Big Bend Texas Galleries & Artists 2019 | Page 12

Southwest Studio, La Mansana de Chinati/The Block, Marfa, TX; Image: Elizabeth Felicella/Esto © Judd Foundation. Donald Judd Art © Judd Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Licensed by ARS. JUDD FOUNDATION Preserving and Defending a Legacy In the summer of 1946, the modern artist Donald Judd (1928-1994), then eighteen years old, took a bus from Fort McLellan in Alabama to Los Angeles, California. He had completed basic training for the United States Army and was on his way to Korea where he would serve in the Army Corp of Engineers until November of the following year. e bus passed through the town of Van Horn, Texas, 70 miles west of Marfa on US-90. is was Judd’s first encounter with the American Southwest, and he sent a telegram to his mother commenting on the beautiful Cobb House, Marfa, TX, Image: Elizabeth Felicella/Esto © Judd Foundation. Licensed by ARS. 12 BIG BEND GALLERIES AND ARTISTS / 2019 mountains and landscape. Twenty-five years later, in 1971, the same expansive landscape and open space drew Judd back to the Trans-Pecos region. e artist had lived in New York City since 1954. It was there that he transitioned from painting to three dimensional objects, and was included in his first group exhibitions, and given his first retrospective exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1968. He also purchased a five-story cast-iron building in SoHo where he began to permanently install his own work and works he had collected. Stifled by the art scene and lack of space for larger permanent installations, Judd began to look at land elsewhere, eventually settling on Marfa. In 1973 and 1974, he bought his first properties in town - an entire city block that included two former WWI artillery hangers, and an old army quarter master’s house. He soon began to install his work, create living and working spaces, and establish his 13,000-book library. Judd continued to purchase buildings in the center of town, preferring to restore preexisting structures rather than demolish them. He converted the former Marfa National Bank into his architecture studio, an old Safeway Grocery Store into an art studio, and a former Rancher’s home into a painting gallery. As early as 1977, Judd established his ideas for the Judd Foundation: “e purpose of the foundation is to preserve my work and that of others and to preserve this work in spaces I consider appropriate for it…I have to defend what I’ve done; it is urgent and necessary to make my work last in the first condition.” Today, the Judd Foundation preserves sixteen properties in both Texas and New York. ey include the artist’s homes and studios in Marfa, a historic cast-iron