Michigan Avenue - 2015 - Issue 5 - September - Natalie Dormer

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faLL faShion

A-List Autumn: Chicago ViPs share their fall favorites the Joffrey Jetés into its 60th seAson PLUS

GAME OF THRONES’

Natalie Dormer

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FRONT RUNNER

Halston (right) with model Pat Cleveland at a party following the 1972 Coty Awards in New York.

ChiCago’s Fashion TiTan

Halston was his name. He set Chicago’s fashion scene alight in the 1960s with his spectacular hats and was soon christened by Newsweek as “the best designer in America.” But before the wildfire fame, he was Roy Frowick, a boy born in Iowa in 1932, trying to make his way at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Fashion columnist Peg Zwecker put him on the map with an article in the Chicago Daily News in 1956. “She met him when he was making hats with André Basil at the Ambassador East,” says Peg’s son Bill, veteran entertainment columnist for the Sun-Times and reporter for Fox Chicago News. “Chicago is a big small town, and he made quite an impact on the social crowd.” It was also Zwecker’s mother who suggested the designer go by his more elegant middle name of Halston and paved his way to global stardom by providing an introduction to Lilly Daché, a French milliner operating in New York City. This was a time before bouffants, when hats were de rigueur for

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women no matter their station. “He was extraordinarily good-looking, very personable, and he wanted to make his ladies feel good,” says fashion scholar Nena Ivon, who spent more than 50 years with Saks on North Michigan Avenue. Like so many other promising young creatives, Halston eventually decamped Chicago for the world’s stage of New York and became an immediate hit with the likes of Liza Minnelli, Elizabeth Taylor, and even Jackie Kennedy, for whom he created the pillbox hat she wore at her husband’s inauguration. His talents transcended millinery, and he pioneered the ultrasuede dresses that defined the ’70s. “They didn’t wrinkle; you looked crisp all the time,” says philanthropist and socialite Hazel Barr. “His impact was enormous. His name was on everybody’s lips.” Halston’s star faded toward the end of his career (a multimillion-dollar deal with J.C. Penney was widely panned), but a quarter-century after his 1990 death at age 57, his legacy as one of Chicago’s most fabulous fashion designers shines ever more brightly. MA

photography by getty images

In 1957, a young desIgner named Halston opened hIs fIrst shop on north mIchIgan avenue, launchIng hImself on a path to InternatIonal fashIon stardom. by seth putnam



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contents 116

LOOK TO THE WEST Fall fashion catches the frontier spirit, from frills and tassels to leather and lace.

september 2015 14 // front runner 30 // letter from the editor-in-Chief

Swan dress, Altuzarra ($2,195). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com. Lilac floral necklace, Dries Van Noten ($735). Barneys New York,

32 // letter from the

see above

34 // ... Without Whom

president and publisher

this issue Would not have been possible

36 // the list 85 // invited

style 41 // rags to riChes Rag & Bone puts its stylish stamp on the city with a new Gold Coast boutique.

44 // digital age Fall accessories take cues from Chicago’s booming start-up scene.

48 // style spotlight Goyard arrives on the Mag Mile; stacked heels hit the streets; Hermès and C.D. Peacock unveil stunning jewelry; and Anna Sui teams up with Frye.

50 // runWay revolution Latino Fashion Week is changing the face of Chicago style.

52 // elie’s empire Elie Tahari looks back on his 40-year career—and ahead to fall.

54 // tiffany,

transformed

56 // natural attraCtion Nature-inspired pieces are fall’s musthave accessories.

58 // lady sings the blues

Cerulean timepieces offer haute horology and azure elegance.

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photography by rené & radka

The iconic brand’s Michigan Avenue fagship unveils a new look.



contents

september 2015

76

66

100

CUISCENE Executive Chef Satoru Takeuchi draws upon eclectic culinary influences at NoMI.

culture

people

63 // A World of Sound

73 // The ShoWmAn

Lend an ear to the globe-spanning acts of the 10th annual Latino Music Festival.

Tony Karman raises the city’s contemporary arts profle with the fourth Expo Chicago.

64 // TWo on The AiSle

76 // keke’S Turn

From Broadway shows to daring world premieres, Chicago’s theater season gets off to a rip-roaring start this fall.

With this fall’s much-anticipated Fox series Scream Queens, former child star Keke Palmer shows the world she’s all grown up.

66 // long live rock ’n’ roll

“Visions of a Magic Time” offers an insider’s look at some of music’s biggest legends.

68 // culTure SpoTlighT The Art Institute honors architect David Adjaye; a new exhibit takes a candid look at Marilyn Monroe; the Windy City fexes its musical chops with two popular series; and the city celebrates Mexican culture in dance.

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78 // Widening The World

After founding Embarc to expose Chicago students to the world beyond the classroom, Imran Khan continues to push for a future without limits.

photography by henry diltz (richards); teren oddo (palmer); anthony tahlier (nomi)

KEKE’S TURN Keke Palmer screams for Ryan Murphy’s new horror-comedy series.

LONG LIVE ROCK ’N’ ROLL A new photo exhibit iconizes and humanizes the artists who created the soundtrack of the 1960s and ’70s.


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Unnecessarily Well Made


contents 110

september 2015

QUEEN OF THRONES Game of Thrones’ Natalie Dormer has become a major Hollywood player.

taste

Embroidered silk dress, Erdem ($5,280). erdem.com. Bra, Dolce & Gabbana ($275). 68 E. Oak St., 312-255-0630; dolcegabbana.com

97 // Cindy’s in the City The Chicago Athletic Association Hotel’s new rooftop concept aims to elevate the Loop’s dining scene.

100 // CuisCene Chef Satoru Takeuchi brings French technique to NoMI; and indulge your wanderlust at Chicago’s best hotel bars.

102 // taste spotlight Jocelyn Delk Adams stirs up affection for Mississippi-style desserts; a new concept from Top Chef ’s Fabio Viviani; three buzzy seafood destinations; and Terlato launches a gourmet foods line.

104 // pas de deuX The Joffrey Ballet’s Ashley Wheater and fashion designer Pamella DeVos toast the start of a stylish new season.

features 110 // Queen of thrones Smart. Beautiful. Fierce. The general consensus on both sides of the pond is that English charmer and Game of Thrones actress Natalie Dormer rules. By David Hochman Photography by Tony Duran

116 // look to the West The spirit of the frontier lives on with feminine silhouettes and Westerninspired accents of leather and lace. Photography by René & Radka

Leaders of our favorite iconic brands— Dior, Graff, Chanel, Hermès, Salvatore Ferragamo, and Lalique—talk about new strategies, core values, and how new talent is driving success. Moderated by Hitha Herzog Photography by Tanya Malott

130 // fall, glorious fall Autumn in Chicago is packed with reasons to say sayonara to summer. By Kate Rockwood

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photography by tony duran

124 // luXe 2.0


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contents

september 2015

haute property 137 // Greektown Luxe With a West Loop location and an abundance of amenities, the new luxury rental Arkadia Tower is staking its claim in the Chicago skyline.

140 // think SmaLL The newest trend in the luxury market? Smaller buildings with just the right bells and whistles.

the guide 145 // michigan avenue 101 You’ll be 101 percent in the know after consulting our bible of elite dining, nightlife, and shopping destinations.

gold coasting 160 // FaLL FaShion, ChiCaGo StyLe Design hounds elsewhere may race to copy runway trends, but Chicago chic has its own school of thought.

on the CoVer:

140

THINK SMALL With its dramatic façades and spacious interiors, the eight-story Ronsley (pictured here and above) proves that when it comes to Chicago’s luxe real estate trend, good things come in small packages.

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Natalie Dormer Photography by Tony Duran/tonyduran.net Styling by Martina Nilsson at Opus Beauty Hair by Christian Marc at Forward Artists using Leonor Greyl Makeup by Matthew VanLeeuwen at The Wall Group using Clé de Peau Beauté Manicure by Sarah Chue for Dior Vernis First photo assistant: Justin Schwan Second photo assistant: Arthur Lang Video: Adriano Valentini Location by Sources Locations/Nancy Rigoli, 323-493-8844 Coat, Dries Van Noten ($2,535). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com. Bra, Dolce & Gabbana ($275). 68 E. Oak St., 312-250-0630; dolcegabbana.com


CHLOÉ

saks.com

Chicago

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We have the inside scoop on Chicago’s best parties, pursuits, and more. escapes

10 DAY TRIPS TO TAKE THIS MONTH Ease into fall by escaping to one of the area’s hottest destinations.

photos

SEE THE LATEST FROM LAST NIGHT’S EVENTS

beauty

HOW TO RENEW YOUR SKIN FOR FALL After too much time in the sun and sand, these products will revamp your skincare routine for the new season.

