About Artisan
Artisan Mission Statement
We want all who walk through our doors to share in the “Artisan
Experience”. We sell supplies to fuel creativity, share our
knowledge of how to use them and give exceptional service to make
everyone feel special. We strive to have fun in our jobs and create
such an environment for our customers. We treat ourselves, employees,
suppliers and customers with respect with the goal of enriching everyone’s life
who have shared in the “Artisan Experience”.
Artisan History
1975: Bill Banta and Jack Young moved to Santa
Fe from Houston, TX and opened their first store on historic Canyon
Road.
1980: Artisan quarter-owner, Ernie Cavasos of Espanola was
hired as only the 4th staff member at the time.
1984: Artisan quarter-owner, Dennis Miller was hired by his
McCurdy high-school buddie, Ernie.
1985: Artisan quarter-owner, Paul Bell was hired by fellow McCurdians
Ernie and Dennis.
1988: Artisan quarter-owner, Ron Whitmore was hired following
his move here from Phoenix, AZ and answering a classified ad.
1989: Ernie moved to Albuquerque and opened Artisan's second
store now located near UNM.
1992: Dennis left Artisan to work 11 years for another art
supply business in Denver and Colorado Springs.
1994: Artisan co-founder Bill Banta died suddenly. His
partner, Jack Young sold 49% of the business to Ernie Cavasos, Paul
Bell, and Ron Whitmore.
1995: Paul moved to Taos to open Artisan's third store.
1998: Paul moved back to Santa Fe to open Artisan's 4th store
(and the 2nd Santa Fe store) on St. Michael's Drive.
2000: The first Biennial Artists' Material Expo was successfully
held at Sweeney Center in Santa Fe under the direction of Ron.
2001: The Santa Fe, St. Michael's store was moved to 2601 Cerrillos
Road. Co-founders Jack Young and Bill Banta (posthumously)
were inducted into the National Art Materials Association Hall of
Fame.
2002: Ron was elected to the National Art Materials Association
executive board.
2003: Dennis was asked to return and given the opportunity
to buy an equal share of Artisan. Jack Young passed away and
the four (Ernie, Dennis, Paul, and Ron), mentored by Jack and Bill,
took over the management of the company.
2005: The original store on Canyon Road was closed and an offsite
facility was purchased to handle the receiving of shipments and custom
canvas stretching.
2006: The Santa Fe store on Cerrillos Road began a two-year
remodel project to increase retail and office space. Artisan
began selling giclees at santafegiclee.com.
THE FUTURE: We like to think of Artisan/Santa Fe, Inc.
as a dynamic company always seeking new directions of growth. Who
knows what will happen next?
Meet the Artisan Owners
Never judge a book by its cover” …as
evidenced by Paul Bell
Paul
speaks English, Spanish and Portuguese fluently along with some (minimal)
American Sign Language. His artistic interest is woodworking, such
as, furniture building, designing and building gates and doors and
a little wood sculpting. An avid sports fan, he played football at
Eastern New Mexico University and has run several marathons…yeah,
I repeat, “Never judge a book by its cover!” Paul
was born in Brazil in 1959, where his parents were missionaries, speaking
only Portuguese the first 11 years of his life before returning to
the U.S. The Bell family settled in Espanola, New Mexico in
1970 where Paul attended McCurdy Mission School and he’s been
a northern New Mexican ever since--including a short stint in Taos,
New Mexico.
His Artisan story began in August 1985, when Paul was hired as a
sales clerk by a couple of Espanola school friends who, for a few
years, were also on the same construction crew with him: current
Artisan partners Ernie and Dennis. He quickly became the “Operations
Manager” – operating the vacuum cleaner every morning
before the store opened! As Artisan grew opportunities
presented themselves. In 1994, co-founder Bill Banta passed
away and Paul started buying in as one of the Artisan owners. He
moved to Taos to open the 3rd Artisan location in 1995 (Albuquerque
having been the second location). Unknown to many, the land of Taos
is very fertile. While living in Taos for three years, he and
his lovely wife, Diane, became the lucky parents of two beautiful
daughters, Eliana now eight and RayLee, ten years old. Paul
also has a son, Mike, who currently manages the Albuquerque Artisan
store. In 1998, Paul and family returned to Santa Fe to open the 4th
Artisan location on St. Michael’s Drive (which later moved to
its current location on Cerrillos Road). In preparation of expanding
the Cerrillos store’s retail space into its storage area, an
offsite warehouse location was purchased where Paul currently oversees
the inventory and custom canvas stretching.
