Showing posts with label Ballroom Marfa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ballroom Marfa. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

Sound Speed Marker at Ballroom Marfa

Remnant of the movie set from Giant!
Photograph from the exhibition Sound Speed Marker
at Ballroom Marfa
From our friends at Ballroom Marfa

Sound Speed Marker

Teresa Hubbard / Alexander Birchler
28 February 2014 – 31 July 2014

Opening: 28 February, 6–8pm
With tacos by Fat Lyle’s and beer by Big Bend Brewing Company


Also:  

The Tish Hinojosa Band
As part of the Sound Speed Marker opening weekend
March 1, 2014 | 8 pm
USO Building, Marfa, Texas
Free


Ballroom Marfa is pleased to present Sound Speed Marker by Teresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler. The three video installations and related photographs, covering a span of five years of work, explore film’s relationship to place and the traces that movie making leaves behind. The exhibition includes the premiere of Giant (2014), a work commissioned by Ballroom Marfa. The exhibition will be on view at Ballroom Marfa until July 31, 2014 and will be accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue to be published in December 2014. Sound Speed Marker will travel to the Irish Museum of Modern Art in December 2014 and the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston in May 2015.

Grand Paris Texas (2009) considers the physical and social space of a dead movie theater, a forgotten song and the inhabitants of a small town. The Grand Theater, an abandoned, pigeon-filled movie theater in downtown Paris, serves as the protagonist in a narrative that explores Paris as a meta-location constructed through celluloid and soundtrack. Grand Paris Texas connects three seminal movies of the Southwest: Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas (1984), Bruce Beresford’s Tender Mercies (1983), and King Baggot’s classic silent film, Tumbleweeds (1925).

In Movie Mountain (Méliès) (2011), Hubbard/Birchler explore the site of a mountain in the Chihuahuan Desert near the town of Sierra Blanca. The project generates several narrative strands that interweave memory and forgetting. Movie Mountain (Méliès) features a script-writing cowboy as well as local residents whose relatives performed in an original silent picture filmed at the mountain. The project also encounters a possible link between Movie Mountain and Gaston Méliès, the brother of famous filmmaker George Méliès.

Giant (2014) interweaves signs of life and vistas of a decaying movie set built outside of Marfa: the Reata mansion from the 1956 Warner Bros. film, Giant starring Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson and James Dean. After filming was completed the three-sided facade was left behind in the landscape. Hubbard/Birchler explore the skeletal remains of the set as seasons change, day turns to night and parts of the structure swing and fall off. Scenes of a film crew recording the current conditions are juxtaposed with a Warner Bros. office in 1955, where a secretary types up the location contract for the motion picture that has yet to be created.

Teresa Hubbard, born in Dublin, Ireland 1965 and Alexander Birchler, born in Baden, Switzerland 1962 have been working collaboratively in video, photography and sculpture since 1990. Their work is held in numerous private and public collections including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D. C.; Kunstmuseum Basel; Kunsthaus Zurich; Modern Art Museum Fort Worth; Museum of Fine Arts Houston; Yokohama Museum of Art and the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich. Work in this exhibition appears courtesy of Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York and Lora Reynolds Gallery, Austin.

It is part of Ballroom Marfa’s mission to enable artwork that would be impossible to realize elsewhere. This project — with its roots in the landscape that we call home — brings Hubbard/Birchler’s trilogy to a close, and clarifies Ballroom Marfa’s role as an organization committed to commissioning new work.

See these events on our Texas Mountain Trail calendar, HERE.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Save Prada Marfa?

The Prada Marfa sculpture just north of Valentine is now under scrutiny by the Texas Department of Transportation, which has ruled it is not art, but advertising and is illegal.  After eight years, this artwork could be torn down.

Today, we offer some remembrances, some news and some background to help you make up your own mind.

