Marfa, Texas, became a famed art haven. Now locals can’t afford it

Published: Mon, 04/24/23

Marfa, Texas, became a famed art haven. Now locals can’t afford it


Photo: Getty/halbergman

Axios
Emma Hurt
April 24, 2023

Marfa, Texas — set amid the vast Chihuahuan Desert, 90 miles from a Walmart and 60 miles from the Mexico border — paints an unusual rural American scene.

Yes, but: These shops largely attract tourists from big Texas cities and beyond, as well as artists and aficionados drawn by world-class installations by Donald Judd.

Catch up quick: Since his 1994 death, Judd's legacy has drawn the eye of the art world to the ethereal landscape of what had been a ranching town.

Why it matters: For longtime residents, the town's outsized reputation comes at a price: the ability to afford to live there.

Driving the news: In response to what many consider an affordability crisis, the Marfa Chamber of Commerce this year began lobbying the City Council to regulate short-term rentals.

What's happening: "Locals can't purchase anything," Presidio County chief appraiser Cynthia Ramirez told Axios. "Everybody that is making the market, it's people that are out of town."

Ramirez, who's been the appraiser for three decades, watched the market really pick up around 2011. "People would come into this office and say, 'I want to know who owns this house,' get the info, and next thing we know the house was sold."


Marfa, Texas, is set amid the vast Chihuahuan Desert, 90 miles from a Walmart and 60 miles from the Mexico border.
Photo: Prisma by Dukas/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Functioning as a town

Marfa Mayor Manuel Baeza told Axios the town is effectively "landlocked" by its signature, sprawling ranchland, which prevents outward development.

Livingston's Ranch Supplies is one of the handful of downtown stores still owned by a Marfa native.

Few locals can afford to rent out the town's high-end event space for wedding receptions and baby showers.

Marfa has 200 active short-term rentals, according to analytics company AirDNA — nearly 20% of the town's housing units. City manager Mandy Roane told Axios AirDNA estimated Marfa short-term rental operators saw $6.2 million in revenue last year.

As a result, "We're worried about being able to function as a town," said Abby Boyd, president of the Marfa Chamber of Commerce.

While some are benefiting from tourism, Boyd notes, not everyone is. Marfa's majority Mexican-American population, she said, are those most affected by the cost-of-living increase.

As Marfa's popularity has risen, both its total population and its proportion of Hispanic and Latino residents have dropped, Baeza pointed out.

"As beautiful as it is to live in Marfa, Texas, it's hard to live in Marfa, Texas," School Superintendent Oscar Aguero told Axios.


Donald Judd in Marfa, Texas, 1982.
Photo: Courtesy of Jamie Dearing © Judd Foundation. Donald Judd Art © Judd Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

"A cow town"

When Donald Judd lived in Marfa, it was not world-known, his daughter Rainer Judd, president of the Marfa-based Judd Foundation, points out.

Flashback: "I never mistook Marfa for an artists' colony. I always wanted it to be a cow town," Judd told writer William Langewiesche in his 1994 book "Cutting for Sign."

Judd chose Marfa for certain large-scale installations, including his famous 100 untitled works of milled aluminum boxes — set in artillery sheds from a shuttered military base that Judd redesigned with large windows so the boxes strikingly reflect the surrounding desert.

Mike Livingston knew Judd and even sold him a ranch. Judd would "go nuts if he saw it today," Livingston said. "He wanted seclusion. He didn't want all the people."

Rainer Judd told Axios she's very interested in solutions for Marfa. "Institutionally and personally, I feel an incredible responsibility," she said.

But regulation, she admits, doesn't mesh with the typical West Texas mindset.

Threat level: A Texas House committee held a hearing for a bill preempting localities from certain short term rental regulations.

Another idea, he said, could be resurrecting past attempts with county officials to develop affordable housing. "That might be a solution, but we haven't spoken about it lately."


Mike Livingston has rebuffed countless offers for his downtown Marfa property. He took over running Livingston's Ranch Supplies from his father in 1981.
Photo: Emma Hurt/Axios

"Property rich"

For the Marfa Independent School District, 94% of whom are Hispanic or Latino, the housing market has created a perfect storm of problems.

Driving the news: The district, considered "property rich" under Texas' school finance system, had to send nearly $1 million of its $4 million budget back to the state last year to support districts considered "property poor."

Yes, but: Nearly 90% of Marfa students qualify for the federal free and reduced lunch program. And Marfa has not seen the enrollment growth that might pad a wealthy district's budget, because new, often absentee property owners don't put children in school.

The biggest problem though, Aguero said, is teacher housing. Marfa ISD owns seven houses it rents to teachers at low rates. District leaders would like to buy more, he said, but can no longer afford the property prices.

Between the lines: A $57 million bond proposal for a new K-12 campus failed last year. Given Marfa's small tax base and high property taxes, it was "difficult to ask," Aguero said.

Plus: Millions of dollars' worth of property is off the rolls. Art foundations in Marfa — as across the country — are tax-exempt cultural institutions.

"I don't want to use the word anomaly, but we are," Aguero said.

Zoom in: Marfa ISD gets 1,400 annual hours of free labor from local art foundations, he said. "The Marfa Studio of Arts is my entire elementary art program," he said of a local nonprofit that provides free arts education to the district.


Donald Judd renovated dilapidated artillery sheds at the former Fort D.A. Russell for his famous 100 untitled boxes of milled aluminum.
Photo: Emma Hurt/Axios

"Two-edged sword"

Livingston told Axios the art world's adoption of his hometown has been a "two-edged sword."

The big picture: In choosing Marfa, many argue, Judd saved it from falling off the map. Tourism has supplanted ranching as the dominant industry. Other West Texas ranching towns have steadily shrunk since the 1950s.

Donald Judd, and the newcomers that followed, also opened the world up to Marfans, she said. "Marfa was pretty closed off," she said.

The bottom line: Rainer Judd said people thank her often for her father's impact on their lives. And she noted Marfa's problems are part of a global theme: "How do special places face their challenges and stay special?"


The famous "Prada Marfa" installation is not actually in Marfa — rather 30 minutes northwest.
Photo: Josh Noel/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
 


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