в контакте форекс марфа / The Renaissance of Marfa, the West Texas Playground of the Art World Elite | Vanity Fair

В Контакте Форекс Марфа

в контакте форекс марфа

Glasschilderij Prada Marfa

Onze glasschilderijen, gemaakt van 4mm dik ESG-glas, worden geleverd inclusief wandbevestiging en afstandshouders.

Eigenschappen

  • 4mm dik ESG veiligheidsglas
  • goed bestand tegen krassen en stoten
  • een zeer hoge kwaliteit door rechtstreeks printen op de achterzijde
  • achterzijde goed beschermd door verzegelende witte lak op achterzijde
  • eenvoudig op te hangen aan voorgemonteerde wandbevestiging en door de meegeleverde, zelfklevende afstandhouders een zwevend effect
  • 'made in Europe'
  • ook verkrijgbaar zonder wandbevestiging

Belangrijk!: De beschikbare ophangpunten aan de achterzijde van het glasschilderij dienen allen gebruikt te worden, dit om het gewicht evenredig te verdelen. Het ophangen middels touw, kabels, draad etc. veroorzaakt een te grote (en schuine) kracht op de wandbevestiging waardoor deze los kan komen. Het schilderij dient dus opgehangen te worden aan alle beschikbare wandbevestigingen met schroeven/haken. Wall-Art is niet verantwoordelijk voor schade als gevolg van het niet volgen van deze richtlijn.

Belangrijk!: Glasschilderijen met een witte achtergrond kunnen een licht groenige waas hebben. Dit is omdat het veiligheidsglas betreft.

Al onze afmetingen worden aangeduid als B x H, dus breedte x hoogte.

In plaats van de wandbevestiging kunnen onze glasschilderijen ook opgehangen worden met wandklemmen (klembevestiging), kies hiervoor de optie 'zonder wandbevestiging' en bestel de wandklemmen los bij, zie hiervoor de bijbehorende producten. Let er goed op dat u voor het gebruik met de wandklemmen de juiste instructie volgt.

In tegenstelling tot plexiglas heeft glas geen beschermlaag die bij ontvangst verwijderd dient te worden.

Kijk voor een uitvoerige handleiding op onze instructie pagina.

Je eigen afbeelding op glas? Dat kan, bezoek hiervoor onze configurator.

Reflecting on Marfa in , Donald Judd wrote: “The area of West Texas was fine, mostly high rangeland dropping to desert along the river, with mountains over the edge in every direction. There were few people and the land was undamaged.” Decades later, that spellbinding beauty and sense of exquisite isolation remain, albeit juxtaposed with the artist’s own legacy—the Judd Foundation (anchored by The Block, his former home) and the Chinati Foundation, the army base he transformed into a museum for contemporary art. Today’s Marfa is a contradiction: a tumbleweed town and an international pilgrimage site, where Judd’s visions of unified art and architecture reached their apotheosis.

Timber bookshelves in the style of Donald Judd line the library; custom-made sofa in a Pindler fabric.

It was that heady mix that set two creative New Yorkers, both natives of the Lone Star State, on the long drive to this one-stoplight oasis. “If you’re from Texas and involved in the arts, then all roads lead to Marfa,” says one, whom we’ll refer to as Cowboy for the sake of this western adventure. As his other half—let’s call her Cowgirl—recounts, “The moment I saw the town, I felt connected. It’s intangible…the big sky, the light, the breeze. Marfa is not one thing; it’s many things.”

Their plans to buy land and build a contemporary glass box were scrapped when they visited a s Spanish Colonial Revival house for sale. Designed by Henry Charles Trost, a celebrated El Paso architect who cut his teeth in the Chicago School, the home occupied a hilltop plot not far from the center of town, with spectacular views and an adjoining empty parcel. Judd had even owned it once upon a time. Says Cowgirl, “It just felt true and beautiful and right.”

Terraced plantings of Russian Sage descend from the entertainment pavilion to the pool.

Custom-made ebonized benches and Bonacina wicker chairs mingle on 
the loggia.


To reimagine the property, they turned to architect Annabelle Selldorf, whom they knew from New York and through Chinati. She updated the Trost house (whose original details had already been stripped away by the prior owner) through a series of deft interventions to the floor plan. On the main level, clusters of small rooms were combined to create a vast living space, with multiple seating areas, and a spacious chef’s kitchen, where an enormous island can seat six comfortably. A tight, sculptural staircase now descends to the primary suite on the lower level, creating a sequence of compression and expansion. “You had to make the trip downstairs into something exciting,” notes Selldorf, whose hand can be felt most clearly on what had been vacant land, where she devised a side-by-side guest casita and a garage/gym, as well as an entertaining pavilion up on another hill. “The architectural vocabulary is a simple series of volumes that speak to one another but feel distinct from the old architecture,” she notes of the structures, clad in clay-colored stucco and aligned to create beautiful transitions.

A view of the historic home, designed in the s by architect Henry Charles Trost.

The kitchen’s large island can accommodate six on counter stools; antique pendant.