COME FOLLOW US

PHOTOGRAPHY BY CREATIVE TRAVEL PROJECTS (ESCAPES); ROBERT CARL (PHOTOS); IMAGES72 (BEAUTY)

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J.P. ANDERSON Editor-in-Chief Deputy Editor MEG MATHIS Managing Editor OUSSAMA ZAHR Art Director JESSICA SARRO Photo Editor JODIE LOVE Associate Fashion Editor CASEY TRUDEAU Copy Editor JULIA STEINER Research Editor LOIS BARRETT

DAN USLAN President and Publisher Account Executives JAMIE FOX, SAMANTHA HARRIS, SARAH HECKLER Director of Event Marketing KIMMY WILSON Event Marketing Coordinator BROOKE BIDDLE Sales Coordinator STEPHEN OSTROWSKI

NICHE MEDIA HOLDINGS, LLC Senior Vice President and Editorial Director MANDI NORWOOD    Vice President of Creative and Fashion ANN SONG Creative Director NICOLE A. WOLFSON NADBOY    Executive Fashion Director SAMANTHA YANKS ART AND PHOTO

Senior Art Director FRYDA LIDOR Art Director  JUAN PARRA  Associate Art Director  ALLISON FLEMING   Senior Designer NATALI SUASNAVAS Designer AARON BELANDRES   Photo Director  LISA ROSENTHAL BADER  Photo Editors  MARIE BARBIER, SETH OLENICK, JENNIFER PAGAN, REBECCA SAHN Associate Photo Editor HALEY HAMBLIN Senior Staff Photographer JEFFREY CRAWFORD    Senior Digital Imaging Specialist JEFFREY SPITERY    Digital Imaging Specialist  JEREMY DEVERATURDA    Digital Imaging Assistant  HTET SAN FASHION

Senior Fashion Editor FAYE POWER    Assistant Fashion Editors CONNOR CHILDERS, LISA FERRANDINO Entertainment and Bookings Editor JULIET IZON COPY AND RESEARCH

Copy and Research Manager  WENDIE PECHARSKY Copy Editors DAVID FAIRHURST, CANDACE NICHOLSON    Research Editors LESLIE ALEXANDER, JAMES BUSS, JUDY DEYOUNG, KAREN MCCREE EDITORIAL OPERATIONS

Director of Editorial Operations  DEBORAH L. MARTIN    Director of Editorial Relations  MATTHEW STEWART    Executive Editorial Assistant CHRISTINA CLEMENTE Online Executive Editor  CAITLIN ROHAN    Online Editors  ANNA BEN YEHUDA, TRICIA CARR    Online Editorial Assistant CATHERINE PARK Senior Managing Editors  DANINE ALATI, KAREN ROSE, JILL SIERACKI Managing Editors JENNIFER DEMERITT, MURAT OZTASKIN Shelter and Design Editor  SUE HOSTETLER    Timepiece Editor  ROBERTA NAAS ADVERTISING SALES

Account Directors SUSAN ABRAMS, MICHELE ADDISON, CLAIRE CARLIN, MICHELLE CHALA, KATHLEEN FLEMING, VICTORIA HENRY, KAREN LEVINE, MEREDITH MERRILL, NORMA MONTALVO, DEVON MOORE, JEFFREY NICHOLSON, SHANNON PASTUSZAK, MIA PIERRE-JACQUES, VALERIE ROBLES, JIM SMITH, JESSICA ZIVKOVITCH    Account Executives SUSANA ARAGON, LAUREN BROGNA, JANELLE DRISCOLL, VINCE DUROCHER, IRENA HALL, CATHERINE KUCHAR, FENDY MESY, RILEY O’NEILL, MARY RUEGG, JACKIE VAN METER    Sales Support and Development  EMMA BEHRINGER, ANA BLAGOJEVIC, LISSETTE COLLS, ERIN GLEASON, KRISTINE GUEVARRA, DARA HIRSH, EMERY HOLTON, KARA KEARNS, MICHELLE MASS, NICHOLE MAURER, RUE MCBRIDE, ELIZABETH MITCHELL, MACKENZIE WAXMAN, ALEXANDRA WINTER MARKETING, PROMOTIONS, AND PUBLIC RELATIONS

Vice President of Marketing and Public Relations LANA BERNSTEIN    Senior Director of Brand Development ROBIN KEARSE    Director of Brand Development JOANNA TUCKER    Brand Development Managers KRISTIN BARNES, JIMMY KONTOMANOLIS  Promotions Art Designers KAITLYN RICHERT, CARLY RUSSELL Event Marketing Directors  AMY FISCHER, HALEE HARCZYNSKI, LAURA MULLEN    Event Marketing Managers  KELSEY MARRUJO, CRISTINA PARRA, ASHLEY VEHSLAGE     Event Marketing Coordinator BLAIR GOTTFRIED Event Marketing Assistant SHANA KAUFMAN ADVERTISING PRODUCTION

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Controller DANIELLE BIXLER    Senior Finance Directors  AUDREY CADY, LISA VASSEUR-MODICA    Director of Credit and Collections CHRISTOPHER BEST Senior Credit and Collections Analyst  MYRNA ROSADO  Financial Analyst NEIL SHAH   Senior Billing Coordinator CHARLES CAGLE Senior Accountant  LILY WU    Junior Accountants  KATHY SABAROVA, NATASHA WARREN Accounts Payable Coordinator NADINE DEODATT ADMINISTRATION, DIGITAL, AND OPERATIONS

Director of Operations MICHAEL CAPACE    Director of Human Resources and Administration STEPHANIE MITCHELL Digital Producer  ANTHONY PEARSON    Facilities Coordinator ASHLEY GUILLAUME    Chief Technology Officer  JESSE TAYLOR    Desktop Administrators ZACHARY CUMMO, EDGAR ROCHE EDITORS-IN-CHIEF

SPENCER BECK (Los Angeles Confidential), ANDREA BENNETT (Vegas), KATHY BLACKWELL (Austin Way), KRISTIN DETTERLINE (Philadelphia Style), LISA PIERPONT (Boston Common), CATHERINE SABINO (Gotham), JARED SHAPIRO (Ocean Drive), ELIZABETH E. THORP (Capitol File), DAMIEN WILLIAMSON (Executive Editor, Aspen Peak), SAMANTHA YANKS (Hamptons) PUBLISHERS

JOHN M. COLABELLI (Philadelphia Style), LOUIS F. DELONE (Austin Way), DAWN DUBOIS (Gotham), ALEXANDRA HALPERIN (Aspen Peak), DEBRA HALPERT (Hamptons), SUZY JACOBS (Capitol File), GLEN KELLEY (Boston Common), COURTLAND LANTAFF (Ocean Drive), ALISON MILLER (Los Angeles Confidential), JOSEF VANN (Vegas)

Managing Partner JANE GALE Chairman and Director of Photography JEFF GALE Chief Operating Officer MARIA BLONDEAUX Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer JOHN P. KUSHNIR Chief Executive Officer KATHERINE NICHOLLS Copyright 2015 by Niche Media Holdings, LLC. All rights reserved. Michigan Avenue magazine is published eight times per year. Reproduction without permission of the publisher is prohibited. The publisher and editors are not responsible for unsolicited material, and it will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication subject to Michigan Avenue magazine’s right to edit. Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, photographs, and drawings. To order a subscription, please call 866-891-3144. For customer service, please inquire at michiganavenue@pubservice.com. To distribute Michigan Avenue at your business, please e-mail magazinerequest@nichemedia.net. Michigan Avenue magazine is published by Niche Media Holdings, LLC., a division of Greengale Publishing, LLC. 500 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1400, Chicago, IL 60611 T: 312-753-6200 F: 312-753-6250 niche m edia holdings: 711 Third Avenue, Suite 501, New York, NY 10017 T: 646-835-5200 F: 212-780-0003

m ichigan avenue:

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LETTER from the Editor-in-Chief // this issue //

ON MY RADAR From an exhibit of cool throwback rock photos to a buzzing new foodie destination, here’s what I’m looking forward to this month. 1. Getting an eyeful of vintage images of the Stones, Hendrix, and other rock legends at Hilton-Asmus Foto’s exhibit “Visions of a Magic Time.” 2. Digging into a bowl of Frogmore Stew at Cindy’s, the new Chicago Athletic Association hotel rooftop hot spot. 3. Taking in the eclectic range of musical acts at the 10th annual Latino Music Festival.