Paul feels fortunate to have met and gotten to know so many great
Santa Fe and Taos artists, many of which, beyond being customers,
have become friends.
From “Gearhead” to DaVinci…As revealed
by Ernie Cavasos
One
of Ernie’s life-long challenges is helping people spell his
last name correctly. That’s C-A-V-A-S-O-S!
Born in southern New Mexico, Ernie lived in several different New
Mexican communities during early childhood (his father worked in the
construction trades and later a licensed General Contractor) before
finally settling in the Espanola Valley in late ’64. He entered
the 5th grade at McCurdy Mission School (with grades 1-12) where two
of his current Artisan partners Paul and Dennis both attended (though
Paul was 4 grades younger). Until graduation in 1973, Ernie and Dennis
took classes together (including art), played high school sports,
and shared a lot of the same interests including their choices in
girlfriends. When college time rolled around, they both attended the
University of Indianapolis and majored in Art but Ernie decided the
Midwest wasn’t for him. After attending Regis University in
Denver he returned to New Mexico to again work with his father driving
the big rigs and operating heavy equipment. Ernie’s interests
run the full spectrum, as broad as they are varied, including but
not limited to a passion for the Arts, fine machinery, and good people,
many of whom are Artisan patrons and employees.
Then one fateful weekend in 1980, Ernie was shopping in his favorite
art supply store on Canyon Road in Santa Fe to pick up a few things
to satisfy his artistic habit. The owners of this quaint shop, Bill
Banta and Jack Young, needed more help and offered him a job. He had
just recently stopped working with his father, and taken a job building
houses with Dennis and Paul. This seemed like an excellent opportunity
to travel a different road in life. He soon became store manager and
in 1984 he recruited Dennis, in ’85 he signed on Paul, and in ’88
hired Ron (the fourth Artisan partner and author of Ron’s Palette.)
In 1984 Ernie had moved to Albuquerque (where his son Carl was born
in ’85) and was commuting to Santa Fe. Artisan decided to
open an Albuquerque location in 1989 and Ernie has been there ever since.
Artisan co-founder, Bill Banta, died suddenly in 1994 and Ernie started
buying in as one of the Artisan owners. Once the Artisan Corporate documents
were drawn up, Ernie had to triple-check the spelling on every page
because more than likely Cavasos was not spelled C-A-V-A-S-O-S. It wasn’t.
Who’s the Guy Hiding Behind
the Desk? ...must be Dennis Miller
Muggy
summer air rustles through the tall corn surrounding
the white country church. Inside, a small boy is slumped
down in the pew next to his mom. He is constantly fidgeting
and wiggling around in the uncomfortable Sunday-goin’-to-meetin’-clothes
he outgrew six months before. The stained-glass windows
obscure the real world from him. He’s tired of
seeing how fast he can flip the pages of the hymnal
and the gum stuck under his seat is too hard to pick
off. His mom grips his leg attempting to regain control.
She sets her purse between them and quietly opens it.
The mind-wandering boy can now focus on a new adventure…a
treasure chest filled with exciting trinkets and exotic
fortunes. He can plunder these riches as long as he
remains quiet and still. He spots a pen and small notepad.
Now he can release on paper the billions of things
going on in his brain. This adventure seemingly lasts
for quite a while until he hears his name spoken loudly.
From behind the simple wooden pulpit, Rev. Miller is
telling a “Dennis Story” in his sermon
to get a point across to the congregation. Perhaps
he has noticed his wife struggling to contain the youngest
of their three children and knew he would get Dennis’ attention
by using his name. Whatever the actual reason, it works
and Dennis is now paying attention to the sermon…for
a while…
Dennis Miller was born in the fun year of 1955. It
was the same year that several great American pop culture
icons came into being, like Jim Henson’s first
Muppet and McDonalds’ first location. But in
Dennis’ opinion, the most important event that
year (besides his own arrival) was Disneyland opening.
Since Dennis’ birth the Miller family lived in
five different Indiana farming communities and spent
three years in tiny Vallecitos, New Mexico, until settling
down in Espanola in the summer of 1969. Dennis’ dad
was now a schoolteacher and coach at the McCurdy Mission
School (grades 1-12) and his mom worked “up the
hill” in Los Alamos.
This is the part where three of the four Artisan partners
hook up. Dennis started at McCurdy as a high school
freshman, the same class as Artisan partner Ernie.