Along the way, Selldorf connected the clients with landscape mastermind Madison Cox, whom they visited in Marrakech well before Cox made it to Marfa. That first trip to Morocco was an aha moment: Their eyes widened as Cox welcomed them to Villa Oasis, introducing them to the work of designer Bill Willis, and guided them to sites throughout the region, whose landscape, building materials, and sensibilities reminded them of West Texas. In no time, an enormous shipping container filled with pots, zellige, and furnishings of all kinds was on its way to Marfa, where Cox conceived a series of outdoor spaces that blend the local vernacular with Moroccan traditions. Terra-cotta tiles line porches, walkways, and exterior stairs. Terraced terrain, fragrant with sage, descends from the pavilion to the pool—part of a larger strategy to limit lawns for water conservation. And iron pergolas devised with Selldorf offer shade thanks to rush awnings that will one day be replaced by creeping vines.

I am so excited about the upcoming trunk show of Marfa Stance at Capitol and Tabor in Charlotte this week.

The more I learn about the brand the more I am planning my order.  

They not only create beautiful customized coats that are incredibly versatile but, they also create a unique and sustainable item to be treasured for years to come.  Fast fashion this is not! 

At Marfa Stance, we’re challenging the status quo by creating pieces that are designed to be enhanced, rather than replaced. As humans, we have a natural instinct to want to express our individuality, be creative and seek out novelty. These are entirely natural traits, but it often drives us to consume fashion in ways that aren’t necessarily good for us – or the environment. 

We acknowledge this innate thrill of discovery, but offer a more intelligent, alternative view.

You can choose your style, liner, collars & hoods.

 I love this interchangeable concept that can be worn all seasons.

Here are a few styles I am going to try&#;and if you cant make it to the show call Capitol and they will help you out! 

this one is dreamy&#;

Daily Desires:

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Mărfurile

"Acest material este o comunicare de marketing în sensul articolului 24 alineatul (3) din Directiva /65 / UE a Parlamentului European și a Consiliului din 15 mai privind piețele de instrumente financiare, și de modificare a Directivei /92 / CE și a Directivei / 61 / UE (MiFID II). Comunicarea de marketing nu este o recomandare de investiții sau o recomandare de informații sau o recomandare care sugerează o strategie de investiții în sensul Regulamentului (UE) nr. / al Parlamentului European și al Consiliului din 16 aprilie privind abuzul de piață ( reglementarea abuzului de piață) și de abrogare a Directivei /6 / CE a Parlamentului European și a Consiliului și a Directivelor Comisiei / / CE, / / CE și /72 / CE și a Regulamentului delegat (UE) / al Comisiei din 9 / al Parlamentului European și al Consiliului în ceea ce privește standardele tehnice de reglementare pentru aranjamentele tehnice pentru prezentarea obiectivă a recomandărilor de investiții sau a altor informații care sugerează strategii de investiții și pentru dezvăluirea de interese particulare sau indicații de conflicte de interese sau orice alte sfaturi, inclusiv în domeniul consultanței în materie de investiții, în sensul Legii privind tranzacționarea cu instrumente financiare din 29 iulie (de ex. Journal of Laws , articolul , astfel cum a fost modificat). Comunicarea de marketing este pregătită cu cea mai mare diligență, obiectivitate, prezintă faptele cunoscute autorului la data pregătirii și este lipsită de orice elemente de evaluare. Comunicarea de marketing este pregătită fără a lua în considerare nevoile clientului, situația sa financiară individuală și nu prezintă nicio strategie de investiții în niciun fel. Comunicarea de marketing nu constituie o ofertă de vânzare, oferire, abonament, invitație la cumpărare, reclamă sau promovare a oricărui instrument financiar. XTB SA nu este responsabilă pentru acțiunile sau omisiunile niciunui client, în special pentru achiziționarea sau cedarea instrumente, întreprinse pe baza informațiilor conținute în această comunicare de marketing. XTB SA nu va accepta răspunderea pentru nicio pierdere sau daună, inclusiv, fără limitare, orice pierdere care poate apărea direct sau indirect, efectuată pe baza informațiilor conținute în această comunicare de marketing. În cazul în care comunicarea de marketing conține informații despre orice rezultat cu privire la instrumentele financiare indicate în acestea, acestea nu constituie nicio garanție sau prognoză cu privire la rezultatele viitoare. Performanțele anterioare nu indică neapărat rezultatele viitoare și orice persoană care acționează pe baza acestor informații o face pe propriul risc. Acest material nu este emis pentru a influenta deciziile de tranzacționare ale niciunei persoane. Informațiile cuprinse în cadrul acestui material nu sunt prezentate pentru a fi aplicate, copiate sau testate în cadrul tranzacțiilor dumneavoastră. Informațiile cuprinse în cadrul acestui material sunt emise în baza experienței proprii a emitentului și nu reprezintă o recomandare individuală, nu vizează atingerea anumitor obiective, randamente financiare și nu se adresează nevoilor niciunei persoane anume care ar primi-o. Premisele acestui material nu au în vedere situația și persoana dumneavoastră deci nu recomandăm utilizarea acestor informații sub orice formă. Utilizarea informațiilor cuprinse în cadrul acestui material în orice modalitate se face pe propria dumneavoastră răspundere. Acest material este emis de către un analist pentru care își asumă răspunderea XTB SA, persoană juridică autorizată de KNF – Autoritatea de Supraveghere Financiara din Polonia."

Certificarea
utilizatorilor profesionisti
ai burselor de transport

ProFxUser Logo

Site-ul se adreseaza persoanelor fizice ce activeaza in domeniul transportului rutier de marfa

Utilizatorii certificati obtin acces gratuit in BursaTransport!