1 LEFT:

Talking autumn with fashion designer Pamella DeVos of Pamella Roland and Joffrey Ballet Artistic Director Ashley Wheater at new Godfrey Hotel hot spot Dolce Italian. ABOVE: At the Park Hyatt with my partner in crime, President and Publisher Dan Uslan, as we raise a toast to our fabulous Women of Influence honorees, (FROM LEFT) Nicole Suarez, Jennifer Park, Michelle Larson, Kathleen Henson, Rohini Dey, and Barbara Gaines.

the ways: It’s the return of Bears football, made all the more exciting this year by the much-anticipated debut of new coach John Fox. It’s a fresh season of theater, dance, art, and music from Chicago’s premier institutions, from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Joffrey Ballet (celebrating their 125th and 60th seasons, respectively) to the countless storefront theaters whose boldly imaginative productions make this city’s stage scene the nation’s most thrilling. It’s also trendy fashions, colorful fall foliage, buzzing new restaurants—after the relaxed vibe of summer, autumn feels like a jolt of energy, signaling that life in the Windy City is back to its typical pulsating, thrill-a-minute self. It seems that everyone in Chicago has their own unique idea of the perfect autumn, which is why this issue’s “Fall, Glorious Fall” feature turned out to be such a delight to put together—and, I think you’ll agree, to read. We asked four notable Chicagoans to share with us just why the season is special to them and received a cornucopia of answers as colorful as the season in response, from artist Nick Cave rhapsodizing about his morning runs by the lake and the Randolph Street Market Festival to new Steppenwolf Theatre Artistic Director Anna Shapiro musing on the joys of the Chicago Botanic Garden. In doing so, they not only give us a glimpse into their lives as Windy City residents, but provide the rest of us with plenty of additional inspiration on how to make the most of the autumn adventures that lie ahead. It’s been a great summer, but now it’s time to raise the curtain on fall—and I personally plan on enjoying every touchdown-filled, leaf-crunching, applause-inspiring minute of it.

J.P. ANDERSON Follow me on Twitter at @JP_ Anderson and at michiganavemag.com.

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PHOTOGRAPHY BY TIMOTHY HIATT (WOMEN OF INFLUENCE GROUP); ANJALI PINTO (DEVOS); CARINTHIA WEST (JAGGER); NEIL BURGER (CINDY’S)

WHAT MAKES AUTUMN IN CHICAGO SUCH A KICK? Let us count


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letter from the President and Publisher

Our September iSSue might mark the end of summer, but I’m not complaining. After months of beach-going and rooftop lounging in the standard uniform of a T-shirt and shorts, fall means I can reinvigorate my wardrobe. Whether it’s a rugged military sweater from Porsche Design or a wool blazer from Boga, there have never been better options to outfit my autumn. I’m confident you’ll find similar inspiration in the following pages of our Fall Fashion Issue. If anyone in Chicago knows style, it’s Mario Tricoci. For the seventh year, the beauty guru’s eponymous salon is selecting, styling, and training a group of amateur models through its Mario, Make Me a Model competition. The process will culminate in an exciting finalist fashion show at Redmoon on September 25, where a winner will be crowned. It’s a perennially close contest, so I encourage you to follow along at tricoci.com/m4 for the latest news. Fall also signals the return of Chicago’s premier art event, Expo Chicago, from September 17–20. Though only in its fourth year, the fair has quickly established itself as a venerable showcase under the stewardship of President and Director Tony Karman.

Think of it as the Art Basel of the Midwest: More than 100 galleries from all over the world trumpet their best pieces at Navy Pier, along with panel discussions, special exhibitions, and more. For tickets and more information, visit expochicago.com. I’m proud to note that this issue marks our seventh anniversary. With each successive edition, we strive to produce compelling content and bring it to life with unforgettable events. Michigan Avenue has weathered a tumultuous media landscape with brilliant results thanks to the steadfast commitment of my teammates. Publishing trends may come and go, but our mission of celebrating, connecting, and captivating with consciousness will never go out of style.

dan uslan

Follow me on Twitter at @danuslan and on Facebook at facebook.com/danieluslan.

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photography by Jeff Schear/Wireimage (bailey); Daniel boczarSki (WaDe)

from left: Getting ready for our first Veuve Clicquot toast at Michigan Avenue’s Ashore Thing at Navy Pier with Marissa Bailey of CBS 2 Chicago and our own J.P. Anderson; welcoming Dwyane Wade (center) as we kick off our fifth annual fundraiser for Wade’s World Foundation at Prime & Provisions, where we were graciously hosted by Lucas Stoioff and his team.


porsche design Timepieces

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You’re One of a Kind... Dress Like It

...wiTHoUT wHoM this issue would not have been possible

1960s Bergdorf Goodman Dress & Cape Ensemble 1930s Eisenberg Original Brooch

Photo: Maureen Schulman. Makeup: Orlando Barsallo. Hair: Sarah English. Stylist: Laurie Davis.

1920s Deco Bracelet

SETH PUTNAM writer Credentials: Seth Putnam is the editor of The Collective Quarterly, a print magazine based on travel and creativity. As a reporter-at-large, he’s written for Chicago magazine, Chicago Sun-Times, The Kansas City Star, Details online, and more. Behind the story: “In my background research on sources for the Halston piece [“Chicago’s Fashion Titan,” page 14], I discovered that Hazel Barr was once described by Chicago media in the 1980s as the ‘Duchess of DuPage.’ It surprised her when I called and asked to speak to ‘the Duchess’—she hadn’t heard the title in a long time—so she filled me in on the backstory: Some years ago, a member of European royalty visited and applied a more traditional French pronunciation to the county. Barr loved it and decided to style herself as the Duchess of Du Pagé—and thus a now-forgotten nickname was born.” What he’s excited about this fall: “Fall in Chicago means it’s time for whiskey cocktails at Scofflaw, comfort food at Pleasant House Bakery, and a weekend escape to go pick apples in Michigan.”


kATe rOCkwOOd writer

Credentials: Kate Rockwood has written for O, The Oprah Magazine; Fast Company; Real Simple; and more. Behind the story: “It requires an imaginative leap to talk during the peak of summer about why fall is blissful in Chicago [“Fall, Glorious Fall,” page 130]. But everyone I spoke with was so effusive so quickly about the glory of autumn here.” What she’s excited about this fall: “My wife and I love taking our kids to Fellger Park at Belmont Avenue and Damen Avenue. It’s breezy and uncrowded on fall afternoons, and you can get a scoop of goat cheese-caramel-cashew gelato across the street at Black Dog Gelato.” Chicago go-to: “I’ll happily drop everything to brunch at m. henry.”

CLAY BOUTTÉ photographer

Credentials: Fashion and branding photographer Clay Boutté has worked in major markets ranging from Barcelona to New York, LA, Miami, and Chicago for publications like Fantastics magazine, The Fashionisto, and Babiekins Magazine and clients like Boga, ZijDEN, Stock Mfg. Co., and Cate McNabb Cosmetics. Behind the story: “We shot in Tony [Karman]’s [“The Showman,” page 73] beautiful Chicago home, which brought what Tony is all about to the images. Those kinds of location shoots add a personal touch.” What he’s excited about this fall: “Fashion Week in New York, of course.” Chicago go-to: “If you know me well, you know I love tacos. Big Star is a must after many shoots.”