Our Texas Mountain Trail was established in 2005, and our Executive Director wrote this in her personal blog after seeing the newly erected structure along the side of the road:

"One of my favorite drives is down to Marfa, about an hour from Van Horn. Because I'm still new to the long isolated distances and always prepared for any contingency in the desert, I ready myself like an astronaut going into space. My Subaru roof antenna is plugged into the office cell phone, on my lap and in vibrate/ring mode. Check. My personal cell phone, also on the lap in vibrate/ring mode. Emergency water and powerbar on the floor on the passenger side. Check. Two more gallons of emergency water is behind my seat (we're in the desert, for crying out loud!) CDs on the seat beside me. Check. Personal emergency kit (with foil blanket, candle, and fish hook?) in the glove box. Check. Then the usual auto checks--gas, oil, etc. Check. Check. Check.
Once I settle in, I'm ready to enjoy the ride.

By late summer, I started to recognize the landmarks, and I noticed a curious structure being built on the side of the road. Odd. Too small for a house or store. Too large for a bus shelter, and too far from anything to house kids waiting for the school bus. Yet, there it was, being patiently built by a small crew of men, just a few miles north of Valentine, population 247. A boxy-looking thing, way out in the middle of the desert nowhere.

In early October, I took that road home to Van Horn. The first clue was the portable lighted sign by the only gas station in Valentine. "Welcome Prada Marfa," it said. Huh.

Then I sped by, way too fast to get anything but a hint of what it was. Stop the car, back up. What?!? A Prada store?

There, perfectly and beautifully positioned in the desert, is a sealed time capsule, a non-functional full-sized reproduction of an urban boutique Prada store stocked with the fall 2005 line of shoes and purses. It makes me happy just to look at it. It will decay in time, and the ruin will become part of the landscape."

An update on the controversy and the news from KFO News in El Paso, via the Alpine Daily Planet:
MARFA — Italian handbags and shoes line a store front window along a U.S. highway in the middle of a West Texas desert, but the store has never made a sale.
Of course, it’s not a store at all.
After eight years, the Prada Marfa sculpture outside of Valentine, Texas, has come under the scrutiny of the Texas Department of Transportation.
The iconic art sculpture serves as a pop-up art installation and is entirely sealed off to the public, but a recent controversy involving TxDOT and a famous bunny may close the shop that never even opened.
A spokesperson for TxDOT told the Associated Press that the artwork is an illegal roadside advertisement.
This only happened after Playboy erected its neon bunny logo a few miles down the highway from the Italian fashion house sculpture.
State officials gave Playboy until October to take down the 40-foot structure, which some in Marfa tell KFOX14 didn’t sit well with some locals.
“There been a lot of controversy about that because it’s a Playboy bunny. I think if it were anything else they wouldn’t have a problem with it. All the young people in town love it; it looks really cool when it’s lit up,” said lifelong Marfa resident Andrea Estrada.
TxDOT officials said neither Prada Marfa nor the famous bunny have permits or license to “advertise” on the side of a U.S. highway.
Now questions remain about what will happen to Prada Marfa.
“Oh I don’t know. Prada’s been there for so long. Do you think TxDOT would go after that?” asked Marfa resident Brenda Garcia. It’s hard to say what will happen to the famous artwork. If those high heels could talk, they’d tell of the thousands of photos snapped in front and famous visitors, like Beyonce and everyday visitors like Kelly Robinson from Austin.
“It’s just like what I imagined,” said Robinson as she looked upon the small building.
While state officials may try to paint Prada Marfa with the same brush as the Playboy image, the local art commissioners behind the project say it’s black and white because Prada Marfa simply isn’t an advertisement at all.
“It’s eight years down the road to find out that it’s being misinterpreted as an advertisement, and to have any threat of being taken down is you know, upsetting,” said Melissa McDonnell Lujan, deputy director of Ballroom Marfa.
Ballroom Marfa is one of the commissioners behind the project; Lujan said the state has yet to contact them about the issue.
“Prada didn’t pay for any of the sculpture. It’s completely funded through the non-profits,” said Lujan.
“We don’t want to see Prada Marfa taken down. We want it to stay. It’s not corporately funded. It’s not to promote Prada Marfa,” said Lujan.
- See more at: http://alpinedailyplanet.typepad.com/alpine-daily-planet/2013/09/artists-release-statement-community-reacts-to-prada-marfa-controversy.html#sthash.RZJv3RB7.dpuf


MARFA — Italian handbags and shoes line a store front window along a U.S. highway in the middle of a West Texas desert, but the store has never made a sale.Of course, it’s not a store at all.