Certificate

Contextul in care a aparut ProFxUser

Contextul in care a aparut ProFxUser

Bursele de transport constituie piete online destinate transportului rutier de marfa. In aceste platforme se pot gasi marfuri de transportat si vehicule disponibile pentru transport marfa.

Cu o experienta efectiva in domeniul transportului rutier de marfa de 15 ani si cu o experienta in administrarea unei platforme de tip bursa de transport de 21 de ani, echipa cargo/BursaTransport a constatat ca accesul neingradit la aceste platforme intra in coliziune cu necesitatea operarii lor de catre utilizatori cu o anumita pregatire in domeniu. Aceasta stare de lucruri este menita sa faca posibile dezagremente ulterioare, in relatia contractuala dintre beneficiarul si prestatorul serviciului de transport.

Pentru a stimula si evidentia profesionalismul utilizatorilor, echipa cargo/BursaTransport a initiat si implementat acest proiect, certificarea utilizatorilor profesionisti ai burselor de transport.

Mentionam burse de transport in general, si nu numai cargo/BursaTransport, deoarece principiul de functionare al tuturor burselor este acelasi. Iar toate bursele ofera servicii in aceeasi industrie, si anume transportul rutier de marfa.

Certificatul ProFxUser

Certificatul ProFxUser atesta ca titularul a trecut cu succes testul de utilizator profesionist al burselor de transport. Certificatul ProFxUser este menit sa confirme oricui este interesat ca posesorul sau indeplineste conditii de principiu pentru a fi considerat un utilizator profesionist al burselor de transport.

Testarea constituie un demers voluntar al vizitatorului acestui site. In cazul testarii incununate de succes, solicitarea si livrarea certificatului de utilizator profesionist in format electronic constituie de asemenea un demers voluntar.

Pentru a putea sustine testarea, vizitatorul trebuie sa se inregistreze si ulterior sa se logheze cu o adresa de email personala aflata sub controlul sau.

Testarea ProFxUser

Testarea ProFxUser

Testarea pentru obtinerea certificatului se desfasoara online si contratimp. Testarea se supune termenilor si conditiilor ProFxUser.

Intrebarile testului acopera:

  • Notiuni generale din activitatea transportului rutier de marfa
  • Serviciile oferite de bursele de transport, si in special de catre cargo/BursaTransport
  • Conventii internationale ce reglementeaza transportul rutier de marfa
  • Activitatea curenta a companiilor de transport si de expeditie

Certificatul ProFxUser se elibereaza persoanei fizice ce a trecut testul.

Obtinerea certificatului ProFxUser

Certificatul se livreaza pe adresa de email cu care s-a facut autentificarea, la cererea (online) a persoanei fizice ce a trecut testul. Pentru a verifica datele personale ce vor fi trecute in certificat (nume, prenume, CNP), solicitantul certificatului va sustine o sesiune online de verificare a identitatii sale cu operatorul Shufti Pro Limited, Marea Britanie, in cursul careia solicitantul certificatului va trebui sa isi prezinte cartea de identitate sau permisul de conducere. Procesul este GDPR compliant.

Certificatul odata furnizat poate fi resolicitat fara a repeta procesul de verificare a identitatii.

Disclaimer

Certificatul ProFxUser nu este un document oficial recunoscut de catre institutii publice. Echipa ProFxUser nu are o licentiere anume pentru a emite aceste certificate. Intrebarile testului nu reflecta o programa anume de invatamant. Intrebarile sunt inspirate din natura serviciului oferit de bursele de transport si de activitatea curenta a operatorilor de transport rutier de marfa, asa cum sunt ele cunoscute si intelese de catre echipa cargo/BursaTransport.

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How to watch the Emmys on Monday night

After being delayed amidst the Hollywood strikes last year, the 75th annual Emmy Awards will take place Monday night. Here's all you need to know to watch the ceremony.

When are the Emmy Awards this year?

This year's Emmys will air on January 15 at pm PT/ pm ET, with a red carpet pre-show on E! beginning at pm ET. The event will take place at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, where comedian Anthony Anderson will host. Actress Laverne Cox will return to host the pre-show.

The Creative Arts Emmys Awards, which honor the work of writers, technical crew members, musical directors, and much more, occurred on Jan. 6 and 7 in Los Angeles. Here's a complete list of winners.

How do I watch them? What if I don't have cable?

FOX will broadcast the Emmys live tonight. You can find your local FOX or FXX station here.

If you don't have traditional cable, you can watch the Emmys live through internet-based TV services that offer FOX, such as Hulu + Live TV, Sling, DirecTV or Fubo. Hulu will stream the ceremony on-demand on January

Why are the Emmys delayed?

The Emmys were initially scheduled for September but were postponed for the first time since due to the writers' and actors' strikes. That means the nominations might feel a bit dated because only shows aired between June and May are eligible. Pop Culture Happy Hour host Glen Weldon breaks down everything you need to know about who's in the running here.

Who are the top contenders?

HBO's Succession, The Last of Us and The White Lotus lead this year's nominations. Along with the Roy family'sdeparture from television, Apple TV's Ted Lasso, HBO's Barry and AMC's Better Call Saul are in the running for their final seasons. Other highly acclaimed shows like FX's The Bear and ABC's Abbott Elementary could win tonight. But since NPR's TV critic Eric Deggans has already decided who deserves which award, he handed out The Deggys last week. Check out his complete list of winners here.