Adrienne gAffneY writer

Credentials: Adrienne Gaffney has worked as an assistant at Vanity Fair and as an editor at WSJ Magazine, and she has contributed to Billboard, Marie Claire, New York Magazine, and Nylon. Behind the story: “The best part of being a writer [“Rags to Riches,” page 41] is learning more about the things around me, from the theory behind my favorite Rag & Bone dress to the retail renaissance in the Gold Coast.” What she’s excited about this fall: “TV season! I keep a calendar of new series premieres and returning favorites.”

‘CORINNE’

GLASSES • CONTACTS • EYE EXAMS • SUNGLASSES

Discover your Spex appeal 24 CHICAGO NEIGHBORHOOD LOCATIONS FOR BRANDS, LOCATIONS, AND EVENTS: spexoptical.com


the list september 2015

Jason Jared

Dorri McWhorter

Tim Hassett

John Smith

Billy Idol

Stephen Colbert

Lisa Lally Kerman

Adam Plachetka

John Fox

Fred Savage

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Kristine Youman

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James Brown

Seth MacFarlane

Terrence Howard

Todd Farrell

Chelsey Mortenson

Tom Carto

Brooke Wiseman

Sandra Cisneros

Mike Cao

Branden James

Steven Taslitz

Gabe Garza

Julian Delos Reyes

Isiah Thomas

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Jim Powers

Madonna

John Vance

Sharon Carnaghi

Brad Parker

Kimberly Senior

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Rob Pinkerton

Ludo Lefebvre

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John Hodgman

Steve Levitan

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Harry Styles

Ben Kaehler

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Jessie Devereaux

Steve Harvey

Teller

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Michael Schiffman

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STYLE Tastemaker FROM LEFT:

David Neville and Marcus Wainwright of Rag & Bone are bringing their coveted casual wear to Chicago. BELOW RIGHT: Runway looks from Rag & Bone’s Fall 2015 collection.

RAGS TO RICHES

DAVID NEVILLE AND MARCUS WAINWRIGHT OF RAG & BONE PUT THEIR STYLISH STAMP ON CHICAGO WITH A NEW GOLD COAST BOUTIQUE. BY ADRIENNE GAFFNEY

Fashion-conscious Chicagoans received a gift recently with the opening of a gorgeous Rag & Bone boutique, bringing what is arguably the most beloved casual wear brand of the moment to the Gold Coast. For managing partners Marcus Wainwright and David Neville—the latter of whom came on board three years after longtime friend Wainwright cofounded the company in 2002 with Nathan Bogle—opening in Chicago was always a question of not if, but when. “We had our eye on the Gold Coast for a long time,” explains Wainwright. “Our brand CONTINUED ON PAGE 42

MICHIGANAVEMAG.COM

41


STYLE Tastemaker **

SHOP HERE NOW

GOOD AS GOLD Rag & Bone’s arrival in the Gold Coast comes as part of a new wave of luxury brand openings that has both shoppers and retail experts talking about a style resurgence in the neighborhood. In addition to recent debuts from Saint Laurent and Brioni, the area will soon become home to La Perla, Rebecca Minkoff,

The new outpost on East Delaware Place stays true to the brand’s aesthetic, with concrete and wood flooring and mahogany shelving to complement the steel fixtures and exposed brick.

Versace, and Dior. “The new shops have brought more publicity to the street, especially for tourism. We are seeing

“WE HAD OUR EYE ON THE GOLD COAST FOR A LONG TIME. OUR BRAND RESONATES THERE, AND IT WAS JUST A CASE OF FINDING THE RIGHT LOCATION.”—MARCUS WAINWRIGHT resonates there, and it was just a case of finding the right location.” That perfect spot turned out to be a storefront on East Delaware Place expansive enough to handsomely house the men’s and women’s lines. “It was originally a gourmet grocery store [Goddess and Grocer]. We try to retain certain elements that exist in our new stores’ previous capacity, so the original fireplace and coffered ceiling remain in the space,” Neville says. While maintaining specific features was key, so was imbuing the store with the distinctive qualities that define the line’s other locations. The flooring combines concrete and wood, and Rag & Bone’s Brooklyn-based fabrication teams used mahogany wood shelving to complement the steel fixtures and exposed brick. The

team looked to Chicago businesses as well and found one of the boutique’s sofas at local favorite Jayson Home. Fans of the line’s wildly flattering jeans, flowy dresses, cult-status booties, and general urban, monochromatic vibe will find much to love in this fall’s collection. “There was a subtle hip-hop influence with the puffer coats, and the simplicity of the ’90s played into some of the collection’s more delicate pieces like the slip dresses and lace separates and the Mary Jane shoes,” Wainwright says. Even sweeter words for Chicago natives anticipating the approaching months? “Outerwear is always a major focus for us, so we’ve got a lot of cool styles there, from heavily quilted leather parkas to camel hair overcoats.” 25 E. Delaware Pl., 312-483-1122; rag-bone.com MA

more international tourists than ever before,” says Toni Palumbo, the president of the Oak Street Council, which fosters and preserves Gold Coast retail, and who is also the store director of Lanvin’s Chicago location. “The area has changed so much in the past 10 years, but the biggest change that I’ve seen is the restructuring of the former Esquire Theater space,” says Palumbo. “I love that the sign is a historical landmark for the city and still

**

RAG & BONE FALL FAVES **

42

TAKE ME OUT “I love the outerwear,” enthuses Wainwright. “The Sullivan coat (RIGHT) is a cool piece as it has a military influence and then very modern detailing.”

MICHIGANAVEMAG.COM

LADIES FIRST Neville is excited for the feminine pieces. “The Izabella dress can work in the day with a chunky sweater or cardigan and then on its own for a night out,” he says.

IN THE BAG Another big focus is the growing handbag line. Two pieces straight from the fall runway are the Daria hip bag and a slouchy hobo called the Sullivan.

standing, but you now have these beautiful storefronts like Tom Ford and Dolce & Gabbana in the space. It’s really changed the look of the street altogether.”


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STYLE Accessories

DIGITAL AGE Fall’s coveted accessories get a high-tech twist with inspiration From chicago’s booming start-up scene. photography by jeff crawford styling by faye power

Heavy Duty

Studded Mini 3 baguette, Fendi ($2,450). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; neimanmarcus.com. Knot backless heel, Proenza Schouler ($895). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312994-6500; saks.com

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prop styling by sergio esteves

Metal accents add a powerful punch to this season’s staples.



STYLE Accessories

Cool Colors

Chrysler suede and specchio pump, Paul Andrew ($1,395). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-9446500; saks.com. Bal58 Spray shoulder bag, Balenciaga ($3,750). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-6425900; balenciaga.com. Spiral pendant fumoso necklace, Pluma ($597). Neiman Marcus, see above; neimanmarcus.com

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prop styling by sergio esteves

Bold combinations of black and blue create the perfect palette.


The Shops at North Bridge | 520 North Michigan Avenue | 312 321 0911 Oakbrook Center | 100 Oakbrook Center | 630 974 6818 www.porsche-design.com


STYLE Spotlight step out

stacked Take your ankle boots to the next level with a chunky heel.

Stuart Weitzman ($465). 520 N. Michigan Ave., 312-6611560; stuartweitzman.com

GallopinG ahead

Gianvito Rossi ($1,065). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com

A Fitting Tribute

debut

Just in time for fall, a luxurious maison arrives in ChiCago straight from the rue saint honoré in Paris.

