DuJour Summer 2018

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SUMMER 2018

DEFINING

DAKOTA

FANNING







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CONTENTS SUMMER 2018 Mother of Pearlescent

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STYLE 37 BLUSH HOUR An overnight case created for Grace Kelly inspires a beautiful Mark Cross box bag.

38 A LIFE IN CLOVER Van Cleef & Arpels celebrates the 50th anniversary of its iconic Alhambra collection.

40 GET WILD A cheeky swim capsule collection, a selection of sparkly new floral-inspired fine jewelry, and sexy stiletto collaboration are on our radar. Men’s wardrobes get an instant upgrade with limited-edition sneakers, fashionforward casual wear, and a debut accessories collection from Mansur Gavriel.

44 ON THE ROCKS Accessories that glitter and sparkle are summer’s most head-turning must-haves.

48 ENCHANTED GARDEN This season’s sexiest prints are wild-kingdom inspired.

51 TIME FRAME Hublot teams up with avant-garde street artist Shepard Fairey for the next installation in its “Hublot Loves Art” series.

BEAUTY 52 MOTHER OF PEARLESCENT Get radiant, natural looking skin with Aussie model Jessica Hart’s line LUMA, made with crushed pearls. Saturated shades are the perfect complement to summer whites.

On the Rocks

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56 MAN MADE Master perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud crafts Louis Vuitton’s first fragrances for men.

57 A BEAUTIFUL LIFE LXMI’s founder Leila Janah created her line to help bring “clean” beauty to women as well as help others in Africa.

58 MANE EVENT The next frontier of hair care is products customized specifically for you.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY S I M O N U P T O N ( M O D E L ) ; C H A N E L ( B AG )

54 PLAYING IT COOL

CAPTION

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42 SNEAK ATTACK


LAND

NAVITIMER 8

AIR

SEA

NAVITIMER 8 B01 CHRONOGRAPH 43 MANUFACTURE CALIBER B01 CHRONOMETER-CERTIFIED

BREITLING BOUTIQUE NEW YORK • MIAMI • ORLANDO SAN ANTONIO • LOS ANGELES LAS VEGAS • WASHINGTON DC DENVER




CONTENTS SUMMER 2018

LIFE 61 ARTIST IN RESIDENCE Tech entrepreneur turned artist Arthur Becker has transformed his SoHo townhouse into a showplace for his collections of antiquities and other works.

64 THE ROSÉ REVOLUTION Whispering Angel’s Paul Chevalier talks about the varietal’s ever-growing popularity.

66 SUITE DEAL

68 HOME FRONT Textile designer Kelly Hoppen introduces her first collection with Restoration Hardware.

70 FIT FOR A KING One King’s Lane’s summer pop-up becomes a permanent fixture in Southampton.

An Island Paradise Renewed

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TRAVEL 72 AN ISLAND PARADISE RENEWED Bucket-list destination Fiji finds a new purpose as a getaway for environmentally conscious luxury travelers.

75 THE FLYER’S CLUB Escape the city for the weekend with a quick helicopter trip to your favorite resort community.

76 PASSPORT TO WELLBEING Fitness and other holistic health offerings are playing a starring role in many luxury hotels’ amenity packages.

Fit for a King

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84 FAMILY DRAMA

Hereditary star Alex Wolff gives a terrifying behind-the-scenes look into his summer fright fest.

85 FOOD FIGHT

Eating Animals author Jonathan Safron Foer releases a documentary based on his groundbreaking book.

86 LA DOLCE VITA Celebrated New York chef Jonathan Benno opens three new eateries.

87 SWEET BEATS Breakout artist Bella Hunter is blazing a new trail in the music scene.

CULTURE

88 ROCK THE BOARDWALK Hard Rock Hotel & Casino opens a new gaming and music venue in Atlantic City.

81 FIT FOR A MCQUEEN

89 THE GOOD STUFF

A new documentary captures the life and work of the late fashion icon, Alexander McQueen.

Derek Jeter’s Turn 2 Foundation helps put kids on a healthy path; now Sharlee Jeter is expanding the mission with a new book.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY J A S O N B U S C H ( L A U C A L A ) ; I M AG E L A B 0 B E D , B AT H & B E YO N D ( I N T E R I O R )

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Miami’s Collection Suites combines a posh clubhouse environment with a elite storage facility for your high-end cars, art and wine.


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CONTENTS SUMMER 2018 FEATURES 92 I AM DAKOTA

The Alienist actress embarks on a year of saying yes, including to new travel opportunities and a role in the summer blockbuster, Ocean’s 8.

I Am Dakota

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Coat, $4,190, and trouser, $1,490, THE ROW, therow.com. Watch, $104,500, RICHARD MILLE, richardmille.com. Shoes, $425, BRUNO MAGLI, brunomagli.com.

100 DRESS REHEARSAL Full-length gowns from flirty to formal will elevate every occasion.

110 WHITE CUBE, DISRUPTED The Fondazione Prada opens in Milan with a number of mind-altering installations as visually captivating as the building itself. Actor Rupert Friend follows up his role as Homeland fan-favorite Peter Quinn with the series Strange Angel that explores a dark side of science.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY F R A N C E S C O C A R R O Z Z I N I

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116 TRAVELLING MAN


LEGENDS ARE FOREVER www.zenith-watches.com

PILOT TYPE 20 I Chronograph Extra Special

Cellini Jewelers New York, New York

Tourneau Bryant Park New York, New York

Timeless Luxury Watches Frisco, Texas

Tourneau Time Machine New York, New York

Westime Sunset West Hollywood, California

Vagu Miami, Florida

Swiss Fine Timing Chicago, Illinois


CONTENTS SUMMER 2018 132 HAMPTONS

Dress Rehearsal

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Jon Bon Jovi and his son, Jesse Bongiovi, launch a rosé inspired by the East End.

134 HOUSTON Underbelly chef Chris Shepherd debuts two new restaurant concepts.

136 LAS VEGAS Andy Masi’s latest projects—including Camden Cocktail Lounge—are ushering in a new era for Sin City nightlife.

138 LOS ANGELES

E! News’s Maria Menounos blazes a new trail with AfterBuzz TV.

140 MALIBU The Malibu Beach Inn gets an upscale renovation and farm-to-table eatery.

142 MARTHA’S VINEYARD Anne and Charles Hajjar open their third Vineyard hotel. DUJOUR.COM

144 MIAMI Neil Shah opens the Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club with a Mediterranean vibe and new restaurant offerings.

146 NANTUCKET

148 NEW YORK The next generation of the Cipriani family open the Mr. C Seaport hotel.

Jacket and skirt, price upon request, DIOR, dior.com. Blouse, $1,390, AKRIS, akris.ch. Boots, $830, MARYAM NASSIR ZADEH, mnzstore.com.

CITIES 126 ASPEN Artist Ai Weiwei is honored at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center.

128 CHICAGO Girl & the Goat chef Stephanie Izard introduces a new cookbook perfect for summer grilling.

130 DALLAS Beauty entrepreneur Jamie O’Banion’s Dallas-based skincare line launches a new lip-serum and contouring roller.

150 ORANGE COUNTY The Laguna Art Museum celebrates a milestone anniversary.

152 SAN FRANCISCO Grant K. Gibson’s new boutique travel company combines his years in interior design with his love of exotic destinations.

The Inn Crowd

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BACK PAGE 160 GARBO’S GOLD The iconic props of Hollywood’s most famous films will now be on display at the new Academy Museum in Los Angeles.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY W I L L I A M A N D S A R A H I R A K AWA ; N I C O L F R I E D L E R ( M A R T H A ’S V I N E YA R D )

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A father-and-son duo are helping building the resort community’s portfolio of highclass hotel offerings.



ED LETTER SUMMER 2018

28 SUMMER 2018

I

love the summertime for so many reasons and enjoy it both in and out of New York City. There’s something so special about those endless summer nights, trips to Nantucket and Martha’s Vinyard with friends, beach weekends along the coast, grilling out, rooftop patio get-togethers and trips back to Wisconsin where I grew up, to watch the sunset from our boat on Beaver Lake, glass of rosé in hand. This summer, in addition to being very excited about quality time spent with all the people I love, I’m especially enthusiastic about allthings DuJour. Putting together the summer issue of DuJour has given me serious wanderlust (you’ve been warned; you’re going to be tempted to book a vacation after flipping through our pages). Our gorgeous feature on Fiji is making me think about finally planning a larger trip abroad come fall, and our city guides, now with the inclusion of Nantucket and Martha’s Vinyard, are conjuring up dreams of endless summer days spent eating lobster rolls and yachting along the shore. Then there’s Chicago, one of my favorite cities in the world, which comes alive during the summer and fall months, rich with street festivals and outdoor dining spots. No matter where on the map you find yourself spending your summer, I hope you make it a great one. Here at DuJour, we’ll be soaking up every moment—and we’ll be hard at work planning our fall issue!

Kim Peiffer

Instagram: @peifferk1

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY F R A N K A L D U I N O ( P O R T R A I T ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F KO KO M O ( F I J I )

Fiji’s Kokomo resort offers stunning beaches and pristine waters, worlds away from the daily grind. above : View from the cottages, Nantucket.

DUJOUR.COM

left :


Be Over the Top

F O R D E T A I L S A N D A V A I L A B I L I T Y, P L E A S E C A L L 2 1 2 . 6 3 2 . 5 0 0 0 | R A I N B O W R O O M . C O M


CEO LETTER SUMMER 2018 Francesco Carrozzini, Dakota Fanning

S

ix summers ago, I was preparing to launch the very first issue of DuJour. Looking back, I am so proud of what DuJour has become, as we continue creating a magazine that gives our readers unparalleled access to the people and places that inf luence fashion, art, design, and business in each of our markets. On that note, I’m excited to announce this issue marks DuJour’s expansion into the resort communities of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. These beautiful New England destinations capture the beauty and essence of what DuJour represents. Each issue of DuJour goes behind the velvet ropes of the most talked about cities in the country, many of which I’ve been privileged to call my home through my travels and launches over the past 25 years. High on that list for the upcoming season is Aspen, with it’s many summer food and wine festivals; Las Vegas, with The Cosmopolitan, under the leadership of Bill McBeath, has created unparalleled luxury suites with panoramic views for a truly distinctive resort experience; and Miami, where the city’s most famous streets continue to be reinvented with new hotels, boutiques and restaurants. But above all, the place that’s truly near and dear to my heart is the Hamptons. It’s where I spend down time with my family and friends, and it’s where I kick off every summer with a Memorial Day party toasting DuJour’s cover star. Gurney’s Montauk Yacht Club Resort & Marina hosted the perfect fête for our summer cover girl Dakota Fanning. Guests started the holiday weekend watching the sunset from the patio of the resort, sipping Whispering Angel rosé and getting a first glimpse of all the exciting changes happening at the iconic Montauk property. That party—and the many others DuJour hosts throughout the year—is a special way for us to connect with our respective community, and toast the partners that fuel our continued success (Thierry Collot at Zenith watches and Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City in particular were instrumental in our recent Hamptons kickoff event). It’s very fortunate to be able to deliver the magazine from my backyard with our exclusive Hamptons estate drop, targeting some of the most prominent homes from Westhampton to Montauk. I’m also excited that one of my favorite New York City restaurants, Cipriani, is coming to the Hamptons for the first time with their new catering service, Cipriani On Location. I’m sure Italian food never had it so good in the Hamptons. No matter where your voyages take you, Du Jour w ill be there for you. Here’s to enjoying and celebrating all Jason Binn Twitter/ Instagram: @jasonbinn things DuJour on behalf of myself, my family, and our team.

Breitling’s Georges Kern

Dakota Fanning, Zenith’s Thierry Collot Camuto Group’s Louise Camuto

Compass’s Leonard Steinberg

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY G E T T Y I M AG E S

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Roche Bobois’s Jennifer Barre


HANDPICKED Marquee Brands’s Cory Baker

Andrea Correale Andrew Gifford Ariel Felix Caroline Niche Christian Poppert Bill Panoff

Hermes’s Peter Malachi

Adam Hochfelder

Richard Mille

The Crypto Company’s Michael Poutre

Pat Day Terry Villani

Anton Rupert

Paolo Torello- Viera Andrew Berg Emily Briody Cory Baker Georges Kern Joey Schottenstein Avi Ellman Barbara Zawlocki Ed Stein Roberto Guttmann Lauren Durden

Pamella Roland

Negi Darsses Paul Chevalier Gina Folin Benoit Vulliet Theirry Collot Peter Malachi Regis Roumila Giles Woodyer William Lauder Carrie Copeland Frederick Martel Gaetano Sciuto Chloe Tardy Niccolo Ragazzoni Todd Moyer Courtney Flint Skyler Stevenson Raychel Fensterstock Lewis Schultz Anthony Ciaomo Shauna Brook Dakota Fanning, CeCe and Penny Binn

Donna Marotta Michele Crowe Catanna Berger Benjamin Brafman Scott Kunz

Sandee and Steven Levine, Brunello Cucinelli’s Massimo and Natasha Caronna

Jane Hudis Mark Gordon Zach Overton Jean Marc Bories Leora Borzak Sanjay Hathiramaini Katie Kinsella Colin Cowie

Richard Cohn, Merchants Hospitality’s Adam Hochfelder

Jay Penske Jim Shea

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY G E T T Y I M AG E S

Katherine Holmes Damon Burrell JP Geoghegan Ward Simmons Rachel Sinert Michael Capace Abraham Merchant and Richie Notar

Baccarat’s Ward Simmons

Jeff Mancini Carey Collins Krug Lauren Peacock Howard Roy


EDITOR IN CHIEF

CEO/PUBLISHER

Kim Peiffer

Jason Binn

CREATIVE DIRECTOR

SA LES LE A D

Fryda Lidor

Cameron Chalfin

MANAGING EDITOR

M A R KETI N G

Jill Sieracki

Andrew Prasad

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

E XECUTIV E AS S I STA NT

Annie Caminiti

Michelle Diaz

PHOTO DIRECTOR

Kimberly Riordan

SENIOR DIGITAL EDITOR

DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS

Kasey Caminiti

William Pelkey

CITIES

PRODUCTION

REGIONAL EDITORS

IT MANAGER

Amiee White Beazley (Aspen/Denver)

Kevin Singh

Carly Boers (Chicago) Holly Crawford (Houston)

PRINT CONSULTANT

PAPER SOURCING

Calev Print Media

The Aaron Group

Holly Haber (Dallas/Fort Worth) Jeremy Kinser (Los Angeles, Orange County) Rebecca Kleinman (Miami, Palm Beach)

FINANCE CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER

David Nash (San Francisco)

Christine Juchem CONTROLLER

Dahlia Nussbaum ACCOUNTING MANAGER

Emma Vanduzer

DuJour (ISSN 2328-8868) is published four times a year by DuJour Media Group, LLC., 530 7th Avenue, Floor M1, NYC 10018, 646-679-1687. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission of the publisher is prohibited. The publishers and editors are not responsible for unsolicited material and it will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication subject to DuJour magazine’s right to edit. Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, photographs and drawings. Copyright © 2018 DuJour Media Group, LLC. For a subscription to DuJour magazine, go to dujour.com/free, call 800-783-4903 or email custsvc_dujour@fulcoinc.com

Crescent necklace with carved lapis lazuli, cabochon turquoise, brilliant-cut diamonds, 18–karat gold and platinum, price upon request, DAVID WEBB, davidwebb.com.


NEW ROOMS

BET TER STORIES

A unique luxury resort & casino


JORDI LIPPE-MCGRAW

SYLVIE BIGAR

Jordi Lippe-McGraw is a freelance writer covering travel, food and wellness for outlets like Condé Nast Traveler, Travel + Leisure, The New York Times, Forbes, and more. She’s traveled to more than 30 countries on all seven continents and is an avid puppy, penguin and truffle lover. In this issue, she explores the latest trend in luxury spas.

International food and travel writer Sylvie Bigar has contributed to Bon Appétit, Departures, Town & Country, and National Geographic Traveler, among other prestigious outlets. In 2016, her piece for the Washington Post, “French Cassoulet, an obsession boils over” won a gold Travelers’ Tales Solas Award for Best Travel Writing. She is also the co-author of Chef Daniel Boulud’s definitive and personal cookbook, Daniel: My French Cuisine.

KATIE JAMES WATKINSON

KEIJA MINOR

KEN RIVADENEIRA

DEBORAH WATSON

A former Miami resident, Ken Rivadeneira has covered luxury lifestyle and travel for such outlets as Worth, Hamptons, Ocean Drive and The Miami Herald, and produced publications for American Airlines, Marriott International and Art Basel, among other brands. He divides his time between Manhattan and the Maine seacoast.

“I have loved Dakota Fanning since I first saw her in I Am Sam, so I was looking forward to styling her in a more sophisticated way for this story,” says Deborah Watson. The editor and stylist’s work has appeared in Vanity Fair, V, Elle and Harper’s Bazaar; she regularly collaborates with photographers Boo George, Tom Schirmacher, Coliena Rentmeester, Ben Weller and Robbie Fimmano.

FRANCESCO CARROZZINI

MARK WILLIAMS & SARA HIRAKAWA

As a former travel editor at Brides and Travel + Leisure, Katie James Watkinson has stamped her passport everywhere from Indonesia to Mexico, French Polynesia to the Maldives. Along the way, she’s laid her head at countless five-star hotels (sometimes as an undercover critic!). She now calls Philadelphia home, where she is still working through the 12 steps of Over-Packers Anonymous.

Emmy-Award nominated director Francesco Carrozzini is internationally known for his portrait photography. He has directed music videos for Beyoncé, and Lenny Kravitz, and commercials for Apple and Fiat. His photographs have appeared in Vanity Fair, L’Uomo Vogue, and The New Yorker, among others. Francesco lives and works between Los Angeles and New York City.

While Keija Minor lives between Brooklyn and East Hampton, she considers Martha’s Vineyard her happy place. “My favorite family memories have been on the island,” says the former editor-in-chief of Condé Nast’s Brides, Uptown, and Gotham, “from when I had my first lemonade stand and got my first pair of roller skates to more recently, my sister’s wedding and grandmother’s 90th birthday party.”

Husband and wife photography team Mark Williams and Sara Hirakawa have worked for Neiman Marcus, Target, Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, Vogue Japan and Capital Records, among others. Based in Los Angeles, the duo shot “Dress Rehearsal” in this issue.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY M AT H I E U B O U TA N G ( C A R R O Z Z I N I ) ; R O M I N A R I VA D E N E I R A ( R I VA D E N E I R A ) ; K AT I E J O N E S ( WAT K I N S O N ) ; M A R K W I L L I A M S ( W I L L I A M S ) ; E R I K M E LV I N ( WAT S O N )

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CONTRIBUTORS SUMMER 2018


MINT CONDITION 8-ROOM RESIDENCE WITH VIEWS Carnegie Hill, New York City | 1136 Fifth Avenue | $6,850,000 | Every room is outward facing with beautiful views. A 60-foot expanse from the foyer through the gallery and formal dining room takes your breath away. The grand living room has a wood burning fireplace and enjoys direct Central Park views. The elegant dining room adjoins the eat-in chef’s kitchen. All 3 bedrooms overlook Central Park. There are 2 luxurious bathrooms and a guest powder room. Prewar details remain including high beamed ceilings, stunning floors, and more. Web# 3189571

DANIELA KUNEN Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker O : 212.891.7611 dkunen@elliman.com

elliman.com/newyorkcity

575 MADISON AVENUE, NY, NY 10022. 212.891.7000 © 2018 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.


INTRODUCING OUR NEW OFF-PREMISE CATERING SERVICE

To Serve is First to Love - Arrigo Cipriani


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DAV I D L E W I S TAY LO R

SUMMER 2018

Blush Hour

A sweet summery shade gives a feminine twist to a masculine-shaped bag.

Mark Cross’s Italianmade Grace boxes are inspired by the overnight cases created for actress Grace Kelly in the Alfred Hitchcock film Rear Window. Grace Small Box in cross grain Grapefruit, $2,295, MARK CROSS, markcross.com.


STYLE

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Princess Grace of Monaco, the former Grace Kelly, in an early Alhambra design. below : An Alhambra necklace in 18-karat yellow gold, lapis lazuli and diamonds.

A Life in Clover

How Van Cleef & Arpels is celebrating the 50th anniversary of its legendary (and lucky) Alhambra collection. BY LAURIE BROOKINS

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY G E O R G E S R O S E /G E T T Y I M AG E S / H U LT O N A R C H I V E S ( G R AC E K E L LY )

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lain Bernard laughs when asked to name his favorite pieces within Alhambra, the iconic Van Cleef & Arpels jewelry collection that has spawned seemingly endless combinations of metals, gemstones and other materials since its debut 50 years ago. “I personally love color, so when we use coral or malachite, for example, those stones truly give life to the collection,” says Bernard, CEO of the Americas for the Paris-based jewelry house. “But I also really appreciate the very classic styling, such as black and white in onyx and diamonds.” Alhambra’s clover motif was the brainchild of Jacques Arpels, nephew of Estelle Arpels, who founded the eponymous jewelry house in 1906 with her husband, Alfred Van Cleef. (History books will tell you Alfred founded the company with his father-in-law, gem dealer Salomon Arpels, but Estelle’s own passion for precious stones influenced the house from its beginnings.) A second-generation family member who joined Van Cleef & Arpels in 1932, Jacques was a big believer in the role luck plays in one’s life and was fond of giving four-leaf clovers found in his garden as gifts, often accompanied by poems he had written. His devotion to the idea of the fourleaf clover as a talisman led Jacques to create the first Alhambra necklace in 1968, a lengthy gold sautoir highlighted by the repeat of the diminutive clovers stationed at equal intervals. From the beginning, each clover has been edged in “gold pearls,” a textured detail that, not unlike a more traditional lucky charm, invites a woman to touch the piece while wearing it. But Jacques also had other thoughts in mind. “How it became an icon is not by accident, rather, it’s a story of passion, creativity and newfound freedom,” Bernard says. Fashion trends in 1968 were undergoing a sea change. Yves Saint Laurent had founded his Rive Gauche ready-to-wear boutique in Paris two years earlier, creating a democratic approach to women’s clothing that was both elegant and an affordable alternative to haute couture (he would open his first New York boutique in 1968). Designers like Paco Rabanne and Mary Quant, meanwhile, had embraced miniskirts as part of a bold new stance that mirrored the growing sense of feminism taking hold in Paris, London, New York and points beyond. It was within this environment that Jacques Arpels sought to create a jewelry collection that also conveyed a modern attitude, as well as a sense of effortlessness and versatility the wearer would appreciate. “It was such a rich time from so many angles,” Bernard says of the period. “There was this tremendous unleashing of creativity and a celebra-


“HOW IT BECAME AN ICON IS NOT BY ACCIDENT, RATHER, IT’S A STORY OF PASSION, CREATIVITY, AND NEWFOUND FREEDOM.” —ALAIN BERNARD

prices ranging from $6,350 to $63,500: mother of pearl in deep gray, paired with pink gold and diamonds; white gold with onyx and diamonds; yellow gold with rock crystal; and yellow gold with lapis lazuli and diamonds. The latter two designs should draw intense interest among collectors, especially the lapis, which hasn’t been seen in Alhambra since Jacques Arpels released the initial 1968 styles. “I am with clients almost every day, and there is an unmistakable addiction about Alhambra,” Bernard says. “All you have to do is check social media; everything you ever wanted to know about Alhambra is there. Collectors are always waiting for the next piece to come, and rumors are flying around all the time.” Fifty years after Jacques Arpels’ first necklace, one aspect is sure to remain a constant, Bernard says. “We love to explore nature, it’s a big part of the DNA of Van Cleef & Arpels, but always in a positive and benevolent way. As we like to say, ‘Our animals have no claws, and the roses have no thorns,’” he notes. “Alhambra is simply very happy jewelry, and it’s limitless. That’s the beauty of creating in our world.” vancleefarpels.com ■

SUMMER 2018

An Alhambra 50th-anniversary bracelet in gray mother of pearl and diamonds set in 18-karat rose gold. here and bottom right : Alhambra pieces are handcrafted in the Van Cleef & Arpels workshop. bottom left : Claude, Pierre and Jacques Arpels.

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tion of the increasing power of women,” he says. “Elegance, freedom, versatility, and the ability to be bold and audacious in your choices—this is the personality that is deeply embedded in this jewelry.” Grace Kelly and Romy Schneider were among the women who wore early Alhambra designs, while Jane Fonda, Reese Witherspoon and Blake Lively can often be seen wearing current pieces. Yet, even as Alhambra has continued to evolve, the techniques used in creating the pieces have changed little over 50 years. Bernard compares the process to high jewelry, with every piece handcrafted in the Van Cleef & Arpels workshops, while an exhaustive search for wellmatched stones is no different than the quest for perfectly matched emeralds or rubies destined for a high-jewelry necklace. “Sometimes it takes years to get the right stones and the right materials,” Bernard says. “We need to be patient. To wait one, two, five or 10 years, if that’s what is needed, that is what we do.” To celebrate the anniversary, Van Cleef & Arpels released four limited-edition designs with


STYLE

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Paper Swoon

Reed Krakoff’s new collection for Tiffany & Co. is a platinum dream.