After eight years, the Prada Marfa sculpture outside of Valentine, Texas, has come under the scrutiny of the Texas Department of Transportation.

The iconic art sculpture serves as a pop-up art installation and is entirely sealed off to the public, but a recent controversy involving TxDOT and a famous bunny may close the shop that never even opened.

A spokesperson for TxDOT told the Associated Press that the artwork is an illegal roadside advertisement.

This only happened after Playboy erected its neon bunny logo a few miles down the highway from the Italian fashion house sculpture.

State officials gave Playboy until October to take down the 40-foot structure, which some in Marfa tell KFOX14 didn’t sit well with some locals.

“There been a lot of controversy about that because it’s a Playboy bunny. I think if it were anything else they wouldn’t have a problem with it. All the young people in town love it; it looks really cool when it’s lit up,” said lifelong Marfa resident Andrea Estrada.

TxDOT officials said neither Prada Marfa nor the famous bunny have permits or license to “advertise” on the side of a U.S. highway.

Now questions remain about what will happen to Prada Marfa.

“Oh I don’t know. Prada’s been there for so long. Do you think TxDOT would go after that?” asked Marfa resident Brenda Garcia.


We're not sure who added the bike signs or when they
popped up along the side of the road near Prada Marfa, but
they were fun to spot!
It’s hard to say what will happen to the famous artwork. If those high heels could talk, they’d tell of the thousands of photos snapped in front and famous visitors, like Beyonce and everyday visitors like Kelly Robinson from Austin.

“It’s just like what I imagined,” said Robinson as she looked upon the small building.


While state officials may try to paint Prada Marfa with the same brush as the Playboy image, the local art commissioners behind the project say it’s black and white because Prada Marfa simply isn’t an advertisement at all.


“It’s eight years down the road to find out that it’s being misinterpreted as an advertisement, and to have any threat of being taken down is you know, upsetting,” said Melissa McDonnell Lujan, deputy director of Ballroom Marfa.


Ballroom Marfa is one of the commissioners behind the project; Lujan said the state has yet to contact them about the issue.


“Prada didn’t pay for any of the sculpture. It’s completely funded through the non-profits,” said Lujan.
“We don’t want to see Prada Marfa taken down. We want it to stay. It’s not corporately funded. It’s not to promote Prada Marfa,” said Lujan.
At times, folks have left their business
cards along the
structure at Prada
Marfa