Valentino Garavani ($1,495). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-6500; saks.com

Since 1853, Parisians have indulged in Goyard’s luxe luggage, including handbags and trunks featuring the line’s signature personalization service marquage à la main, in which the owner’s initials are hand-painted directly onto the pieces themselves. Now the brand has arrived on Michigan Avenue in an exclusive boutique within Neiman Marcus’ sleekly remodeled Chicago fagship—just the eighth location in the US (with a ninth opening next month at Bal Harbour). The façade of the much-anticipated store fttingly welcomes guests with a design reminiscent of the Tribune Tower; for Windy City shoppers on-the-go, the house offers the Saigon—a chic and feminine yet versatile handbag perfect for the Chicago sophisticate. And for tote enthusiasts, Goyard’s beloved Bellechasse bag is available in small and large sizes to carry the city’s smart set seamlessly from work to play. Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; goyard.com MA

// need it now //

Tory Burch ($595). 45 E. Oak St., 312-280-0010; toryburch.com

Beyond the Sea

Legendary pearl cultivator Mikimoto has partnered with Chicago jeweler C.D. Peacock to open a shop-in-shop in the local store’s Oakbrook Center location. The boutique features one-of-a-kind pieces made from the fnest Akoya, South Sea, and Baroque South Sea pearl strands. C.D. Peacock, 172 Oakbrook Center, 630-571-5355; cdpeacock.com Dior ($1,710). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-6500; saks.com

FASHION FUSION

Eclectic designer Anna Sui and legendary bootmaker Frye have joined forces to bring fashionistas nine different bag and shoe styles this fall. “The

48 miChigAnAvemAg.COm

Hermès honors its equestrian heritage with the Filet d’Or jewelry collection. Available in rose and white gold, the line incorporates familiar touches like the shaping of the metal with an excess of diamonds, as seen in the 12.61-carat Filet d’Or bracelet (above, $146,200), which features no fewer than 1,144 stones. 25 E. Oak St., 312-787-8175; hermes.com

fun part was customizing their classic shape in an Anna Sui style,” says Sui of the collaborative efforts, which combine Sui’s eccentricity and lively

prints with Frye’s tried-and-true staples, bringing chic functionality to Chicago’s streets. 1007 N. Rush St., 312-642-3793; thefryecompany.com


It’s not just what you spend, but who you spend it with.

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STYLE Partners in Crime

below: Arabel Alva Rosales and Cesar Rolon Jr., the movers behind Chicago’s Latino Fashion Week (LFW), in their South Clark Street space. center and right: Runway looks from Bolivian designer Rosita Hurtado at last year’s LFW.

chic celebs: “I love Jennifer Lopez, Eva Longoria—their style, their confdence,” says Rosales. Rolon favors a more classic celebrity style: “I look at someone like a Raquel Welch,” he says of the iconic Chicago native, “who still looks amazing and wears it well.”

chicago style: The city’s notorious temps don’t prevent Rosales from dressing up. “It may be 25 degrees below zero, but when my girlfriends go out to dinner and start taking off their coats, they’re dressed to the nines.”

Runway Revolution

With their ambitious passion project Latino Fashion Week, ArAbel AlvA rosAles and CesAr rolon Jr. are changing the Face oF chicago styLe. by meg mathis “First of all, we’re not married!” Arabel Alva Rosales exclaims. Sitting next to Rosales in her loft-like South Loop office, Cesar Rolon Jr. chuckles with her, his blue eyes widening. “We always laugh about that,” Rosales continues. “We have different business interests, but we both have a great vision for this.” “This” is Latino Fashion Week (LFW), the five-day celebration of style that Rosales and Rolon cofounded in 2006. With a tagline of “By Latinos, For Everyone,” LFW has proven a winning passion project for Rosales, the president and CEO of technology firm AAR & Associates, and Rolon, president of Imagen Marketing Consultants. Catching the pair together is rare, they say (“We don’t see each other very much,” laughs Rosales, a Lincoln Park resident whose office is lined with accolades, not to mention a framed photo of her with Mayor Rahm Emanuel displayed prominently on her bookshelf). “It’s a really high-level art project, if you will,” says Rosales of LFW, whose ninth installment, “Timeless,” returns to Block Thirty Seven this month with

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a red-carpet event featuring local celebrities, Hispanic and otherwise, walking the runway wearing Windy City–based designers like Jimmy Guzmán, Ronald Rodriguez, and Claudia Urrutia. For Rolon, LFW’s opening night is the tip of the chic iceberg. “Even though we start with a bang, we end with a bigger bang,” says the Logan Square resident. Indeed, LFW hosts a medley of events over five days, from runway shows and VIP receptions to benefit luncheons and afterparties, all designed with key targets in mind: women 35 and older, men, plus sizes, youth, etc. The event has also helped change the minds of fashionistas who may assume that Chicago’s scene lags behind LA’s and New York’s. “The minute we start describing Latino Fashion Week, [the designers] respect the city,” says Rosales. “They feel there is a lot more opportunity here, so we’re really, really happy that we’re able to change that perception and help Chicago shine.” September 30– October 4, Block Thirty Seven, 108 N. State St., 773-733-7140; latinofashionwk.com MA

photography by ryan lowry (rosales and rolon); philip Minefee photography (runway looks). hair and Makeup by alex lopez (rosales and rolon)

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STYLE Fashion Insider “As far as we perform, Chicago is the most important city outside of New York,” says designer Elie Tahari (below). Juliana knit ($128) and Irene pants ($128), Elie Tahari. Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-6425900; neimanmarcus.com

EliE’s EmpirE

It’s a lovely fact that Elie Tahari, the father of a fashion empire as American as apple pie, speaks with a beautiful accent that recalls his childhood in Iran and Israel. After immigrating to New York in the early ’70s, the designer embarked on a career in fashion that’s seen him create his eponymous company (one of the market’s most famous), open stores around the country, and cofound the line Theory. The 63-year-old Tahari’s label marked its 42nd birthday this year, but he’s more passionate than ever about creating an innovative wardrobe that reflects the life of the American woman. You recently opened a shop-in-shop at London’s Harrods. We’re very excited about the Harrods shop. It’s our window to Europe. In London a lot of international people come to shop and look, so we feel through Harrods we’ll be able to get to the international [market]. What are your thoughts on Chicago as a fashion city? As far as we perform, Chicago is the most important city outside of New York. Chicago is an urban city; they buy more designer pieces and urban clothes.

52  michiganavemag.com

It’s just a good match for Elie Tahari. It’s a shopping city. What is your proudest accomplishment as a designer? I’m proud that for 40 years we have delivered fashion and exciting clothes that are quality and fit well. We’re dressing a woman and making her look better. It makes you feel good. How has the label evolved over the years? When we started, it was cool, young, and contemporary. Today we are dressing an established woman, when yesterday she was just a kid in a contemporary market. You recently launched a line of activewear. What made you want to get into that market? We live in a world that is changing so fast. Everybody wants to be more comfortable and relaxed. They’re wearing flats, they’re wearing leggings, they’re wearing clothes that feel good on their body and that move with their body. One of the buyers told me, “This trend, do you think it’s going to last?” I don’t think it’s a trend, I think it’s a movement. We’re all moving to more comfortable clothes and to more luscious fabric. Women don’t want to go out of their way to dress up. MA

photography by doug young (tahari)

With a fleet of boutiques around the World, designer EliE Tahari looks back at his 40-year career—and ahead to fall. by adrienne gaffney


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STYLE Reinvention FALL MUST-HAVES

Tiffany reimagines three iconic collections for autumn. Design Director Francesca Amfitheatrof ’s reinterpretation of the iconic Tiffany Bow, Victoria, and Infinity collections has made these pieces some of the season’s most coveted. “This is jewelry that can be worn day and night,” says Amfitheatrof. “The designs work together or on their own to create a spectacular diamond look.”

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT:

A rendering of the Tiffany & Co. flagship on Michigan Avenue; Tiffany Victoria key pendant in platinum with mixed-cut diamonds ($10,500); Bow cuff with diamonds in 18k white gold ($7,500); Infinity rings with diamonds in 18k rose, white, and yellow gold ($2,200 each).