GET WILD

Charlotte Olympia marks its 10-year anniversary with a swimwear collaboration with Adriana Degreas. FOR A DECADE, CHARLOTTE OLYMPIA’S plucky, pin-up-inspired designs have winked to the past. But for its 10-year anniversary, the brand, founded by property heiress Charlotte Olympia Dellal, is embracing change by teaming up with Brazilian designer Adriana Degreas for its first swimwear collaboration—a capsule collection of bikinis and maillots, cheeky swim caps and water-safe sandals for both adults and children. Bursting with bold prints and rich colors on high-waisted, ‘50s-esque silhouettes, the collection draws inspiration from golden age-star Carmen Miranda. “She represents the playful spirit of our country, the exotic and glamorous beauty with so much attitude and style,” says Degreas. Degreas and Dellal also have overlapping clientele, like Emma Roberts and Poppy Delevingne—an It-girl pedigree that’s channeled in the capsule collection’s campaign featuring Swiss socialite Sabine Getty. “I’ve always wanted to work with Sabine and thought this was the perfect time to collaborate,” says Degreas. “She is a muse of mine and also a very close friend of Charlotte’s.” adrianadegreas.com

AISLE STYLE Just in time for wedding season— British fashion designer Jenny Packham has partnered with L.K. Bennett for a collection of heels perfect for the fashion-forward bride. The four glittery footwear styles, which debuted in Packham’s 2019 Bridal Catwalk Show in London, include the Felicity sandal in metallic silver, plus three dusty blue options: the Benedetta, Summer and Brielle. lkbennett.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY B I L L A L B A R U K TA R I G H T ( S W I M ) ; L . K . B E N N E T T ( S H O E S ) ; T I F FA N Y & C O . S T U D I O ( N E C K L AC E ) .

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esigner Reed Krakoff has unveiled his first jewelry collection since taking over as Chief Artistic Officer at Tiffany & Co. The high- and fine-jewelry collection, entitled Paper Moon, includes petal-inspired pendants, ear r ings, bracelets and rings in highly polished platinum, adorned with tanzanite or Tiffany yellow diamonds. To support the line’s debut, the storied jeweler released its “Believe in Dreams” campaign featuring Elle Fanning and A$AP Ferg and its first ever original song, a modern remake of “Moon River,” available exclusively on Spotify. tiffany.com



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SNEAK ATTACK!

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THIS SEASON’S MOST INDEMAND KICKS will be the chic collaboration between Oliver Cabell and Berlin-based visual artist AESTHETNIK, one of the pioneers of hyper-minimalist photography and the Image Director at Highsnobiety. This clean-lined and unadorned edition of Oliver Cabell’s Low 1 silhouette is limited to just 75 pairs. Oliver Cabell CEO Scott Gabrielson previously worked with British designer Cole Buxton for a limited-edition shoe that sold out in less than two minutes and had a 500-person wait list. Should you not make it to the top of the queue for this collaboration, Oliver Cabell regularly drops other low top sneakers and super soft Chelsea boots in limitedquantities. olivercabell.com

Pro-Level Posh

F MAN, SURE Purveyor of quality leather goods Mansur Gavriel is introducing its first accessories collection for men. Featuring vegetable-tanned leathers, the line is designed in New York and crafted in Italy. Browse from a selection of minimalist must haves, like zip wallets, travel bags, backpacks, briefcases (also available in leather-lined canvas), attaches and dopp kits in cool neutrals like cammello, brandy, olive and navy (the brand’s rich Blu). mansurgavriel.com

inding shirts that f it “just right” can be challenging enough when you’re a standard size, but what if you’re built like a first-round NFL draft pick, such as Tremaine or Terrell Edmunds? You look towards the made-to-measure services of And rew Ja ng, t he fou nder of Ad r ia en Black, a private label worn by top players in the NFL and NBA, including AJ McCarron and Jeremy Lin. Now, Jang is introducing his first ready-to-wear collection featur ing t-shir ts, sweaters, jackets, and other outer wear, all designed and made in New York City. A highlight of the collection: The buttery soft Owen suede jacket, perfect for early summer nights. adriaenblack.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E R E Z S A B AG/ B L A U B U T E D I T I O N / A U G U S T ( M O D E L ) ; S U Z A N N E SA RO F F ( P RO D U C TS )

The menswear designer behind the NFL draft’s best dressed is out with a new collection of summer staples.


CALIBER RM 67-01 EXTRAFLAT

RICHARD MILLE BOUTIQUES ASPEN • BAL HARBOUR • BEVERLY HILLS • BUENOS AIRES • LAS VEGAS • MIAMI • ST. BARTH • TORONTO NEW YORK CITY FLAGSHIP BOUTIQUE OPENING SOON


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STYLE

On the Rocks

Elegant or playful, these summer accessories for day or night are sure to make a splash this summer. PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVID LEWIS TAYLOR FASHION EDITOR LAURIE BROOKINS STYLING BY JOHN OLSON

clockwise from top left : Grosgrain oxford pump with jewelry accent, $2,200, CHANEL, chanel.com. 100 Points crystal Champagne coupe (sold as set of six), $960, LALIQUE, lalique.com. Silver slide with crystal heel, $1,995, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana.com. Elite Lady Moonphase watch in stainless steel, $5,900, ZENITH, zenithwatches.com. Serpenti earrings in 18-karat white gold with emeralds and diamonds, $25,000, BULGARI, bulgari .com. Tiffany Paper Flowers bracelet in platinum with pear-shaped and round brilliant diamonds, $390,000, TIFFANY & CO., tiffany.com.


clockwise from top: White Madame Viv’ bag, $2,650, ROGER VIVIER, rogervivier .com. “Centered Rhyme” twill silk scarf, $395, HERMÈS, hermes. com. Panthère de Cartier tripleloop bracelet watch in 18-karat yellow gold, $35,800, CARTIER, cartier.com. Chroche Du Desert nude crepe satin and chiffon, $1,295, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, christianlouboutin.com. Bamboo pendant with Fashion item, DESIGNER, diamonds in 18-karat yellow website.com. item, gold, $6,900,Fashion JOHN HARDY, DESIGNER, website.com. johnhardy.com. Serpenti Fashion in item, DESIGNER, bracelet 18-karat pink gold website.com. Fashion item, with mother of pearl and DESIGNER,$68,000, website.com. diamonds, BULGARI, Item, DESIGNER, site.com. bulgari.com.


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from top: Lily embroidery long lined triangle bra, $148, FLEUR DU MAL, fleurdumal.com. Summer 2018 sunglasses, $585, CHANEL, chanel. com. Pink plastic DG logo clutch, $2,595, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana.it. Champagne glasses (sold as a set of six) ,$990, BACCARAT, us.baccarat.com. Harlequin ring featuring brilliant-cut diamonds, blue and white enamel set in 18-karat gold and platinum, $28,000, DAVID WEBB, davidwebb. com. Leather sandal with crystal details, $645, EMPORIO ARMANI, armani.com.



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Hummingbird brooch featuring a South Sea cultured pearl, $29,800, DAVID WEBB, davidwebb.com

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CAROLINA HERRERA

BY LAURIE BROOKINS

BALENCIAGA

Fortitude fragrance in horned-ram decanter, $295, ROBERT GRAHAM, robertgraham.com Divas’ Dream Phoenix tourbillon watch in 18-karat rose gold with hand-painted dial, price upon request, BULGARI, bulgari.com

Medium cognac crocodile shoulder flap bag with metal bee closure, $22,000, GUCCI, gucci.com

Amazonia loafer, $595, AQUAZZURA FOR DE GOURNAY, aquazzura.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY G E T T Y I M AG E S ( R U N WAY ) ; GA M M A . R A P H O ( C A R O L I N A H E R R E R A , V I C T O R V I R G I L E ) . O P P O S I T E PAG E : P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E S T R O P /G E T T Y I M AG E S ( VA L E N T I N O R U N WAY, O S C A R D E L A R E N TA )

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Kelly one-piece swimsuit, $195, ONIA, onia.com

Animal motifs and bold florals top your summer wardrobe wish list.

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Enchanted Garden


Dior a Versailles Cote Jardins “Trianon Diamant” necklace, price upon request, DIOR FINE JEWELRY, dior.com

Porcelain Tart Platter, $390, HERMÈS, hermes.com

Pink rose wedge, $4,995, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana.it

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OSCAR DE LA RENTA Fashion item, DESIGNER, website.com.

Icona watch in white gold set with diamonds and blue and green enamel, price upon request, BUCCELLATI, us.buccellati.com

VALENTINO Braylea floral pump, $89, GUESS, macys.com


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Orchid sunglasses, $314, L.G.R, lgrworld.com

Mouth-blown glass fishbowl, $500, TIFFANY & CO., tiffany.com

RALPH LAUREN

ESCADA

Callison offthe-shoulder top, $138, BCBGMAXAZRIA, BCBG.com

Set Sail

From Nantucket to St. Tropez, nautical stripes and sea-inspired accessories are a classic summer must-have. BY LAURIE BROOKINS

Nautical-stripe Faye sweater with boat neckline, $334, 360CASHMERE, 360cashmere.com

From Rome to New York ring in 18-karat pink gold with coral, lapis and diamonds, $17,200, BULGARI, bulgari.com

Viv’ V Stripes Cabas mini bag, $2,650, ROGER VIVIER, rogervivier.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY G E T T Y I M AG E S ( R U N WAY )

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Striped anchorembroidered mule, $1,105, SANAYI313, bergdorfgoodman.com


Time Frame One of today’s most prolific and influential artists, Shepard Fairey partners with Hublot to unveil an all-new limited-edition timepiece. BY ROBERTA NAAS

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in the form of a f loral looking scroll pattern. The strap is Hublot’s patented “one-click” mechanism that allows for interchangeability. Each of the two editions of the Big Bang Meca-10 Shepard Fairey watches will be made in a limited edition of 100 pieces, each retailing for $28,300. “Hublot is about craftsmanship and a very refined execution and that to me is what my art is about: doing whatever it takes to create a visual that I think is important to create,” says Shepard Fairey. “The amazing thing about working with Hublot is that they say, ‘we can try anything that you want’; they were very open to anything that I wanted to experiment with and they take a lot of pride in pushing the envelope in terms of technique.” “While all of our artist partners are world renowned, joining forces with Shepard Fairey truly raises the bar for our ‘Hublot Loves Art’ program in terms of scale and prominence, as Americans would easily recognize his iconic work,” says Jean-Francois Sberro, President of Hublot North America. “For the Shepard Fairey timepieces, we worked closely to translate the elements that are characteristic to his art on a micro-scale to retain a look that is signature to both brands.” hublot.com  ■

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Hublot’s Big Bang Meca-10 Shepard Fairey timepieces in gray and blue, $28,300 each.

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P H O T O G R A P H Y C O U R T E S Y O F H U B LO T ( WAT C H E S ) ; G I L L E S T O U C A S ( P O R T R A I T )

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t isn’t often that watch brands team up with people outside the industry for timepieces, but when they do, it is typically with classic artists or architects. Hublot, however, has blazed new ground by building relationships with today’s most popular street artists. The newest collaboration, announced in Los Angeles at a large-scale celebration, is with the highly renowned Shepard Fairey whose works are in the collections of such prestigious museums as Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Fairey is not only a contemporary street artist, but also a graphic designer, illustrator and activist. Among his more famed works is the Barack Obama “Hope” poster, created in 2008 during the US Presidential election. He is also the founder of OBEY Clothing and creator of the well-known “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” sticker campaign. One of the most avant-garde contemporar y watch brands on the market, Hublot’s main concept in watchmaking is the Art of Fusion, which is also its tag line. Under that umbrella, wherein the brand fuses new materials, concepts and more, it has several offshoot campaigns including “Hublot Loves Art.” In this project, the brand has teamed with different artists, such as Romero Britto, Chen Man, and now, Shepard Fairey to create special timepieces. The new Big Bang Meca-10 Shepard Fairey watch is part of the Big Bang Meca-10 family of Hublot watches that was first unveiled to the world two years ago. The concept for the watch was inspired by the classic Meccano mechanical construction toys, and the watch movement has a geardriven mechanical aesthetic. The bold architectural design of the skeletonized manually-wound movement, with a 10day cogwheel power reserve indicator, is comprised of 223 components. The HUB 1201 movement is designed to offer 10 days of power reserve, hence the name Meca-10. For the Big Bang Meca-10 Shepard Fairy series there are two timepieces being offered, one in gray with bold red accents, and one in blue. Each version boasts several features designed by Fairey. For instance, there is an opening at 3:00 that displays Fairey’s “Star Gear” logo. Additionally, a red dot is reveled when the movement’s power reserve has run low; juxtaposed to that dot is a gear wheel at 6:00 that indicates exactly the number of days left of power reserve. Crafted in a 45mm carbon fiber and Texalium case with a décor designed by Fairey, each Big Bang Meca-10 Shepard Fairey watch also sports a rubber and calfskin strap with embossed design that ref lects Fairey’s distinctive artwork


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Mane Event

Could customized shampoos, conditioners and other hair-care treatments spell the end of bad hair days forever? BY KARI MOLVAR

S

itting at my laptop, I placed my order by checking off things like gluten-free, vegan and my preferred farm-fresh ingredients. I felt like I was ordering a salad when, in fact, I was picking out my shampoo from Prose, a new customized hair-care line that lets devotees build natural, eco-certified products from scratch. In five days, I would receive my kit, complete with a gentle cleansing shampoo (no silicone, please), a color-protective conditioner (hold the heavy oils) and a volumizing mask, all tailored to my exact hair type and climate conditions, infused with my preferred violet scent and stamped with my name on the bottles. Welcome to the world of personalized hair-care, a rapidly expanding market filled with smart-tech brands that want to radically transform the traditional one-size-fits-all approach. In the era of customized everything (sneakers, vitamins, lipstick), one could argue that hair-care has lagged sorely behind. Whether in the drugstore or at the salon, the range of formulas only speaks to pre-determined hair types and needs, the ingredients may contain outdated chemicals or animal by-products, and the search for a suitable match usually involves a lot of time, trial-and-error and half-empty bottles in your bathroom. And frankly, women—and men—are over it. “I realized how unhappy people were with the products [out there],” says Zahir Dossa, the co-founder of Function of Beauty, a customized hair-care brand based in New York. Most companies, she contends, “don’t have the ability to target each person as an individual,” a problem that she solved by building a team of cosmetic scientists, MIT engineers and developers. That team devised a proprietary algorithm that delves into strand structure, scalp moisture and 17 different hair goals (from fixing split ends to de-

fining curls) to blend shampoos and conditioners precisely calibrated for each client. “No two formulas are ever the same,” she says—literally, there are “more formulas than there are humans on earth.” Similarly, Prose analyzes 85 data points, including your diet (vegetarian? low calorie?), where you workout (indoors or out?) and if you color (permanent or semi-permanent dye?) to devise its bespoke blends, which are made from a pantry-like lab filled with 76 natural ingredients and scents sourced from Provence. Getting this personal allows brands to directly zero in on those whose hair needs have been largely ignored or underserved until now. Form, for example, speaks to women from all different ethnic backgrounds who have a variety of textures. Online consultations touch on how you cleanse (perhaps with conditioner, co-wash, oils or nothing at all), what styles you wear (extensions, weaves, wigs), if you chemically treat your hair (with straightening, for example, or if you’re transitioning off it) and if you have braids or locs, among other factors. After probing this data, Form gives you a cu-


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rated routine to follow using ready-made products from their collection—think 3-in-1 leave-in lotions, elongating curl crèmes and moisturizing pomades. More inclusive hair-care means rarely talked-about issues— like hair loss—are now part of the customization conversation. Danish clinic Harklinikken, for instance, now offers online assessments to diagnose hair loss and thinning (an issue that affects 45 percent of women and men in the U.S.). Clients are given a madeto-measure Extract, a liquid composed of ingredients derived from plants and cow’s milk (and occasionally a low-strength minoxidil), along with a personalized regimen of shampoos and conditioners to stimulate regrowth. Beyond the convenience factor, the results are impressive. Founder Lars Skjoth says clients typically see a “30 to 70 percent increase in hair quality and amount,” and the concept has taken off so well that he plans to open a clinic in New York City this summer. German dermatologist Timm Golueke, M.D., meanwhile, recently started offering his prescription-strength, bespoke Stimulating Serum to clients he meets with via FaceTime, and to maintain thickness and density, he launched an antioxidant-rich shampoo and root-strengthening supplement Stateside this spring. For some, though, thinking about your mane on such a micro level can be overwhelming. What if you’re not sure about your scalp’s hydration level or whether your strands are of medium thickness? In that case, having an expert weigh in can be hugely helpful. Prose, for example, partners with salon stylists who can guide you through their online assessment, and Beauty of Function opened a lab in New York City this spring where you can work out your formula with a pro (and see it made on the spot). At Schwarzkopf Professional’s forthcoming SalonLabs, slated to arrive in the U.S. this year, you can get really sci-fi: stylists measure your strands’ moisture level, color tone and overall health on a molecular level using a handheld tool outfitted with near-infrared and light sensors. In true Jetsons-style, a Customizer machine takes all that data and mixes up personalized products, dispensed in bottles while you wait. With zero guesswork involved, consider this the wave of the future. ■

Function of Beauty creates shampoos and conditioners unique to you; Form’s collection includes cleansers, conditioners, stylers and finishing products; stylists help you select the correct Prose formulations.

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E R E Z S A B AG/ B L A U B U T E D I T I O N / A U G U S T ( M O D E L ) ; S U Z A N N E SA RO F F ( P RO D U C TS )

clockwise from top left :

All About You

A look at other beauty goods that let you get up close and personalized. Makeup: With Lancôme Le Teint Particulier, an expert measures your exact skin tone with a scanner, and then a machine uses those measurements to whip up a custommatched foundation on the spot at select Nordstrom locations. Fragrance: Hawthorne taps into your body chemistry and lifestyle habits to identify your ideal scent preferences, which it translates into bespoke colognes. Skincare: LOLI Beauty lets you blend your own formulas in minutes: just take the powdered base and spike it with nutrientrich mix-ins, like hydrating prickly pear seed extract or firming red maca root, to form everything from cleansers to scrubs to face oils, suited to your needs.


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Summer means a new crop of makeup and skincare launches designed to keep you safe from the sun and cool from the heat—without sacrificing that bronzy glow. BY KIM PEIFFER PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVID LEWIS TAYLOR

GHUO P TTO E RG C RA R EPDHIYT H E R E T K

Playing It Cool


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clockwise from top left : Edition 04 Orchard fragrance, $165, GOOP, goop.com. Jet Lag mask, $48, SUMMER FRIDAYS, sephora.com. The Moisturizing Cool Gel Cream, $315, LA MER, net-a-porter.com. Rose quartz roller, $38, JENNY PATINKIN, neimanmarcus.com. Résistance Extentioniste, $33-$51, KÉRASTASE, available in August at kerastase-usa.com. Clean Bee Ultra Gentle facial cleanser, $28, FARMACY, farmacybeauty .com. Fluffy cheek brush, $72, and Doomed multi-blender, $34, JENNY PATINKIN, neimanmarcus .com. Soleil contouring compact in Nude Glow, $110, TOM FORD, sephora.com. opposite page, clockwise from far left : Skin Caviar Essence-In-Foundation Broad Spectrum SPF 25 suncreen, $195, LA PRAIRIE, laprairie.com. Ultra-Shine lip color in Indulgent, Rapturous, and Willfull, $54, TOM FORD, neimanmarcus.com. Cream and Powder Eye Color in Azure Sun, $62, TOM FORD, sephora .com. Light Moisture UV Defense SPF 50, $39, SKINCEUTICALS, skinceuticals.com. Anti-Pollution Sunshine Serum, $36, DRUNK ELEPHANT, sephora.com.


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Man Made

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Louis Vuitton debuts a fragrance collection for men, inspired by the house’s history of exploration. BY JILL SIERACKI

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f your company is more than 160 years old, like Louis Vuitton, it’s hard to imagine there is anything that hasn’t been done. Yet, that’s exactly what’s happening in 2018 as the luxury house introduces its first fragrances for men. Developed by Louis Vuitton’s master perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud, the collection includes five different scents, each inspired by the brand’s history around travel. “I was dreaming about perfumes that a woman would love to smell on a man,” says Belletrud. “I wanted to create a unique personality for our fragrances, with very specific emotions.” To date, Louis Vuitton has released seven aromas for women, including Le Jour Se Leve, which was introduced in March of this year. For men, Belletrud crafted L’Immensité, a spicy blend of ginger and grapefruit; Nouveau Monde, that mixes leather with cocoa and saffron; musky Orage; the lemon- and cedar-based Sur la Route; and Au Hasard, that combines sandalwood with cardamom. “If we look at fashion for men today, we can notice a lot of colors, flowers and freedom,” says Belletrud of the collection, which took five years to produce. “Nowadays, men dare to wear colorful clothes, they are more disruptive, less classical, but still chic. It is time for men’s perfumes to be in the same mood. Perfumery for men is evolving, just as fashion is.”

Belletrud, who also created such iconic scents as Jean Paul Gaultier Classique and Opium Pour Homme by Yves Saint Laurent, began studying fragrance under the tutelage of his father, a perfumer, at age 8. By 18, he created his first formula; he was named Louis Vuitton’s master perfumer in 2012. “Creating a perfume awakens one’s most hidden thoughts, deepest recollections, it questions the most intimate and profound part of our personality,” says Belletrud, whose inspiration for the collection is drawn from his exotic travels and experiences, including sampling Mayan hot chocolate in Guatemala, as well as his home base of Provence. “I start from myself, from my thoughts, then I try to enclose them into a perfume bottle. I believe creating a fragrance is recounting one’s self, but without running.” Similar to the women’s collection, the men’s fragrances are contained in apothecary-esque bottles that are exquisite in their simplicity. Silver caps differentiate them from the brass-topped scents for women; the engraved LV recalls the symbol that runs throughout the brand’s leather goods. “I want people to have the delight of wearing something exceptional,” says Belletrud of Les Parfums. “You must recognize a Louis Vuitton perfume in the street. Not because it is too powerful, just because it’s good. For me, this is the definition of luxury.” us.louisvuitton.com ■

“Perfumery for men is evolving, just as fashion is,” says Master Perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud of Louis Vuitton’s debut collection of scents for men, Les Parfums (above).

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY C O U R T E S Y O F LO U I S V U I T T O N

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BEAUTY


A BEAUTIFUL LIFE Leila Janah’s luxury skincare line LXMI not only transforms your skin, it also helps women in East Africa. BY ANNIE CAMINITI

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY L I A N N A TA R A N T I N F O R S A K A R A L I F E ; C O U R T E S Y L X M I .

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ver since Danielle DuBoise and Whitney Tingle changed the concept of nutritional delivery programs with the launch of their company, Sakara Life, celebrities and wellness junkies have been fawning over their plant-based meals. Now, the girls have launched a new program designed to help you feel your best in 10 days—but this time you’re the chef. The 10-Day Reset marries the core philosophies of the Sakara Life nutrition program (beauty water, detox teas, probiotics) with 20 of the program’s most popular plant-based recipes that you can make at home. “Some people enjoy cooking for themselves, so our new program allows us to continue to be their nutritionist while they get to continue their chef skills,” says DuBoise. “This program is designed give you that glow in 10 days by healing the gut and flooding your body with all the nutrients it needs to feel and look its best.” Start your morning by whipping up a mineral-rich beauty water, keep your energy up with plant protein-rich energy bars, and fuel your mind, body and soul with nutrient-dense meals that have become the favorites of Sakara Life devotees (butternut squash tacos are the girls’ favorite dinnertime recipe). “Studies have shown that your gut can begin to shift within days of switching your diet,” says Tingle. “You will absolutely see and feel a difference in your body in 10 days. Remember, your microbiome (that six pounds of bacteria living in your gut) is dictating almost everything about your health—from your mood, ability to lose or gain weight, energy levels, sex drive and skin clarity. sakaralife.com ■

ON THE GLOW

These beauty-boosting superfoods pay-it-forward to girls in need. After years of settling for sugar-heavy, low nutrient foods that made them feel bloated and tired, models Chrissy Blair and Jayla Harnwell founded Kalumi BEAUTYfood. Each meal replacement Kalumi bar is fortified with beautyboosting super foods including marine collagen peptides, vitamin-rich sweet potatoes and organic yacon syrup. These nutritious ingestibles are designed to keep you fit, full and gorgeous. Kalumi also encourages self-love and female empowerment by donating all the proceeds from their new flavor “Cheeky Chai” to Girl’s Inc., a Los Angeles–based charity aimed at mentoring girls ages 6 to 18. Says Blair and Harnwell, “We are so excited to support a charity that helps young girls realize their full potential by encouraging them to grow up strong, smart and bold.” kalumihealth.com

SUMMER 2018

BY KIM PEIFFER

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The dynamic duo behind Sakara Life launch a 10-day customizable cleanse that begins in your own kitchen.