MARFA — Italian handbags and shoes line a store front window along a U.S. highway in the middle of a West Texas desert, but the store has never made a sale.
Of course, it’s not a store at all.
After eight years, the Prada Marfa sculpture outside of Valentine, Texas, has come under the scrutiny of the Texas Department of Transportation.
The iconic art sculpture serves as a pop-up art installation and is entirely sealed off to the public, but a recent controversy involving TxDOT and a famous bunny may close the shop that never even opened.
A spokesperson for TxDOT told the Associated Press that the artwork is an illegal roadside advertisement.
This only happened after Playboy erected its neon bunny logo a few miles down the highway from the Italian fashion house sculpture.
State officials gave Playboy until October to take down the 40-foot structure, which some in Marfa tell KFOX14 didn’t sit well with some locals.
“There been a lot of controversy about that because it’s a Playboy bunny. I think if it were anything else they wouldn’t have a problem with it. All the young people in town love it; it looks really cool when it’s lit up,” said lifelong Marfa resident Andrea Estrada.
TxDOT officials said neither Prada Marfa nor the famous bunny have permits or license to “advertise” on the side of a U.S. highway.
Now questions remain about what will happen to Prada Marfa.
“Oh I don’t know. Prada’s been there for so long. Do you think TxDOT would go after that?” asked Marfa resident Brenda Garcia. It’s hard to say what will happen to the famous artwork. If those high heels could talk, they’d tell of the thousands of photos snapped in front and famous visitors, like Beyonce and everyday visitors like Kelly Robinson from Austin.
“It’s just like what I imagined,” said Robinson as she looked upon the small building.
While state officials may try to paint Prada Marfa with the same brush as the Playboy image, the local art commissioners behind the project say it’s black and white because Prada Marfa simply isn’t an advertisement at all.
“It’s eight years down the road to find out that it’s being misinterpreted as an advertisement, and to have any threat of being taken down is you know, upsetting,” said Melissa McDonnell Lujan, deputy director of Ballroom Marfa.
Ballroom Marfa is one of the commissioners behind the project; Lujan said the state has yet to contact them about the issue.
“Prada didn’t pay for any of the sculpture. It’s completely funded through the non-profits,” said Lujan.
“We don’t want to see Prada Marfa taken down. We want it to stay. It’s not corporately funded. It’s not to promote Prada Marfa,” said Lujan.
- See more at: http://alpinedailyplanet.typepad.com/alpine-daily-planet/2013/09/artists-release-statement-community-reacts-to-prada-marfa-controversy.html#sthash.RZJv3RB7.dpuf


And a statement from Ballroom Marfa and the artists, with more excellent background here:

"Prada Marfa: An Explainer
What is Prada Marfa?

Prada Marfa is a site-specific, permanent land art project by artists Elmgreen & Dragset constructed in 2005. Modeled after a Prada boutique, the inaccessible interior of the structure includes luxury goods from Prada’s fall collection from that year. The door does not open, ensuring that the sculpture will never function as a place of commerce. Art Production Fund and Ballroom Marfa co-produced the project.



Prada Marfa is an artwork initiated by ourselves and realized in a collaboration with the not-for-profit cultural organizations Art Production Fund and Ballroom Marfa in 2005. It was not a work commissioned by the fashion brand Prada nor had the fashion brand any involvement in the creation of this work. They kindly gave us the permission to use their logo after we asked them, due to the founder Muccia Prada’s personal interest in contemporary art, and she donated shoes and bags, which have never been renewed but stay the same – as a historic display – inside the sculpture. The right definition of advertisement must be based on criteria more accurate than just including any sign which contains a logo. It is advertisement only when a company either commissions someone to make such a sign, pays for its execution or makes a sign themselves in order to promote the company’s products. And this is not the case here since Prada Marfa never had any commercial link to the fashion brand Prada, unlike the Playboy bunny which went up this summer initiated by Playboy itself.
Prada Marfa is firmly positioned within a contemporary understanding of site specific art, but also draws strongly on pop art and land art – two art forms which were conceived and thrived especially in the USA from the 1960′s and onwards. Many artists, from Andy Warhol with his famous Campbell soup cans to Andreas Gursky with his grand photographic documentation of retail spaces have appropriated and dealt with the visual language of commercial brands. In an increasingly commercialized world, we see the independent artistic treatment of all visual signs and signifiers as crucial to a better and wider understanding of our day-to-day surroundings, including the influence of corporations.

It comes as a big surprise for us that the Texas Department of Transportation now after eight years may declare this well-known artwork to be illegal and we think it would be a shame for the local community if it disappeared after being there for so long since the work clearly is one of the strong points for the cultural tourism, which is such an important financial factor in this region. However, we are very happy to experience the fantastic support from both art professionals internationally, locals and others, who have even created a Facebook page named “Save Prada Marfa” that after just a short while has received almost 4000 likes and daily receives plenty of new posts, stories and images from people who once visited this site. "

– Elmgreen & Dragset


For more information on the controversy, read this excellent blog post by Ballroom Marfa.  Consider supporting Ballroom Marfa with a membership gift, here.  To see the "Save Prada Marfa" facebook page, click here.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Comic Future opens at Ballroom Marfa on Friday!