Tiffany, Transformed For almost 50 years, Tiffany & Co.’s Midwest flagship on Michigan Avenue has drawn scores of customers seeking out the brand’s sumptuous, timeless jewelry and accessories. Now, after a nine-month, top-to-bottom renovation, there’s even more appeal to the place, as the refreshed and reconfigured 10,100-square-foot space is officially unveiled this month. Walking into the store, customers are welcomed by a striking white marble staircase at the center of the room’s light, bright salons. Dramatic high ceilings draw the eye upward— from the cases of sparkling jewelry to a commanding white-gold magnolia chandelier by New York artist Michele Oka Doner—and the overall effect is startlingly lovely, and aimed at invoking a particular feeling. “There’s that moment—that sort of Holly Golightly moment,” says

54

MICHIGANAVEMAG.COM

Tiffany Executive Vice President Jon King of the effect produced on visitors. “It’s the feeling that you are coming into a space where important things happen.” The contemporary new aesthetic feels every bit as rich and luxurious as the medium cherry wood it replaced, but with a refined elegance and a hint of femininity. The serene space is accented with layered velvet draperies and chairs in Tiffany Blue. These design elements aren’t unique to Tiffany’s Chicago location, but their implementation is on a much larger, more lavish scale for this expansive flagship, where customers come from all over the Midwest to take pictures, make special-occasion purchases, and perhaps even see a Tiffany & Co. store in person for the first time. “Because of the grand scale of

Michigan Avenue, we have the opportunity to do things in a more important way than a [smaller] boutique in Tokyo,” King says. One example is that grand staircase, which integrates a wheatleaf motif in its detailing. “The wheatleaf pattern is, we think, a very American motif that Midwesterners understand—a design that is at once elegant and that which is understood to be at the heart of America,” says King. Nature influences not just the décor, but also Tiffany’s collections as well. Oka Doner’s magnolia chandelier and sconces pay homage to the company’s first director of design, Louis Comfort Tiffany, and the stained-glass screens he designed for his Manhattan home. His wisteria pattern is framed by black lacquer and white gold in five new private

sales salons, whose décor draws inspiration from Tiffany’s Upper East Side residence. Notes Chicago-based Regional Vice President Cathy Elward, “There’s a lot more dedication to allowing people to sit down to have a consultation.” Other changes to the store’s layout include a 1,400square-foot expansion, and the company’s first-ever dedicated watch salon in the Americas. Even the flagship’s familiar granite façade didn’t go untouched. Branded Tiffany Blue awnings have been added to decorate the store’s exterior, a touch that was most definitely deliberate. Says Elward, “We wanted to make sure there was no way you could walk past and not know this is Tiffany’s.” Tiffany & Co.’s newly renovated boutique will be unveiled in September. 730 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-7500; tiffany.com MA

PHOTOGRAPHY BY © TIFFANY & CO.

THE ICONIC LUXURY BRAND’S MICHIGAN AVENUE FLAGSHIP UNVEILS A NEW LOOK WITH A NOD TO THE COMPANY’S RICH HISTORY. BY JACQUELINE BENDER



Style Ikram’s It list

Natural Attraction

For ChiCago style expert I ram Goldman, NaCh Bijoux’s deliCate, NatureiNspired pieCes are the musthave aCCessories For Fall.

In her recent quest for stylish finds for fall/ winter, boutique owner Ikram Goldman was having a nature moment. “I was thinking, I would love to find little animals,” she says. “Something alive and sweet that wasn’t a jewelry statement, but a really fun accessory.” Goldman got her wish when she stumbled across the Paris showroom of Nach Bijoux, whose delicate pieces are a paean to the natural world, adorned with everything from turtles and monkeys to ladybugs and fish. “When I saw them, I stopped dead in my tracks,” enthuses Goldman. “I love the idea that, if you’re wearing a floral dress or a sweater or a shirt, you have this little frog pin placed ever-soslightly off center. It’s three-dimensional. It pops. It’s sweet and it moves, and it just adds another level of fabulousness to a garment. And the wise owl earrings... and of course that snail ring. Who doesn’t want a snail ring on their finger? That’s just the happiest little thing as you’re sitting cocktailing away.” MA from top: Ceramic owl hoop earrings ($95), ceramic snail ring ($110), and ceramic frog pin ($45), Nach Bijoux. Ikram, 15 E. Huron St., 312-587-1000; ikram.com

56  michiganavemag.com

photography by maria ponce berre (goldman)

by j.p. anderson photography by jeff crawford


MARIO TRICOCI PRESENTS

and

2120 S. JEFFERSON STREET, CHICAGO

Don’t miss the conclusion of Mario, Make Me a Model when the fve remaining fnalists take the runway with professional models in a fashion show featuring Chicago designers: Two Penny Blue, Elena Bobysheva, The Order, Misanthrope, and Sahar Dada. Mario’s winner will be announced at the end of the show.

Special appearance by CBS 2 News Anchors Rob Johnson and Kate Sullivan ©2015 Mario Tricoci. All Rights Reserved.

Julia Swibes | 2014 Winner


STYLE Time Honored

This season, ChiCago’s arbiTers of ChiC are Choosing exCepTional Cerulean TimepieCes ThaT offer boTh hauTe horology and azure eleganCe. by roberta naas photography by jeff crawford

It’s not unusual for luxe watch brands to emblazon their straps with the most craved colors of the season, but today’s makers are taking the notion a step further by adorning watch dials and dial accents with sought-after shades. This season’s heavenly hue is blue, and watchmakers are racing to add this classic color to their most highly crafted creations. For more watch features and expanded coverage, go to michiganavemag.com/watches. MA

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clockwise from left: The Tonda Hémisphères Globo watch ($28,000) from Parmigiani Fleurier is crafted in a 42mm stainless-steel case set with diamonds. The blue Hermès strap matches the blue hemisphere globes set into the dial. The watch is powered by an automatic 337 movement with dual timezone indication and 50 hours of power reserve. Swiss Fine Timing, 1915 Sheridan Road, Highland Park, 847-266-7900; parmigiani.ch

From Zenith, this Elite Ultra Thin Lady Moonphase watch ($8,100) is crafted in stainless steel and houses the Elite automatic movement with 195 components that is ultrathin—measuring just

8.65mm cased. The watch offers a power reserve of 50 hours and has a sub-seconds dial at 9 o’clock. Swiss Fine Timing, 645 N. Michigan Ave., 312-337-4700; zenith-watches.com From Omega, this De Ville Ladymatic watch ($17,200) is rendered in stainless steel with a blue mother-of-pearl sunray dial with diamond stars as markers and a snow-set diamond bezel. It is powered by the Omega Co-Axial caliber 8520 and is a COSC-certified chronometer. Marshall Pierce, 29 E. Madison St., Ste. 600, 312-372-2415; omegawatches.com This Patek Philippe Ref. 4947G Ladies Annual

Calendar with Moon Phases ($49,800) is crafted in 18k white gold and features a sunburst dial and blue-gray alligator strap. The watch is powered by a mechanical self-winding movement. C.D. Peacock, 172 Oakbrook Center, Oak Brook, 630-571-5355; patek.com accessories:

Indian horse silk pocket square, Hermès ($145). 25 E. Oak St., 312-787-8175; hermes.com. Silk pocket square, Brunello Cucinelli ($165). 939 N. Rush St., 312-266-6000; brunello cucinelli.com. Big wallet ($875), small wallet ($540), and pin ($505), Prada. 30 E. Oak St., 312-951-1113; prada.com

styling by terry lewis

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Culture Hottest ticket

A WOrld Of SOund Lend an ear to the gLobe-spanning acts of the 10th annuaL Latino Music FestivaL. by Thomas Connors Mainstream names like Enrique Iglesias and Shakira aren’t on the bill. But the lineup for this year’s Latino Music Festival does include Ensemble Dal Niente and Grammy-nominated Sones de Mexico, performing the classically structured, folk-infused Cantata a Santa María de Iquique, by Luis Advis. More akin to the Aspen Music Festival than Lollapalooza, the Latino Music Festival is a wide-ranging, risk-taking celebration that both delves deeply into the past and showcases work by living composers. Now in its 10th year, the festival has satisfied aficionados and novices alike with programming that has run from chamber pieces to tango, and featured such artists as the renowned Paquito D’Rivera and bandoneón virtuoso Julien Labro. “Our concerts strive to represent as many countries, time periods, and ethnicities

as possible,” says Gustavo Leon, who programs the festival along with Elbio Barilari, co-artistic director. “This vast expanse of music genres, both in regard to stylistic and historic significance, highlights the festival’s philosophy of exploring our past to understand our place in history.” September 10–November 22, various venues, 312-431-1330; latinomusicfest.org MA

GlamourTango, an all-female multimedia show celebrating women in tango, at last year’s Latino Music Festival.

michiganavemag.com  63


CULTURE Taking the Stage

Two on the Aisle

From Broadway shows to daring world premieres, ChiCago’s theater season gets oFF to a rip-roaring start this Fall. by thomas connors

01

Gem of the ocean

Racially riven Pittsburgh circa 1904 is the setting of this August Wilson classic, in which a murderer seeks solace at the home of sensitive soul Ester Tyler. Noted local Wilson interpreter Ron OJ Parson directs this gritty, fantastical chapter in Wilson’s grand epic of African-American life. September 10– October 11, Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave., 773-753-4472; courttheatre.org