Copyright NPR. To see more, visit eunic-brussels.eu

Robert Irwin, the octogenarian light-and-space artist, designer of the Getty and lacma gardens, wearer of Hawaiian shirts and baseball caps, looked out at one of the largest unpopulated areas in the contiguous United States. His vantage point was a rooftop (in fact, our rooftop) at the edge of the Far West Texas town of Marfa. And while the view stretched out 60 or 70 miles (tall yellow grass and gently sloping mountains), Irwin’s focus was on a former army hospital less than a mile away. He has been working on plans for the renovation of this structure for more than a decade. The current iteration requires that the building be knocked down and reconstructed with a sunken floor and windows which begin at chest height so that, as the artist told us, “you will see a little bit of landscape and a lot of sky.” From within, the West Texas desert “will look like a Dutch landscape.” This permanent, large-scale installation will be the crowning work of his career. Irwin added, “Hopefully I won’t go facedown in my pudding before it’s done.”

The project of demolishing and reconstructing a hospital in order to evoke a van Eyck fits into the history of this remote border town (about miles from El Paso or Midland—take your pick). Irwin’s contemporary, the New York minimalist artist Donald Judd, settled here in Judd purchased dozens of buildings with the help of the New York–based Dia Art Foundation—which at the time had unlimited access to the Schlumberger oil fortune—and filled them with his own work, as well as pieces by artists he admired, before his death, at the age of 65, in , halfway through the process of creating “permanent installations of contemporary art that are among the largest and most beautiful in the world,” as his New York Times obituary put it. In the years since his death, the town of Marfa has changed radically. He left New York to escape the “glib and harsh” art scene, but because of his singular vision here, Judd laid the groundwork for present-day Marfa, which one resident described as an “East Coast Utopia” and another as an “art cruise ship where you just hope the last stop is a Betty Ford Center.” Take your pick again.

Irwin took a sip of a margarita (salted rim) and said, “The first time I came to Marfa it was really cold in L.A. So I drove down to San Diego. But it was cold there too. So I started following the course of the Rio Grande. When I got here I saw Don Judd sitting on a corner.” It was the late 70s, and Irwin had had no idea that Judd was in Texas. We tried to imagine the white-bearded, heavyset, more than occasionally kilt-wearing Judd sitting on the sidewalk like a panhandler.

Irwin went on. “So I pulled over and we talked for a while. He wasn’t sure what he was doing. He’d been taking these trips down in the wilds of northern Mexico. And now he was in Marfa. He was trying to figure out what to buy.”

In the end, over two decades, and after spending a couple of million, Judd acquired two aircraft hangars, a bank, a acre former cavalry base (for which Irwin’s hospital was originally constructed), 40,odd acres of land, the Safeway, a hotel, a handful of commercial buildings, six homes, and the local hot springs, together valued in excess of $30 million today. Following the artist’s death, these holdings were divided between two entities, the Judd Foundation, which manages his private properties, and the Chinati Foundation—named for a nearby mountain peak—which operates as a museum on the former cavalry base. The distinction between these two foundations is almost arbitrary. All the buildings, which were renovated to Judd’s exacting specifications, are used to some degree as exhibition spaces for his own work and original work by artists he admired: Rembrandt, Richard Long, Yayoi Kusama, and Frank Stella, among others.

Irwin finished the drink. “So we talked for a while. Then I got back in my car I made it all the way down to Key West, and when I got there I thought, Well, now I’m committed.

He carried on up the East Coast, all along Canada, and back home to L.A. “I circled it,” Irwin said. “That’s where all the stuff is going on. The edge.” Such a tour of America resonated as almost a parable to us of why people move to Marfa now: the fierce, near irrational desire to get outside the mainstream. But Marfa isn’t an outsider redoubt of the sort the Unabomber might have favored (even if David Kaczynski, his brother, did live in isolation nearby). With high-end restaurants, concerts, and theater (think André Gregory directing Endgame), it’s a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too sort of outsiderness.

Marfa is the seat of Presidio County, which was near-Switzerland-size (12, square miles) at its founding, in , but registered no population in that year’s U.S. Census. Its terrain was later reduced to the current, more manageable Rhode Island-times-three size. But even today, if the county’s density were imposed upon New York City, Manhattan would be home to 46 people. Marfa’s population peaked at 5, people in the s, when ranching was profitable and soldiers (guarding German P.O.W.’s) were billeted at Chinati. Now, permanent residents having dwindled steadily, in inverse proportion to Marfa’s fashionableness, the population is 1, Tourist numbers are higher than ever.

Marfa became a railroad water stop in Some of the first documentation of the area comes from accounts of mobile, luminous pinpoints on the horizon—the Marfa Mystery Lights. Popular with ghost- and U.F.O.-hunters and the subject of a study by U.T. Dallas, the lights have never been satisfactorily explained. Marfa became a cattle town in the late 19th century when half a dozen ranchers, among them Luke Brite, the great-great-grandfather of the New York artist Leo Villareal (who works mostly in L.E.D. lights), drove a herd of longhorns and other native stock from South Texas and became the founders of a community where 32 churches, an opera house, numerous dance halls, and a grand hotel were eventually constructed—the infrastructure that provided Donald Judd with so much exhibition space. The army pulled out in , and this, combined with a severe drought, “jerked the rug out from under the economy,” according to Cecilia Thompson, the county’s nonagenarian historian.

