Blog Archives
Even chairs like to get some sun
These chairs seem to have crept away from the shadow in order to enjoy a bit of hot summer sun. I like how the one on the left seems to lean away from the other one, as though to distance itself for some reason.
And I also like how the satellite dish peeks over the fence, keeping its eye on the chairs. Or on the photographer.
This is for my blogging pal over at Syncopated Eyeball, who is also very fond of chairs.
Marfa, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013
Nooses? Yes, it looks like nooses.
I don’t really know what would have gone on at the ice house (other than the making of ice, I mean), so I am not entirely sure why there’d be a row of big eye bolts on the outside of the building.
But check out the noose-shadows on the corrugated metal wall. I’m not saying that was my favorite thing I’ve ever seen in Marfa, but it’s right up there with this. Oh, and here’s a wider view of the ice house, taken on a previous trip. Before I knew about the nooses.
Marfa, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013
The things I’ll do…
Here’s another shot, from a different trip, of the very same wall in Marfa. This time, though, I spotted the yucca that had been very considerate to send its wavy stalk up right in front of the white line on the wall.
In the interest of full disclosure*, I want to point out that the yucca wasn’t the only, uh, spiky plant in the area. And that I wasn’t standing upright to shoot this. If you see what I am getting at. Also: red ants. There were a lot of red ants. And they weren’t all that happy to have an itinerant photographer show up and walk around their front yard.
Marfa, Texas
photographed 8.16.2013
*Or, as it is also known, too much information.
Why there’s no photograph of anything famous
If you go to Marfa, you’ll see the influence of sculptor Donald Judd’s Chinati Foundation. And if you visit the Foundation, you’ll have to agree, in writing, to not publish any photographs that you take of the various art installations. So, instead of seeing my shots of the famous 100 untitled works in milled aluminum, you get this: ruins of something that’s across the street from the Foundation’s headquarters.
(I don’t think I agreed to not publish any shots of the ruins.)
(And, anyway, I like this better than the milled aluminum boxes. Even though my photographs of them were quite fabulous.)
Marfa, Texas
photographed 11.12.2010