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DIY Detox

TH ERE ARE SH ELVES OF BEAUTY PRODUCTS that do great things for your sk in a nd ot hers that do great things for the world. But natural beauty pioneer Leila Janah’s lu xur y skincare line, LXMI, does both. Pronounced “LUX-me” a nd na med a f t er t he Hindu goddess of beauty and prosperity, LXMI’s products are safe enough to eat, and also give work to women in East Africa. “I came up with the brand because I believe in clean beauty, and the first step towards this is to get rid of any existing toxins,” says Janah. “The second step is to then add in things that are good for you.” Four years ago, while visiting an outpost of her Northern Uganda nonprofit, Samasource, a digital company that lifts people out of poverty through work, Janah discovered nilotica, a natural shea butter or coconut oil equivalent that contains more than 25 percent additional fatty acids. The entrepreneur saw the superfood being used by women in East Africa to heal wounds, soothe scars and as a plant-based medicine for various ailments. Nilotica became the signature ingredient in her luxury line, including her signature “everything” product, Pure Nilotica Melt. “It’s 2018, we shouldn’t have to choose between a luxury experience and doing good in the world—the two are one and the same.” lxmi.com


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Mother of Pearlescent Model Jessica Hart’s skincare and beauty line LUMA is your ticket to natural radiance. BY ANNIE CAMINITI

products and samples, but the one thing I am consistent about is removing my makeup every night and exfoliating at least twice a week,” she says. “I use Bioderma Micellar Cleansing Water to remove dirt and makeup from the day, then I exfoliate with my LUMA Crushed Pearl Facial Polish and mist my face with Nuskin NaPCA Facial Mist. I’ll then add a few drops of my LUMA Brighten Up Beauty Serum into my moisturizer, which changes a lot depending on the season or how dehydrated my skin is. I finish off with a Lepaar Skin lip balm on my lips and a touch on the highs of my cheekbones.” lumabeauty.com ■

WE WANTED TO FIND AN AUSTRALIAN-MADE INGREDIENT THAT WOULD ILLUMINATE THE SKIN IN A HEALTHY, NATURAL WAY.”—JESSICA HART

from top:

LUMA’s Just a Touch Lip and Cheek Tint in Lady Luck, Signorita, and Muse. The line’s creamy On the Glow Highlighter is available in five shimmering shades.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY S I M O N U P T O N ( H A R T ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F L U M A B E A U T Y ( P R O D U C T S ) ; D I A N E L A B O M B A R B E , G E T T Y I M AG E S ( P E A R L N E C K L AC E ) .

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hile getting glowy isn’t a new trend in beaut y, “nontour,” the term to describe using illuminator without the contrasting darker shades, is decidedly less familiar. But for Aussie model Jessica Hart it’s the secret behind her lit-from-within luminosity and the cornerstone of her beauty collection, LUMA. “LUMA is all about luminous, glowing and radiant skin,” says Hart of the line that’s made from crushed pearls. “We wanted to find an Australian-made ingredient that would illuminate the skin in a healthy, natural way. A f ter a lot of brainstorming and sourcing, we decided that pearls were our key ingredient.“ Hart’s mom taught her early about leading a healthy, holistic lifestyle and it’s a philosophy she’s infused into both her product line and her beauty beliefs, which include anti-concealing and embracing uniqueness. “I have been in the modeling industry for over 10 years now and I have tried many skincare and makeup products,” says Hart. “When I first created LUMA five years ago, there was a huge gap in the market for affordable, natural products that took pride in its formulations and was true to its ethos. Our skincare and makeup products are all about making your skin radiant and luminous, as well as looking healthy and natural.” All of LUMA’s skin and makeup essentials are formulated to enhance natural and authentic radiance. The main ingredient, pearls, reportedly offer light reflecting properties that instantly even the appearance of your complexion, heal imperfections, reduce redness, and assist regenerating anti-aging collagen. Pearls are also rich in amino acids and minerals for intense hydration. The line, which includes both skincare as well as cosmetics, contains no parabens or sulfates and does not test on animals. Hart herself uses much of the line in her own beauty regimen. “I’m always trying new


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FOLLOW THESE TIPS FROM JESSICA HART FOR RADIANT SKIN:

GUTTER CREDIT HERE TK

“Start from within,” says Hart. “Drink lots of water, take your vitamins and supplements. I also like to use vitamin mists and sprays to help keep my skin supple and radiant throughout the day.” ››

Sunscreen, always! SPF 50+ is a must!

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Exfoliate your face with an exfoliating brush.

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Use highlighter on the high points of your face where the sun would naturally hit.

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Use treatments in your hair after going to the beach or swimming.

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Apply a clear lip balm to the highs of your cheekbones!


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Cash Crush, 2017, by Arthur Becker.

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Artist in Residence

In a townhouse in SoHo, Arthur Becker lives the loft life surrounded by the things he loves. BY DEBORAH L . MARTIN


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ormer tech mogul and current artist Arthur Becker acquired three townhouses in SoHo as part of an investment and development deal, but he wasn’t committed to the idea of actually living there. “I was going to just stage one of them,” he says. “A broker friend suggested doing Holiday House there and introduced me to Iris Dankner.” Dankner, an interior designer and breast cancer sur vivor, founded Holiday House in 2008 to benefit breast cancer research. Becker and Dankner met at a showhouse event in the Hamptons, and they agreed to meet again in Manhattan to discuss using the new townhouse

as a location for the next fundraiser. “After the showhouse he wanted me to stage the townhouse, rather than design it for his personal use,” says Dankner. “Eventually he decided that he wanted to live there, and he got more and more involved in the design decisions.” The pair was a perfect match—Dankner has a fine arts degree and she understood Becker’s need to be surrounded by art, his own and others. Becker liked Dankner’s sense of style, and the fact that she appreciated his collections of ancient objects. “There is a stillness to these rooms with the neutral colors and the light,” he says. “It feels like a loft space. I love sitting in the parlor surrounded by the things I love. Antiquities have a deep resonance.”

Becker’s art and aesthetic were an important factor in the design. Although he took a long and successful detour into the business world, he majored in ceramics and photography in college. His artwork Money Mandalas and Moneyflies merge both of those worlds. “I have a relationship with money, and a fascination with it,” he says. “I’m interested in the ways people assign value to things.” In both series, Becker transforms currency into another form by 3D printing and then folding the notes, origami-style, into butterf lies and shapes. The Mandalas series is inspired by the geometric shapes of Tibetan thangkas, and Money Flies questions our perceptions of value, vanity and ego. The origami butterf lies, made from currency, are set on backgrounds of fashion colors like Hermès Orange and Tiffany & Co.’s Scuba Green. He is currently at work on a large-scale installation for the St. James Building in Boston. Having already installed Money Mandala and Money Flies in the space, he is expanding that project with a set of dining tables and chairs that are created from coins and primitive objects. “I collect antiquities, so I thought it would be interesting to take these objects which are quite small, and 3D print them and scale them up,” Becker says. “The 10-foot, cast aluminum tables are based on an African scroll that is 8-inches long. The chair backs are scaled-up Qin Dynasty coins shaped like a truncated man with f lared pants. The seats will be made of plexiglass, so that they disappear, and it will just look like a row of coins.” This use of technology allows Becker to appreciate the antiquities that he loves in a new way, by making them modern, but preserving their geometry, scale and gestural qualities. Says the artist, “These things represent the history of man and man’s societal development. With the use of technology I am trying to make them part of modern life.” ■

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY D O U G H O LT ( I N T E R I O R S ) ; J A S O N M A L I H A N ( P O RT R A I T )

Cash Crush, 2017, by Arthur Becker, is made from digital printed currency and money bands. this page , clockwise from top left : In the master bedroom, a seating area with chairs from Dennis Miller Associates. Over the fireplace, Money Flies by Becker. The dining room table by Restoration Hardware is illuminated by a chandelier by Reagan Hayes. The zen-like living room features a portion of Becker’s antiquities collection.

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Arthur Becker at home. The parlor in Farrow & Ball’s Black Blue, with sofa, tables, and lighting from Michael Dawkins Home. In the office, a gallery wall features artists like Picasso and Joan Miró, among others.

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I LOVE SITTING IN THE PARLOR SURROUNDED BY THE THINGS I LOVE.”—ARTHUR BECKER


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OUR BIGGEST CHALLENGE IS THAT WE ARE NOT ABLE TO PRODUCE ENOUGH WHISPERING ANGEL TO KEEP UP WITH THE DEMAND. THAT’S A GOOD PROBLEM.” —PAUL CHEVALIER

Paul Chevalier oversees all of Château D’Esclans’ rosé varietals including Whispering Angel, Rock Angel, Les Clans, Garrus. and new this year, The Palm.

The Rosé Revolution Chateau D’Esclans’ Paul Chevalier on why rosé wine has become a worldwide obsession. BY KIM PEIFFER

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n a typical workday, you’ll find Paul Chevalier jetting off to a fabulous event like the Nantucket Wine & Food Festival or the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen to spread the word about Whispering Angel, the widely popular rosé under the Château D’Esclans portfolio that has not only taken over Instagram, but seems to have taken over the world. This theory was solidified in New York City this past winter; Whispering Angel was nowhere to be found on store shelves—it was so popular during summer, the island of Manhattan nearly ran out of it. The rosé phenomenon has risen quite dramatically in recent years with the launch of wines that are redefining the stigma associat-

THE PALM BY WHISPERING ANGEL The makers of iconic Provence wines Rock Angel and Garrus, Château D’Esclans has just released The Palm, a gorgeous rosé that offers a bright and crisp flavor with a smooth finish. The winery’s Paul Chevalier hosted the vintage’s debut at NYC’s The Seville with 300 tastemakers in attendance. The Instagram-friendly bottles, which feature a picturesque label illustrated with palm trees and stylish blush hues, are now available nationwide—just pull the cork and be transported to your dream Provençal vacation spot at first sip.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY J OY A S I C O/ A S I C O P H O T O ( P O R T R A I T ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F W H I S P E R I N G A N G E L ( PA L M )

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ed with rosés in general. Rosés of the past were always identified as sweet, sugary, syrupy wines, but today’s varietals couldn’t be farther from that. “When rosés from Provence f inally became available in the U.S., we evolved from the old generation U.S. rosés which were mostly the sweet/blush style to something bone dry,” says Chevalier. “The overall quality of rosé production (specifically f rom Provence) d ra matic a lly improved through investment in winemaking technology. We went from ‘cheap and cheerful’ to producing good wine.” Which is perhaps the reason why rose clientele is changing. “It’s no longer more female driven, but almost an even split male/female; definitely the chic and discerning wine consumer.” esclans.com ■


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Suite Deal At Collection Suites, Miami’s Fayen family turned a passion project into every car collector’s dream.

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hat do you do when your car collection has outgrown your home parking spaces? Father-and-son team Juan Manuel and Lino Vicente Fayen were faced with the same predicament, and in response, they developed Collec tion Suites, an exclusive complex opening this summer where car aficionados can create a personal retreat among their prized passions. “It’s a place where you can enjoy your collectibles while watching a football game with your friends, conducting a meeting or closing down a deal,” says company COO Lino Vicente Fayen whose family’s collection of 15 cars includes a 1963 Maserati Mistral 4000 GT Spyder and a 1965 Shelby Cobra. “It goes beyond storage.” While specialized garages abound in most luxury markets, Miami’s Collection Suites forms a private atmosphere. Each unit—there are 38 in total, ranging from 2,200 to 2,600 square feet in size—features upscale amenities such as Italian tiles, Swiss wood floors, wet bar with wine fridge, Sonos entertainment system, bathroom with luxury finishes, integrated security system and automated LED lights. Owners can also store wine, art and other collectibles. More importantly, Collection Suites offers complete anonymity. “We don’t have a common area,” Fayen says of the compound comprising four heavily guarded buildings. “If owners want to meet their neighbors, they can. If they don’t want to, nobody is going to see or know who is here.” Although the idea of luxury car condos has been a popular one in South Florida in recent years, Fayen’s is the first project to be completed. “There’s a niche, but we did this at first because we needed the space for ourselves,” says Fayen, whose grandfather, Franco-Venezuelan racecar driver Lino Fayen, was a sixth-place finisher at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1959. “My family was always surrounded by cars.” Starting at around $836,000, Collection Suites aim for the top of the market. But for high-net-worth collectors, price seldom plays a main role in decision-making. “That’s the beauty of collecting,” Fayen says. “It’s more emotional than logical.” collection-suites.com ■

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IT’S A PLACE WHERE YOU CAN ENJOY YOUR COLLECTIBLES WHILE WATCHING A FOOTBALL GAME WITH YOUR FRIENDS, CONDUCTING A MEETING OR CLOSING DOWN A DEAL.” —LINO VICENTE FAYEN

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Juan Manuel with a replica of the 1965 Shelby Cobra, made by Kirkham, that Carol Shelby himself says might be even better than the original. left and above: Collection Suites will be the first luxury car condo to open in South Florida. below : The Suites will feature high design and art, like the glass table by Gervardino, made from a Ferrari 348 engine that was flown in from France.


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Home Front

Restoration Hardware’s latest Source Books unveil the season’s most exciting collaborations—including a new collection with textile designer Kelly Hoppen. BY JILL SIERACKI

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any home design connoisseurs anticipate the RH, Restoration Hardware and RH Modern Source Books the way fashion insiders watch their mailboxes for September issues. The tomes showcase an elegant curation of fine furnishings and home accents, crafted in conjunction with some of the biggest names in design, including WYETH’s John Birch, Jens Juul Eilersen, Jonathan Browning, Timothy Oulton, Ian K. Fowler and Milo Baughman, among others. Spring 2018 will bring a new name to the fold—textile artist Kelly Hoppen. “There is a great deal of mutual respect between us, and the synergy of both brands collaborating is wonderful,” says Hoppen. “I have admired what RH has done for years so when the opportunity came around to work with them I was thrilled.” Hoppen’s first collection for RH includes linen, suede and leather pillows with geometric stripes in a soothing palette of white, cognac, camel, sand and Fog gray. “One of the signature looks within my brand are the shapes and the bands that I use on my cushions, something which is inspired by my East meets West ethos,” says Hoppen. “When designing for RH​,​I used materials which you will often find in my designs. I wanted to make sure that my designs complimented the existing collections perfectly and would encompass both a masculine and feminine feel.” RH.com and RHModern.com ■

clockwise from top left :

Ravelle round chandelier, $2,846; Aspen French aak platform bed, $3,896; Framed linen pillow collection by Kelly Hoppen, from $96; Dutch ceramic vessel table lamp, $521; Framed linen pillows provide a graphic punch against white; Cassel leather chair, $1,871.

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I WANTED TO MAKE SURE THAT MY DESIGNS WOULD ENCOMPASS BOTH A MASCULINE AND FEMININE FEEL.” –KELLY HOPPEN


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One Kings Lane’s Southampton shop combines classic beach-house pieces by established designers with one-of-a-kind and vintage finds.

SUMMER 2018

Fit for a King

One Kings Lane makes a splash in Southampton and SoHo.

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ince opening last summer, One Kings Lane in Southampton continues to offer chic home accessories and contemporary furnishings for the beach set, providing home-obsessed clients with inspiration to add a little graphic punch, or to completely redo their rooms. Since launching in 2009, One Kings Lane has proven itself to be a design mecca for shoppers. Though the 3,500-square-foot Southampton store opened originally as a seasonal pop-up shop, ahead of its two-year anniversary it has become a successful brick-and-morter addition to the local scene. This summer there is a full slate of special appearances and in-store events planned. With brands like Juliska, Ralph Lauren Home, Kate Spade New York, and Bunny Williams Home, One Kings Lane incorporates bohemianchic styles, vibrant patterns and quirky accents

BY DEBORAH L . MARTIN in bright blues and crisp whites, perfect for that beachy vibe. To set themselves apart from the rest of the East End home boutiques, One Kings Lane also features an eclectic selection of one-ofa-kind vintage pieces ranging from furniture to accessories. For inspiration, check out the colorful surfboards hanging on the walls or the ornate bubble and rope artwork adorning the ceiling. As the brand continues to grow, they are gearing up for the fall opening of their New York City flagship store in SoHo. Housed in a 200-yearold Federal-style building that was originally built as a residence, it now boasts a glass addition and 3,500-square-feet of retail space. “Our first shop, which opened in Southampton last summer, set the tone for this new store, and future stores to come,” says president Debbie Propst. “It was important to us to find the right space—one that has deep roots in the local community and provides the perfect backdrop for the storytelling we do around our product.” onekingslane.com ■

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An Island Paradise Renewed

Two years after a devastating cyclone, Fiji has rebounded as a culturally immersive destination, particularly for jetsetters attracted to both luxury and ecotourism.

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t was 45 minutes past our appointment time, and the phone still hadn’t rung. I checked my inbox and found an urgent email asking to reschedule my call with Andrew Griffiths, owner of the new Six Senses Fiji: Tropical Cyclone Keni, a category 3 storm with projected 115 mile-per-hour winds, was due to make landfall on Fiji in less than 24 hours. As I sat safely at home some 8,000 miles away, I frantically checked the news, worried that history was about to repeat itself. Just two years ago, this South Pacific island archipelago was devastated by Tropical Cyclone Winston, the most intense storm to ever hit the Southern Hemisphere, causing 44 deaths and nearly $1 billion in damage and losses. Thankfully, Cyclone Keni changed direction, heading out to sea rather than barreling toward Viti Levu, the largest and most populous of Fiji’s 333 islands, where recovery from Winston has been hard-fought. As unpredictable natural disasters become more commonplace (consider the U.S. and Caribbean following last year’s catastrophic Hurricanes Irma and Maria), it would seem that the fate of such a remote paradise hangs in the balance. And yet, Fiji has fearlessly rebounded—nowhere more so than the tourism industry, which accounts for 40 percent of the country’s GDP. In the last two years, there have been a bevy of new resort developments and increased flight service (including a direct route on Fijian Airways from San Francisco to Nadi International Airport). And travelers have taken note: Last year, Fiji saw more than double the annual visitors of similarly castaway-chic destinations, like French Polynesia and the Seychelles, plus a 17 percent increase in U.S. tourists. In an area roughly the size of Washington State, there are more than 250 resorts, ranging from backpackers’ outposts to six-star stays like Laucala, a private-island resort owned by Red Bull billionaire Dietrich Mateschitz, that’s hosted everyone from Oprah to Ludacris. The appeal of Fiji isn’t the hotels, however; it’s the people. “Fijians are the most loving, genuine beings that you’ll ever encounter,” says Annette Sordoni, luxury travel consultant at Protravel International. “From the first ‘bula,’ their version of ‘aloha’ or ‘ciao,’ to the time you board the flight home, you’re greeted with smiles and sincere kindness.” While many f ly-and-f lop destinations aim to deliver such an over-the-top-experience that it becomes insular (butler service so you don’t interact with hotel staff, tricked-out accommodations designed to make you never leave the room), Fiji’s top stays encourage the opposite of just lounging beachside all day. At Nanuku Auberge Resort, for example, one of the hallmark experiences is the

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Laucala, owned by Red Bull billionaire Dietrich Mateschitz, has hosted everyone from Oprah to Ludacris.

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WE FULLY EMBRACE THE LOCAL CULTURE AND EVEN PAIR GUESTS WITH A CULTURAL AMBASSADOR FROM THE NANUKU TRIBE WHO CAN TEACH THEM ABOUT FIJIAN CUSTOMS.”—SASCHA HEMMANN


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“Food Safari,” in which guests shop at the local market, go crabbing in the Lobau River, and participate in a traditional Kava Ceremony, where a welcome offering of kava root is made to the Lobau village chief (who then turns it into a mouth-numbing drink shared by all). As Nanuku General Manager Sascha Hemmann explains, “We fully embrace the local culture and even pair guests with a Cultural Ambassador from the Nanuku Tribe who can teach them about Fijian customs.” An immersive experience is also available for visitors entranced by the local environment. At Kokomo Private Island—on the southern fringes of the archipelago, in the Kadavu island group—guests have access to 40-plus dive sites on the Great Astrolabe Reef. This scuba-diving pinnacle is filled with kaleidoscopic soft corals, underwater caverns and all kinds of aquatic life—from manta rays to green turtles and spinner dolphins. Though the resort has every imaginable luxury (21 villas set on pristine white sand, a Turkish style hammam), Kokomo’s sustainable practices sets it apart. Every structure is made from local timber, stone, and crafts, and 70 percent of produce comes from the nearly six-acre garden, making meals truly “farm-to-table.” Mindfulness is also at the core of the just-debuted Six Senses Fiji, an eco-chic resort on Malolo Island that is entirely solarpowered by Tesla batteries and prohibits the use of plastics. This sustainable ethos has become central to the guest experience: You can tour the organic gardens, participate in beach clean-up and even assist with coral planting just off the shore (a marine biologist was enlisted to introduce coral gardens years before the resort even opened). As Griffiths put it when we spoke on the phone a few days later, “Seventy percent of the world’s oxygen comes from the ocean, so if we can do a little bit in our own backyard to promote the growth of coral and marine life, we’re going to do it. That’s what being a global citizen means.” If you were to imagine a course for Fiji’s recovery from Winston, sustainable tourism wouldn’t be an obvious one, but it’s become a fruitful one. This remote paradise is inextricably linked to foreign visitors, but its emphasis on the local culture and the environment are essential. Fiji has to be more than just a box to check off the bucket list; it has to be a place of deep, personal connection to the people and the land—which is exactly what you feel upon hearing that final ‘bula.’ ■

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The Hilltop Estate Villa is just one of the 25 villas available at Laucala. left : The Laucala beach bar. bottom : The newlyopened Six Senses Fiji is an eco-chic resort on Malolo Island that is entirely solar-powered using Tesla batteries.

P H O T O G R A P H Y, P R E V I O U S PAG E C O U R T E S Y L A U C A L A ; T H I S PAG E T O P : L A U C A L A ; B O T T O M : S I X S E N S E S , F I J I .

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The Flyer’s Club

Luxury helicopter transport is changing the travel game for the jet-set crowd this summer.

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY K E V I N C O R T E S ( H E L I C O P T E R ) ; A DA M M C I E ( C E N T R A L PA R K ) ; PA U L S E I B E R T ( P O R T R A I T ) .

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etting out of a major city on a Friday afternoon during the summer is the equivalent of trying to sw im a 1500m ra c e i n d r ied mud. At least it used to be; enter, the chopper. Rush-hour traff ic, which prevents you from arriving at your summer house until half the weekend is gone, is suddenly no longer a cause of anxiety as you blade over the traffic quells and land in mere minutes at your destination, sans road rage. Patrick Day, CEO of private air charter company Foxtrot, says helicopter travel has evolved the way that people vacation these days, allowing customers to seamlessly arrive at their destination without waiting in crowded airport lines, or dealing with rush hour traffic. They make sure the entire experience is safe, and headache-free. “We have our own f light department, we hire and train the pilots, we purchase and lease the air-

crafts, and we’re the only company that has that in three markets (New York, Miami, Los Angeles). That’s what makes us so unique.” That, and the white glove treatment and luxury experience that goes along with every ride. “The experience you have in New York is the same experience you have in Miami and Los Angles,” he says. “It’s treating every single customer as if they were our only customer.” f lyfoxtrot.com ■


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Passport to Well-Being Health-minded jetsetters are finding more and more high-end resorts creating unparalleled packages that offer rejuvenation and transformation.

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t most high-end resorts, a spa is as standard as Egyptian cotton sheets and concierge services, but it’s no longer enough to only offer massages and detoxifying skin treatments. Wellness is the new wealthy and discerning jetsetters are looking for higher level spa services—and are willing to spend to get exclusive access. According to the Global Wellness Institute, healthminded tourism revenues grew to $563.2 billion from $494.1 billion in just two years. “High-end healing is on the rise as travelers are now seeking vacations and moments that can help them relax, destress, detox and allow time to connect with their self,” says Rakhee Lalvani, VP of Taj Hotels corporate team. “The more hyper-connected we get with the rise in technological innovation, the more the need to switch off and retreat to a spa.” But the term spa is so general. After all, what hotel doesn’t have at least one treatment room for facials and massages and space for yoga? That’s why major hospitality players in the saturated market are looking for ways to stand out. That has bred a new trend-within-a-trend where luxury hotels are offering elevated and exclusive wellness experiences only available at their properties. Some destinations are setting a higher bar by welcoming just a limited number of guests at any one time. For example, the Golden Door in Escondido, California only allows 40 guests per week to attend, The Ranch Malibu hosts just 18 guests at a time for their wellness retreats, and COMO Shambhala in Bali has under 50 rooms available, all of which are privately perched in the jungle. Another method of appealing to clients is by offering access to big names in the wellness industry who host retreats, create classes, or develop spa treatments, allowing visitors to become immersed in their teachings. The Four Seasons, for example, has rolled out programming across their portfolio: The Four Seasons Ho-

tel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills enlisted famous energy healer Jeannette von Johnsbach to perform BioMeditation balancing energy services during which she removes guests’ negative energetic blockages. And the Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown just launched a Resident Healer Program where they rotate offerings from world-renowned healers like Deganit Nuur, creator of The Nuurvana Method, Rashia Bell, creator of The Cristalline, and Snow Shimazu, creator of Air Beautiful. “Our guests may be sleep deprived, overworked, jetlagged, tech-obsessed, overindulged city dwellers that want a balance of traditional and new innovative experiences, and it’s our job to provide creative offerings that deliver,” says Tara Cruz, the spa director at Four Seasons Hotel New York Downtown. “Our Resident Healing sessions will allow you to gain new insight, new perception, and clarity. All unique sessions provide a one-of-a-kind experience that creates a sense of balance and understanding.” Montage Hotels & Resorts recently announced a partnership with celebrity wellness coach Kelly LeVeque while The Spa at The Ritz-Carlton, Los Angeles collaborated with California-favorite House of Intuition to create crystal healing therapies for guests. The Mandrake Hotel in London enlisted celeb-favorite practitioner Louka Leppard to create a Tulayoga program for the property that combines massage, inverted yoga, meditation and the use of breath to release withheld emotion, physical tension, and stress. “A treatment with Louka is one of the most calming and restorative experiences I have had in a long time,” actress Sienna Miller once boasted. But more than just having big names in the wellness industry attached to big names in the luxury hospitality industr y, high-end properties across the globe are going out of their way to be the star attraction for people who travel to cater to their wellness fantasies. Inkaterra Hacienda Urubamba, a contemporary hotel located in the heart of Urubamba Valley, offers many authentic Andean

SOPHISTICATED TRAVELLERS ARE LOOKING WELL BEYOND THE RESORT SPA, SEEKING TO RETURN FROM HOLIDAY FEELING LEANER, FITTER AND MORE MENTALLY ACUTE.” —SAMANTHA GEE

G U TPT H ER ED RO E UT R KT E S Y Z E M I T H A I H O U S E S PA . O TCORG R IATPHHEC

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The Zemi Beach House Hotel & Spa in Anquilla recreates the bathing rituals practiced by the indigenous Taino Indians.