Artisan partner Paul had three older brothers with
whom Dennis and Ernie went to school. Ernie and Dennis
took classes together (including art), played high
school sports, and shared a lot of the same interests.
When college time rolled around in 1973, they both
attended the University of Indianapolis majoring in
art. In those art classes, Dennis (and Ernie until
he decided the Midwest wasn’t for him) became
good friends with Cat. Cat would help Dennis get dates
for the weekend until she figured out she was the best
date he could get. After graduating with a business
education degree and marrying in ’77, he packed
up the pickup and drug Cat to Espanola where they had
two sons, Joshua, now 26 living in Denver, CO, and
Caleb, now 23 living in Burbank, CA. (Dennis would
rather write about the lives of his greatest two achievements
but space is limited.) Dennis worked construction
to support the young family. He got both Paul
and Ernie jobs working for the same outfit, building
custom adobe homes in the Santa Fe area.
Now comes the Artisan part of the story. Ernie started
working for Artisan in 1980 and occasionally tried
to persuade Dennis into working there with him. There
wasn’t enough construction work to keep Dennis
and Paul busy through the winter of ’84 so fidgeting
Dennis called his old pal Ern to see if there was still
a job opening at Artisan. There was and Ernie also
brought in Paul the following summer. In ’88, “the
outsider” came bubbling into Artisan from Phoenix,
AZ, answering the help-wanted ad. It took a while for
Dennis to let Ron eat lunch with him at the patio table
in front of the store. Eventually, however, they even
hung out together during lunches at the park up Canyon
Road.
Here is where Dennis’ Artisan story takes a
different road than his partners. In 1992, the restless
one took an offer from Henry, the owner of Meininger
art supply shops in Colorado, to open a store in Colorado
Springs. He eventually oversaw the entire Meininger
operation under the guidelines of Henry. Cat and Dennis
happily packed up their young family and spent 11 wonderful
years in Colorado but that fidgeting, wiggling, restless
little boy started looking for something through the
stained glass again. Artisan co-founder, Bill Banta,
died suddenly in 1994 and Dennis’ former co-workers
bought his share of the business. Artisan co-founder
Jack Young’s health was failing. Dennis’ old
pals convinced themselves that Dennis would somehow
fill the void left when Jack eventually passed away
in 2003. He drug Cat back to New Mexico where Dennis
became a quarter-owner of Artisan, handling the financial
side of the business and hiding behind his desk to
refrain from staring at those stained glass windows
searching for yet another inviting adventure.
Passions, Pythons, and Pianos
I,
Ron Whitmore, am the last of the four partners to give
you my life history.
I grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, where my passions for
pythons and pianos began. When I was about 8 years
old I started taking piano lessons so I would know
how to use the grand piano that had been sitting in
the living room since I could remember. The rest of
my youth was spent wrestling, motorcycle racing, and
catching lizards and snakes. My dad was cool enough
to make half my room a snake cage and my mom was cool
enough to allow pythons, alligators, Gila Monsters,
bats, tortoises and hundreds of reptiles and rodents
to share my room. After surviving being bit by the
rattlesnake I used to scare some girls while out motorcycling
(three of my passions all rolled into one), I moved
to Tucson to attend the University of Arizona. While
studying pre-veterinary medicine I played piano in
a little piano bar (the bar was little - not the piano).
After graduating I worked for Marriott for a while
and then a friend and I opened a small restaurant called
the Paradise Cafe. We eventually sold the restaurant
and I moved to Santa Fe. My mom had previously moved
to Santa Fe and following a few visits I wondered why
I lived in Phoenix when Santa Fe is so much more desirable.
Upon my arrival I saw an ad in the paper stating, “Wanted:
young person to learn the art supply business.” It
sounded like fun. My eventual business partner Ernie
hired me and eighteen years later I am still having
fun at Artisan.
My passions now are my wife Karen, stepdaughters Jessica
and Kristina, and children Brittany and Brandon. Ok,
so I’m still passionate about some of the same
things I was as a kid. I have 3 dogs, 3 donkeys, 5
snakes (2 of those are pythons), 1 opossum, 3 motorcycles
and play keyboards in a band called High Altitude.
Check out our music at www.highaltitudeband.com.
We play at local bars, casinos, weddings, and parties
on a regular basis.
One of the many lessons I have learned so far is that
life is a journey not a destination. Friends and mentors
who have helped me along the way both personally and
professionally bless my journey. I am lucky enough
to have three great partners at Artisan who make the
journey fun and exciting and we four partners have
great employees that make us all look better than we
really are. |