Sign up for our newsletter

Stay informed on our latest news!

Under the Texan Sun at Marfa’s Invitational Art Fair

Composed of a mix of emerging and established galleries hailing from the far and wide, participants such as Nino Meier, with spaces in Brussels, LA and now Marfa, as well as The Valley in Taos, and Half Gallery in New York added to a mixed roster that ran the gamut in terms of style, location, and sensibility. Like the wide-open Texan plains located outside its door, the fair reflected its surroundings, leaving visitors with ample space to float around, held at Marfa’s Saint George Hall

 

 

The Invitational’s manageable size was one of the first things attendees noticed, with just 11 participating galleries taking part — providing breathing room for visitors to take in the art. “Less is more” seemed to be a common thread throughout, rather than overwhelming audiences with an inundation of both artwork and programming.

 

It made it easy for newcomers to hop on the train, with everyone shuttling to the same destinations — whether it was in town for a conversation between artist Lacy Dorn and philanthropist Suzanne Deal Booth, the opening of Nino Meier’s Marfa gallery, or further out in the desert for an outdoor sculpture section titled “Monuments.”

 

 

The entirety of the weekend, fulltime Marfa residents Phelan and his wife, Melissa Bent (founder New York’s now-shuttered Rivington Arms gallery), hosted guests with true Southern hospitality, arranging a full schedule of events that left the fair feeling like an art-world adult summer camp.

 

From an opening night cocktail event hosted at Marfa’s Brite House, an estate built in 1917, to a party honoring artist Emma Stern at the historic Mercantile Saloon in Valentine, Texas, visitors got a taste of Marfa’s art scene, both in-town and offsite. In true Texan style, guests trekked out to the abandoned Western property, where they were treated to a horseback rodeo show with cowgirls wearing a collection designed by Cynthia Rowley specially for the occasion.

 

 

The legacy that artist Donald Judd left when he established his homebase in Marfa, resonates with those that are drawn to this sleepy desert town deep in the Chiuhauan Desert. His credo to consider the landscape, embody a sense of space, and transport visitors to a portal of another dimension holds true.

 

The experience that is Marfa Invitational encourages attendees to tap into their sensorial connections — as Phelan notes, its intention is to “deepen our relationship to and with art, the landscape which surrounds us, and each other.”

Confirm your age

Please confirm that you are at least 18 years old.

I confirm Whooops!