Sarah McEneaney (German-American, 1955) - Chinati Night (2020)

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from Spain

seen from Maldives
seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from China

seen from India
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seen from United Kingdom
seen from Iraq
Sarah McEneaney (German-American, 1955) - Chinati Night (2020)
John Chamberlain
Marfa, TX.
“The space surrounding my work is crucial to it,” Donald Judd wrote in 1977: “as much thought has gone into the installation as into a piece itself.” Quote and photos are from 'Donald Judd Spaces' — new, expanded edition, published by @juddfoundation Image credits: 1. 101 Spring Street, Kitchen with furniture by Donald Judd. Photo 2018. 2. 101 Spring Street, Permanent installation, left to right: Donald Judd, untitled, 1962; Claes Oldenburg, Soft Ceiling Lights at La Coupole, 1964 – 72; Lucas Samaras, Box #48, 1966; Dan Flavin, untitled, 1970; platform bed by Donald Judd. Photo 2018. 3. La Mansana de Chinati/The Block, West building. First library with Frank Stella, study for River of Ponds III, 1971; furniture by Donald Judd. Photo 2018. 4. La Mansana de Chinati/The Block, Art studio. Interior with, left to right: untitled, 1987; untitled, 1987; untitled, 1989; untitled, 1989; untitled, 1985; untitled, 1985. Photo 2012. 5. Las Casas, Don's house. Permanent installation, untitled, 1987; furniture by Gustav Stickley. Photo 2018. 6. La Mansana de Chinati/The Block, Architecture Studio. Interior with desk by Donald Judd; chair by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe; chair by Gerrit Rietveld; lamp by Karl Trabert. Photo 2019. 7. La Mansana de Chinati/The Block, East Building. Permanent installation of south room, left to right: untitled, 1969; untitled, 1963; untitled, 1963; table and chairs by Gustav Stickley. Photo 2012. Edited by Flavin Judd, Rainer Judd. Text by Donald Judd. Read more via linkinbio. #donaldjudd @flavinjudd @rainerjudd #juddfoundation #101springstreet #chinati #ayaladechinati #marfa #design #architecture #art #minimalism #sculpture https://www.instagram.com/p/CqVhafYuxEg/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
I went on a brief road trip with one of my best friends to Chinati Hot Springs in West Texas. It was magical!
There is no internet or cell service there, and I haven't been on Tumblr in 3 days. I'll never catch up! What did I miss?
Andy Coolquitt, Multi-Marfa Room, 2014
Ilya Kabokov, School No. 6, 1993. Permanent Installation at the Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX.
Purpose-built as a total installation, Ilya Kabakov’s School No. 6 (1993) occupies one of Chinati Foundation’s many former army barracks, a structure chosen by Kabakov when he first visited in 1992 precisely because of its authentic state of disrepair. Subdivided into a sequence of rooms painted in institutional beige and light green, the work evokes an abandoned Soviet schoolhouse subsumed by a retrospective Soviet melancholia. Invited by Judd to produce a permanent installation for the Foundation, Kabakov fabricated a mythological schoolhouse: a container of the sense of utopian possibility embedded in the Soviet childhood, here transformed into ruins.