Donald Judd Furniture

Single Daybed 32

44 × 80 × 45.5 in
112 × 203 × 115 cm

 

Made for production in 1982

Originally designed in pine in 1978 as Single Daybed 12 for the two-story building at La Mansana de Chinati; later made for the second floor of 101 Spring Street

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Single Daybed can be seen at
101 Spring Street

This five-story cast-iron building located at the corner of Spring Street and Mercer Street in New York City was renovated by Don as a residence and studio. It was the first building he owned and where he developed architectural and installation concepts. Acquired: 1968

La Mansana de Chinati

This complex of buildings located in downtown Marfa encompasses a full city block and includes two large hangars where Don installed art across three studios and built an expansive library. Referred to as The Block, it includes a two-story house, formerly offices of the U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps, where Don and his family lived. The property includes a pool, garden, greenhouses, chicken coop, pergola, and outdoor furniture. Acquired: 1973/74

Eichholteren

Eichholteren is a former hotel and restaurant located on a lakeside  site near Kussnacht am Rigi, Switzerland. Judd used it as a home and studio beginning in 1987. He began renovation of the original 1943 structure in 1989, working step by step, from the top story to the bottom, until 1993, when the project was completed. Judd did not own the building and it was sold shortly after his death in 1994.

Casa Perez

This ranch located directly off Pinto Canyon Road about 45 miles outside of Marfa was used by Don as a weekend retreat. The adobe structure was built in the early 1900s as the main house of a goat ranch owned by the Perez family, after whom Don named the house. An extensive system of outdoor furniture and pergolas were later added to the property. Acquired: 1982

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