “This is a classic pose that I like,” he says as he gets into position with a smile on his face. I.B. Funny frequents local events to share his craft of balloon making. 

Wednesday 06.22.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Gabriel, the Record Shop Owner

Gabriel Torres, owner of Spectre Records on Wells Avenue, prides himself in his smaller, select music collection. Spectre Records moved in December 2015 from Center Street to its current location. CREDIT: Natalie Van Hoozer for Noticiero Móvil.  

Monday 03.28.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Michelle, the Community Gardener

Michelle Hawkins is a volunteer coordinator at Teglia’s Paradise Park Community Garden.

Hawkins says garlic, onions, chives, collard greens and turnip greens are already looking good as this Spring 2016 slowly rolls around.

“The garden is my therapy. It does provide a need for people who do need food, and love to garden, but there’s also that very special part of us as humans who love to dig in the dirt and I think it’s very therapeutic, very spiritual to do that. This is especially great for people who live in apartments or don’t have their own garden space. We have a compost area out here for people to come out and compost. We’re a great resource for people in those positions.”

The community garden is open to individuals and non-profits.  Potlucks are held in the summer.

Friday 03.25.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Emily, the Taxidermist

photo and story by Caroline Ackerman

Emily Felch is the young owner of Natural Selection, a thriving oddities shop in Midtown Reno. Natural Selection sells taxidermied animals who died of natural causes, among an assorted selection of succulents and air plants.

Felch explains that after graduating high school she began attending UNR, but found that she neither fit in nor enjoyed school. Natural Selection has now been open for a year and a half and is located on St. Lawrence Ave. off of Virginia Street.

Friday 03.25.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Kiera, the Yoga Teacher

photo and story by Camille Loustalet

Kiera Gallup has been practicing Bikram yoga off and on since September 2012, and now instructs Bikram yoga at the Juice Box Studio in northwest Reno.

Bikram Yoga is referred to as a Yang style yoga, because throughout 90 minutes one stays in the room, participants remain active- actively engaging each and every muscle to benefit their mind and body. In 105 degree heat, the practice is intense, detoxifying-yet entirely relaxing.

A Childlike Energy

While the Juice Box Studio employs several, unique teachers, Kiera is loved by her students because of her enthusiasm and childlike energy.

Childlike, because of her smiling, joking manner she talks students through each posture- making silly jokes here and there. It reminds students in the midst of the intense, very hot, challenging practice to smile, to enjoy the time they have in the room not only to heal and improve their bodies, but their minds as well.

Mind and Body

Kiera teaches her students every class that the effort they put in will only benefit them overall. Sometimes she shares stories or ideas with her classes to expand the students minds as they extend themselves to the furthest limits their bodies can handle.

A delicately beautiful practice, yoga teaches that intensity, power, ferocity can exist in the most serene exterior. Yoga does indeed transcend through one's body into their mind and spirit- bringing with it understanding of not only one's body, but of oneself.

Thursday 03.24.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Kenny, the Snowboard Waxer

photo and story by Carly Moran

"We have people coming in from other countries but I also get to meet a lot of locals who all have different boards and personalities and I get to work with it all," Gumns said.

Kenny Gumns has worked at the Mt. Rose Ski Resort Repair Shop for over ten years and says he loves his job because he gets to work with a variety of people. Gumns also mentioned perks such as a free season pass and free rentals which contribute to making it a fun job. 

Monday 03.21.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Spike, the Food Truck Guy

photo and story by Caroline Ackerman

"Working in the small space really proves how much I like my boss. Sometimes it's both of us in here together," Spike said with a laugh.

Spike works in the Taste of Chicago truck outside of Bibo Coffee on Record St. Normally a touring Americana and folk musician, Spike says working in the truck is the perfect job during the winter when he is home.

Sunday 03.20.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Lara, the Cooking Instructor

photo and text by Brooklyn Reich

Lara Ritchie, Culinary Director at Nothing to It! Culinary Center in Sparks, runs the cooking school, kitchen store, and catering business with her husband.

Ritchie has been teaching cooking classes and demonstrations at Nothing to It since 2002, and has been cooking since she was very young. 

She currently teaches 5 classes a week, and 400-500 students in a month. Ritchie is a big advocate for cooking with organic ingredients, especially when cooking with meats. On Thursday, March 10th she taught a class called "Killer Chicken Recipes", where she demonstrated proper technique on roasting and carving a chicken. 

Ritchie says that for her the most rewarding part of teaching is "when I hear about their success stories at home". A "healthy mix" of her students are new and returning, so she makes sure to take time to chat with her students before class. 

Saturday 03.19.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Anthony, the Tattoo Artist

photo and story by Pierce Baker

Destany Swan was having Stewart tattoo a flower on her right arm on March 13, 2016. "Anthony is super talented," Swan said. "I like his line work, we have a lot of similar interests in tattoos. So many of my friends' dads have been tattooed here. It's just an amazing place."

Anthony Stewart, a tattoo artist at the Body Graphics Tattooing in downtown Reno, works at the vintage shop established in 1976. 

The owners, the Martynuik family, have lined the walls with colorful knick-knacks, pictures of tattoo examples, and a ceiling filled with dollar bills on which customers are encouraged to write profanity-filled messages. 

Stewart was quick to praise the family-owned parlor, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary.

"Everybody in here is our family. We're very old school and try to keep things traditional. This shop is still trying to keep the real heart and soul of what it used to be back in the day," Stewart said. 

 

Friday 03.18.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 
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