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wellness experiences and treatments. For example, guests can partake in the Payment to the Earth ceremony—an ancient ritual for giving thanks to the Andean gods, performed by a local shaman—and a unique Pachamanca dining experience when a traditional Peruvian dish is cooked underneath the ground. Rosewood Mayakoba just introduced the Marry Oneself Journey. The four-day personal retreat focuses on self-love, was inspired by ancient Mayan traditions, and is designed to re-connect guests with their inner selves. The personalized luxury experience includes a series of guided rituals led by the hotel’s resident shaman and spa experiences, culminating with a ceremony of self-commitment. Zemi Beach House Hotel & Spa in Anguilla recreated the bathing rituals of the Taino Indians, who are indigenous to the island. And Taj Hotels offers locally-inspired services at their signature Jiva Spas, like the saffron-infused bath at Taj Usha Kiran Palace, which is accompanied by live classical music akin to ancient royal traditions undertaken before an important coronation or wedding ceremony. Even Las Vegas, the City of Sin, is jumping on the wellness wagon. The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas is one of only three hotels in North America to have a traditional Turkish hammam. “The world of luxury hotels is evolving rapidly, and sophisticated travellers are looking well beyond the resort spa, seeking to return from holiday feeling leaner, fitter and more mentally acute,” says Samantha Gee, Executive Director of Zen Savannah, a luxury travelplanning company. “This is where a good quality health retreat can play a key role, providing a kick-start to a healthier lifestyle with sound advice, a motivating environment and, above all, the time to focus on yourself. Because of that, this trend isn’t going anywhere any time soon.” ■

P HUO G TTO E RG C RA R EPDHIYT C HO E RUER TTEKS Y R I T Z C A R LT O N S PA LO S A N G E L E S ; A D R I E N H O U STO N ( M A N D R A K E ) .

The Mandrake Spiritual Wellness Center at the Mandrake Hotel London (top), and The Spa at The Ritz Carlton, Los Angeles (bottom), offer healing therapies administered by celeb-favorite wellness gurus.

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CULTURE Alexander McQueen at the home of Isabella Blow.

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY A N N D E N I A U ; GA RY WA L L I S .

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Fit for a McQueen A new documentary gives a revealing insight into the avant garde designer through exclusive interviews and a deep dive into his runway collections. BY SAMUEL ANDERSON


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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY A N N D E N I A U ; GA RY WA L L I S .

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lexander McQueen’s death in 2010 inspired an outpouring of tributes to the radical designer whose runway shows, which seemed to stop time with their boundarypushing themes and deep historical referenc e s , h ave b e en monu ment a l i z e d i n blockbuster exhibits. (“Savage Beauty” drew a combined 1 million visitors.) Now, his rags-to-riches ascent to fashion royalty will be canonized in three upcoming films, including McQueen, a documentary arriving in theaters July 13. Through interviews with friends and family, as well as 150 archival sources, the film’s codirectors, Peter Ettedgui and Ian Bonhôte, unspool McQueen’s almost-20-year career—a superhuman yet sensitive task. “A lot of people decided not to take part because it was too raw for them to talk about on camera,” says Bonhôte. “We had a responsibility to respect that while still trying to tell our story.” The best resource into McQueen, says Ettedgui, was the clothes. “He used to say, ‘My work is my biography. Look at my work and you’ll know who I am.’ We took that as an instruction.” Opening on an image of a human skull—a fundamental McQueen trademark—the film sets out to peel back the layers of the designer’s prodigious genius, which was propelled by both preternatural talent and a troubled upbringing. Born Lee Alexander McQueen to a cab driver and a teacher, McQueen grew up in London’s rough East End, suffering abuse at age nine by his sister’s husband. After leaving high school, he found refuge in making clothes. “We wanted to choose the aspects of his childhood that were relevant to his work [such as] the fact that he was an outsider and gay in a very patriarchal society,” says Ettedgui. The film is organized into six chronological chapters, or “tapes,” each named for a seminal McQueen runway show. Act one, “Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims,” highlights McQueen’s graduate thesis at Central St. Martin’s, which foreshadowed his lifelong fixation with the macabre and self-sacrifice—on one of the sanguinary looks, McQueen fastened a lock of his own hair. The show caught the eye of the late editrix Isabella Blow, who bought the entire collection, becoming McQueen’s kingmaker and friend.

clockwise from top left : Models in “Elect Dissect,” F/W 1997. Finishing touches at “Banshee,” F/W 1994. Dressing Eva Herzigova for Givenchy S/S Haute Couture, 1997. Closing the show for Givenchy F/W 1998. Adjusting a headdress for Jade Parfit, S/S 2001. Shalom Harlow strikes a pose in the VOSS show, Spring 2001, and takes a bow with McQueen in his S/S 1999 “No. 13” show.

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ALEXANDER MCQUEEN IS AN ICON TO EVERYONE WHO HAS BEEN A MISFIT.” — IAN BONHÔTE

What followed is fashion history. McQueen, both at his own house and eventually as creative director at Givenchy, repeatedly set the industry ablaze—sometimes literally. From his controversial 1995 show “Highland Rape,” in which models hobbled down the runway in tattered silks and ultra low-rise pencil skirts, to 1997’s “It’s a Jungle Out There,” which included a spontaneous petrol fire, McQueen’s runways were one show-stopping feat of originality after another. Up until his final show—2010’s “Plato’s Atlantis,” featuring the cyborgian boots later worn by Lady Gaga—McQueen was fashion’s foremost disruptor. “He brought things on the catwalk that didn’t have any place on the catwalk,” says Bonhôte. “He didn’t just see conventional beauty; he’s an icon to everyone who has been a misfit.” ■


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Family Drama Naked Brothers Band alum Alex Wolff stars in the fright-fest Hereditary. BY SAMUEL ANDERSON

Shirt, DAVID NAMAN, apropstudiony.com. Pants, DIESEL, shop.diesel .com. Jacket, THE KOOPLES, thekooples.com.

P O R T R A I T BY B I L B R O W N ; S T Y L E D BY E L I J A H V I E L M A ; G R O O M I N G BY B R A N D I E H O P S T E I N

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n the f ilm Hereditary, the Graham family is on the losing side of the genet ic lot t er y. W hen Gra nd ma Ellen, not the milk-and-cookies type, pa sses away, it unlea shes a n ev il, seemingly genetically linked, force upon mom Annie (Toni Collette), dad Steve (Gabriel Byrne) and their two kids, Peter and Charlie. It’s Peter, played by Alex Wolff, who bears the brunt of the deeply hair-raising domestic psychodrama that ensues, and the experience often followed him off the set. “I completely immerse myself in what’s going on. You’ve got to lose yourself a little bit,” Wolff admits of his acting style. “The movie is pretty upsetting and it was a pretty upsetting experience making it.” Backed by A24, the independent film company behind Lady Bird, Hereditary has horror fans buzzing thanks in part to director Ari Aster, whose haunting short The Strange Thing About the Johnsons also centered on a family plagued by demons. Wolff, on the other hand, is known for more harmonious family dynamics: as a tween, he was one half of the sibling duo on Naked Brothers Band, a Nickelodeon movie-turned-TV series created by his mother, Polly Draper, and costarring brother Nat. “My introduction to the business was working with my family and friends, and everything was loose and fun,” Wolff says. “It was a good experience. I’m super proud of Naked Brothers Band.” After NBB, Wolff played a therapy patient on HBO’s In Treatment opposite Hereditary costar Byrne, who became a real-life father figure. “He’s the person that I’ve worked with who has probably inspired me the most,” says Wolff. “After In Treatment, he said, ‘We are going to work together again and you’re going to be a star.’ I reminded him of that on Hereditary he was like, ‘No. I definitely didn’t say that.’ I was like, ‘I’ve been carrying that around for the past seven years!’” After the intense three months spent shooting Hereditary in Utah, Wolff got a tattoo on his right shoulder to mark the experience. “It’s a circle shape and it was sort of a representation of me coming out on the other side,” he says. And Wolff isn’t done sacrificing for his art; he recently wrote, directed and starred in the film The Cat and the Moon, which he says may have been his most taxing to date. “It was also very dark and emotionally demanding, so I’m continuing to torture myself,” he laughs. “But it was also the most fun experience I’ve ever had. It’s turning out to be something special, so I’m excited.” ■


Food Fight

Jonathan Safran Foer continues his crusade against factory farming with a new documentary produced by Natalie Portman. BY SAMUEL ANDERSON

P H O T O G R A P H BY M AT T H U P R E L ( T U R K E Y S ) ; S T E V E G R A N I T Z /G E T T Y I M AG E S ( P O R T M A N ) ; J E F F M E R M E L S T E I N ( F O E R ) ; S U N DA N C E S E L E C T S ( M OV I E P O S T E R )

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he food landscape has changed significantly since acclaimed author Jonathan Safran Foer published his nonfiction debut Eating Animals 10 years ago. Oat milk happened; Beyoncé went vegan; Reba McEntire played Colonel Sanders in a KFC commercial. And yet, the bleak reality of factory farming presented in the book remains the same: it’s a major cause of virtually every single environmental issue, from water pollution to biodiversity loss, and it produces more greenhouse gas than all other factors put together. These facts now form the basis of the timely-asever documentary version of Eating Animals, coproduced by Foer w ith Oscar-w inning actress and longtime friend Natalie Portman, whom he credits with conceiving the adaptation early on. “I gave her a draft while I was writing the book, and she said it would make a great documentary,” says Foer. Laced with Foer’s trademark mix of lush imagery and existential dread, the film, also narrated by Portman, traces the unlikely origins of factory farming to 1923 when a Delaware housewife named Sylvia Steele received an oversized order of chicks. “She started raising them inside rather than outside and regulating the lighting cycle so that it seemed to be day when it was actually night,” Foer explains. That accidental discovery, as the film illustrates in full, unf linching color, eventually led to today’s fast food industrial complex—one that wasn’t easy to document, even with Foer’s foundational text. “It took a long time to make [the movie],” he says. “[Director] Christopher [Dillon Quinn] traveled all over the world and accumulated tons of footage. It’s a very complicated story to tell and that resists telling because factory farming as an industry is very secretive.” But meat’s stronghold may be weakening, says Foer, thanks in no small part to a growing number of pro-veg celebs. “Nothing is more powerful than when people like Beyoncé come out and say, ‘I’m not going to tell you what do to, but I’m going to share with you why I do what I do—that’s the beginning of the end,’” says Foer of the singer, who recently launched the vegan meal planning program 22 Days. With Eating Animals the book and now the documentary under his belt, Foer is undeniably an apostle of the no-meat movement. But, he says, he’s hardly vying with Queen Bey to be the nation’s foremost vegetarian influencer. “Whether I’m cooking, ordering at a restaurant, or grocery shopping—I don’t think of myself as a vegetarian,” he says. “I think of myself as an eater who’s trying to be conscientious. And it feels good to try.” ■

In a new documentary based on his book, Eating Animals, Johanthan Safran Foer explores the damage to the environment created by factory farms, and the benefits of sustainable and humane farming, such as on the Good Shepherd Poultry Ranch in Kansas.

I THINK OF MYSELF AS AN EATER WHO’S TRYING TO BE CONSCIENTIOUS.” —JONATHAN SAFRON FOER


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After leaving popular NYC eatery Lincoln in 2017, chef Jonathan Benno is opening three new eateries inside The Evelyn hotel.

Wine Larder’s Chase Sinzer and Joey Letchinger are your on-call wine concierges.

La Dolce Vita

Famed New York City chef Jonathan Benno opens three Italian eateries in NoMad’s Evelyn hotel. BY SYLVIE BIGAR

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efinitely take the cannoli at the new Leonelli Focacceria e Pasticceria, one of three establishments chef Jonathan Benno, of Per Se and Lincoln fame, opens this summer in the hip Manhattan neighborhood of NoMad. Indeed, Benno is inventing a new food destination at The Evelyn hotel on East 27th Street. Besides the pastry shop, a casual trattoria with a bar and lounge launches in June while a fine dining restaurant is in the works for the later part of this year. “With Leonelli Focacceria e Pasticceria, we are bringing back the old Italian-American pastry shop,” says Benno, who grew up within an Italian-rooted community in Connecticut. Yes, there will be bombolini and biscotti, but also a variety of focaccia, sfogliatelle and the ubiquitous cannoli. The bakery will open onto the street and offer lunch and afternoon treats. No need to bring your tablet though; on the sleek mezzanine above, Assouline will curate a collection of its beautifully illustrated books. Leonelli Taberna takes its inspiration from the great Roman trattorias but with an added bar and lounge area for innovative cocktails. Antipasti, arancini and even a spaghetti carbonara croquette accompany Italian and private label wines. Piccoli piatti (small plates) include baked ricotta, meatballs and a tripe preparation. Most pasta comes “al forno”—think lasagna al ragu bolognese, but with both a rotisserie and a massive steakhouse-style broiler, there will be plenty of action and delicious aromas on the floor. Details on Benno, the fine-dining restaurant, are still somewhat mysterious but the chef promises what amounts to an ideal Mediterranean cruise, “at the junction of France and Italy with Portuguese and even Moroccan accents,” he says. This is Jonathan Benno’s most personal project to date and for those who have followed him around, taste buds ablaze, his most exciting one. theevelyn.com ■

WE WANTED TO CHANGE HOW people approach wine and make it a fun thing, regardless of the level of wine you’re drinking,” says Joey Letchinger cofounder of Wine Larder, a personalized wine service that can curate tastings, source rare bottles and enhance your collection. Letchinger, the former sommelier at Manhattan’s Maialino, launched the business alongside Chase Sinzer, former wine director at Momofuku Ko, and since the company’s inception, the duo have guided clients ranging from people under 30 who want to impress a new boss to wine collectors who want to explore rare categories and further their expertise. The entry-level into Wine Larder’s services is what Letchinger calls a “benchmark tasting.” This intimate sampling opportunity walks clients through a typical menu, then offers them techniques to grow and develop their palette, such as hosting an intimate preview of eight bottles of the same vintage wine dating back to the 1960’s and noting the differences and how things have changed. For more experienced collectors, Letchinger and Sinzer can expand their personal wine collection to include rare bottles that are often difficult to source and broaden their knowledge of higher-end varietals. “The person who put together [a restaurant’s] wine list knows it better than you, even if you’re a wine professional,” says Letchinger. “My favorite piece of advice is to never be afraid to ask for help.” winelardernyc.com —Kasey Caminiti

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E VA N S U N G ( C H E F ) ; W I N E L A R D E R ( S I N Z E R A N D L E TC H I N G E R ) .

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Bella’s Best

A look at Hunter’s favorite live music venues SOUND NIGHTCLUB | LOS ANGELES This is my favorite club to see great house music DJs. The VIP tables behind the DJ are the best place to sit or dance. THE GREEK THEATRE | BERKELEY I’ve seen some amazing artists perform here... It’s intimate enough that you can feel the artists’ energy from wherever you’re standing. BABEL EVENTS | NEW YORK CITY Babel has created this beautiful community vibe, complete with tribal/ethnic sounds blended into sexy disco house. THE ISLAND | SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA Get a private tender to take you to this floating bar/beach club in the middle of Sydney Harbour. My brother, Jackson, DJs here and I always get homesick for nights sipping Campari cocktails and dancing to him spinning incredible house tracks.

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY N I K KO L A M E R E ( H U N T E R ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F D E V I A L E T ( S P E A K E R )

BY KASEY CAMINITI

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ith long f low ing hair, bronzed skin, an armful of thick bangles and sculptural rings on every f inger, Australian artist Bella Hunter could easily be mistaken for one of the bohemian girls twirling in the fields of Coachella or dancing the night away at Ultra in Miami. However, raised in a musical family, Hunter would rather be on the stage than in front of it, rocking a crowd with her hit dance track, “Waves,” with Erick Morillo, or beats from her upcoming summer release through Armada Music. The daughter of Marc Hunter, the lead singer of Australian band Dragon, Bella was raised to appreciate the poetic sounds of classical music, and was inspired by everyone from Nina Simone to Ella Fitzgerald. “There was this 24/7 immersion in

music with an entirely comprehensive subliminal musical education before the time I was 10,” Hunter says of her upbringing, which initially led her to a career in songwriting. “Being able to write for other artists and DJs is one of the most rewarding and humbling experiences.” Hunter later moved from Sydney to Los Angeles to New York where she was exposed to a wider range of sounds, including Daft Punk, which became a pivotal moment in her life. “I didn’t know how much they would inf luence my respect for house music,” she says. Today, a self-proclaimed electronic artist, Hunter says her vibe lives loosely in house music. “I reference the term ‘Sunset House,’ which has a chilled, sexy, beautiful island or rooftop vibe—full of happiness and def initely something you can dance to,” she says of her blended genre. ■

Speaker of the House Devialet’s wireless speaker ($2,990) offers a sleek and sophisticated style and unrivaled sound quality, as well as distortion and background noise elimination. The tiny Phantom produces a huge sound that transports you to a mind-blowing live music experience. devialet.com

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With new music on the horizon, Bella Hunter is cultivating our summer soundtrack.

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PAPAYA PLAYA PROJECT | TULUM, MEXICO This eco-resort hosts the best deep house DJs in their multi-level bar and beach club. You can dance under palm trees and a Mexican palapa adorned with disco balls with Caribbean salt in the air and a mezcal cocktail in-hand.


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e’re not in the mindset of re-carpeting and putting some memorabilia on the walls; we thought it was very important to either present a product that was going to be brand new, or to not do it at all,” Hard Rock International chairman Jim Allen says of the new Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City, which opens June 28 in some prime oceanfront real estate on the Atlantic City boardwalk. The new venue—the result of a $500 million investment—includes 3,500 revamped hotel rooms, a state-of-theart casino, 20 restaurants and two theatres, including the Mark G. Etess Arena which was expanded to include over 7,000 seats. And of course, there’s an 80-foot guitar adorning the brand new façade. In addition to announcing the property’s opening date, Hard Rock also released its initial entertainment lineup—putting 60 shows on sale simultaneously. “Ticketmaster told us that in their history, that’s never been done before,” says Allen of the schedule that includes Carrie Underwood, Maroon 5 and Florida Georgia Line, as well as other types of entertainment such as the Broadway hit Kinky Boots in the fall and comedy by Amy Schumer and Jon Lovitz. “Music is important, but we’re also doing a whole Broadway show series and we will be hosting the first world-championship boxing fight that will be televised on HBO,” says Allen. “We have a very eclectic and hopefully exciting program. Com-

bine that with world-class dining and the aspect of the casino entertainment, I think there is a new level of interest to come see the resort.” Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City takes over the space vacated by the defunct Trump Taj Mahal Casino. Billionaire investor Carl Icahn acquired the property from Trump before the casino shut down in 2016 following profit losses of up to $350 million, making the Taj the fifth casino in Atlantic City to close that year. Attempts have been made to revive the former gambling and entertainment mecca with luxury resorts such as the Borgata Hotel & Casino, which is marking its 15th anniversary, and the Revel, which opened in 2012, closed just two years later and now is planning to reopen this year as the Ocean Resort Casino. In 2017, Florida-based Hard Rock International took over the 4 millionsquare-foot Taj site. The company’s rock-and-roll spirit, an exciting entertainment roster of global superstars and unique on-site shopping experiences, like the fun Sugar Factory candy boutique, is setting the property up for long-term success. But it’s more than just creating a one-stop resort destination; Allen says that by investing in Atlantic City, it will hopefully encourage other properties to commit to building a thriving tourism industry around the Jersey Shore. With nearly 30 million people located within a three-hour drive from Atlantic City (including express bus service from Manhattan), a large audience is attainable if the quality is there. In addition, the Hard Rock will introduce 3,000 jobs back into Atlantic City. hardrockhotels.com ■

“WE HAVE A VERY ECLECTIC AND HOPEFULLY EXCITING PROGRAM. COMBINE THAT WITH WORLD-CLASS DINING AND THE ASPECT OF THE CASINO ENTERTAINMENT, I THINK THERE IS A NEW LEVEL OF INTEREST TO COME SEE THE RESORT.” —JIM ALLEN

P H O T O G R A P H Y C O U R T E S Y O F H A R D R O C K H O T E L & C A S I N O AT L A N T I C C I T Y

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Atlantic City is getting a mega-dose of stardom when the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino opens this summer.

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Rock the Boardwalk


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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E I L E E N B A R R O S O/ T U R N 2 F O U N DAT I O N , I N C .