Our friends at Ballroom Marfa are opening a new exhibit this Friday...read information on the show from their website:

"COMIC FUTURE

Curated by Fairfax Dorn

27 September 2013 through 26 January 2014

Artists:

Walead Beshty
Liz Craft
Aaron Curry
Carroll Dunham
Arturo Herrera
Mike Kelley
Paul McCarthy
Erik Parker
Sigmar Polke
Peter Saul
Dana Schutz
Michael Williams
Sue Williams

Comic Future features work by artists who employ the language of various and discordant approaches such as abstraction and figuration to twist representation of their immediate environment thereby imbricating a skewed, often apocalyptic vision of the future.
Showcasing works from the 1960s through 2013, the exhibition surveys political satire and cultural commentary through art movements ranging from capitalist realism to contemporary pop art. The works include early drawings by Sigmar Polke, collage by Walead Beshty, painting by Carroll Dunham and Peter Saul, alongside newer works by Dana Schutz, Sue Williams, Michael Williams and Erik Parker. Sculpture by Aaron Curry, Liz Craft and Mike Kelley. A Ballroom-commissioned site-specific wall installation by Arturo Herrera will complete the show.
Drawing from the art-historical lineage of cubism, cartoons, figurative painting and gestural abstraction, and appropriating subjects from mythology, advertising, print culture and consumerism, Comic Future is as much about the breakdown of the human condition as it is about the absurdities which define the perils of human evolution. The exhibition will be on view September 27, 2013 through January 26, 2014."

After the opening, they invite everyone for a free community dinner, catered by Future Shark, and held under the shade structure on Highland in the middle of Marfa! 
Join us after the opening for a free community dinner catered by Future Shark at the shade structure in the middle of Marfa on Highland. - See more at: http://texasmountaintrail.com/events/marfa-comic-future-opening-ballroom-marfa-and-free-community-dinner-marfa-shade-structure#sthash.EJnS62YJ.dpuf
Join us after the opening for a free community dinner catered by Future Shark at the shade structure in the middle of Marfa on Highland. - See more at: http://texasmountaintrail.com/events/marfa-comic-future-opening-ballroom-marfa-and-free-community-dinner-marfa-shade-structure#sthash.EJnS62YJ.dpuf

Friday, September 20, 2013

The Marfa Triptych Part One: Country and Western Big Band Suite

One of the most innovative arts organizations you'll find just about anywhere--Ballroom Marfa--is once again presenting lovely and thought-provoking work, inspired by the landscape and culture of Far West Texas.  This November 16th, Ballroom is presenting the music of composer Graham Reynolds at Marfa's Crowley Theatre.
Crowley Theatre in Marfa

From Ballroom's blog:

The Marfa Triptych Part One: Country and Western Big Band Suite, is an instrumental suite for 13 players, described by Reynolds as “classic instrumental country meets Western soundtrack meets power jazz rhythm section.” This performance includes contributions from country music veteran Redd Volkaert, along with other members of Reynold’s far-reaching group of collaborators."

Want a brief "listen" now?  There are two sound samples here.  


"This project is inspired by Reynolds’ trips from his base in Austin, Texas to the high desert grasslands of Far West Texas that Ballroom Marfa calls home. His approach combines local musical traditions — from cowboy songs and Southern jazz to the norteño music of Northern Mexico — with a personal perspective that comes from years of scoring film, theater and modern dance performances."

