|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Wednesday, September 24, 2025 |
|
Tough Times in Remote West Texas: Vandals Target Quirky Art Project Prada Marfa |
|
|
Graffiti on the Prada Marfa art project located about 35 miles west of Marfa, Texas. The iconic sculpture intended to mimic a store of the Italian fashion house has come under repeated attack by vandals since it was finished in 2005. (AP Photo/Mike Graczyk.
By: Michael Graczyk, Associated Press
|
VALENTINE, TX (AP).- These are tough times for Prada Marfa, the quirky art project standing alone in the remote desert of Jeff Davis County in far West Texas.
If the harsh environment doesn't provide enough stress, the 15-foot-by-25-foot adobe cube building intended to masquerade as a boutique of the luxury Italian fashion house is being battered by vandals.
Graffiti is spray painted on an exterior wall and bullet holes pepper the windows that front U.S. Highway 90 about 35 miles west of the internationally known art mecca of Marfa. A steel post that held a dedication marker next to the structure appears to have been mowed down by a vehicle.
"I'm disappointed with the way it is," says Boyd Elder, the local site representative for the 6-year-old $100,000 project designed by Berlin-based artists Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset. "We're dealing with it. It's just a matter of budget. We're going to take the graffiti off and make some changes ... as soon as we can come up with some money."
Elder rescued the damaged dedication plaque and said he'll reinstall it as part of the repairs.
But Elmgreen, in an email to The Associated Press, says these latest incidents of destruction may mean it's time to pull the plug on the entire project.
"The store has been attacked before," he said. "And when it will get restored again, the vandalism will for sure happen again, too.
"At some point, we might ask the local authorities to take responsibility for it and if they show no interest, it might be time for tearing it down and only keep it as a wonderful memory."
The building mimics a Prada store, with softly lighted shelves of expensive women's shoes and a couple of displays of equally pricey purses.
But the door stays locked. You can look but can't touch shoes that can start at more than $500 and purses that easily climb into four figures.
"It was always our intention to let the Prada Marfa disintegrate over time, but we hoped it would happen in a natural manner," Elmgreen said. "There is not much entertainment along Highway 90 so, of course, the sculpture, which has become something of a landmark in the area, is an obvious target for bored vandals."
Elder said a recent lightning strike near the site knocked out an online video feed he monitors, making it more difficult to keep tabs on intruders.
"We're going to readjust the cameras and spruce the place up," he said. "I'm hoping we're going to catch someone. Some people love it and other people just despise it."
The project on a tiny piece of desolate grazing land was completed in October 2005. Mountains on the horizon surround it and the only signs of civilization are the highway and a train track paralleling the highway. Traffic is nearly nonexistent.
Milan-based Prada SpA hailed it at the time as a work of minimalist art. Art Review magazine described it as having "aesthetic friction in an iconic wilderness."
Others saw it as a target.
Only a couple days after it was finished, somebody hooked one end of a chain to the front door and the other to a vehicle and ripped the door open. The bandits didn't find out until examining their loot that the shoes they took were right-foot only.
The items subsequently were replaced by Prada and graffiti the intruders also left behind was removed. In the years since, the original plate glass windows have been replaced with panes of three-eighths-inch-thick bullet-resistant polycarbonate. Vandals with some success have tried to scratch words on it and have dented it with gun shots. At least one slug is burrowed in the plastic.
"Prada Marfa is now 6 years old and it has probably been one of the most spoken and written about works in Texas in the past decade," Elmgreen said. "If the population of nearby Marfa would like to keep it, we would, of course, be very happy."
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
|
|
Today's News
March 26, 2011
Complete Series of Goya's "The Disasters of the War" on View at The Diocesan Museum
Surface Truths: Abstract Painting in the Sixties at the Norton Simon Museum
Andy Warhol's Portrait of Liz Taylor to Be Projected on Building During Exhibition
Claude Monet's Les Peupliers" Set to Fetch $25 Million at Christie's Auction in New York
LACMA Launches Image Library Expanding Online Access to Museum's Collection
Gene Tunney's Boxing Gloves from "The Long Count" Fight Donated to National Museum of American History
Tough Times in Remote West Texas: Vandals Target Quirky Art Project Prada Marfa
Bulgarian Mogul Vasil Bozhkov Exhibits His Thracian Collection at the National History Museum in Bulgaria
Sotheby's New York Sales of Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art Total a Record $71,320,518
Europe's Largest Antiques Association, LAPADA, Comes to Russia
Gl Holtegaard Presents A New Generation of Artists Who Have All Discovered The Magic of Clay
Turkish Horse Bridle Owned by Tipu Sultan for Sale at Bonhams in London for £60,000 to £90,000
Street Cries: Depictions of London's Poor on View at the Museum of London
United States Mint Introduces 2011 Native American $1 Coin at Bicultural Museum in Plymouth, Mass.
CAM Raleigh Announces New Executive Director, Inaugural Exhibitions Set to Open April 30
Spanish Artist Carlos Rodríguez-Méndez in Hot Water at S.M.A.K.
Long Beach Museum of Art Presents Art Auction XIV: Where Imagination Takes Flight
Miniature Portrait in Brooklyn Museum Collection Now Attributed to Rembrandt Pupil Gerrit Dou
Seattle Art Museum Receives $150,000 Grant from the Henry Luce Foundation
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|