Derek Jeter’s family values inspired the Turn 2 Foundation; now his sister Sharlee’s new motivational book is going one step further. BY JILL SIERACKI

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t’s been almost four years since Derek Jeter played his last game at Yankee Stadium, but he’s far from retired—he’s the CEO of the Miami Marlins and continues to be active in the Turn 2 Foundation, the philanthropy he founded his rookie year that encourages kids with education and leadership programming. “I developed a passion for giving back at a young age,” says Derek. “My father, who was a drug and alcohol abuse counselor, and my mother, instilled in [my sister] Sharlee and me the

says Sharlee, who chronicles her experience battling Hodgkin lymphoma while a college student in the book that spotlights the 11 shared elements, aka “the stuff,” the authors have identified in people’s stories about overcoming obstacles. The organization and book go hand in hand in keeping the message of positive change alive, and both Sharlee and Derek are encouraged by today’s socially active youth. “It’s so inspiring to see young people around the country use their actions—and their voices—to make a difference,” says Derek. “Through our programs, we strive to provide our Leaders with opportunities to create positive change and empower youth nationwide to follow their lead. We believe that it is crucial for young people to have the support, guidance and inspiration to make positive, constructive decisions that will help them to lead successful lives.” ■

“WE’VE NEVER WAIVERED FROM OUR GOALS AND EXPECTATIONS FROM OUR KIDS.” —SHARLEE JETER

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The Good Stuff

importance of community service, hard work and education. When we started the foundation, I knew that one of the core values would be helping young people to turn away from negative influences and turn to healthy lifestyles.” Today Sharlee Jeter is the President of the Turn 2 Foundation and works closely with her brother on the organization’s programming, including Jeter’s Leaders, which recognizes high school students who achieve academically, stay drug and alcohol free and are engaged with their communities. “We’ve never waivered from our goals and expectations from our kids,” says Sharlee. “We made a point to have kids from all different backgrounds. We said all of them can have the same academic expectations; all of them have a voice, and their voice is important. All of them can work together to have a common goal.” This summer, Sharlee is inspiring others beyond the youth community with her first book, The Stuff: Unlock Your Power to Overcome Challenges, Soar, and Succeed, a self-help tome she co-wrote with Dr. Sampson Davis, who pulled himself out of poverty to become an emergency room physician and founder of The Three Doctors Foundation, which inspires inner-city youth with education, volunteerism and mentorship programming. “One of the things we’re trying to do constantly is show kids their potential,”


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DA KO TA

With a yearlong goal of saying yes, actress DAKOTA FANNING is embracing projects both big and small, as well as a new chapter in her career—as director. by JILL SIERACKI photography by FRANCESCO CARRONZINI styling by DEBORAH WATSON


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W ith many of Dakota Fanning’s earliest projects, such as I Am Sam, War of the Worlds, and The Cat in the Hat, regularly popping up on cable television, the actress is, for many audiences, perpetually frozen in time as a tween. However, at 24 years old, Fanning is most certainly not the cherubic little girl in those films and the projects she has undertaken in recent months further demonstrate her evolution. This summer, Fanning appears in the all-female remake of Ocean’s 8, costarring Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Sarah Paulson, Helena Bonham Carter, Rihanna and Mindy Kaling. “Even before I was involved in any way I was excited about the idea of an all female Ocean’s edition,” says Fanning. “I loved Ocean’s 11, Ocean’s 12, so I’m so excited to see that vibe inhabited by such talented women and I like that my name is attached to a cool group of ladies.” Weirdly, a role in a 2018 crime caper is a total 180 from her previous project—as Sara Howard, the first female police officer in 1896 New York, in TNT’s The Alienist, which costars Daniel Brühl as psychiatrist Dr. Laszlo Kreizler and Luke Evans as society bon vivant-turned-investigator John Moore. The 10-episode series based on Caleb Carr’s 1994 novel premiered to solid ratings in January, and message boards are already buzzing about the possibilities of a second season, potentially based on the follow-up novel in Carr’s Dr. Kreizler series, The Angel of Darkness. It was Fanning’s first television project since the 2002 Taken mini-series. A fan of Criminal Minds and other hardboiled dramas currently punctuating America’s televisions and podcasts, Fanning was interested in exploring work on the small screen when she was approached about The Alienist script. “The stories that were being told [on television] and the shows I was watching were so good,” she says. “I read the first three episodes and loved the character, loved the story.” Fanning’s character, Sara, was expanded from the original novel to become one of the three series leads. In an era of #MeToo, it’s a challenging role to watch as she faces harassment and discrimination as the only woman in a turn-of-the-century police department, working directly for newly appointed commissioner Theodore Roosevelt. But as the story unfolds, we see her strength and tenacity. “The first scene that we meet [Sara], she is not so quiet and not so nice,” says Fanning. “It was just about sprinkling different seeds—whether it’s over 10 hours or 2 hours, you’re usually hinting at what’s to come in subtle ways for your character.” Attempts had been made to adapt The Alienist since the novel came out, but the richness of the characters and the depth of the story had made it too extensive for a two-hour film. But the success of other limited series, such as American Crime Story, opened the door for a television adaptation that allowed the plot to unfold over 10 hours. Jakob Verbruggen directed the first three episodes and after, multiple crews ran simultaneously to complete the project. Says Fanning, “I kind of thrive in that pressure situation of the jump-

ing back and forth between the units. Some of the other actors were like, this is crazy, but I just went with it; it was fun.” A large-scale series like The Alienist was a new endeavor for TNT, and no expense was spared in its creation. Sets included fully propped storefronts on constructed streets that come to life in aerial photography, as well as an under-construction Williamsburg Bridge that plays a significant part in a key episode. Michael Kaplan, who created wardrobes for Star Wars: Episode VIII, among others, produced period-specific costumes for each of the characters. “As Sara goes along, her clothes get more tailored and slightly more ‘masculine’ for the time, and feel a little bit more like armor,” says Fanning. “In terms of the restrictive nature of the clothes and the corset and having to be helped to get dressed in the morning and having to be helped to get undressed, it just puts you in a different mindset.” Sara’s ties and the trousers also helped visually transform Fanning from the doe-eyed Fern of Charlotte’s Web into The Alienist’s gun toting badass. “I think that idea has been constructed by other people; it’s not necessarily how I feel about myself,” she responds to the idea of being typecast in roles best described as “sweet.” “I’m drawn to darker material a lot of the time. When I think about the work I’ve done, I feel like I see a lot more darkness than light.” The Alienist’s material—hunting a serial killer through the seedy underbelly of turn-of-the-century New York brothels—is decidedly dark. Even Fanning found the series penultimate episode (which she watched alone in a hotel) terrifying. However, the costars kept things light on set, and those are the memories she sees watching the show in real time. “Just because you’re in something serious or something scary doesn’t mean you’re serious or scared the whole time during the making of it,” she says. “You’re trying to make it as real as possible, but you know how not real it is.” Filmed over seven months in Budapest, Hungary, the series was one of Fanning’s longest time commitments to date. “I hadn’t been away from home for that amount in time in a long time, so I was nervous about it, but it ended up being a nice break from my life,” she says. “How often do you get to just skip town and live in Europe for a summer?” Also new for the actress was the experience of interacting with people who were watching the show unfold week after week. While Fanning herself isn’t on Twitter, costar Luke Evans kept her appraised as to fan reactions on social media. “It felt like a much more connected experience than when a film gets released,” she says. “Great material is great material wherever it lands. I [love that it was on cable] because it’s so accessible for people to watch and that’s ultimately what you want—for people to be able to see [your work] as easily as possible. We’re thinking less and less about where people watch things.” By all accounts people were watching—The Alienist’s premiere drew 3.1 million viewers; cumulatively it brought in 13.1 million, half of who were new to the network. Another 16 million saw the series through online streaming. Hence, it’s no surprise that Fanning appeared at the network’s May Upfronts


Black stretch crepe gown with cut outs, $3,960, PAMELLA ROLAND, available by special order at Bergdorf Goodman, bergdorfgoodman.com.

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“WHEN I THINK ABOUT THE WORK THAT I’VE DONE, I FEEL LIKE I SEE A LOT MORE DARKNESS THAN LIGHT.”


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Belted jacket, price upon request, LOUIS VUITTON, louisvuitton.com. Necklace in platinum with diamonds, $1.2 million, ROBERTO COIN, available by special order, robertocoin.com. Diamond earrings in 18-karat white gold, $9,750, ROBERTO COIN, exclusive to select Saks Fifth Avenue stores, us.robertocoin.com.


Cashmere and wool dress, $3,500, CHANEL, chanel.com. Diamond earrings in 18-karat white gold, $9,750, ROBERTO COIN, exclusive to select Saks Fifth Avenue stores, us.robertocoin.com.

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“I JUST LIVE MY LIFE AS IF NOBODY HAS ALWAYS BEEN IMPORTANT NOBODY WILL KNOW WHO I AM. I TIME, I JUST DO WHAT I GOT TO DO

and the buzz around a potential second season isn’t slowing down. “There’s nothing confirmed, but I think it’s definitely safe to say that we would all be open to seeing if there was another part of the story to tell because of how great the experience was and how much we each love our characters,” says Fanning. “But I also think what’s nice about it is there’s a satisfying end, because we really do tell the story of the book, and The Alienist is bookended. Sometimes it is frustrating when you feel like it is too much of a cliffhanger at the end.” After the series wrapped, Fanning returned to America to make her directorial debut, a short film for Miu Miu’s Women’s Tales, titled Hello, Apartment, written by Liz Hannah (cowriter of Oscar nominated film The Post). Fanning’s was the 15th in the series that celebrated femininity in the 21st century with shorts made by women filmmakers including Zoe Cassavetes, Ava DuVernay and Chloë Sevigny. “I definitely don’t take any project for granted or take my career for granted by any means, but the area of my life that I’ve never stressed about was acting,” says Fanning, who foresees always having a career in entertainment, both in front and behind the camera. “That’s a really happy place for me. I stress about other areas of my life, but I don’t really worry about [getting projects] and I just have hope that it continues. I just trick myself into being calm and then everything follows.” So far, that mantra seems to be working. Born and raised in Georgia, Fanning got her start doing commercials. But her family recognized her aptitude and passion, and brought her out to Los Angeles for six weeks to meet the West Coast arm of her agency during pilot season. They stayed with an aunt, visited Disneyland, and watched as opportunities began to roll in. “For years my mom would say that we still live in Georgia; we’re just here because this ‘thing’ is happening,” says Fanning, who recalls the first time she was recognized by a fan, shopping at The Gap with her mom at age 7, not long after the release of I Am Sam. “My mom was constantly making sure that I knew I didn’t have to do this, and that actually she would rather be back in Georgia. But also, my mom recognized something in me and recognized potential and recognized the love that I had for acting. You can tell when somebody really wants to be doing something, whether they’re 2 or 20—you can tell when somebody is happy and I was. I looked at it as fun and the Internet wasn’t the way it was, so I was only affected by the people that I was interacting with on the set. It wasn’t like people were talking about how I looked at 7 years old in a negative way because we didn’t really have that yet.” Bigger roles followed and so did Fanning’s younger sister, Elle Fanning, who today is a star on the rise in films such as The Beguiled and Trumbo. “It’s crazy how that is something that Elle and I are always asked about, if we’re competitive with one another,” says Dakota. “We’re normal sisters, we’re not some super evolved species where we have never felt competitive or have never felt jealous, but we have a great dynamic. There’s no person I want to succeed as much, or

more than, myself than my sister. If there ever was a time where [we were up for] the same part, the person that I would want to get it if it wasn’t me would be her. People who don’t know us, who just see us and think, Oh they must be so similar because we look similar and ‘are’ similar to the naked eye, but we’re so different,” she continues. “Anyone who knows us or spends any amount of time with the two of us, we’re immediately very different and so I don’t think either one of us really worries about the crossover because something is either right for her or right for me.” Another area where Fanning is remarkably unaffected is social media, where she only maintains a presence on Instagram, which hit the mainstream when she was a senior at North Hollywood’s Campbell Hall Episcopal High School, where she was a cheerleader, homecoming queen and a member of the prom court, among other “normal” high school activities. “The way I think about my Instagram is what I share, if it’s true and it’s real then I don’t feel weird sharing it,” says Fanning. “There are some things I wouldn’t want to share, because I don’t want anybody beside a close friend to know that. It doesn’t really have anything to do with being ‘famous’; I’m not an over-sharer in general whether people know who I am or they don’t. [I feel like] if it’s personal, you don’t share.” Having every element of her life the subject of fascination is something that just rolls off Fanning’s back—whether it’s curiosity about the Miu Miu gown she wore to the recent “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” Met Gala, sitting with boyfriend Henry Frye at a Prada fashion show, or just leaving a magazine interview at New York’s SoHo Grand Hotel, where a number of paparazzi were outside the door, snapping photos as she walked downtown. “[For people] that goes either one way or the other—one way being that it drives you crazy and makes you obsess over it and freaks you out, which is totally valid,” she says. “Or its what I feel I am, which is because it’s always been there, I’ve gotten so used to it that it doesn’t bother me at all. I just live my life as if nobody knows who I am, which I think has always been important to me because maybe one day, nobody will know who I am. I like [acting], and the rest of the time, I just do what I got to do to live the life that makes me happy.” And, if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t comment. “People as a whole need to curb how they speak about other people in general, famous or not,” adds Fanning. “You can be so anonymous on the Internet and say the worst things—that’s totally unfortunate.” Today, without another project on the horizon, Fanning’s plan is to just “be open” to whatever comes her way next. “I did set one goal this year and that was to say yes more than no,” she says. “I don’t know if there’s been anything that’s been out of character, but there’s been a lot of travelling. I don’t have a ton of responsibilities, I don’t have any kids, I’m not married, so I’m taking advantage of the fact that I’m in this free time in my life and I just want to be open to it.” ■


KNOWS WHO I AM, WHICH I THINK TO ME BECAUSE MAYBE ONE DAY, LIKE [ACTING], AND THE REST OF THE TO LIVE THE LIFE THAT MAKES ME HAPPY.”

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Evening Gown, $23,000, DIOR available at Dior boutiques nationwide. Ring, $24,000, JOHN HARDY, available by special order only, johnhardy.com. Makeup by Jeanine Lobell © Streeters Hair by Sebastian Scolarici at traceymattingly.com Manicure by Kayo Higuchi using Dior Vernis Production by BaM Productions Retouching by Le Bloc Prop Stylist Todd Wiggins at TheMagnetAgency.com


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DRESS REHEARSAL

From lace to embroidery, silks to linens—this season’s frocks are going to great lengths to make a statement. photography by MARK WILLIAMS & SARA HIRAKAWA styling by CARRIE WEIDNER


left : Skirt, price upon request, ULLA JOHNSON, ullajohnson.com. Sunhat, $325, ALBERTUS SWANEPOEL, albertusswanepoel.com. Socks, $34, FALKE, falke.com. Boots, stylist’s own. right : Sweater, $700, CIENNE X THE KNITTER, ciennenewyork.com. Bag, $395, BROTHER VELLIES, brothervellies.com. Boots, stylist’s own.


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left :

Blouse, price upon request, LOUIS VUITTON, us.louisvuitton.com. Skirt, price upon request, ULLA JOHNSON, ullajohnson.com. Necklace, price upon request, BULGARI. bulgari.com. right : Gown, $5,900, VALENTINO, similar styles at valentino.com. Clyde Adriatic hat, $272, CLYDE WORLD, clyde.world.


Dress, price upon request, JONATHAN SIMKHAI, available by special order, jonathansimkhai.com. Earrings, $475, ZOE CHICCO, zoechicco.com. Rings, $3,300$4,180, JFINE, Betteridge, betteridge.com. Pearl ring, $115, MARY MACGILL, marymacgill.com.


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Dress, $561, MARYAM NASSIR ZADEH, mnzstore .com. Blouse, $295, LOUP CHARMANT, loupcharmant.com. Boots and belt, stylist’s own.


Gown, $595, NILI LOTAN, nililotan.com. Blanket, $520, LAUREN MANOOGIAN, laurenmanoogian.com. Ring, price upon request, BULGARI, bulgari.com. Rings, $3,300$4,180, JFINE, Betteridge, betteridge.com.


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Jacket, $2,495, ALTUZARRA, saksfifthavenue.com. Dress, $1,995, ALTUZARRA, net-aporter.com.


Gown, $2,595, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana .it. Blanket, $520, LAUREN MANOOGIAN, laurenmanoogian.com. Ring, price upon request, BULGARI, bulgari .com. Belt, stylist’s own.


left :

Dress, $1,795, CHRISTOPHER KANE, christopherkane.com. Socks, $34, FALKE, falke.com. Boots, stylist’s own. right : Gown, $5,990, AKRIS, akris.ch. Bracelet, price upon request, BULGARI, bulgari.com. Ring, $7,480, JFINE, London Jewelers, londonjewelers.com.

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Models Mila & Nastya @ Wilhelmina Hair by Felix Fischer for Phyto Haircare at Factory Downtown Makeup by Eric Polito using Chantecaille



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The new Torre at the FONDAZIONE PRADA stimulates new ways of looking at Contemporary Art.

by MEGHAN WATSON-DONALD

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY D E L F I N O S I S T O L E G N A N I E M A R C O C A P P E L L E T T I , C O U R T E S Y O F F O N DA Z I O N E P R A DA .

DIS UP ED R T

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Carsten Hรถller, Upside Down Mushroom Room, 2000.


newly completed Torre, which opened to the public for the first time this spring, provides a dramatic last act to the foundation’s sprawling cultural compound dedicated to the manifestation of ideas across the spectrum of art, literature, cinema, music, philosophy and science. Housed in a former distillery and designed by celebrity architect Rem Koolhaas’ firm OMA (the Office for Metropolitan Architecture), the Fondazione Prada is now the largest privatelyfunded contemporary art museum in Europe, with approximately 13,000 square meters of exhibition space as well as a restaurant, two bars and a cinema. The Torre, a nine-story, white concrete monolith, dominates the skyline of Milan’s industrial Largo Isarco neighborhood and presents an asymmetrical façade that transforms according to the viewer’s perspective. From the start, the Fondazione Prada campus was conceived as a range of exhibition spaces within existing buildings and new structures that would challenge how works of art were viewed and received. “The idea was a citadel of art, made of different buildings, spaces, programs and materials. You have a juxtaposition of the existing buildings, the white cube, the Podium, the Cinema and outdoor spaces,” says lead architect

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THE FONDAZIONE PRADA’S

Damien Hirst, A Way of Seeing, 2000. opposite page : Jeff Koons, Tulips, 1995-2004.

Federico Pompignoli. “The fact that the buildings were already divided or detached made it the perfect opportunity to insert the different exhibition typologies into different buildings. You could create a series of episodes, a patchwork of different conditions, and you could experiment with different exhibition set-ups in various spaces.” If the renovated distillery buildings speak to the “refurbished industrial” typology, such as that found at the Tate Modern, and the Podium building, constructed in 2015, which showcases the “art fair” typology with generic, flexible spaces that can be reconfigured for different exhibitions, then the Torre is a riff on the “white cube,” typically a pure, featureless environment that interacts minimally with the artwork and will not interfere with its reception. However, the architects at OMA turned the concept on its head. “We didn’t surrender to the idea of designing a traditional white cube,” says Pompignoli. “OMA is not a fan of this typology. We believe in an open relationship rather than a system of isolation between art, the environment and visitors.” By playing with the spatial parameters of each story in the tower, the architectural team designed a series of nine “special conditions,” so that no two floors are the same. The core of the building, normally at the center of a tower structure, was moved to the south, creating a wedge-shaped

footprint in order to gain open gallery spaces to the north. The galleries were then cantilevered above the building’s triangular foundation in a sequence of alternating floor plans—some triangular, others rectangular—that extend over the public street beyond the property line. The architects also increased the ceiling height by close to two feet from one story to the next, creating a progression in height from just under nine feet on the first floor to nearly 28 feet at the top. In addition, each story boasts a wall of windows that faces to the north, east or west, drawing upon the mutability of natural light in different weather conditions and at varying times of the day. The result is a shifting kaleidoscope of viewing environments as the viewer ascends through the tower, with each floor offering a different combination of spatial parameters that subtly changes the way the art is situated and seen. “What happens if the same art piece is hung on a wall 3 meters high or 8.5 meters high? It completely changes the meaning and reception of the art piece,” says Pompignoli. “It explores the relationship between art and the container.” The Torre’s inaugural exhibition is “Atlas,” which the Fondazione Prada describes as a mapping of the ideas and visions that run through its permanent collection of 20th and 21st century works produced between 1960 and 2016.


“The idea was a citadel of art, made of different buildings, spaces, programs and materials.” —FEDERICO POMPIGNOLI

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the common spaces such as the staircase. “The stairs are a crucial part of the building,” he explains. “In order to gain such conditions in the galleries, the stairs become the most crazy, dynamic, unpredictable space ever. The number of steps, the shape of the landings is changing every time. It’s like two sides of the same coin. To create a calm condition on one side, you have to create a completely dynamic condition on the other.” The result is a perfect tension between mirrored forms and reflected angles, heaviness counterbalanced by lightness, positive and negative space coexisting in pure equilibrium. Triangular forms and diagonal lines echo one another in the jagged windows, the external contours of the stairs, and the angled handrails. Softening the overall effect is the otherworldly glow of the lighting emitted by the handrails and by service walls clad with pink plasterboard on the landings. “We spent some energy trying to generate a meaningful space,” says Pompignoli. “The light is soft because it has some color in it. Without it, the exposed white concrete would have been too surgical, so we decided to work on warming solutions in terms of light.” The decision to build the Torre in exposed white structural concrete arose from two separate but interlinked ideas: a literal interpretation of the white cube gallery as a “pure white” structure, and a contrapuntal purity in the use of materials. “Steel and concrete structures are traditional,

then they are covered in skins, layers, panels, cladding. You never see the underlying materials,” Pompignoli adds. “The Torre was a more honest and reliable way of building architecture. All the material you see from the outside is white concrete as well as inner spaces: stairs, walls and ceilings. What you see is what it is.” Adding further to the repertoire of spaces within the Torre are the rooftop bar, with its optical-illusion floor pattern that expands into the infinite over the city, and the sixth-floor restaurant with furnishings by Philip Johnson (designed in 1958 for the Four Seasons Hotel in New York), sculptures by Lucio Fontana, and elements from Carsten Höller’s nightclub installation, The Double Club. The array of offerings within the Fondazione Prada complex is so extensive that a visit is always first and foremost a process of exploration. “There is no predictable way to visit all of the spaces,” Pompignoli says. “This is not a common feature of museums. It challenges the visitor into taking action, in deciding what to do. You can’t just passively follow a pre-defined curatorial path.” Indeed, the visitor acts as a curator for his or her own experience, bringing to mind the late, great art critic John Berger’s famous quote: “To look is an act of choice…We never look at just one thing: we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves.” ■

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The product of a conversation between Miuccia Prada and the foundation’s artistic director, the renowned curator and critic Germano Celant, the exhibition is staged as a series of confrontations between individual artists whose works speak and interact with one another. On the eighth floor, William N. Copley’s sexually charged nudes stare down from the walls at Damien Hirst’s glass-walled tanks containing an animatronic figure in a laboratory or a suspended umbrella and floating rubber ducks. Expansive views of the Milan skyline open out behind them. On the first floor, Carla Accardi’s vivid abstract works from the late ‘60s and ‘70s commune with Jeff Koons’ giant, rainbow-colored Tulips against a backdrop of fields and tower blocks. The exhibition also features the occasional ‘solo’ or single-artist installations, such as Carsten Höller’s immersive Upside Down Mushroom Room with its gargantuan hallucinogenic mushrooms sprouting from the ceiling. The interactions among the works and the architectural spaces generate unexpected dialogues, new meaning and fresh perspectives. “We created a vertical conglomeration of differences,” says Pompignoli. “We wanted to be consistent with the [Fondazione Prada] museum where every building is a different story.” An additional confrontation takes place between the gallery spaces, which Pompignoli describes as “soft, proportioned and relaxing,” and

from left to right : William N. Copley, Gathering of the Clan, 1974; Damien Hirst, Waiting for Inspiration (Red + Blue), 1994; Damien Hirst, Tears for Everybody’s Looking at You, 1997; Damien Hirst, The Last Judgement, 2002.


“The stairs become the most crazy, dynamic, unpredictable space ever. The number of steps, the shape of the landings is changing every time.” —FEDERICO POMPIGNOLI

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P H OTO G R A P H Y

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Blazer, $2,800, and trousers, $950, BOTTEGA VENETA, bottegaveneta .com. Shirt, $595, BRIONI, brioni .com. Pocket square, $145, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana.it. Watch, BREITLING $8,590 breitling.com. opposite page: Blazer $1,185, trousers, $565, and shirt, $260, STELLA MCCARTNEY, stellamccartney.com. Shoes, $1,095, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, christianlouboutin.com. Sunglasses, $585, OLIVER PEOPLES, oliverpeoples.com. Watch, $6,250, CARTIER, cartier.com.


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Strange Angel star Rupert Friend’s latest role takes him down a darker path, however it’s just one more adventurous trip for the wanderlust actor. by SAMUEL ANDERSON photography by KURT ISWARIENKO Styling by JILL LINCOLN & JORDAN JOHNSON


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Trousers, $695, and coat, $4,995, RALPH LAUREN, ralphlauren .com. Shoes, $1,295, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, christianlouboutin.com. Sunglasses, $575, THIERRY LASRY, theirrylasry.com.


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signal I texted, ‘Let’s do it’ and then said goodbye to the civilized world.” But Friend is used to taking leaps of faith: Before getting Homeland, he’d taken out a large loan to buy his London flat—a venture that didn’t go according to plan. “I ran out of money halfway through renovating it,” he explains. “So I had to fire all the construction workers. By that point my house was worth far less than it was when I bought it because I’d knocked holes in the walls, so I had no choice but to finish it myself.” It was Homeland that eventually brought Friend to the U.S. “I found that there was a real genuine joy in what might be in America and that’s how I’ve always thought,” says Friend, who up until his role as Peter Quinn had been known for period dramas like his debut The Libertine opposite Johnny Depp and Pride & Prejudice, where he’d met Keira Knightley, his former girlfriend of five years. “What I don’t want to hear is ‘I wouldn’t do that—it probably won’t work.’ I was very much wanting to try to tap into that positive potential energy; you might have done this kind of role, but we’d like to see what you can do with that kind of role.” Stateside, Friend leaned into both professional and personal opportunities, meeting his future wife, Aimee Mullins, an actress, public speaker, TED Talkgiver and Paralympic athlete, who turned out to be a valuable resource when it came to his role on Homeland. While an undergrad at Georgetown, Mullins interned at the Pentagon. “Aimee’s invaluable to me in every way, and is a great help on every one of my projects,” he says. “That particular one, it’s unfortunately classified. So we’ll have to leave it at that.” On the precipice of his Arctic vacation, Friend had just two weeks to prepare for the role of Ernest Donovan. But as luck—or perhaps the spirit world—would have it, Friend got some help from one of his fellow passengers. “In the way that the world is sometimes very fortuitous, I got on the plane and met a wonderful man who was obsessed with all of it—CalTech, Los Angeles, rocket science, sex majick, the occult, fantasy—and he was a complete expert on the whole period. He grabbed my iPad and got me a ton of literature on it.” In addition to studying, Friend prepared by doing, as he always does, “what thou wilt.” In the Arctic, this included coming dizzyingly close to a whale, traversing massive icebergs, diving into arctic temperatures and jump-roping on deck during a storm—“I was getting fidgety,” he quips. While he may be the living embodiment of following one’s heart, Friend says his days of extreme wanderlust are mostly behind him. “I used to find the familiarity of a living space claustrophobic, actually. Now less so because I like to come back to a place that I can call home,” he says. Following the wrap of Strange Angel’s first season in June, Friend plans to head back to New York, where he and Mullins share a construction site-free apartment. But, he admits, another adventure may be in the works. “I want to take Aimee on the Orient Express. I think that would be great,” he says. “I want to do the tablecloth dining car thing, but I do get very twitchy, so I’ve got to figure out what to do about that.” ■

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what t hou w i lt shall be the whole of the law,’” says actor Rupert Friend, quoting the philosophy behind an obscure religion practiced by his character on his for thcoming CBS A ll Access show Strange Angel. Yet, he could just as well be summing up his own life’s motto. He may not, like his character, worship early 1900s occultist Aleister Crowley or dabble in the dark arts, but Friend says his own propensity to quote, “do what thou wilt” has prepared him for the role of the freewheeling Ernest Donovan. Born in Oxfordshire, England, Friend grew up reading voraciously, which he says primed him for an actor’s life; his character on Strange Angel is a testament to just how many lives he’s lived. “There’s a wild and reckless quality to him that I certainly did have for quite a long time in my younger years,” he says. “I would chuckle to myself while reading the script [because] it was like a greatest hits of all the things I once did. Like, ‘Oh, yeah, crashed my motorbike, done that. Down a beer and tears up the night, done that. Oh yeah, killed my own food, done that.’” Based on a stranger-than-fiction chapter in scientific history, the show centers on real-life 1930s scientist Jack Parsons, who invented a form of rocket fuel later used by NASA while in his free time practicing satanic rituals and organizing mystical orgies. In the show, Friend’s Donovan turns Parsons onto British occultist Crowley’s teachings—which, he says, are as universal as they are sensational. “[Crowley’s] detractors would say it was an excuse for debauchery,” says Friend. “But I think the people who followed the religion then and now would say it’s more about being true to yourself and allowing your desire to lead you rather than repressing it. I think there’s something in it.” Not unlike Crowley, Friend is seemingly driven by a desire to occupy as many worlds as possible. A little over a year ago, Friend wrapped his five-season run as Peter Quinn, a CIA warhead who takes a shine to Claire Danes’s ex-CIA operative Carrie Mathison on the Showtime drama Homeland. An audience favorite, Quinn’s unexpected death at the end of Season 6 caused so much outrage that a fan group called “Not OurHomeland” took out a full-page ad in The Hollywood Reporter demanding an explanation from showrunners. After wrapping such a high-pressure role, some actors may have retreated to a white-sand beach. Instead, Friend jumped into back-to-back film roles: one in the Paul Feig-directed buddy comedy A Simple Favor and the other as Theo Van Gogh in Julian Schnabel’s Van Gogh biopic, At Eternity’s Gate, with Oscar Isaac and Willem Dafoe. Only after that, a vacation of sorts: “I decided to go on an ice-breaker to Antarctica. I’d never been,” Friend says matter-of-factly. Just before embarking for the Arctic, Friend got the Strange Angel offer. “Our bags were packed and we were about to get on the plane when we got a call,” he says. “I was going to have no phone signal for about two weeks, so they needed a decision. I read the whole season f lying over North and South America, and I thought it was terrific. Using my last couple bars of


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Shirt, $345, DOLCE & GABBANA, dolcegabbana.it. Watch, $8,600, PANERAI, panerai.com. Sunglasses, $455, OLIVER PEOPLES, oliverpeoples.com. opposite page: Sweater, trousers, and trench coat, prices upon request, LOUIS VUITTON, louisvuitton.com. Boots, $1,295, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, christianlouboutin.com.