"As the project springs from the culture of Far West Texas, Reynolds is currently in the process of working with Ballroom Marfa to coordinate research trips throughout the region in order to experience its culture and history firsthand. Through his own connections and via sources recommended by Ballroom, Reynolds has been keeping an itinerary that includes visits with musicians, historians, storytellers, artists and local legends from Terlingua, Alpine, Presidio, Shafter, Fort Davis, Valentine, Marfa and other far-flung locales in the Big Bend region."

"This is the first installment in Reynold’s documentation of his progress, with more to come."


Ballroom Marfa
Tickets are available online in the Ballroom Marfa store.

Half-price tickets are available in the gallery for all residents of Brewster, Jeff Davis and Presidio counties.









Looking for more events in the Texas Mountain Trail region?  Visit our events calendar at: www.texasmountaintrail.com/events

Sunday, August 19, 2012

What's coming up? Marfa Lights Festival!

From Marfa's Chamber of Commerce!

"The Marfa Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce the annual Marfa Lights Festival will take place on Labour Day Weekend, August 31 through September 2 around the historic Presidio County Courthouse. The festival will begin at 5 PM on Friday when food and craft vendors open their booths for business. The fun continues Saturday morning with 5k walk/run followed by the Festival Parade down Highland Avenue. Also on Saturday home bakers are invited to submit their hand-made pies for consideration in the Pie Baking Contest. On Sunday, we are looking forward to the FIRST EVER Marfa Lights Festival Box Car Derby, and the salsa competition, everyone is invited to participate, as a contestant or as a judge. The vendors and entertainment will be hopping from noon until 5 PM on Sunday."

"The festival's free outdoor entertainment series will begin at 5 PM on Friday night. Throughout the weekend there will be music, dancing and other performances. For more information on any aspect of the Marfa Lights Festival email  info@marfacc.com. "

Also that weekend in Marfa, from Ballroom Marfa:

"Ballroom Marfa, in conjunction with the Washington Spectator, The Big Bend Sentinel, Marfa Public Radio and Marfa Book Company, is excited to announce the second biennial Marfa Dialogues, a three-day symposium that includes conversations around climate change and sustainability with artists, performers, writers, scientists and entrepreneurs — among them Michael Pollan, author of The Botany of Desire and The Omnivore’s Dilemma, and Rebecca Solnit, the distinguished critic and author of A Field Guide to Getting Lost and A Paradise Built in Hell. Other featured participants include David Buckland, Hamilton Fish, Cynthia Hopkins, Diana Liverman, John Nielsen-Gammon, Robert Potts, Tom Rand and Bonnie J. Warnock."  For more info on this program, click here.

Monday, November 21, 2011

The Cottonwoods of Shafter

All around Shafter yesterday, the color was YELLOW.  The community's runoff areas and little streams are home to cottonwood trees, and they're in glorious fall color.

The Shafter Mining District was active from 1883 to 1952, taking silver and related ores from the area, and once again, Shafter's seeing mining again.  Drive into town and visit the cemetery and cemetery museum to learn more about the history of this small and proud community, on Hwy 67 between Marfa and Presidio.

And unrelated to cottonwoods or mining, but still pretty interesting.....

The town was also featured in the opening scenes of the 1971 science fiction film, The Andromeda Strain, where it played a small town in New Mexico.  Shafter's lovely church, pictured in our last photo above, can be seen (if you watch for it--glimpses of it near  0:35, 0:55 and 1:05!) in the film's trailer, above.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Riders on Hwy 90

We've been working on cycling itineraries that take visitors to some pretty interesting places in the region.  This view of Hwy 90 is part of our Texas Mountain Ride! from Adventure Cycling's Bike Overnights blog, which starts in Marathon, and goes to Alpine, Fort Davis and Marfa.

What attracts cyclists (from beginners to racers) to our region?  Great scenery, little to no traffic, and lovely places to stop and enjoy!
We also have the El Capitan to El Capitan Heritage Bike Ride (Van Horn to Guadalupe Mtns National Park), Ride to the Post (Marathon to Post Park), and Fort Davis' Scenic Loop

Take a look at our website's cycling page for a list of cycle-friendly hotels, B&B's, historic motor courts and modern motels!  Check it out at www.texasmountaintrail.com/bike

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

The Tumbleweed Times, History for Kids and Families!

