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All the United States Texas Marfa Chinati Foundation

Chinati Foundation

Minimalist modern art on a repurposed military base in rural Texas.

Marfa, Texas

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Melissa Marshall
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Donald Judd’s works at The Chinati Foundation.   John Cummings/CC BY-SA 3.0
15 untitled works in concrete by Donald Judd.   zackofalltrades / Atlas Obscura User
Fluorescent light pieces by Donald Flavin.   zackofalltrades / Atlas Obscura User
Donald Judd’s concrete installations.   zackofalltrades / Atlas Obscura User
Metal sculptures by John Chamberlain.   zackofalltrades / Atlas Obscura User
  Sascha Pohflepp/CC BY 2.0
4-10-24   Darrell Powers / Atlas Obscura User
Chinati’s newest exhibit “Untitles (dawn to dusk)” 2016 by Robert Irwin   notoriousFIG / Atlas Obscura User
Outside dawn to dusk   notoriousFIG / Atlas Obscura User
dawn to dusk courtyard   notoriousFIG / Atlas Obscura User
Chinati Foundation Donald Judd Concrete Art   Nan Palmero
Chinati Foundation Donald Judd Concrete Art   Nan Palmero
  gingercinnamon / Atlas Obscura User
  cait7911 / Atlas Obscura User
  cait7911 / Atlas Obscura User
The Chinati Foundation at dusk and Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen’s Monument to the Last Horse.   Monica D./CC BY 2.0
4-10-24   Darrell Powers / Atlas Obscura User
4-10-24   Darrell Powers / Atlas Obscura User
4-10-24   Darrell Powers / Atlas Obscura User
4-10-24   Darrell Powers / Atlas Obscura User
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About

Machined aluminum boxes, fluorescent tubes, and salvaged auto bodies are just some of the sculptural media used to create the modern art housed at the Chinati Foundation, a series of modern art installations on a repurposed military base once studio to artist Donald Judd, on the desolate West Texas plains. 

Needing more space and wanting to establish a permanent location for the installation of his work and the work of contemporaries in which the work would be displayed appropriately and not subject to damage from being moved, Donald Judd purchased 340 acres near Marfa, TX, including the abandoned U.S. Army Fort D. A. Russell in 1979. The complex first opened to the public in 1986, originally providing a permanent home to works by Judd, John Chamberlain, and Dan Flavin. Since then, other artists' works have followed and a vibrant artistic community has grown up around the foundation. The focus of the collection is on large-scale sculptural works which are made to be inextricable from their chosen surroundings.

Marfa has lately become something of an art world destination, which has in turn revitalized the once semi derelict cattle town with the addition of new galleries, bookstores, restaurants etc., along with attracting new short and long term artist residents from the more expensive art hubs of NYC and LA, as well as a substantial population of artists from Europe.

The entire collection is only available through private tours, which require good shoes and a bottle of water as they can take an entire day to cover the sprawling, arid location, winding indoors and outdoors. The permanent works have become so revered the site was recently recognized by the World Monuments Fund as one worthy of conservation and preservation. Since its founding, the Chinati Foundation has helped turn Marfa, Texas into a unlikely mix of small town Texas vistas and big city artistic pretension.  

 

Related Tags

Art Sculptures Sculpture Gardens Statues Modernism

Know Before You Go

In Marfa, turn left at the blinking red light. Travel 1/2 mile, turn right at the Chinati Foundation sign. Follow this road, it will veer to the left and up a hill; the foundation is atop the hill

Community Contributors

Added By

Melissa Marshall

Edited By

hrnick, Molly McBride Jacobson, zackofalltrades, notoriousFIG...

  • hrnick
  • Molly McBride Jacobson
  • zackofalltrades
  • notoriousFIG
  • gingercinnamon
  • nanpalmero
  • cait7911
  • Darrell Powers

Published

December 15, 2012

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  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinati_Foundation
Chinati Foundation
1 Cavalry Row
Marfa, Texas, 79843
United States
30.297337, -104.027897
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