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Shirt, $875, BRIONI, brioni.com. Trousers, $530, ETRO, etro.com. Belt, $215, HUGO BOSS, hugoboss .com. Shoes, $1,095, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, christianlouboutin .com opposite page: Shirt, $875, BRIONI, brioni.com. Grooming by David Cox for Art Department using R + Co



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From expansive porches with views of the harbor, to the summer camp-inspired décor in each room, Martha’s Vineyard’s Summer Camp Hotel in Oak Bluffs is a nod back to the days of yore. Buckle down for a game of Twister or ping pong, and refuel with vintage snacks like Cracker Jacks and Dreamsicles.

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Ai Weiwei on Lesvos, 2016.

EBB & FLOW

Artist and activist Ai Weiwei comes to Snowmass Village. BY AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

“A

nderson Ranch Arts Center will honor Chinese conceptual artist and humanrights activist Ai Weiwei with the International Artist Award at its Annual Recognition Dinner on July 19. The award is given to globally recognized artists whose careers have fundamentally influenced contemporary art; past winners have included Frank Stella, Theaster Gates, Cindy Sherman, Vik Muniz, and Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Born in Beijing in 1957, Ai was the subject of a well-known arrest and imprisonment by the Chinese government. Now exiled, Ai resides and works in Berlin; his work spans a wide range of media, including architecture, installation, social media and documentary film, including his first featurelength documentary, Human Flow, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2017. “My duty as an artist is to associate myself with freedom of expression, and to spark dialogue around urgent issues facing

humanity,” says Ai. “We live in a complex and ever-changing society, and my art calls on people to question and engage with that reality, to respond to history as it happens, and to demand accountability.” andersonranch.org

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F A I W E I W E I ST U D I O ( P O RT R A I T ) ; A N D E RS O N R A N C H A RTS CENTER (ANDERSON RANCH)

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TOP FIVE:

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O2 Aspen: This yoga studio and spa, housed in a new chic space on the edge of Wagner Park, also features Artem, its own line of women’s yoga and leisurewear. O2aspen.com Basalt Bike and Ski: With locations in Aspen, Basalt and Carbondale, the store transforms over the summer from ski shop to cycling mecca with road and mountain bikes as well as clothing and accessories for men and women. basaltbikeandski.com

3

Aspen Shakti Boutique: A uniquely curated collection of clothing also stocks its own line of Shaktiwear and locally made prayer beads by Denev, as well as wellness and ritual products for mind, body and spirit. aspenshakti.com

4

Outdoor Voices: New to the Aspen landscape is Outdoor Voices; stop in for the line’s hugely popular TechSweat and color-blocked leggings for women and CloudKnit hoodies for men. outdoorvoices.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E L L E LO GA N ( E V E N T S ) ; TA L S T U D I O ( H O T E L J E R O M E )

SHOP TALK

SPARKLING ASPEN EVENTS

While the summer season in Aspen may be short, it is full of extraordinary festivals and events. Mark your calendars now for the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen (June 15-17) and Aspen Summer Words Writers’ Workshop and Literary Festival (June 18-22); followed by eight weeks of the Aspen Music Festival (June 28-August 19); the Aspen Ideas Festival (June 21-30); An Evening on the Lake benefiting Aspen Center for Environmental Science (July 12); and the Anderson Ranch Arts Center Recognition Dinner (July 19) and the JAS Labor Day Experience (August 31-September 2).

FOR GENERATIONS, ASPENITES HAVE LOOKED TO THE UTE MOUNTAINEER FOR THE LATEST IN TECHNICAL OUTDOOR CLOTHING AND GEAR, INCLUDING SKIS, HIKING BOOTS AND CLIMBING HARNESSES AND ROPES. BUT DON’T FORGET TO SPEND TIME WITH THE STAFF—THE SHOP IS FILLED WITH ALPINE SPORTS EXPERTS INCLUDING CLIMBERS, MOUNTAINEERS AND CYCLISTS. UTEMOUNTAINEER.COM

SUMMER 2018

In June, Hotel Jerome unveils its most ambitious expansion ever as it opens the conversion of the 140-year-old Aspen Times newspaper building adjacent to the iconic threestory brick hotel. The new building features three-bedroom residential style suites with views of Aspen Mountain, an underground bar and lounge called Bad Harriet, and a newly transformed courtyard that includes a redesigned outdoor swimming pool and terrace for summer delights or après ski relaxation in winter. hoteljerome.aubergeresorts.com

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Bristlecone Mountain Sports: An outdoorsman’s destination for close to 25 years, this expansive store in Willits Town Center has everything you need for a summer of fun—from sleeping bags to stand-up paddleboards, running shoes to backpacks. bristleconemountainsports.com

ROOM REQUEST: HOTEL JEROME DEBUTS NEW RESIDENCES


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CAST IRON

Iron Chef Stephanie Izard is expanding her culinary empire.

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BY CARLY BOERS

W

ith the imminent launch of her prepared foods and condiment line, pla ns to sta r t o n h e r third cookbook, and a new restaurant announcement coming soon, Stephanie Izard is not about to take a summer break. But along with the rest of us, she’s soaking up these fleeting mild days. “[My husband] Gary and I have people over for grill-outs all the time,” says Izard, the toque behind Chicago eateries Girl & the Goat, Little Goat and Duck Duck Goat. A James Beard Award winner and the first female Iron Chef, Izard’s recently released cookbook, Gather & Graze, has an entire chapter devoted to cooking over live flame and includes fan favorites such as banh mi burgers and Kalbi beef ribs. “It is really my favorite part of the book,” admits the chef, who is partial to late-season sweet corn on the cob. In addition to her three restaurants, Izard is also training for a sprint triathlon and has a two-year-old son to chase after, but Chicago’s most industrious chef is relishing the city’s summer vibes. “The restaurants are so much more lively with the patios open and all the folks out enjoying the West Loop,” she says. “Chicago really comes to life in the summer.” stephanieizard.com

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ROOM REQUEST Listen up, sports fans: Hotel Zachary may be the hottest ticket in Wrigleyville this summer. With its outstanding bar and restaurant tenants and a chic design that pays homage to Chicago architecture, there’s reason to check it out before, after or even during the game. For the ultimate Cubs’ fan experience, book the signature Marquee suite, which offers various seating areas including a lounge, dining room and custom game table; a 65-inch television; a gentleman’s chest with bar set up; and views of both the Wrigley Field marquee and city skyline. hotelzachary.com

PLAY BALL!

Huge changes have swept through Wrigleyville since Tom Ricketts and family

past off-season. In addition to the nabe’s first luxury hotel, the area surrounding the Friendly Confines now boasts dozens of new dining and drinking options from some of the city’s best restaurateurs— including Mathias Merges’s whiskeycentric Mordecai, a two-story Big Star and Boka Restaurant Group’s American bistro Dutch & Doc’s. Inside the stadium itself, the tony new American Airlines 1914 Club affords prime views from beneath

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY L U C Y H E W E T T ( O P P O S I T E ) ; G I L B E R T O R T I Z ( PAC I F I C S TA N DA R D T I M E ) ; RYA N B E S H E L ( R I D E R ) ; F O L K A R T R E S TA R A N T M A N AG E M E N T .

the stands just behind home plate and

SHOPPING SPREE Rider

serves upscale food and cocktails.

AZEEZA:

more, plus light bites and

Chicago-bred Azeeza Khan

pick-me-ups at an in-house café.

showcases her eponymous line,

ikram.com

Azeeza, at her flagship boutique. Creations include luxe silks and

RIDER:

hand-woven, bejeweled

Nestled among the city’s hottest

embellishments. azeeza.us

restaurants, this West Loop retailer offers vintage furniture,

BRIMFIELD:

apothecary goods and women’s

This tasteful store skews

clothing. In keeping with its foodie

English-cottage chic. In addition

environs, a coffee bar sells

to plaid aplenty, you’ll find

upscale concessions. shoprider.us

reclaimed furniture and antique curios. Custom furniture is also on

STOCK MFG. CO.:

offer. brimfieldus.com

What began as an online-only dealer of unfussy men’s clothing

IKRAM:

and accessories has blossomed

Inside the glossy red walls of this

into this lounge/shop/factory

world-renowned women’s

hybrid where everything is

couture destination, you’ll find

designed and produced onsite.

Lanvin, Givenchy, Moschino and

stockmfgco.com

SHOP TALK Beverly Hills-based bridal line Winnie Couture has brought its glam gowns to Old Town. Look for intricate details and high-end materials including European silk and Swarovski crystals, as well as a collection of statement jewelry perfect for your big day. winniecouture.com For a decidedly less opulent—but equally memorable—shopping excursion, swing by Andersonville newcomer Cowboys and Astronauts. The expertly curated, upscale general store for guys offers everything from clothing and accessories to apothecary products, artwork, home décor and even toys. Boys will be boys. cowboysandastronauts.com

SUMMER 2018

Erling Wu-Bower cut his teeth at The Publican and earned a James Beard nomination for his work at Nico Osteria. Now he’s got an 8,000 square foot River North restaurant to call his very own: the West Coastinspired, veggie-centric Pacific Standard Time. Expect all 189 seats to be constantly occupied this summer. pstchicago.com Meanwhile, over in West Town, Scott Worsham and Sari Zernich Worsham (formerly of MFK) have created quite the fiesta/fête at Bar Biscay—an ambitious Basque pintxo bar/French bistro hybrid. barbiscay.com

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bought the Cubs in 2009, but the most dramatic transformation happened this


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SKIN DEEP

Beauty Bioscience CEO and co-founder Jamie O’Banion is changing the skincare game worldwide from her Dallas headquarters. BY KIM PEIFFER

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F B EAU T Y B I OS C I E N C E

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q u i c k s c ro l l t h ro u g h J a m i e O’Banion’s Instagram and one may wonder how the mother of three could possibly do everything that she does, and do it all seemingly flawlessly. For starters, she seems to exist on little to no sleep, yet she looks perfectly put-together, 100 percent of the time. She travels the globe on a weekly basis, yet somehow still manages to drop off her three children at school in the morning before she boards her flight. It should come as no surprise that this entrepreneur is continuing to reel in success with her $100 million company Beauty Bioscience and its star product, the GloPro microneedling tool, the $199 at-home device designed to stimulate collagen and elastin production. “The most important attribute for success is your ability to get back up, learn from your mistakes, be open to constructive criticism, and persevere,” O’Banion says of her well-earned success. “I have fallen more times than I can count but the only number worth recording is the number of times you get back up.” This summer, her empire will continue to grow with the launch of a new lip serum called The Pout, a natural athome alternative to lip injections. “One use and you will be hooked—the most perfect pouty lips in seconds,” she says. In addition, the brand will launch a rose quartz contouring roller in July—and there’s already a lengthy waitlist for it. “We all keep one at our desks at work and are seriously obsessed.” beautybioscience.com


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SHOPPING SPREE Sister shops CABANA and CANARY are the brainchild of artsy philanthropist Merry Vose. Residing a block apart on West Lovers Lane, Cabana sports a casual beach vibe while Canary is its dressier counterpart. cabanacanary.com ELEMENTS charms glamour gals with fashionforward contemporary brands such as No. 21, MSGM, Zimmermann and Giamba; plus there’s an exclusive Eden Square parfumerie and a full bar. elementsclothing.com

ROOM REQUEST

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F ST E V E N V I S N EAU ( A D O L P H U S ) ; C A M B R I A H O T E L D O W N T O W N ; H I LT O N DA L L A S U P T O W N ; J U S T I N C L E M O N S ( LO U I S V U I T T O N

Model Erin Wasson is among the loyal clients at the under-the-radar epicenter of cool V.O.D. Nestled next to W Dallas Victory Hotel, V.O.D. owners Jackie Bolen and Liz Thompson obsess over French chic (Isabel Marant, Vanessa Bruno, Au Jour Le Jour, Christophe Lemaire) and edgy denim. vodboutique.com NORTHPARK CENTER is on a roll. This summer, the shopping mecca debuts the first location in the Southwest for upscale Kiwi men’s wear retailer Rodd & Gunn as well as the second U.S. store of Italian luxury brand Fabiana Filippi, a Cumbrian house of effortless chic in fine fabrications, including a new offering of monogrammed sweaters. Also arriving at NorthPark are Aesop and Johnny Was. northparkcenter.com

SUMMER 2018

Beat the Texas heat at Midnight Rambler, a craft cocktail bar located under The Joule hotel. Chad Solomon and Christy Pope helm the Rolling Stonesinspired bar that debuted the “Pagan Ritual: Rites of Summer” menu for the season. Alums of New York City’s famed Milk & Honey, Solomon and Pope have created a menu filled with neo-classical cocktails crafted with housemade sodas and other aromatics, like the Asbury Park Swizzle (white Applejack, mint, lemon, orange blossom honey, and aromatics bitter). True Texans should sample the Alex Chilton that’s named for the 1970s Big Star musician and the popular Abilene cocktail. midnightramblerbar.com

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Affluent young moms hit PLANET BARDOT in the burgeoning Knox District for smart California-inspired lifestyle togs. Owner Diana Tabesh, who’s often personally assisting shoppers on site, keeps it fresh with L’Agence, Ulla Johnson, See by Chloe, Antonello Tedde and more.

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growing Main Street District within steps of posh shopping at Forty Five Ten, Neiman Marcus, Traffic Los Angeles and Tenoversix. The “upscale, not uptight” property features a 24-hour fitness facility outfitted with premium TechnoGym equipment and a plush-casual grill dishing seasonal, locally sourced fare. cambriadallas.com Canopy by Hilton Dallas Uptown is a casually luxurious, dog-friendly hotel that makes the most of its location in an area teeming with restaurants and shops. “It’s for folks who want to come in and have a walkable nightlife,” says general manager Jeff Pope. “Every employee is well-versed in the neighborhood.” Venture up to the rooftop bar for a skyline view, or grab a bite and a beer next door at Mutts Canine Cantina dog park and bar. canopy3. hilton.com—Holly Haber

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Two new hotels plus a total renovation of the century-old Adolphus Hotel offer a fresh spate of luxury accommodations. An iconic Beaux-Arts beauty that opened in 1912, the Adolphus has just completed a three-year facelift that updated every room and surface. Contemporary Texas art, custom furniture and antique French limestone fireplaces lend a residential ambience to common areas. New facilities include a lobby bar, spa, boutique specializing in fine local wares, Viennese-inspired coffee and pastry shop, and a gallery whose original marble floor was discovered during the renovation. adolphus.com The newly opened Cambria Hotel Downtown has a modern Art Deco sensibility reflecting its home in the Tower Petroleum Building that dates to 1931. The boutique property is situated in the


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left :

Handvaerk founders Esteban Saba and Petra Brichnacova. below, clockwise from top

Handvaerk’s short sleeve henley, $125; Raglan sweatshirt, $195; and sweatpants, $195.

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left :

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TEE TIME

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outhampton-based luxury clothing brand Håndværk is our new favorite for summer staples. Launched in 2013 by husband and wife Esteban Saba and Petra Brichnacova, the artisan label creates award-winning t-shirts and loungewear for men and women that are made from ultra-soft Peruvian pima cotton and produced in small familyowned workshops. Stock up on muscle tanks, basic tees, loungewear and henleys at Henry Lehr. handvaerk.com

DORIN GOLD

Stock up on Handvaerk’s award-winning basics, available in a reserved color palette and neutral design. BY JILL SIERACKI


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HOT FOR POP UPS SAVE THE DATE!

FRESH FITNESS

K A R E N W I S E ( T I K I H U T ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F X T E N D B A R R E ; B FA . C O M ( S U R F LO D G E ) ; D O R I N G I L D P H O T O G R A P H Y ( B O N J OV I ) . O P P O S I T E PAG E : M A R K S A N D E R S ( H A N D VA E R K P O R T R A I T ) ; C O U R T E S Y H A N D VA E R K ( FA S H I O N )

HIDE & GO TIKI

Tiki With a Twist author Lynn Calvo is also proprietor of one of The Hampton’s best kept secrets—Lynn’s Hula Hut, a Jimmy Buffett song come to life on Montauk’s Marine Basin. Chill next to Buddha in the hammock garden and sip handcrafted cocktails infused with locally grown organic ingredients. Then knock back some clams and oysters as local bands jam on the bamboo stage. lynnshulahut.net

PARTY PERFECTED

Cipriani is coming East this summer with Cipriani on Location. The catering service will offer favorite menu items from Cipriani’s restaurant locations and Bellini bar, served as a sit-down dinner or passed hors d’ouevres. cipriani.com

ROOM REQUEST Since it opened in Montauk in 2008, The Surf Lodge has become a major destination for visitors looking for a beach chic respite, cool drinks and fitness pop-ups. This summer, chef Ron Rosselli of Locanda Verde fame helms the kitchen, overseeing a menu of Italian and Mediterranean dishes, like fluke crudo with pineapple, jalapeno and mint. Make a dinner reservation, then stick around for The Surf Lodge Concert Series, presented by Lincoln Motor Company, which hosts Bob Moses on June 24, St. Lucia on July 8, and Donavon Frankenreiter on August 12. Local icon Nancy Atlas commands the stage every Wednesday night. thesurflodge.com

SUMMER 2018

Longtime Hamptonite Jon Bon Jovi, his son Jesse Bongiovi and French winemaker Gérard Bertrand are introducing Diving into Hampton Water rosé. The bottle features a letter written by Jesse that invites anyone who pulls the stopper to experience the Hamptons as he and his family see it. “The Hamptons for me is riding bikes to Georgica Beach,” says Jesse, “it’s bonfires late at night in Montauk and wildly competitive badminton in the yard. It’s life perfected.” hamptonwaterwine.com

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REFRESH: Recover from too much sun with Park Avenue Skin Solutions satellite office in Southampton. Open July 4 through Labor Day, guests can receive B12 and Red Light/Blue Light Infrared Therapy, Botox and fillers from company founder Lauren Abramowitz.

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East Hampton, starting June 29. The instructors will also be hosting a morning workout and pool party at their Summer House, located at 7 Whitney Lane in Wainscott Fourth of July weekend. dancebody.com Finally, SoulCycle’s East End flagship at The Barns is getting a major overhaul. The expanded Bridgehampton space will not only get more bikes, SoulAnnex will offer private training sessions as well as The Class by Taryn Toomey. soul-cycle.com

SHOP: Jimmy Choo is coming back to East Hampton with their seasonal store on Newtown Lane in East Hampton. Exclusive to the store will be the sweet summer sandal, the Lance Jelly gladiator.

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Summer in the Hamptons is about rocking out, chilling out and working out. Several new fitness programs are making an appearance in the East End, including Xtend Barre (shown), which will host workouts at Solé East on Saturdays from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Founder Andrea Rogers’s low-impact cardio classes combine interval training and Pilates to sculpt, lengthen and tone. xtendbarre.com Shake your booty at DanceBody’s two locations in Bridgehampton and

This year’s Hamptons Paddle and Party for Pink, a star-studded morning paddleboard race and late-night party to benefit the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, will be held August 4. hamptons paddlefor pink.org

FOOD: NYC Japanese omakase and kaiseki restaurant Shuko hosts a pop-up dining experience, Shuko Beach, at Highway Restaurant & Bar Friday and Saturday nights starting July 6. Reserve asap for one of three nightly seatings at the six-seat Chef’s Counter and enjoy at 16-piece sushi progression featuring local fish.


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A LA CARTE

Culinary king Chris Shepherd is spicing up Houston, bite by bite. BY HOLLY CRAWFORD

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ot on the tails of his new no-reservations restaurant UB Preserv, James Beard Award-winning Chef Chris Shepherd is set to unveil not one, but two, new concepts before year’s end— Georgia James steakhouse in July and One Fifth Mediterranean debuting in September. Yet, the very driven Shepherd is cool as a cucumber. “It’s not that hard because there’s an infrastructure in place,” he says. “For me, it’s food and having a team around you... and everybody is in their places.” Along with all the newness comes the closing of beloved Underbelly, which Shepherd says “got too big and had too many restrictions.” It will be home to the 180-seat Georgia James, which will get a slick interior redesign with a lot of glass and steel, as well as room for table side carts, but no wood-burning oven. Steaks cook in cast-iron, and the restaurant will be open for dinner only, seven days a week. One Fifth’s second concept, Romance Languages, closes at July’s end to make way for Mediterranean, the third variation of Shepherd’s brainchild to push himself as a cook and

learn new cuisines and techniques. “Our eating experiences are better for it, not to mention our empathy and understanding for those who are different than us,” says Shepherd, a Tulsa native who grew up going to Lebanese steakhouses. “As a kid, it was normal to eat tabouli alongside a rib-eye, and it wasn’t until later that I realized it was a result of the Lebanese population in Tulsa. Looking back, it was my first time experiencing the merging of cultures.” And that’s exactly what his chef de cuisine, Nick Wong, formerly of Momofuku Ssäm Bar, is doing at the 80-seat UB Preserv, with a menu that mirrors the diversity of the city. “Houston doesn’t limit itself, and neither do we,” says Shepherd. He, Wong and Underbelly Hospitality culinary director, Nick Fine, designed dishes that they, as cooks and students of H-Town culture, want to eat. Think crawfish and noodles made with garlic, crawfish tails and crispy rice noodles from Vietnamese shop Van Loi—and don’t miss Dim Sum-style brunch on Sundays. The changing culinary scene is a positive step as the city continues to recover from 2017’s Hurricane Harvey. Says Shepherd, “We got kicked in the knees a year ago, but this is a city that’s thriving...and it’s ever-evolving.”