The Chinati Syndrome

We first went to Marfa together in Judd was dead. The town was dead. Chinati was in mourning. Tumbleweeds the size of shopping carts blew down the wide streets—with no one even there to photograph them. There were a handful of Tex-Mex cafés with flyswatters on the tables and a drive-through window at the local bar. Nearly every storefront on Highland Avenue leading up to the courthouse was empty, save the ones installed with artwork by Judd. The phrase “art pilgrimage” was routinely invoked by thin-on-the-ground visitors. Of the near-ghost-town feeling, the painter Jeff Elrod, who arrived as an artist-in-residence at Chinati in , said, “Anybody of interest who was in town in the nineties you definitely ended up sitting around a table with them eating dinner every weekend [at Chinati] … me—some ne’er-do-well artist—Yve-Alain Bois or Rudi Fuchs or Tommy Lee Jones. There was no town. Everyone was up there, sort of captive.” Be they art historians, European-museum directors, or movie stars, they would find one another.

We stayed in Judd’s former print studio at Chinati. Marianne Stockebrand, a German curator who was Judd’s partner for the last five years of his life, and Rob Weiner, Judd’s former assistant, were trying to figure out how to maintain a world-class collection of minimalist art with no money in the middle of nowhere, in a town that was indifferent or even hostile to their mission. When Judd installed a kilometer-long series of large concrete boxes at the edge of the property, ranchers said jokingly that they were square drainage culverts. A Chinati neighbor told us that he’d spent years watering a tree so that it would block the view of Judd’s work from his bedroom window.

In the mids, Judd parted acrimoniously with the Dia Art Foundation, which had begun pulling back from its funding obligations. Judd threatened a lawsuit, thereby securing a $1 million payout and the transfer of Dia’s Marfa holdings to the newly established Chinati Foundation. On his death, the museum was left with $, with the rest of his holdings—and debts—going to his estate (which became the Judd Foundation), of which his children, Rainer and Flavin, were the executors. The two organizations, despite their common cause of maintaining and promoting Judd’s legacy, have surprisingly little to do with each other. All that was part of Judd’s realm while he was alive became more markedly divided after he died. The Judd Foundation took on the private side of Judd, and Chinati became the more pronouncedly public face. (Stockebrand stepped down last year, and the museum is currently run by the senior staff and the museum’s board.)

For a time Chinati paid no curatorial salaries. The staff worked anyway. And Stockebrand and Weiner, in a situation that might have led others to scramble for cash, pursued Judd’s vision and expanded the collection, rather than exclusively soliciting funding. The pair reached out to artists who had been part of Judd’s world, such as Robert Irwin and John Wesley, a close friend who worked at Chinati in the 80s and whose Pop-Surrealist paintings now have a permanent exhibition space in a former stable. And in a most daring act of reconciliation, Stockebrand visited Dan Flavin in the final months of his life and encouraged him to sign off on drawings he had done years before for a massive installation that now fills six barracks with colored fluorescent-light sculptures, a project that was abandoned when he and Judd, who had named his son Flavin, had a falling-out in the early 90s. The critic Michael Kimmelman titled his review of the Flavin piece “The Last Great Art of the 20th Century.” Money followed.

But Chinati also supported up-and-coming work. In the case of Elrod, Weiner’s endorsement brought him to the attention of the New York art dealer Pat Hearn, who sent down a truck and filled it with every painting the artist had made during the last six months of his Chinati residency. She sold the lot in two weeks, transforming his career. Chinati was always, as Weiner puts it now, “watering the culture of the place. We had to make sure that each person who came was enchanted by it.” And so: internship and artist-in-residence programs, free children’s art classes, lectures, banquets, concerts, and symposiums such as “Art and the Landscape” and “Art and Architecture” (bringing in architects such as Frank Gehry and Jacques Herzog). Weiner and Stockebrand also continued Judd’s tradition of annual open-house weekends with music, a barbecue for the whole town, a bonfire, and offering the use of empty exhibition space for pretty much any local artist or performer with an idea.

We, too, were early beneficiaries of Chinati’s singular definition of what a museum could be when not bound to convention—by simply being allowed to live there and be immersed in Judd’s vision of large-scale work, in harmony with architecture and landscape. The town’s culture, part Mexican-American and part Anglo (“rancher”), was flinty to the point of being cranky, but its authenticity was preferable to the chirping, saccharine “Howdy—how’re y’all doin’ today?” that you find at points farther east in Texas. In Presidio County, when you greet anyone you pass on the road, the social code is to lift two fingers ever so slightly from the steering wheel. A nod is considered excessive.

And then there is the land. In our friend Mary Farley, who describes herself as an “art-world participant” (perhaps inevitable, considering that her ex-husband is Matthew Barney), left her job as a forensic psychotherapist in New York and that winter went to Marfa for the first time. She once said, “I’m always impressed when you can feel diminished by the natural world Things can hurt you here—plants, snakes, bugs. It’s exciting.” Rudi Fuchs, the longtime director of Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum (Holland’s MoMA), proclaimed the vistas “terrifying.” In we bought a two-room sheep shed at the edge of town, now our second home.