02

DisGraceD

Ayad Akhtar’s Pulitzer Prize–winning drama (which debuted in Chicago in 2012 at American Theater Company) returns to town in a Goodman Theatre production. A study in assimilation and faith in Islam, the show is directed by Kimberly Senior, who has been with it since the beginning. September 12–October 18, 170 N. Dearborn St., 312-443-3800; goodmantheatre.org

03

east of eDen

Frank Galati, whose stage take on The Grapes of Wrath earned two Tony Awards in 1990, is back to Steinbeck with this new adaptation for Steppenwolf. Cofounder and ensemble member Terry Kinney—whose 2000 adaptation of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest also earned a Tony—directs. September 17–November 15, 1650 N. Halsted St., 312-335-1650; steppenwolf.org

04

a Gentleman’s GuiDe to love & murDer

Written by Broadway newcomers Robert L. Freedman (book and lyrics) and Steven Lutvak (music and lyrics), this delightfully devilish 2014 Best Musical romp follows one greedy guy as he steamrolls his way to an inheritance by bumping off all who stand in his way. Based on a 1907 novel by Roy Horniman, A Gentleman’s Guide

64  michiganavemag.com

allows audiences to root for someone doing wrong. “Horniman was part of Oscar Wilde’s circle, so there’s a certain tone and wit to his work, and commentary about society and issues of class,” says Freedman. “We rode on a cloud of inspiration from that and the story itself, which is so funny and so dark at the same time.” September 29–October 11, Bank of America Theatre, 18 W. Monroe St., 312-977-1700; broadwayinchicago.com

05

treasure islanD

The Robert Louis Stevenson classic gets the dramatic treatment from ace adaptor/ director Mary Zimmerman. “Stevenson is a remarkably beautiful writer,” says Zimmerman. “The way the pirates speak is so unbelievably expressive and singular. And there are passages of narration that are very moving. Yet it is never sentimental.” Starts October 7, Lookingglass Theatre, 821 N. Michigan Ave., 312-337-0665; lookingglasstheatre.org MA from top:

Disgraced, Treasure Island, and A Gentleman’s Guide grace Chicago’s stages this fall.

photography by Michael brosilow (disgraced); sean williaMs (treasure island); joan Marcus (gentleman’s guide)

With more than 250 theaters in town, it’s never hard to find a show in Chicago—especially come fall, when every company and presenter goes all out. Here’s a sampler to get you started.


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CULTURE Art Full

Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood, Los Angeles, 1979, shot by Henry Diltz.

Long Live Rock ’n’ Roll

“Visions of a Magic TiMe” offers an insider’s look aT soMe of Music’s biggesT legends. Compared to the “branding” that seems embedded in every social media gesture and the dubious authenticity of reality TV, the rock royalty photographs of Pattie Boyd, Henry Diltz, and Carinthia West appear nearly guileless. Gathered together in “Visions of a Magic Time”—on view at Hilton-Asmus Foto September 18 to October 30—these shots of stars on the road, at the beach, laughing, or lost in conversation simultaneously iconize and humanize the artists who created the soundtrack of a generation. Although these photographers sometimes shot with the wider world as their target, even their most commercial images projected an air of informal intimacy. West’s portrait of Mick Jagger and Ronnie Wood, enchanted by Wood’s infant son, is an eye-opening glimpse of these men in a mode miles away from their strutting on the stage. Boyd was married to both George Harrison and

66  michiganavemag.com

Eric Clapton, so she had immediate access to their moods and manners. And as a former model accustomed to facing the camera, she understood well the inherent intrusiveness of the lens. Diltz, who made the scene just about everywhere in the ’60s and ’70s, from Woodstock to LA’s musician-packed Laurel Canyon, says, “I am very low key in my approach. Sometimes I don’t take any pictures until people forget why I’m there. If someone’s not interested in being photographed, then I’ll probably put my camera away. David Crosby might give me the finger once in a while, but that’s just his nature, not a warning!” On view September 18–October 30, Hilton-Asmus Foto, 716 N. Wells St., 312-475-1788; hiltonasmus.com. A pop-up exhibit is also on view September 19–30 at Virgin Hotel, 203 N. Wabash Ave., 25th Fl.; virginhotels.com. MA

photography by henry Diltz

by thomas connors



CULTURE Spotlight

exhibit

Built to Scale

on the rise

The ArT InsTITuTe shInes A lIghT on InTernATIonAl ArchITecT DaviD aDjaye wITh An expAnsIve new exhIbITIon. “It’s a privilege and an honor to work with someone of his stature,” says Art Institute of Chicago curator Zoë Ryan of the subject of “Making Place: The Architecture of David Adjaye.” “This isn’t a retrospective; we’re catching him at a signifcant moment where his career is very much on the rise.” Coinciding with the frst Chicago Architecture Biennial, it’s the largest show yet for the Art Institute’s architecture and design department, with an array of sketches, full-scale mock-ups, installations, and flms that narrate Adjaye’s body of work of more than 50 built projects. Says Ryan, “I love the way that David has managed to create public buildings that have an informal quality [and] are really about engaging an audience.” September 19–January 3, 312-443-3600; artic.edu MA

// homecoming //

“Everybody thought of her [as] the dumb blonde, but she was very educated,” says Limited Runs founder Pierre Vudrag of Marilyn Monroe, the subject of his latest photography exhibition, a series of previously unseen photographs that capture a lesser-known side of the glamour queen. Candids of Monroe by the likes of Tom Kelley, Gene Lester, and Len Steckler are displayed alongside short films explaining the history of the actress’s life and legend. September 17–19, The Study Chicago, 1837 W. Fulton St., 312-888-2313

MiChiGAnAveMAG.CoM

Marilyn Monroe by Gene Lester.

The Chicago Jazz Festival and the International Beethoven Project kick into high gear.

music beat

Chicago fexes its musical chops this season with two crowd-pleasing series. The International Beethoven Project (September 18–27; internationalbeethovenproject.com) showcases performances that span classical, world, chamber, jazz, and even electronic music—all in the spirit of Beethoven’s love for connecting people through music. “Beethoven believed that art could move society forward and help bridge differences,” says Artistic Director George Lepauw. Meanwhile, the 37th annual free Chicago Jazz Festival (September 3–6, Millennium Park and the Chicago Cultural Center) honors the city’s deep jazz roots. “We have to get at every angle of jazz and try and get it represented,” says Festival planning committee chairman (and Constellation owner) Mike Reed of the lineup, which includes acts ranging from free jazz master Muhal Richard Abrams to hip-hop-inspired artist José James.

SPIRIT OF MEXICO A celebration of Mexican culture in dance arrives in Chicago.

From culture to cuisine, Chicago has a deep connection to Mexican culture—which makes Ballet Folklórico de México de Amalia Hernández’s return to the Windy City a sort of homecoming. “I’m really looking forward to [going] back to Chicago,”

68

above: A snapshot of

from top:

says company director Salvador López. “It’s a beautiful city [and a] very enthusiastic audience.” This season’s performance focuses on the traditional dances of the Mayan people and the rich legacy and creative influence of the company’s founder,

Amalia Hernández. Explains López, the music and choreography show “how we feel about our culture, our religion, about our celebrations.” September 26–27, Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Congress Pkwy., 312-341-2310; auditoriumtheatre.org

PhotograPhy by © Lyndon dougLas, courtesy of adjaye associates (adjaye); © city of chicago (jazz festivaL)

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PEOPLE View from the Top

The Showman

photography by clay boutté

Tony arman raises the city’s contemporary arts profile with the fourth expo chicago. by novid parsi Tony Karman knows that the strength of Expo Chicago, the international art fair whose fourth iteration runs September 17–20 at Navy Pier, rests on the broad shoulders of the town that attracts the curators, collectors, and other art enthusiasts who come from across the globe. “The asset that we have is our city,” he says. It’s an asset that, during the decline of Expo’s defunct forerunner, Art Chicago, too often went untapped by the world’s art connoisseurs. “I am still amazed at how many collectors confess they’ve never been to Chicago,” he says. As Expo’s president and director, the 56-year-old Karman wants to restore Chicago’s reputation as the home to a

first-rate international art fair. His ideal world? “If you’re a collector, curator, or other arts professional, there’s no question that you are in Chicago in September,” he says. Working to make that vision a reality, Karman early on identified a few winning strategies. He went small—emphasizing gallery quality, not quantity. He created premier programming, from installations to lectures. He placed the fair on Navy Pier, where Art Chicago used to be held, enlisting renowned architect Jeanne Gang to design the exhibition space. And he scheduled the fair not in the spring, when the international art calendar is packed, but in September. continued on page 74

Expo Chicago’s Tony Karman, photographed at home next to Jackie Saccoccio’s Saccarin (2013), is putting the Windy City on the global art world map.

michiganavemag.com  73


PEOPLE View from the Top An art lover takes in the offerings at Expo Chicago 2014.