One of the fun aspects of our Texas Mountain Trail program--made possible through our association with the Texas Historical Commission--is our ability to send grant money to worthy projects in Far West Texas that engage folks with history.  Last year, one of the grant recipients was the Tumbleweed Times, sponsored by the El Paso County Historical Commission, the El Paso Independent School District and the El Paso Public Library.  Jeryl Marcus of El Paso wrote and edited the newspaper for schoolchildren all across our six county region in the westernmost portion of the state.


The Fun Page, click in the image to enlarge it!

The four-page, black and white monthly publication has the look, feel and format of a local newspaper. It presents information in a child-friendly, easy-to-read manner and is designed to capture the interest and imagination of both children and adults.

The back page of each issue has a review and retention section – or “Fun Page” with games, puzzles and other clever activities based on information that can be found elsewhere in the paper.  (Click on the large image to read a fun page...our favorite is the maze featuring Van Horn's museum cat!)

A website (http://www.tumbleweedtimes.net/) is a dynamic, colorful supplement to the newspaper. Readers can log on to the website in order to submit feedback, or to offer story ideas, suggestions, letters-to-the-editor, etc.

Both the online and printed versions include the sponsor information and logos as preferred by each of the following sponsor organizations: Texas Heritage Trails Program; Texas Historical Commission of El Paso; El Paso Independent School District; and the El Paso Public Library.

Distribution to elementary schools: Each student in grades three through five received his or her own free copy to read in class and take home to share it with parents, siblings, extended family and others. Teachers, principals and librarians received their own copies as well.

El Paso Independent School District
Alpine Elementary School
Ft. Bliss Post Exchange (PX)
Eagle Elementary School (Van Horn
Marfa Elementary School
El Paso International Airport:
El Paso Visitors and Convention Center
El Paso Public Library
and other locations across the region

Visit Tumbleweed Times' website for more photos and features! 

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Look like fun?

Check out our two night cycling itinerary -- Marathon to Alpine to Fort Davis, to Marfa, to Alpine and back to Marathon! Read more here.

More about cycling in the Texas Mountain Trail region: www.texasmountaintrail.com/bike
Our list of cycle-friendly accommodations here

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Texas Mountain Ride--a two day overnight on bikes!

Hwy 90 between Alpine and Marfa
Fort Davis National Historic Site
Marathon's French Co. Grocer, a great place for snacks and cycling supplies
Cool treats available at Alpine's Murphy Street Raspa Co.
Beautiful Presidio County Courthouse in Marfa
Adventure Cycling Association published our three-day, two-night cycling itinerary for Marathon, Alpine, Fort Davis and Marfa today on their new Bike Overnights blog, and we wanted to share some of the photographs that didn't get posted on that great new resource for adventurous travelers.  (Thanks to Marci Roberts for the rainbow photograph of Marathon's French Co. Grocery!)

For more regional cycling information, please visit: www.texasmountaintrail.com/bike  and click through to see our heritage bike routes, mountain biking information and a list of cycle-friendly hotels! 

Monday, September 13, 2010

Heading back to Marathon from Post Park

From Marathon, follow the sign to "County Park 5" and you'll travel on a single lane road to an old Comanche watering hole, a Buffalo soldier outpost and a WPA worksite, now a county park, called Post Park.  On the way back to town, the mountains and the small town of Marathon, rise up into view.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Shoes on the Ranch

If you don't slow down and take it easy, you miss the most incredible things....

Just north of Valentine, not far from Marfa, there's a surprise for unsuspecting travelers, an art installation, called Prada Marfa.

You can read more about it, here.

Visit the fine folks at Ballroom Marfa, when you're in the area. They helped this project come to fruition, and they bring a steady stream of high quality visual and performing arts projects to the region!