An examination of independent regional publishing and cultural narrative formation in Marfa, Texas, during the mid-2010s. Drawing upon contemporaneous media records, including the publication Marfa Tatler, the study analyzes how artistic communities described, circulated, and negotiated questions of place, visibility, legitimacy, and cultural production during a period of accelerated institutional attention. The publication Minimalia | Art from the New Marfa Avant-Garde is reproduced and contextualized as a primary-source media artifact preserved within the Marfa Field Record (2011–2016). The analysis considers the relationship between regional publishing, cultural mythology, artistic legitimacy, symbolic capital, and systems of visibility operating in Far West Texas during the early twenty-first century. Part of the Erik Brunetti Foundation for the Arts Regional Media Studies Series.
Robert-Brunetti Emmelie (Mon,) studied this question.