Ever since I discovered Marfa, Texas almost two years ago, I'd been
dying to visit it. About once a month I'd get
an itch to finally go,
make an announcement to everyone that I'm going, am reminded that it's
an eight hour trek from Austin to Marfa, still announce that I'm going,
wake up the next morning thinking about driving in a car for eight
hours only to drive back the next day for another eight hours, and go
back to sleep.
Finally after two years of this repetitive behavior, I finally made it to my beloved Marfa.
It was everything I hoped for and more.
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If you live in Austin, Texas, you know what Marfa is. It's kind of like
the Palm Springs to Los Angeles or the Coney Island to New York City.
Actually it's none of those places at all.
If you live outside of Texas, you may have heard of Marfa because of the famous films shot there,
Prada Marfa, The Chinati Foundation, The Marfa Film Festival, or
The Marfa Mystery Lights.
Maybe you've never heard of it at all.
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Marfa, Texas was founded in 1883. A lowly railroad stop before then,
the wife of the president of Southern Pacific Railroad reportedly
christened the stop after a character in a Dostoyevsky novel, most
likely
The Brother Karamazov, though
this gentleman doubts that probability.
Marfa thrived through the years as a ranching and farming town, as well
as a military training camp during the Mexican Revolution and World War
II. As ranching began to wain during the 20th century, the town's
economy shifted focus after the introduction of Donald Judd to the
area. Judd, a well known minimalist in New York City, relocated to
Marfa in the early 70's and legitimized the place as a playground for
artists. Today, Marfa has both The Chinati and
Judd Foundations- in addition to multiple art galleries- and continues to be an escape for creative types and out-of-the-box thinkers.
This small town also has been a popular area for film making. The Rock
Hudson-Elizabeth Taylor-James Dean film about Texas oil and cattle,
Giant, took over the town, shooting for two months in various locations around Marfa in 1955. The still standing
El Paisano Hotel was used as the cast and crew headquarters. Today, the hotel continues the
Giant legacy with an informal museum and restaurant named
Jett's Grill. Recently both
There Will Be Blood and
No Country For Old Men were shot in Marfa.
What Marfa has been known for maybe the longest is their mystery
lights. First reported in 1883, mysterious lights have been appearing
on the horizon located roughly nine miles west of town. There is no
rhyme or reason to when the lights appear or how they behave- doing
everything from changing colors, changing brightness, moving, and
disappearing all together. Theories as to what they are range from
UFOs, car lights in the distance, Native American ghosts, and swamp
gas. To this day the lights have not been explained and only disappear
when you get close to them.
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We rolled into Marfa at the perfect time.
I remember thinking, "Next time, I want to be traveling down this road
at this hour... I look over at the driver, and I think there is nothing
better than this moment."
Little did I know that I was thinking that at the time. I have a habit
of being nostalgic for places at the time I'm experiencing them.
Wishing I was alone or with someone I'm hopelessly in love with. When
in fact, the circumstances and the person I am with at the time
couldn't be anymore perfect.
This thought will continue to haunt me the next morning when I wake up
in a king size bed in a room built in 1930 overlooking the whitewashed
store fronts of a bygone era and listening to the repetitious melody of
metal hitting metal on the train track below.

The truth is, no matter who are driving with on the way to Marfa, you are alone.
You and the road. You and the Big Sky. You and the West Texas horizon.
You will get out of the car to look at one of the few speckles of color
that dot the landscape- double makeshift white crosses covered in
plastic flowers and magic marker scrawl- and realize that you can't
hear a thing.
The only reprieve from the rotating desert backdrop comes in the form
of a lone building standing on the west side of the road. A building 15
by 25 feet and showcasing high heels and handbags to no one at all. The
Prada logo shines boldly from the canopies and you peak in to see only
spiders and flies active in the place.
This installation art piece was built in 2005 and will one day slowly erode back into the landscape.

Though flicked with the fingers of worldliness, Marfa is still a small
town. Upon arriving you are welcomed by a Dairy Queen and the familiar
run-down houses you've been seeing scattered across West Texas. There
are four hotels and a four block stretch of main street. There are 2121
people and they all have an opinion about their town.
Some were even kind enough to share them with us.
"Where are you from?!" A slightly pained-looking middle-aged man said as we we snapped pictures under the Marfa hacienda arch.
"Austin" I said.
"New York" my mother said.
Both the wrong answers.
The man proceeded to tell us how specifically Austinites and New
Yorkers have been pillaging his cherished town for years- moving in,
setting up shop, never contributing to the economy, and only sending
money back to where they came from. He specifically pointed out
establishments we should not stay, eat, or shop at- places not owned by
life-long residents- and with a gruff, got into his truck and drove
away.
I had difficulty understanding his resentment. My understanding is that
the New Yorkers (Donald Judd et al.) and the Austinites (various
business owners who own hotels, restaurants, and galleries) have only
helped to make this town more than just one of the many forgotten West
Texas blips on the map.
However, not every resident felt that way. We ran into the unofficial
ambassador of Marfa. A friendly gentleman by the name of Ken who walked
with us off and on along our journey through town, occasionally losing
him as he stopped to say hello to every single person that came across
his path. He was not native, but had lived there for twelve years and
didn't feel so strongly against the big city people that come to play
and gawk in cattle and oil country. As Ken was telling us about his
book of poetry that sells at the only bookstore in Marfa, I spotted
three characters walking from the most expensive restaurant in town. A
place where one plate will get you three at Carmen's around the block.
They were dressed all in black. The gentleman wearing a turtleneck and
oval-shaped wireless glasses. The ladies wearing combination slick
leather heels, shirred skirts, and scarves draped over their billowy
tunics. I thought of the movie,
Beetlejuice- the
artsy nouveau riche family from New York City who moved out into the
country and contemporized their farmhouse and threw sushi parties- and
for a second, I understood what the angry resident was conveying to us
earlier.
I then caught my own reflection in a storefront. An entire ensemble
from American Apparel- asphalt high waist pants, black and creme
striped bodysuit, rusty floppy hat- all topped off with unlaced vintage
leather boots and some bright red lipstick.
Maybe I'm one of them too- but won't you just let us pretend for a second that we're someone else?
Won't you let me walk in my daydream for awhile?
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