Thompson, the historian, who passed away in January, described Marfa’s renewal as a three-phase process: Judd’s establishing of Chinati, in ; the arrival of Texas attorneys and law-school classmates Pablo Alvarado (who grew up in Marfa) and Tim Crowley in the late 90s; and the arrival of arts foundations and nonprofits beyond Chinati, most prominent among them the Santa Fe-based Lannan Foundation, which owns five homes that serve as writers’ residences, and Ballroom Marfa, described by The New York Times as “a certified alternative space,” which took over an old dance hall, started a concert series (Lyle Lovett, Sonic Youth, Yo La Tengo), and is planning the construction of (presumably) the world’s first art-house drive-in movie theater. The town’s status as a Hollywood movie set—for the James Dean-Liz Taylor feature, Giant, in the mids—was revived with No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood.

Now, finally, there is food. First came Maiya’s, in the early s, an Italian trattoria whose owner-chef was just nominated for a James Beard award. In the former owners of an Upper East Side restaurant Ruth Reichl described, in her two-star review, as “astonishingly exuberant, accepting no limits and recognizing no boundaries” opened Cochineal in a year-old adobe building. In two chefs from Virginia’s acclaimed Inn at Little Washington briefly opened a place called Miniature Rooster in an old gas station, serving a mix of southern and Indian food—it’s now a catering company. The Food Shark, a silver-and-orange truck with a constantly changing menu—Veracruz-style shrimp, pork banh mi, brisket braised in Guinness—parks most afternoons under a massive corrugated-steel canopy in the middle of town known as “the Shade Structure.” It was built and opened to the public by Tim Crowley, the Houston lawyer, and acts as a gathering place for an absurdly well-educated group of to year-olds who have chosen to build furniture, restore adobes, make prints, light concerts, design clothing, start a Montessori school, D.J. rare country songs a couple of hours a week for the local NPR station (smallest listenership in the Lower 48), or operate a pirate radio station from a “jailbroken” iPhone (recently shut down by the F.C.C.). Others, in their 20s, are finishing up first albums, first novels, first films, or first installations while working three jobs and wearing fashion-blog-worthy vintage ensembles. Notable recent shade seekers include Richard Hell, Robert Plant, David Byrne, and, lest you think Marfa really is a coastal Utopia, Karl Rove, who slept in a vintage camper at El Cosmico, a field full of rent-by-the-night Airstreams. (A Cosmico employee told us, “There were Afghan poppies all around the trailer we gave him.”) Elrod—who “paints” abstractly on a Mac and then painstakingly re-creates the images on canvas, knitting together the handmade and the digital—moved from Brooklyn in and says, in contrast to the atmosphere of the late 90s, the experience of being in one of the many new restaurants in town is like visiting “a badass international airport bar I’m in a first-class lounge of American Airlines. I’m talking with really interesting people from all over the world who I won’t ever see again.”

Don’t Mess with Excess

One evening last summer we found a live hollow-point handgun round marked “S&W ” in the gravel outside the El Cheapo liquor store. When we pulled it out over drinks in the courtyard of the El Paisano hotel an acquaintance whistled and said, “Law enforcement carries that.” A lawyer immediately disparaged the prosecutors in Presidio County as “weaklings” who wouldn’t even go after murderers. “Nothing gets prosecuted here but drugs.”

We went to the Masonic Lodge and found a note explaining that the 70s Marguerite Duras movie India Song would be shown later in the evening, signed, “Love, Nicolas.” We went across the street to Maiya’s for a drink. An older, bald, grizzled man with a patch over his left eye sat in the window. Jeff Elrod was at the bar with a slender, dark-haired woman in a tight teal dress.

We pulled out the bullet. Teal Dress grabbed it and slammed it down on the concrete bar.

“Whoa! That could go off!,” an observer shouted. Manic laughter. Elrod clamped it between his teeth and bit down hard.

We asked if they’d be attending the French movie and lecture.

“What kind of French movie?,” Teal Dress wanted to know.

Hard to say. A frustrated iPhone search—AT&T is still useless in Marfa—led to the conclusion that it was about leprosy.

Teal Dress said, “Leprosy?! I’m going to go rub myself on a leper and come to this lecture and say”—she pressed her dress tight against her body and pointed at her chest—“This is leprosy!”

“How do you rub yourself on a leper so it takes?,” Elrod asked.

His friend began pistoning on the barstool, feigning intimacy with a leper. It was time to go.

In front of the bookstore, dressed in black, Marianne Stockebrand seemed, by virtue of her impeccable posture, to tower above the Francophiles gathered around her.

“Ben Schonzeit, the painter, is in town visiting his son,” she told us.

We surmised that he’d just been eating in Maiya’s window and said so.

“Oh,” she said. “You know, he does paintings that look like photographs. Still.”

“Photo-realism?”

“Yes. He still does it.”

“Hmm.”

“He’s very attractive.”

“With the eye patch?”

“Yes.”

The film contained no leprosy. The subject was, nominally, ennui. Staged tableaux of various languid diplomats in a subcontinental French consulate were overlaid with passages of poetry. Stockebrand began to loudly sigh. Next she began to laugh. After an hour she said, “I’m leaving.” When the screen said “Fin” we went to Elrod’s studio, a cinder-block-and-steel building two doors down from the only stoplight in town—about as urban as Presidio County gets.

Cars at odd angles filled the lot. A sign that read GALLERY, advertising the space next door, had been defaced with the addition LAME. A dozen partyers were inside, among them the New York artist Christopher Wool. Picture the short-cropped hair and concentrated features of the artist who painted black text on white canvas:

SELLTHE

HOUSE S

ELL THEC

AR SELL

THEKIDS

Wool played pool. The studio serves as a clubhouse/greenroom/crash pad for artists, musicians, and filmmakers. Elrod, “a Puck for the ages,” per Chinati’s Rob Weiner, proffered a whiskey bottle and a pool cue, while a tall, tattooed woman sauntered up, plucked off a player’s hat, and placed it on her own head.