M A R T H A’ S V IN E YA R D

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S A N F R A N CI S C O

SHIRT NOTICE

Bespoke shirt-maker Hamilton Shirts has spent 135 years perfecting styles for men. Now the oldest familyowned business in Houston—which is helmed by its fourth generation, brother and sister David and Kelly Hamilton—is adding a new women’s collection that includes a classic button-down with bust sizing, a “boyfriend” buttondown, tunic, western style and utility shirt. Each can be personalized with design detail choices like collar, cuff, pocket and monogram; all are handcrafted from fine Italian linen, poplin and cotton cashmere. “For the last few years, I’ve been working with our team of expert patternmakers and seamstresses to create five classic, customizable styles that I think every woman would want in her wardrobe,” says Kelly. “The fit and style options really are what set Hamilton Women’s apart.” From $265 to $345; hamiltonwomens.com

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY L U C Y H E W E T T ( O P P O S I T E , F O O D ) ; J U L I E S O E F E R ( O P P O S I T E , P O R T R A I T ) ; G I L B E R T O R T I Z ( PAC I F I C S TA N DA R D T I M E ) ; RYA N B E S H E L ( R I D E R ) ; F O L K A R T R E S TA R A N T M A N AG E M E N T ; F E R T I T TA E N T E R TA I N M E N T ( P O S T OA K H O T E L ) ; H A M I LT O N S H I R T S

New restaurant Emmaline is serving brunch (mascarpone pancake stack, anyone?), lunch (south pizza with marinated ricotta, eggplant and basil) and dinner (wood-fired cioppino bianco or lobster and squid ink tagliarini) with a welcoming vibe. Helmed by debonair managing partner Sam Governdale and executive chef Dimitri Voutsinasm, this is Houston’s version of The Ivy with an inviting interior design by Houstonian Ashley Putman, a former Domino cover girl. “From the moment you walk in, you will find a lively, comfortable and

versatile landmark, which we believe will contribute to the ongoing revitalization of the area and serve as a natural gathering space,” says Governdale. The main dining floor highlights a 100-yearold oak tree centerpiece through floor-to-ceiling steel and glass windows. “My hope is that people will find a spot in the midst of the action or tuck away in a nook to enjoy high-quality, seasonal offerings and mainstays, along with attentive, unpretentious service.” Make sure to visit for Saturday Spin, which showcases DJs from 10 am to 3 pm. dineemmaline.com

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Rider

River Oaks District’s latest amenity solidifies its status as a fashion destination. The Studio is a new private luxury lounge for one-on-one wardrobe consultations with resident stylist Lisa Powers, who has been dressing some of Houston’s elite for years. “The Studio is tucked discreetly in the furthest corner of the property, and my clients can arrive as they are, park steps away and enter into their heart’s desire,” says Powers. “We can cater from a restaurant on property and we can accommodate small parties and giving events—the sky’s the limit!” Powers can also pull looks from any of the District’s 60-plus storefronts (think Akris, Canali, Cartier, COS, Dior, Giuseppe Zanotti, Harry Winston, Hermès, Stella McCartney and Tom Ford, among others), and her services go beyond personal shopping. “What defines someone’s personal style is such a dynamic and subjective concept, so I’m all about getting the client to open up about what makes them happy,” she says. “I’ve always taken a holistic approach and pushed boundaries, but I observe my client’s response and ask questions so, together, we find the answer.” As for the top trends Powers is playing with this season: “There’s an optimistic vibe and a diminishing distinction between gender, race, body type, age, and social status,” she says, “and the retro style of the hour references the 80s power suiting for women, but I hear 90s grunge playing in the not-so-distant future!” riveroaksdistrict.com

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SHOPPING SPREE DUJOUR.COM

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The Post Oak Hotel is the centerpiece of Landry CEO Tilman Fertitta’s unique 10-acre mixeduse development, complete with restaurants, Rolls Royce dealership and spa in uptown Houston. The two-bedroom 5,000-square-foot Presidential Suite, however, is the crown jewel—and one of the largest hotel rooms in town. Guests arrive by private elevator to unwind in the suite that has its own fitness room, private office, catering kitchen and helipad as well as panoramic 22nd-floor city views. thepostoak.com


LAS VEGAS ASPEN

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HAMPTONS

HOUSTON

LOS ANGELES

M A L IB U

POWER PLAYER

TALK IT OUT

Hospitality impresario Andy Masi wants you to stop staring at the DJ.

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as Vegas in the early aughts was the right place and time for Andy Masi. The town was shedding its previous family-friendly persona, transforming into a culinary destination, and thanks to Masi, nightlife became an entity of its own. Now, he’s reinventing the scene again with endeavors at the Palms, including Apex Social Club and Camden Cocktail Lounge. Masi’s first Strip endeavor was Light at Bellagio, which ushered in an era of massive, million-dollar nightclubs appointed with big room DJs, banging sound systems and the ultimate see-and-be-seen status symbol: bottle service. Then the floodgates opened: Masi and Light Group opened venues at The Mirage, Mandalay Bay and Aria, each bigger and more extravagant than the last with lines snaking out the door and crowds huddled behind velvet ropes waiting to be part of the scene. A decade later, Masi, much like Las Vegas itself, is once again in the midst of another transformation. “We went from a place that really had no nightlife to a place with too much nightlife,” Masi says of the city. With his latest company, Clique Hospitality, he’s moved towards smaller scale nights out, including venues like the chic Clique Lounge at Cosmopolitan or the neighborhood-feeling Hearthstone Kitchen at Red Rock Resort, as well as expanded to other markets including San Diego and Washington, D.C. “I saw a higher-end market that was looking for a cool bar, a great restaurant. [They] don’t want to be crammed in with 5,000 people, looking to a DJ.” The impresario’s latest developments are part of Palm’s $620 million renovation—the 55th floor Apex created its own sort of social feng shui with tables and seating designed to encourage a convivial

atmosphere and four giant Dustin Yellin sculptures in the middle of the room. “We’re actually encouraging you to talk to the person next to or in front of you,” says Masi. First floor Camden Cocktail Lounge is inspired by the cool speakeasies from across the pond with cleverly crafted cocktails by talented mixologists, stunning visuals such as a ceiling that glitters with black and gold pebbles, and two pieces by renowned American artist Richard Prince. “You’re going from Real World to high-end art world,” he adds, a nod to the Palms being the first home to MTV’s The Real World: Las Vegas. “Nothing against the Real World,” he laughs. “There was a time for it, but it’s not now.” cliquehospitality.com

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M A R T H A’ S V INE YA R D

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A TALE OF TWO COCKTAIL BARS

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY M A D I S O N F R E E D L E , O N E 7 C O M M U N I C AT I O N S . C O M ( D R I N K ) ; M G M R E S O R T S I N T E R N AT I O N A L ; T H E V E N E T I A N ; T H E PA L A Z Z O L A S V E GA S .

NEW LOCALS TO LOVE Sparrow + Wolf: Las Vegas’ Chinatown, Spring Mountain Boulevard, is garnering even more gourmet cred with the addition of Sparrow & Wolf where chef Brian Howard serves up bone marrow and beef cheek dumplings, or “peasant food” Chinatown Clams Casino. sparrowandwolflv.com The Kitchen at Atomic: Atomic Liquors may be one of the oldest free-standing bars in town, but its adjacent restaurant is brand new. Chef Justin Kingsley Hall’s maitake macaroni and cheese, or

a Central California inspired tri-tip bbq sandwich make it worth the trek downtown. atomic.vegas Black Sheep: Vietnamese food has never been cooler than at chef Jamie Tran’s cozy Southwest-side eatery. Tuck into her contemporary takes on spring rolls and spicy chicken curry, but also fun salmon skin tacos and bao sliders. blacksheepvegas.com Flock & Fowl: Hainanese chicken and rice is deceptively simple, but its Flock & Fowl’s claim to fame. The

newest outpost downtown has expanded on its original, concise menu, and now features rich, Southeast Asian laksa and an extensive cocktail program. flockandfowl.com Esther’s Kitchen: Save your old-school, red-sauce Italian for the Strip. Esther’s opts for the lighter, brighter side of Italian fare, think silky, airy pasta made fresh in house, adorned with only a few ingredients—a cacio e pepe here, a carbonara there. It’s the place you don’t need excess in Las Vegas. estherslv.com

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Goodbye Monte Carlo, hello Park MGM. It all began with the construction of the adjacent outdoor entertainment retail space, The Park, and after that T-Mobile Arena. Now, the last piece of the puzzle, the complete transformation of Monte Carlo to Park MGM is complete. The $550 million renovation included updating all of its 2,700 rooms with more modern, colorful looks; the addition of the intimate Park Theater which hosts acts such as Cher, Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars; and a spectacular dining arsenal that includes Bavette’s Steakhouse, Eataly as its crown jewel right on Las Vegas Boulevard, and the first foray outside of Los Angeles for chef Roy Choi. Next up for The Park: its boutique hotel-within-a-hotel, The NoMad Las Vegas, is still slated for later 2018. parkmgm.com

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PARK IT LIKE IT’S HOT

The Venetian and The Palazzo have upped their cocktail game with the addition of two new swank bars. The seductive Rosina at Palazzo boasts secluded booth seats and a Champagne Call Button that does exactly what it says it does. Art-deco-inspired The Dorsey at The Venetian melds with the neighborhing Baz Luhrmann extravaganza, Baz-A Musical Mash Up, and features a contemporary cocktail menu with names such as Depeche Mode, RuPaul and Spicy Flamingo. Plus there’s easy access to the casino floor, so be prepared for more noise and more excitement as the night goes on.


LOS ANGELES ASPEN

CHICAGO

DALLAS

HOUSTON

HAMPTONS

LAS VEGAS

MAILIBU

Captin TK

POWER PLAYER

HEAVENLY HOST

Emmy-winning actress Maria Menounos is mentoring a new generation of correspondents with her online network AfterBuzzTV.

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fterBuzzTV cofounder Maria Menounos knew there was a hunger for TV series after-shows—just how big that appetite was, she never could have predicted. With billions of international eyes and ears devouring AfterBuzz’s 150-plus hours of weekly original content, Menounos and her producer husband, Keven Undergaro, have a hypercharged hit on their hands. “We’ve got this great platform that allows young talent to flourish with a lot of supportive people involved… This was not necessarily the case when I was coming up,” says Menounos of AfterBuzz, which provides a post-show recap of some of primetime’s most popular series, like Billions and Dancing with the Stars. “It’s hard to get a break in this town. In this business, you can’t get a reel without a job… but how are you going to get a job without a reel? It’s exciting to give our young hosts this great opportunity.” Menounos launched the digital broadcasting network in 2014 with Undergaro, who she married live on television during FOX’s New Year’s Eve

2018 broadcast. (Steve Harvey performed the ceremony.) On AfterBuzz, nearly 300 young hosts expertly dissect favorite shows and often interview cast members in the moments after an episode has aired. “We keep growing, and it’s such a community,” insists Menounos. “There are stars zooming in and out doing interviews and so much creativity in the air. It’s a safe haven for people with these dreams, right here in Hollywood.” Launching the network and developing up-and-coming talent came on the heels of Menounos’ recovery from a brain tumor, an emotional ordeal she bravely shared with the world. Now, she insists upon taking life and career at a much more civilized pace than in her E! News heyday. That it’s also an opportunity to work side-by-side with her husband makes it all the sweeter. “It’s amazing, and Keven gets so much of the credit,” says Menounos. “So many people have great ideas but don’t know how to execute them, and he really does. Somehow, together, we manage to create 150 hours of programming every week, with retention rates of 67 percent. We are now on every red carpet, and we have all of these cool partnerships happening. The best part is, fans really get what they want.” afterbuzztv.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY S A K I S L A L A S

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SAN FRANCISCO

KATY PERRY SLEPT HERE

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY J U WA N L I ( K I M S I N G ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F W E S T D R I F T M A N H AT TA N B E AC H ( R O O M R E Q U E S T ) ; P I E R R E H A R DY ( S T Y L E ) ; W LO S A N G E L E S - W E S T B E V E R LY H I L L S ( L A C R O I X ) ; C O U R T E S Y OV V0 ( S U N G L A S S E S )

Ê FIZZ FANS Who isn’t obsessed with La Croix these days? So it was only a matter of time until the Whole30-approved sparkling water became a summerapproved cocktail menu. Enter: W Los Angeles-West Beverly Hills’ La Croix Cocktails, available at the hotel’s outdoor restaurant, The Hideout, and at the WET pool deck. wlosangeles.com

MADE IN THE SHADES

These funky frames are headturners from Rodeo Drive to Redondo Beach.

Freja sunglasses, $335, CAROLYN WOZNIACKI + OVVO, ovvooptics.com

Kim sunglasses, $495, PIERRE HARDY, pierrehardy.com

Lory cat-eye sunglasses, $495, JIMMY CHOO, us.jimmychoo.com

Sunglasses, $292, EMILIO PUCCI, emiliopucci.com

SUMMER 2018

provided by specialty coffee shop SPLA. Originally opened in 1926 as a vaudeville house, the theater was later used to show kung fu films before languishing vacant. Harrison Ford’s son, Willard Ford, bought the property in 2000 and reimagined it alongside XTen Architects as a live-work space. Now owned by Indra & Co., the company plans to further expand the hip locale with an on-site restaurant. kimsingtheatre.com

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nyone transfixed by singer Katy Perry’s 24/7 Witness World Wide four-day live stream can now rent that exact space, The Kim Sing Theater, which is open to the public for the first time in more than a decade. Available for overnight stays for up to 10 guests, the location in downtown Los Angeles includes three bedrooms and three and a half baths, a deep soaking tub, wireless sound system, meditation lounge, and Brazilian pastries and drinks,

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The first luxury Autograph Collection hotel has opened in Los Angeles. The Westdrift in Manhattan Beach includes 393 luxury guest rooms, a nine-hole executive golf course, a signature restaurant featuring 360 degree bar, a CrossFit-inspired fitness center and more. Taking inspiration from the beachside location, the décor includes wood-and-metal columns akin to the nearby Manhattan Beach pier, custom Argentine driftwood check-in desk and artwork by SoCal photorealist Eric Zener, who is celebrated for his underwater paintings. The onsite indoor-outdoor restaurant, Jute, creates a communal vibe with sharable plates, such as wagyu beef cheeks and mushrooms with root vegetable puree, veal demi and pickled radish, or kimchee ravioli with fennel and onion soubise, ricotta and preserved lemon, as well as a number of light flatbreads with refreshing ingredients like piquillo pepper, chicken, spinach, goat cheese and burrata. westdrift.com

ORANGE COUNTY


ASPEN

CHICAGO

DALL AS

HOUSTON

HAMPTONS

L A S VEG A S

LOS ANGELE S

POWER PLAYER

ONE IN A BILLION

Visit Malibu Beach Inn for a dose of oceanfront luxury.

rics in soothing blues and grays sourced from Bellino in Italy in the 47 guest rooms, each with a private balcony overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Executive Chef Cody Dickey helms the onsite restaurant, CBC (Carbon Beach Club) that uses locally sourced ingredients from One Gun Ranch for Mediterranean-inspired dishes such as freerange chicken confit with blackberry harissa, charred fennel, and Moroccan spices, or the spring pizza Bianca, made with preserved citrus ricotta spread, asparagus, and fresh calabrese mozzarella. malibubeachinn.com

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estled along a strip of Carbon Beach, a n a re a n i c knamed “Billionaire’s Beach,” the recently t r a n s fo r m e d Malibu Beach Inn offers luxury accommodations, indulgent spa services, and gourmet culinary options—all presented in a chic SoCal design. A member of the prestigious Virtuoso Hotels & Resorts Program since 2018, the property features European Oak flooring, crisp white walls, and soft natural fab-


MALIBU MARTHA’S VINE YARD

MIAMI

NANTUCK E T

NE W YORK CIT Y

OR ANGE COUNT Y

SAN FR ANCISCO

MART MY WORDS

Jeff Koons, Play-Doh, 1994-2014

It’s easy to while away an entire afternoon at shopping mecca Malibu Country Mart. While the name sounds provincial, the boutiques are decidedly beach chic, including Calypso St. Barth, John Varvatos, Planet Blue, Ted Baker and Vince. Bring the kids, there’s an on-site playground and Legacy Park is next door for some Insta moments. Be sure to save time for lunch—John’s Garden is a local favorite for healthy sandwiches and snacks while Taverna Tony offers the best of Greek cuisine. Plus, two on-site charging stations can help you “power up” your ride while you play! malibucountrymart.com

PLATO MEET PLAY-DOH

TOP TABLE

Get a prime view of the folks catching waves at Surfrider Beach from the roof deck at the boutique hotel Surfrider Malibu. The food and beverages are “California to its core” including avocado smash with poached egg on sourdough toast and the refreshing coconut yogurt berry bowl with fresh fruit, chia, raw nuts and seeds granola and wildflower honey. Of course, the wine list is dominated by California chardonnay, Riesling, and sauvignon blanc. thesurfridermalibu.com

SUMMER 2018

SAVE THE DATE

Looking to live your best life? Transformational coach Noelle Malvin is hosting a day-long Infinite Wellness Retreat at the Sunset Restaurant on June 23 offering mediation, energy healing and chakra clearing. infiniteserenitycounseling.com

Following the success of Café Habana New York, celebrity owners Rande Gerber and Cindy Crawford have opened a West Coast outpost at the upscale Malibu Lumber Yard. (George Clooney, Hilary Swank and Kate Hudson have already stopped by.) Featuring a festive atmosphere, legendary fish tacos and free-flowing frozen margaritas, Café Habana Malibu’s plant-lined outdoor patio is the best place to hang and share plates of grilled corn Mexican style, shrimp ceviche and endless servings of guacamole. habana-malibu.com P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F T H E S U R F R I D E R M A L I B U ; CO U RT E SY O F C A F E H A B A N A M A L I B U ; C O U R T E S Y O F M A L I B U C O U N T RY M A R T

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HABANA DAYDREAMIN’

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Plan a visit to The Getty Villa and tour the museum’s extensive collection of Greek and Roman art, including the “Plato in L.A.” exhibition, on display until September 3. In addition to works by Jeff Koons, Mike Kelley, and Rachel Harrison, the museum is hosting familyfun activities, like Play-Doh Play on Saturdays, or Bacchus Uncorked: Drinking and Thinking—an early evening event that combines wine tastings and conversations with “fun-loving philosophers.” getty.edu


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A The Inn Crowd Anne and Charles Hajjar are adding to their real estate portfolio with a new Martha’s Vineyard hotel, The Richard. BY KEIJA MINOR

sk anyone in commercial real estate and they’ll know the name Charles (Chuck) Hajjar, the Boston-based developer with more than 100 projects, from shopping centers to apartment buildings, mostly in New England. What they may not know is that the driving force behind three of Martha’s Vineyard’s newest and most posh boutique hotels is his wife, Anne Hajjar. In 2012, when friends were selling 22 North Water Street in Edgartown, Anne saw an opportunity to create a jewel box of a hotel, a place her “St. Barth’s and New York friends would want to stay,” she says. She enlisted interior designer Robin Pelissier of Hingham, Ma. and later Rachel Reider of Boston (the star creative behind Summercamp hotel in Oak Bluffs) to bring her vision of clean, sophisticated, fabulous rooms to life. Hiring Lark Hotels (the co-owner of Summercamp) to manage daily operations rounded out her A-team. The Sydney opened in 2014; the following year, Anne opened The Christopher, a 15-room inn enhanced with a healthy dose of turquoise and purple thanks to Annsley Interiors, and regular BYOB cocktail parties

for guests. This summer marks the opening of The Richard, her third property in Edgartown’s historic village. In addition, The Sydney is expanding from eight to 22 rooms, and debuting a larger bar for its acclaimed anchor restaurant, L’Etoile. Today, the Hajjars also own a 14,000-square-foot home in Oak Bluffs adjacent to Farm Neck Golf Club, another in St. Barth’s and a primary residence in Milton, Ma. Their love for the Vineyard is apparent not only in their hotels but in the organizations they support. The Hajjars, who have four children for which their hotels are named, are founding members of MV Youth, an organization that provides college scholarships to local students, and are loyal supporters of Camp Jabberwocky, the MV Preservation Society, MV Hospital and the local YMCA. The Massachusetts natives agree that the Vineyard is a magical place and as Chuck summarized, “it’s the fun people, from all walks of life, from all backgrounds, coming together—that’s what really makes the island.” For reservations, visit thesydney hotel.com, thechristophermv.com, and therichardhotel.com.

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F L A R K H OT E L S ; ST E V E L I P O F S KY ( H A J JA R )

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MARTHA’S VINEYARD MALIBU

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NEW YORK CITY

ORANGE COUNTY

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2 SOULCYCLE IS BACK!

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RAINY DAY: Stuffed with dishes, cards for every occasion, luxe bath products and a super cute kids section, this store is guaranteed to make you smile. rainydaymv.com

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VINEYARD VINES: Yep, this is where two brothers sick of their desk jobs launched their clothing line—and then opened their first store in Edgartown. vineyardvines.com

KATAMA GENERAL STORE: Rebuilt from the ground up in 2017, this last stop before South Beach offers everything from gourmet salads, sandwiches, and snacks to Vineyardinspired gifts not seen elsewhere. katamageneral.com MORNING GLORY FARM: The queen of all farm stands offers just-picked produce and the most anticipated fresh corn of the season. Get there early for the made-on-site muffins and pies, still warm from the oven. morninggloryfarm.com

P H O T O G R A P H Y BY E L I Z A B E T H C E C I L ( G O U R M E T ) ; C O U R T E Y O F L A R K H O T E L S ( S U M M E R C A M P ) ; A L I S O N S H AW ( H A R B O R V I E W )

ROSEWATER MARKET & TAKEAWAY: Order an iced coffee, avocado toast, or artisanal sandwich and while you’re waiting, check out the understated gift shop filled with elevated finds in a neutral palette. rosewatermv.com Rosewater Market & Takeaway

ON A LARK Formerly the Westerly, a shabby without-the-chic favorite of bikers, this Oak Bluffs property is now the Summercamp Hotel, owned by the rapidly expanding Lark Hotels group. A total remake of the harbor-front property resulted in 95 vibrant and modern rooms that evoke an energy apropos of the hotel’s name. summercamphotel.com

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SUMMER 2018

GOURMET TO GO

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Due to popular demand, last year’s summer pop up will be back in full effect this August. Check the site for the schedule—and check the next bike over for Michelle Obama. soul-cycle.com

BEACH HOUSE GIFT SHOP: Brimming with Robshaw-like tablecloths and blankets, elevated paper and plastic party goods plus colorful serving dishes, this Vineyard Haven favorite is a go-to for those who love to entertain.

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PORTOBELLO ROAD: Inspired by the London flea market, this fun and sophisticated shop overflows with posh coffee table books, oversized signs, nods to Vineyard landmarks, beach reads and memorabilia.

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Set apart from Edgartown’s shopping district by just a few scenic blocks is the elegant yet relaxed Harbor View Hotel. Built in 1891, it offers old world stature with modern accoutrements. A large pool, two restaurants, and a Sunday brunch where regulars greet friends before heading to their own tables, make this a favorite of first-timers and longtimers alike. While all of the 114 guest rooms, suites and cottages offer elevated coastal decor, many with balconies and patios, it’s the posh and spacious Captain’s Cottages, ranging from one- to threebedrooms in size that’ll make you want to extend your stay. News that the Harbor View was recently sold has islanders anticipating what new management’s late-2018 renovation will bring. One thing is for sure, guests will continue to enjoy the hotel’s wraparound porch boasting unobstructed views of Edgartown Harbor, Chappaquiddick and the famed lighthouse, just steps away. harborviewhotel.com

SHOPPING SPREE:

ALLEY’S GENERAL STORE: This old fashioned general store off the beaten path offers everything from essentials, postcards, hostess gifts, novelty items and vintage-inspired toys. Not in the mood to shop? Grab a rocking chair on the front porch, a prime location for sipping coffee and reading the Vineyard Gazette.

ROOM REQUEST

SAN FRANCISCO


ASPEN

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LOS ANGELES

The Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club, a 1940s gem by architect Roy France, is reopening following a multi-million dollar renovation.