Elrod’s studio is, as one local put it, “the center of some scene that defines Marfa for this moment that I think is self-destructive, not sustainable.” It’s hard to argue with this. But ideas are generated here. In , the New York installation artist Justin Lowe co-created, with Jonah Freeman and Alexandre Singh, a multi-room piece called Hello Meth Lab in the Sun, described by an awestruck Roberta Smith as “an immense, labor-intensive, maniacally contrived walk-through”—the best installation in Marfa since Flavin’s barracks. We asked Lowe if he had hung out at Elrod’s studio while making the piece. His reply: “Hell yeah, I did. Like every day.” Smith said of the piece, “Like Alice’s rabbit hole, [it] will take you as deep as you want to go.” Sponsored by Ballroom Marfa, the artists re-created a burned-out methamphetamine lab, a red-carpeted Upper East Side mansion, and a hippie Valhalla. Lowe told us, “By the end it felt like the whole town had contributed in one way or another.”

On another Marfa evening we found ourselves in Elrod’s studio with the photographer and filmmaker Larry Clark (Tulsa, Kids) and David Hollander, an L.A. transplant (and child star—in Airplane! he suavely brings a girl some coffee, only to be told, “I take it black, like my men”). Hollander, with his wife, Jennifer Lane, co-founded CineMarfa, the town’s newest film festival (the first one crashed and burned). In they featured 70s and earlys No Wave films alongside banned and sexually explicit work by Clark. Before one screening, a local punk band called Solid Waste played a set. Anglo and Mexican-American, all in their twenties, two of them have a child together. Clark was smitten and just finished shooting a new film in Marfa, featuring the lead singer.

Videos were projected on a wall, and visitors drifted in and out. At midnight a group, ranging in age from 10 to 50, decided to go on a full-moon bike ride out on Ranch Road , which winds through mountains until dissolving into a boulder-strewn track suitable only for four-wheel drives. After a few miles the riders stopped, and an illuminated Frisbee was thrown between two rock outcroppings, above the spot where Javier Bardem killed the Marfa National Bank president, Chip Love, in No Country for Old Men. Two border-patrol S.U.V.’s idled down the road, observing. When it was proposed that the group head out and visit the border-patrol checkpoint, five miles south of town—naked—we went back to Elrod’s.

Red Tecate cans mingled with cans of spray paint. Solid Waste discussed their first album. An art teacher and waitress changed the video on the wall from a ballet dancer performing on a rainy Oakland street corner to rapper Kreayshawn in Minnie Mouse ears strutting through Beverly Hills: “Gucci Gucci, Louis Louis, Fendi Fendi, Prada.” Clark took in the scene with a slightly detached air. Hollander did an animated impression of Doris Lessing’s reaction when she won the Nobel Prize. (“Oh Christ,” she said, half dismissing it all.)

There was an attempt to appoint one of us Clark’s designated driver, a job we did not want, and managed to evade by noting that we had come by (non-tandem) bike. He helped by declaring that he wasn’t leaving.

On the night of the pool game, Wool teamed up with Tavahn Ghazi—a perhaps too handsome (though not the town’s handsomest) young musician who moved to Marfa from the Bay Area to complete an album in the same studio building where Grizzly Bear had just recorded. He said, “I wake up in San Francisco, life’s too easy—I’m the captain of my neighborhood What it’s like in Marfa, in comparison, is that every single person I’m around is absolutely percent better than me.” He gestured around Elrod’s studio. “I want to fight to become this incredible person—that is the exact goal and point of all of this mess.”

The spectators were: a sound artist who had collaborated the week before on a piece with Elrod (at Chinati), using audio tracks from the Terminator movies broadcast from aged boom boxes and scavenged MP3 players; a wiry and stoned performance artist who, during the Chinati Foundation Open House Weekend in , incinerated hot dogs over a flaming grill in Elrod’s parking lot and threw them at a crowd that had gathered for an impromptu concert (he now peered out of a nest he’d made amid towers of Elrod’s books); a handful of teenage girls who looked as if they could have been cast in the Larry Clark movie; a visiting M.F.A. candidate from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop; and a young curator who had publicly stated her opinion that the authors of this article were “provincial” (owing, we guessed, to our early departure from a lecture she’d organized … which led us to further surmise that she’d intended to denounce us as philistines but got confused).

In an upset Wool and Ghazi were defeated, while a dark-haired woman hollered repeatedly, “Ma che cazzo?!” (What the fuck?!)

Wool gave a gracious nod.

We asked the “Ma che cazzo?!” woman, “Do you speak Italian?”

She said, “That’s the only Italian I know.”

If this all has an element of performance to it, perhaps it is due to the fact that beautiful and talented Marfans operate under the impression that they are about to become famous. Elrod said, “These kids think it’s all a wonderland of fame and fortune and they’re just going to wait to be discovered. They think if they just chill and do their cool thing, someone will swoop in and make them.” We could only point out that that is exactly what had happened to him.