CLUB KING

With the renovation of the new Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club, Hersha Hospitality Trust president and COO Neil Shah helps reimagine a Collins Avenue gem. BY REBECCA KLEINMAN

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s a Miami resident, I ’m most exc i te d a b o u t creating a place that I personally want to go to and can recomm e n d to my friends and associates,” says Neil Shah, president and chief operating officer of Hersha Hospitality Trust, a multi-billiondollar hotel and real estate firm. “We’re offering unique, non-touristy ways to see Miami by land, air and sea.” Among the company’s 49 hotels across the country, six are located in South Florida, including the Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club in Miami Beach, which reopens following a multi-million-dollar renovation. Now part of Marriott International’s Autograph Collection, the Cadillac Hotel & Beach Club includes 357 guest rooms featuring a Mediterranean blue-and-white color scheme, bold prints from Greek key to palms, and offering beach and city views. To transform original architect Roy

France’s 1940s Art Deco gem, interior design firm Bill Rooney Studio channeled the European Riviera, and the Cadillac is reopening with a beachside restaurant, Bungalow by the Sea that offers a raw bar and roséall-day concept. The Amalfi Coast is also represented through chef Manuel Mattei’s Donna Mare trattoria. “We saw a transformation in demographics, such as families, who were looking for cultural activities and beachfront resorts as opposed to South Beach’s party crowd and boutique hotels,” says Shah of the hotel, that captured his attention with the historic structure’s strong bones and heritage, and its hot neighborhood, Mid-Beach, which is a straight shot to the airport and near all the best art and shopping in Wynwood, Bal Harbour and the Miami Design District. “As part of our European sensibility, we want our guests to truly feel a connection to our community.” cadillachotelmiamibeach.com

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RESERVATION REQUEST

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For BALENCIAGA’s second location, creative director Demna Gvasalia approached the bi-level boutique like a site-specific design project. Several elements blend style and sustainability, such as the façade’s solar panels. The floor is carpeted in a pink logo print. balenciaga.com

JARED LANG, a full menswear and accessories collection by a Canadian designer in Miami, opened its first brickand-mortar boutique at Aventura Mall. Following a well-received pop-up at the center, the permanent space also carries new After Hours pieces; loungewear arrives in fall. jaredlangcollection.com

Being a drama queen is actually encouraged at DOLCE & GABBANA— for its follow-up boutique to Bal Harbour in the Miami Design District, the Italian duo looked to Milan’s Teatro alla Scala. Don’t hold back with selfies, either; large-scale classical statues welcome Insta-moments. dolce-gabbana.com

The skateboard ramp inside GELAREH MIZRAHI’s pop up is as eye-catching as the designer’s luxury accessories including python handbags shaped like luscious lips, breasts and bodega bags, or funny food items. Find the entire assortment along with new exclusives. gelarehmizrahi.com

Miami’s melting pot quotient went up a notch with Novikov’s first U.S. outpost. The posh eatery’s complex international recipe combines a Russian restaurateur and Chinese-Japanese menu with a New York-based hospitality designer, Adam D. Tihany. Topping it off is an already notable celebrity fan base ranging from Prince Harry to Rihanna, who have been spotted at Novikov’s London, Dubai, and Moscow locations. novikovmiami.com

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iami handbag maker XIMENA KAVALEKAS teamed up with MARGHERITA MISSONI for a limited-edition python style. They aptly decorated Kavalekas’ best-selling Mandolin 2.0 bag with daisies (Margherita is Italian for daisy). Starting in July, choose from three exclusive colors, available at the Webster, Moda Operandi and Kavalekas’ website. ximenakavalekas.com

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Running late for the gym used to be an easy excuse to just skip class—that is until professional trainers Matt Miller and Cody Patrick founded Sweat440 in Sunset Harbour. Their concept stands out from the rest of neighborhood’s upscale fitness programs for its schedule-free flexibility. Attendees simply drop in for one of the constantly rotating mini classes. Each session lasts 10 minutes; stay for four classes and you’ve completed a workout. “We bridged the gap between personal training and group fitness,” said Patrick. “It’s also less competitive so all levels can participate.” sweat440.com


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Red Soles by the Bay

Douglas Karp’s White Elephant is a quintessential Nantucket waterfront destination.

Christian Louboutin shares his thoughts on Cardi B and designing for men at his San Francisco boutique BY DAVID NASH

POWER PLAYER

COTTAGE INDUSTRY

Real estate developer Douglas Karp is helping transform Nantucket into a posh summer playground. BY SAMUEL ANDERSON

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h ile staking out land around Cape Cod has long been a pastime for moneyed N ew Eng landers, Stephen and Douglass Karp have made it their business. New England Development’s fatherson duo have owned property on Nantucket for 30 years, but it wasn’t until Stephen hired Douglass to spearhead a new venture, Nantucket Island Resorts, that the two began to elevate the island into a bona fide hospitality hotspot. Stephen Karp founded New England Development in 1978 and built the business through a constellation of indoor malls across the northeast. Douglass inherited his father’s entrepreneurial spirit, starting the mall mecca Lids with a buddy while still in high school.

Years later, Stephen sold his properties and Douglass left Lids for the family business. “It was a shift we decided to make from being just a retail developer to more hospitality,” says Douglass. “That was when we made a big purchase on Nantucket and bought a bunch of hotels.” The White Elephant, a collection of 8 to 12 sleepy cottages, became Douglass’s pet project. “That winter I essentially lived in Nantucket during the week and helped oversee the construction of what White Elephant is today,” says Douglass, who owns a home on the island and got married at the White Elephant last year. “We took it from almost a motel format to a real first-class hotel.” Today, the White Elephant is a quintessential beachside waterfront destination and the flagship of Nantucket Island Resort’s portfolio, which also includes The Wauwinet, Jared Coffin House, and The Cottages at Nantucket Boat

Basin. As the Karps expanded, so did Nantucket. The island is growing so fast that Elon Musk is furnishing it with a Tesla-made 48MWh Powerpack battery to help with electrical demands. But, says Douglass, the upswing hasn’t overpowered the town’s quaint charms. “A board oversees all the aesthetics of the island so it generally looks very similar to how it did 100 years ago,” he says. “There’s still that historic charm but you can go to restaurants that rival any major city in the country.”

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E ST Y O F N A N T U C K E T I S L A N D R E S O RTS ; W H I T E E L E P H A N T ( I N T E R I O R ) ; G E N E V I E V E D E M A N I O ( P O RT R A I T )

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY N AT H A N C O E ( P I C T U R E P E R F E C T ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F M A R K C R O S S ( B AG ) ; C O U R T E S Y O F G R AY S A LT

Villa America, in Cap Antibes, France was home to Gerald Murphy, the owner of Mark Cross, and his wife, Sara. The couple entertained non-stop, amusing their friends with picnics on the beach and outings on their boat, The Weatherbird. Mark Cross’s Rattan Collection is inspired by their glamorous life in a glorious setting. Our favorite from the collection is the Dorothy ($2,995), made with rattan and white Saffiano leather trim, available exclusively at Serenella. markcross.com

The popular health-conscious café Lemon Press is relocating from its first home on Centre Street to a bigger space at the top of Main Street (formerly occupied by Arno’s Restaurant). The new spot will provide more seating than in its former location, and the café will also offer full wait service, as well as to-go foods and a bar for smoothies, juices and lattes. lemonpressnantucket.com On Orange Street, the mid-island specialty coffee shop Roastd General Store will be open for its first full-season this summer, featuring Stumptown coffee and Rishi Teas along with unique add-ins like Moon Juice’s Dusts (Sex Dust is the most popular latte choice), treats like vegan fudge and raw cacao balls, and house-made organic Brazil nut milk, which can also be used as a base in their smoothies. roastdgeneralstore.com

LET’S GO!

Popular carriers JetBlue and American Airlines have both added more flights to the island’s Nantucket Memorial Airport. Due to popular demand, JetBlue is extending service to New York City into late October, and American Airlines is adding seasonal direct flights from Charlotte (running Saturdays, from June 23 to September 4).

SHOPPING SPREE

Grey Salt: Opening under the same roof as sister store Perch on Straight Wharf, this new menswear boutique will carry upscale brands like Rag & Bone, Faherty, Vince, Culturata, AG Jeans and more. greysaltvail.com

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Photographer Nathan Coe and painter Illya Kagan have collaborated to open Kagan + Coe Studio, their two-story working studio and gallery at 38 Centre Steet. The space will showcase Kagan’s signature beach- and townscapes (he can often be found set up in front of an easel downtown), alongside Coe’s landscape photography and mixed media work.

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Ignazio and Maggio Cipriani expand their Mr. C hotel brand to a new location in the reinvigorated Seaport District.

POWER PLAYER

BE OUR GUESTS

Maggio and Ignazio Cipriani brings Mr. C Hotels to the East Coast with a new location in the South Street Seaport. BY JILL SIERACKI

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he Ciprianis have been in the hospitality industry for four generations, starting with patriarch Guiseppe Cipriani who opened the famed Harry’s Bar in Venice in 1931. Today, the family business encompasses multiple restaurants, catering, event spaces, even residences. Also part of the portfolio is Mr. C Hotels, launched in 2011 by brothers Ignazio and Maggio Cipriani with a location in Beverly Hills. Now, the brothers are opening their first East Coast outpost in the Seaport District, which is being rapidly revitalized by real estate developers The Howard Hughes Corporation. “We had been looking for some time for the right location in New York and when Howard Hughes offered this particular address as part of their exciting and visionary development we thought it was perfect—charming and a bit out of the classic areas with incredible views and a very European flavor,” says Ignazio of Mr. C Seaport, opening this month at 33 Peck Slip, a five-story brick structure built in 1856. Developed by Bob and Alex Ghassemieh, the same team behind Mr. C Beverly Hills, Mr. C Seaport will include 66 guest-

rooms, including six premium suites with panoramic terraces, a Lobby Lounge serving “aperitivo” (afternoon tea), event space, fitness center, and fittingly, an Italian restaurant concept from Maggio and Ignazio Cipriani. “Coming from a family with a long history in the hospitality business, it was a natural progression for myself and my brother to want to extend the experience to a full-service hotel, and offer more than a lunch or a dinner to create a home where travelers can feel comfortable and look forward to returning,” says Ignazio. “We also wanted to create our own concept, naturally inspired by our family DNA, but with our independent vision.” The New York location is smaller than its West Coast counterpart, but with a similar relaxed elegance (think bellinis in the bar while staff handles your check in). “I like to travel and I like to find hotels where I feel comfortable and want to go back again. This led to me and my brother to coming up with a place where we would feel at home,” says Ignazio. “It is really exciting to open just as this area will really blossom. It will add another interesting piece to the many surprises that travelers and New Yorkers alike will discover while walking through the cobblestone streets.” mrchotels.com

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"WE WANTED THE SPACE AND THE TREATMENT ROOMS TO FEEL SERENE, TIMELESS AND CALM... A SANCTUARY FROM THE CRAZINESS OF EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE CITY." —Brandon Haw, PRESIDENT AND CEO BRANDON HAW ARCHITECTURE

TONE IT UP

This summer, hotelier Ian Schrager will go where he hasn’t gone in decades: above 42nd Street. The forthcoming Times Square Edition Hotel will mark Schrager’s third property under his EDITION development group. While the hotelier has helped shape downtown culture with clubby-chic monuments like Lower East Side’s PUBLIC Hotel as well as the original EDITION in Flatiron, the 452-room Times Square EDITION is sure to bring an edgy-cool vibe to the Disney-fied neighborhood. editionhotels.com

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FLOWER POWER Hollywood’s reigning power stylist Kate Young is debuting a public installation celebrating the summer solstice and St-Germain liquor. On June 21 and 22, the experiential project will take over the Financial District’s riverside Battery Gardens with a hallucinatory array of floral installations and spirited cocktails. The showcase marks the second installment of Maison St-Germain; Young’s inspiration was the cinematic glamour of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Beautiful and Damned as well as the intoxicating surrealism of Salvador Dalí’s famous dinner parties. “We’re envisioning grandiose flowers, floating dining room tables, overflowing fountains, along with integrated performances, fusing actors into elements of the décor,” says Young. “Each new discovery will serve as a fleeting stage for guests to forage their own paths through The Battery Gardens as layers of StGermain’s enchanting tale are unveiled.”

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Need some finishing touches on that summer bod? The New York Dermatology Group’s Integral Health and Wellness center in the Flatiron District boasts an arsenal of potent treatments. The Brandon Haw-designed headquarters includes eight treatment rooms, a blood-infusion facility, nutrition center and two cryotherapy chambers. Stop in for cutting

edge treatments like the CryoFacial, a blast of sub-zero stimulation for cellular rejuvenation, and Coolsculpting for body contouring and cellulite reduction. nydermatologygroup.com If you’re looking up to shape up using more “traditional” means, F45 Training is opening its second location in the Lower East Side. This Australian-born HIIT program utilizes 31 workout systems in interval stations for a challenging 45-minute workout lead by world-class coaches. f45training.com

ROOM REQUEST

VIP TABLES Guests at the Rainbow Room’s Gallery Bar will be seeing the beautiful space through rosé-filled glasses when the Rosé Bar pop-up reopens. Enjoy refreshing bottles and rosé-inspired food pairings (save room for the Tipsy Treat dessert) while you take in the sweeping views from the skytop locale. Additionally, the building’s Bar SixtyFive rooftop terrace is now open. rainbowroom.com The Kimberly Hotel’s 3,000-square-foot rooftop lounge, Upstairs, is also offering perfect pours with breathtaking 360-degree vistas. Open nightly, the space is serving mouthwatering small plates, like truffled mac & cheese, with refreshing summer cocktails, including the Electrolyte, a cooling blend of vodka, muddled watermelon and pineapple juice. kimberlyhotel.com


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MAJOR MILESTONE

The Laguna Art Museum celebrates its 100th anniversary with a new exhibit and centennial ball.

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orks made by California artists and pieces that symbolize the state’s way of life and history are on display at the Laguna Art Museum, which is marking it’s centennial with a yearlong celebration. Kicking off the festivities will be “Art Colony: The Laguna Beach Art Association, 1918-1935,” which will display approximately 100 paintings, including a number of works by major artists that were seen in the original exhibitions of the Laguna Beach Art Association, the group led by Anna Hills and Edgar Payne that hosted its first showing at a small pavilion near the Laguna Beach Hotel, leading to what is now the museum. In addition, LBAA will host a birthday party on August 25, featuring art activities, tours and cake, as well as a Centennial Ball, featuring Chefs Amar Santana of Broadway by Amar Santana, and Chef Craig Strong, of Studio at Montage Laguna Beach, on September 29 at the Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach. lagunaartmuseum.org

Lita Albuquerque, Particle Horizon, 20142015; below : David Ligare, California Classicist, 2015-2016


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SHOPPING SPREE Black Swan: Find sweet summery tops, rompers and dresses in fashion-forward patters, like the bold florals of the Harlee Cold Shoulder dress. blackswanclothing.com Icons of Culture: Rock and surf classics reimagined, think a modern take on OP tanks and tees featuring Janis Joplin. iconsofculture.com

P H OTO G R A P H Y CO U RT E SY O F F I L L ; A L L E N L I N G ( I RV I N E S P EC T R U M C E N T E R ) ; O P P O S I T E : C O U R T E S Y O F L AG U N A A R T M U S E U M

Rag Poets: Beach chic at its best, including chambray culottes and light-as-air maxi dresses. ragpoetsclothing.com

ALOHA! Hawaiian native James Mullis is bringing the unique flavors of his homeland to Costa Mesa. Fill is a new bakery and creamery that will serve up the sugarcoated confection known as malasadas as well as homemade ice creams. For this islands-on-the-mainland outpost, Mullis also recruited celebrated pastry chefs Lincoln Carson and John Park. “We represent the best of Hawaii’s embracing culinary culture at Fill with made-to-order malasadas, artisan fillings, and housemade, small-batch ice cream,” says Mullis of the eatery’s Instagram-friendly offerings. eatfill.com

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The Irvine Spectrum Center, known as one of California’s most buzzworthy outdoor entertainment centers, is undergoing a $200 million overhaul. When it re-opens later this summer, visitors can find 30 new restaurants and stores, including Gorjana, home décor boutique SoHa Living, and The Denim Lab, a one-stop shop known for its “fitting lab” and wide array of brands including J Brand, Paige Denim and Citizens of Humanity. Food wise, the center will include a now-permanent location for the Hello Kitty Café pop-up shop, an Afters Ice Cream (don’t miss the Milky Bun ice cream-meets-glazed donut dessert!), and Vietnamese craft coffee spot BLKdot Coffee. shopirvinespectrumcenter.com

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No Rest For Bridget: Discover super cute jumpers, vegan leather slides, and statement earrings as well as other hardto-pass up accessories. norestforbridget.com


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AWAY WE GO

Local interior designer Grant K. Gibson expands beyond San Francisco with a travel series that combines décor and exotic destinations.

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BY JENNIE NUNN

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or more than 14 years, San Francisco–based interior designer Grant K. Gibson has been busy creating fresh and timeless spaces, ranging from private residences in the Bay Area and New York to tasting rooms for wineries in Healdsburg and St. Helena. His latest project is a salon for hairstylist Todd Reyes in San Francisco’s Union Square. “Think classic blue-and-white pottery and chinoiserie,” says Gibson, whose inaugural design tome, The Curated Home: A Fresh Take on Tradition, will debut this fall. “It’s a boutique salon with a feeling that you have walked into someone’s apartment, maybe in Paris.” Raised in Los Angeles, Gibson frequently traveled to farflung countries and visited art galleries, flea markets and antique auctions with his parents, yet his initial career trajectory wasn’t interiors. “I started off thinking that I wanted to be a psychologist and went down that path for a few years,” says Gibson, now one of the country’s most acclaimed designers. “I had just moved to New York and wasn’t really sure what I was doing with my life. A friend suggested that I talk with an interior designer friend that was looking for an assistant. I was hired on the spot with no experience and learned the ins and outs of the business. Growing up, I never thought it was something that one could make into a career.” In 2004, Gibson officially ventured out on his own with his sophisticated black-and-white Gentleman’s Retreat at the San Francisco Decorator Showcase. “I have clients that are maximalists and want layers and patterns, and others that want simple, more edited homes,” says Gibson. “I love putting on the different hats for each project and collaborating to create a tailored interior that is correct for its inhabitants.” His latest project, a boutique design travel series entitled Travels With Grant, combines two of his passions. “A lightbulb went off while I was sitting in a hotel in India,” says Gibson, whose first guided five-person trip, Journey to Jaipur, slated for this December, sold out within 24 hours. “I didn’t want to open a shop or launch a fabric line, and wanted to do something different, but I didn’t expect this to be so successful,” he says. “I don’t think of it as a group tour, but rather a private, individual experience with like-minded, design-oriented travelers—I won’t be wearing a headset on a tour bus.” grantkgibson.com

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SAN FRANCISCO M A L IB U

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P H O T O G R A P H Y BY K AT H RY N M C D O N A L D ( O P P O S I T E ) ; E D GA R C A S T ( M M C L AY ) ; K I M S E R V E A U ( M E C OX GA R D E N S ) ; N I C O L A PA R I S I ( A I R S T R E A M ) .

EDIBLE ART

GARDEN GROWS

Known for one-of-a-kind home and garden oddities, original artwork, sculptural stools, outdoor teak farm tables and vintage reclaimed Elmwood consoles, Mecox has opened its first Northern California emporium. Located at First Street Napa, a 325,000-square-foot mixed-used development featuring 45 shops and restaurants, and the 183-room Archer Hotel Napa, the showroom is dotted with hardto-find pieces such as a wooden campaign trunk dating to the 1860s, an antique Chinese buffet circa 1930 and handmade ceramic lamps by Dallas-based ceramicist Paul Schneider. mecox.com

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Housed in the former RTB pop-up space on Fillmore Street, newly opened Avery is designed as a wink to American painter Milton Avery with hints of charcoal and hunter green, modern Italian white chairs and custom Venetian plaster wall treatments created by local artist Victor Reyes. Conceived by Executive Chef Rodney Wages of The French Laundry and Atelier Crenn, and General Manager Matthew Mako of Benu and Saison, the restaurant offers three prix fixe menus paying homage to the beloved painter, including, “Cello Player” with 7-9 courses; “Shades of Spring,” a seasonally changing 10-to 15-course menu; and “Avery’s Room,” in the private dining room. averysf.com

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Ceramicist Mary Mar Keenan’s handmade tableware is coveted among celebrity chefs and carried at local restaurants such as A16, The Progress, Nightbird and Bellota. Now the owner of pottery design studio MMclay has opened her first boutique on wheels in Hayes Valley. The reinvented Airstream trailer contains a well-edited mix of slab-built and hand-thrown stoneware dinner plates, salad bowls, cheese boards, ramekins and mugs. mmclay.com

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BINN SHOTS Glashütte Original’s Sasha Shapiro, Christoph Prinz

Global Brands Group’s James Gabriel

Roberta Naas Tag Heuer’s Andrea Soriani, Jessica Bonari

Graff’s Thomas Bouillonnec

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Elegant Affairs’s Andrea Correale, Blair Underwood, Donald Pliner

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Valley National Bank’s Christine Curiale, Unison Investors’s Michael Micheletti

Kerry Washington

Frank Furlan 360 Sweater’s Andrew Gifford Gurney’s Brandon Tarpey

Louis Vuitton’s Kristine Westerby

Montblanc’s Florent-Aymeric Dubiez

NY Rangers’s Henrik Lundqvist

The Estée Lauder Company Inc.’s Damon Burrell

Elle Macpherson, Roberto Coin, Roberto Coin’s Peter Webster


Skylark’s CharlesEmmanuel Lopez, Shark Tank’s Daymond John

Brunello Cucinelli’s Massimo Caronna, Sylvester Stallone

Hublot’s Jason Morrison

Breitling’s Thierry Prissert

Dolce & Gabbana’s Sanjay Hathiramin, Dan Rolfman

Jerry Wilcoff and wife

Shannon and Bill McBeath London Jewelers’s Mark and Candy Udell Robert Roche Ocean Resort Casino’s Bruce Delfik

ICONIQ Capital’s Michael Anders All Things Coty

One Kings Lane’s Michael Krueger


BINN SHOTS Colin Cowie

Westime’s John Simonian

Tourneau’s Ira Melnitsky, NFL’s Phil Simms

Samsung’s Zach Overton

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Sarah Zaouk

Aquatalia’s Louis Lara Jr Steve Deluca

Fairchild’s James Fallon

William Lauder Baccarat’s Jim Shreve

John Geoghegan

Channing Tatum

Effy Jewelry’s Lauren Peacock

Moét Hennessey’s Audrey Morley, Yves de Launay


Marquee Brand’s Leigh Brill, Ann Akiri

EmpireCLS’s David Seelinger

Isaia’s James Shay

Chris Del Gatto

Gansevoort Hotel Group’s Michael Achenbaum

Estiatorio Milos’s Costas Spiliadis

Roberto Coin’s Tatiana Imamura, Katie Kinsella

Joel Schumacher

Baume & Mercier’s Frederick Martel

James Mariano

Wempe Jewelers’s Ruediger and Maggie Albers

TK Matt Dillon

Diageo’s Keenan Towns


PARTIES

George Filopoulos, Henry Frye

The Cove Atlantis’s Lauren Snyder, Former NY Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, Tiffany & Co.’s Melissa Pordy

Jon Oringer and Talia Oringer

Summer Soiree

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Veronica Kelly

WHO: Dakota Fanning, Thierry Collot WHAT: DuJour’s summer kickoff party WHERE: Gurney’s Montauk Yacht Club Resort & Marina

Zenith Watch’s Thierry Collot

Sanford Rubenstein, Hakim Dubois

Concepts of Time Inc.’s David Veitsman

Dolce & Gabbana’s Sanjay Hathiramin

Jacqueline Collot

Serge Krawiecki Jazes and Ian Krawiecki Jazes

Dr. Richard Firshein


IS WHERE LUXURY LIVES Connect with the most affluent individuals where they LIVE, WORK and PLAY

Bevy at Park Hyatt New York


ARTIFACT

Garbo’s Gold An enigmatic starlet’s most iconic look will be the forthcoming Academy Museum’s crown jewel. BY SAMUEL ANDERSON

Endeliquid utesequ iature es acerrum nulparinetur sequas torerferum idellia eprovid quis qdfuam quid eaque posant mollupt ass for thnt, nestrum quia apdi conectam con eorat as prectec tatur, quas sum qui dlore

liest nitrate reels. “The Academy’s mission has long been to preserve and promote the history and practice of filmmaking; the museum’s collecting plays an important role in that mission,” says Linkof. “Very few institutions in the world have understood these objects as worthy of preservation, and much of film history has been lost because of that institutional oversight. The Academy Museum will maintain the integrity of these objects, preserving them for posterity, and providing an exciting, multimedia context in which to understand their historical, scientific, and artistic achievements.” academymuseum.org ■

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reta Garbo was the star of the 1931 film Mata Hari, but her headdress, pictured here, played a significant suppor t ing role. The seduc t ive headpiece, designed by Wizard of Oz costumer Adrian Adolph Greenberg, was the defining feature of the film’s titular lead, a Dutch spy who disguised herself as an exotic dancer to gather secrets from the Russian opposition during World War I. In the film, Garbo is rarely seen without it; in fact, the original opening striptease (later heavily censored due to the passage of the Hays Code) ends on a wide-angle shot of Garbo wearing nothing but the ornate crown. Garbo was a notoriously sphinxlike MGM starlet. She started out in silent films that long hid her Swedish accent, but managed to reinvent herself for the talkies thanks to hits like Mata Hari, her highest grossing film, that played on her exotic origins. But even at the height of her fame, Garbo juggled dueling personas; while publically linked to actor John Gilbert, Garbo never married and was rumored to have had affairs with women including Marlene Dietrich. It was also rumored that Garbo worked as a spy herself, allegedly collecting intel on Swedish Nazi sympathizers for Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service. Today, the headdress is housed in the collection of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, organizers of the Oscars and the custodians of 120 years of film history. In 2019, that collection will finally have a permanent home in L.A.’s forthcoming Academy Museum. “The headdress is a rare example of an Adrian-designed costume from the early 1930s and the signature element of Mata Hari, one of the most successful films of Garbo’s career,” says associate curator Ryan Linkof. “It is an icon of the film and of her star persona.” Split between a landmarked, Art Deco building that once housed the Miracle Mile’s premier department store and a new spherical addition designed by Renzo Piano, the 300,000-square-foot, $250-million museum will showcase iconic pieces, like the tablets from The Ten Commandments and the Mata Hari headdress, which would come to embody Garbo’s career after she abruptly walked away from Hollywood at 35, later depicted by Andy Warhol for his 1981 “Myths” series. “These cinematic artifacts will be integrated into installations showing the many unique art forms that constitute the filmmaking process,” says Linkof. “Combined with the immense holdings of the Academy’s Margaret Herrick Library and the Academy Film Archive, the museum’s exhibitions will tell a multilayered history of the achievements of filmmakers from the origins of the medium through the present day.” In addition, the museum will also include a 1,000-seat theater capable of screening everything from 3D to the ear-


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