And so a myth abides: glamour, money, and artistic recognition will fall out of the sky above Marfa, as actual meteors often do. The town has certainly been adopted by the would-be arbiters of culture: T magazine ran a series of columns on “The Real Artists of Marfa”; the painter Wilhelm Sasnal flew Solid Waste’s progenitors—the outrageous, now disbanded Latino punk group Satanic Punk International Conspiracy (yes, SPIC)—to play in Warsaw (their first trip out of Texas); and every road-tripping filmmaker just might return with a camera.

A Marfa State of Mind

Aregularly posed question: Is Marfa like Santa Fe? The idea makes Marfans scoff. As Mary Farley, who brought Christopher Wool to town, told us, “If you ever see me putting on a piece of turquoise, airlift me out of here.” It’s a place, she said, for “artists transgressing social mores.” A place where an elected official recently walked into the Museum of Electronic Wonders and Late Night Grilled Cheese Parlour after a Sean Lennon concert (in a funeral home turned bar) and shouted, “All the guys, get your dicks out and put ’em in your hands!” (These instructions were ignored.) A place where Rocky Barnette, the chef-owner of Miniature Rooster, told us, “This is a different country, where you can do doughnuts in the middle of town in your jeep if you want to.” And then you can go eat some escargots with parsley and garlic butter, drink a $ bottle of Barolo, and watch the fiction writer (and MacArthur genius grantee) Deborah Eisenberg tell her “boyfriend” of more than 30 years, Wallace Shawn, he’s a “worthless piece of filthy shit”—in a production of Shawn’s play Marie and Bruce, at the Crowley Theater.

Don Culbertson, who runs a Marfa medical clinic, describes the two adjacent towns, Fort Davis and Alpine (each 25 miles closer to “civilization”), as “hair catchers in the shower. Fort Davis gets the tourists who want the Wild West, and the relocated baby-boomers who don’t know any better go to Alpine.” Judd’s sculptures may sell for six to eight figures, but he remains a rarefied pleasure, virtually unknown in the world at large. Artists, intellectuals, iconoclasts, and, yes, elitists make it to Marfa. A Connecticut shipping executive keeps a s Nash-Healey here and has a mechanic on retainer, like a groom, for maintenance. And then there are the people trying to escape the escapists. Notably absent from the party, though married to Wool, is the abstract painter Charline von Heyl. She made a roomful of work in Marfa for her recent show at the Tate Liverpool. The landscape painter Rackstraw Downes—a former Chinati artist-in-residence and yet another recent MacArthur genius-grant recipient (Weiner calls Downes “our Corot”)—now spends half the year 70 miles south of Marfa hiding out in the emptiness of southern Presidio County. He occasionally appears in town for dinner or a lecture. “I come to Marfa to play,” he told us.

In classic artist-as-gentrifier style, proprietary feelings can be most pronounced in the recently arrived. During a rock festival on the edge of town a local covered cars’ bumpers with stickers reading, KEEP AUSTIN THERE (a slap back on the capital’s self-satisfied slogan, “Keep Austin Weird”). Anthony DeSimone, a year-old who is in two bands and has been cast as the lead in a forthcoming Wallace Shawn production (Rob Weiner, who co-produced Shawn’s last play, Grasses of a Thousand Colors, is directing), told the story of serving a couple dinner at Cochineal one evening. When the man learned DeSimone was originally from Tiburon, California, he said, “So that’s interesting: you come from a place some would call heaven, and you’ve chosen to live in a place that some would call hell.” Yes—that is what we want you to think.

Of course, distinctions among Austinites, New Yorkers, and Californians are meaningless to third- and fourth- and fifth-generation locals, to whom all newcomers are now simply “Chinatis,” whether they have an affiliation with the museum or not. One sixth-grader we know, who was born and raised in Marfa but whose parents come from the East Coast, was teased in school: “Are you a Chinati? Do you wear sandals? Do you ride a bicycle?

But the moniker is apt. The Marfa renaissance started with Chinati, Judd’s public face and in many ways his unfinished work. Part of the thrill of being in Marfa is adding to what Judd left undone. The town is animated by a state of perpetual suspense: Will Irwin’s masterwork coexist alongside Judd’s and Flavin’s? Will the county support the construction of a superhighway running up from the border, making Marfa into a highbrow truck stop? (This was an early Rick Perry plan that never came to be, though some of the county’s weaklings recently allowed a monolithic electrical transmission line to be erected through Chinati’s view, degrading a landscape that had been close to pristine for approximately the last million years.) Will Ballroom Marfa’s drive-in be anything more than a jaw-dropping photograph in Artforum, and will the Judd Foundation open its doors? (The artist’s daughter, Rainer Judd, encouragingly, told us she’d like to see “more cooking” in the artist’s shrine-like private spaces.) Finally, who among the talented people congregated in Presidio County will realize their creative ambitions and take them beyond this enclave to a wider audience, and does it matter if they do? Wanting to be a part of that narrative as it unfolds compels us to stay. That Marfa is a scene there can be no question. But walk out of Elrod’s studio, and there is silence and space—to think, to create a waking dream. Judd’s friend Rudi Fuchs described the artist’s vision in Marfa and in life: “In Judd’s scale of values … beauty and perfection are ultimately matters of dignity, not only of the artwork but of nature and culture in general. Beauty is a very special and noble state Yet Judd fervently believes that such an idealistic notion of beauty … is, in the end, much too limited. Like the right to liberty and the pursuit of happiness, people have a right to things beautiful.”

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