“If you’re a collector or curator, there’s no questIon that you are In chIcago In september.” —tony karman

“There’s no better time to be in our city,” he says of our temperate early autumn, when Chicago’s cultural institutions collectively come to life. If the fair depends on the city, it also relies on the city to be at its most vibrant. Last year, Expo Chicago welcomed 32,500 visitors, significantly more than the year before. While Karman says he’d like to see that number climb even higher, he insists the fair will never have more than this year’s 140 galleries, up from 100 galleries in its inaugural year. And while Karman says he doesn’t know (or even track) any sales figures from Expo’s exhibiting galleries, he notes that if sales weren’t going up, the fair wouldn’t still be here. “What we’re doing is first and foremost an artistic endeavor, and it should be,” he says. “On the other hand, that doesn’t happen unless commerce is transacted.” The fair owes its success, Karman says, to its partnerships with local arts institutions that align their exhibitions and programs with Expo Chicago. On September 19, the Art Institute of Chicago opens the first exhibition dedicated to British architect David Adjaye, and the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art launches the first solo museum exhibition of local multimedia artist Geof Oppenheimer. Expo has expanded its collaborations, working with the locally based councils of China, France, Italy, and Spain to bring top curators and collectors from those countries to Chicago’s fair. This year’s show also sees the introduction of the Greater Midwest Curatorial Forum, which connects top Midwest curators with their colleagues from around the world. “The act of partnering,” Karman says, “is the only reason success happens in anyone’s endeavors.” He learned that fact, he says, from his 30-plus years working in Chicago’s arts community, a career that ranges from an early stint as a security guard for the Chicago International Art Exposition to a panoply of civic and cultural gigs. In 2006, after Merchandise Mart Properties Inc. boosted a floundering Art Chicago, it named Karman as the fair’s vice president and director, a position he held until

74  michiganavemag.com

Last year’s Expo drew 32,500 visitors.

2010, more than a year before the fair closed. “I decided early on I didn’t have the inner voice that said I have to be an artist,” says Karman, who earned his BFA from Kansas State University. “I don’t paint anymore. Someday, maybe.” Rather than creating art, he collects it, which, he says, “is almost as rich as taking a breath or having a great meal.” That passion can be seen on the walls of the lightflooded River West condo he shares with his wife, Sondra. He demurs when asked the names of the local galleries represented in his home (“If I [were to] ever single out a favorite gallery, I would be tarred and feathered, and I should be”). Still, he acknowledges that most of the pieces he and his wife respond to fall in the realm of structured abstraction. “I love process,” he explains. “There’s something about manipulation that’s always attracted me, whether of canvas, clay, or paper”—and it is thanks in part to that love of process that Chicago once again boasts a globally respected art fair. Expo Chicago runs September 17–20 at Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand Ave., 312-867-9220; expochicago.com. MA

Artistic Pursuits Expo Chicago’s president-director shares his personal passions. local loves:

a perfect night:

“The Hideout, the Green Mill, The Matchbox—those are the kinds of places I seek out, the places where the tourists don’t go. That’s the way I navigate the world and our city.”

“A quiet night with my wife and my two cats— making a great meal, sitting outside and having a glass of wine. We do that as often as we can, and not often enough.”

urban explorer:

the power of art:

“When I’m in London for Frieze, I go mudlarking on the Thames. When [it’s] at low tide, you can fnd 15th-century pipe heads and the detritus of London—the grit and the beauty.”

“I remember seeing the Chicago Picasso when it was frst installed. [It’s impossible] not to be impacted—that’s what artwork should be. It should be provocative.”


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PEOPLE It Girl

Keke’s Turn

With a starring role in this fall’s much-anticipated fox series Scream QueenS and a neW album in the Works, former child star e e Palmer shoWs the World she’s all groWn up. by juliet izon “I was very much a social butterfly,” says actress Keke Palmer, who plays Zayday in this fall’s Scream Queens.

“I had a very Midwestern childhood,” actress Keke Palmer says of growing up in south suburban Robbins, Illinois. “I remember going through pathways to get to my grandmother’s house. When I would make stuff in my EasyBake, I would drop her off cookies,” she laughs. One of four children, Palmer was always an extrovert—“I was very much a social butterfly,” she notes—who began singing in her church as a child. Acting, however, “came out of nowhere,” she says. Her mother read about auditions for The Lion King in the paper, and, knowing her daughter’s penchant for music, asked her if she’d like to audition. It was through that first experience that Palmer found her true passion. A small role in Barbershop 2: Back in Business opened the floodgates; soon she was cast as the lead in 2006’s Akeelah and the Bee, a feel-good story about an inner-city child who participates in the national spelling bee.

INSIGHT onstage:

“My dream show would be The Other Cinderella. My mother did it; I’d like to do that as an homage to her.” at home in illinois:

“I really like to be with my family because it reminds me of who I am or who I’ve been and where I come from: the people that love me and have always loved me.” musical inspiration:

But unlike some child actors, Palmer has made the transition into meatier roles seamlessly. This fall she stars in Ryan Murphy’s highly anticipated, campy horror series Scream Queens. “I’m playing Zayday, a full-honors scholarship [student] from Oakland. She’s very strong and focused, but open at the same time,” Palmer says. Working with auteur Murphy is also a major achievement for the actress. “For me, it’s kind of unbelievable. I’m so thankful for the opportunity, and that pushes me every day on set.” In her limited time off, Palmer is also revisiting her first love, music, with an album set to drop in early 2016. Although she released records as a teen in 2007, this time around it’s the artist herself who is calling the shots. “I have more creative control, more of a voice and a hand in it,” she says. “[Now] I’m an adult; people listen to what I have to say.” MA

76  michiganavemag.com

photography by teren oddo

“Whether it ranges from Brandy to R. Kelly to Mariah Carey, you can hear them in the music that I do. But at the same time, with this album, I really just want listeners to hear a young woman’s story.”


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PEOPLE Spirit of Generosity

Imran Khan’s Embarc has gone from serving 30 kids to 650, with a goal of expanding to some 2,000 students at 15 high schools across Chicago.

Widening the World

“Six years ago, I began teaching at Harper [High School]—South Side, West Englewood. This American Life did a two-part series on the school because 29 kids were shot; eight were killed [in] a single school year. Teachers there really came to understand what does violence, poverty, isolation, lack of access to resources look like? You quickly realize that we have classrooms full of kids who have never seen the lake—17-year-old kids who don’t even know what Millennium Park is. “I was preparing this Shakespeare lesson—we were doing Macbeth, I believe. I stood in front of the class and said, ‘I’m going to pose a question, and we’re going to have a debate.’ The question was, ‘If you go to the grocery store with your mom and she starts picking up grapes and eating them as she shops, is that stealing? Would you do the same? Why or why not?’ I thought that we were going to have a really deep conversation. The conversation totally derailed and the kids were like, ‘What kind of grocery store are you talking about, Khan? What do you mean, grapes? Where is this happening?’ I had to explain, and I said, ‘Have you heard of Jewel? Have you heard of Dominick’s?’ I mentioned Whole Foods, and they asked me if I knew what Quick Stop was. The class was laughing at me for not knowing Quick Stop and for having a lesson that flopped. At that instant, I saw I am missing the game: I’m sitting here talking about morality and

78  michiganavemag.com

Shakespeare, and I have kids who have no idea about basic elements in life, so as I’m connecting the learning, what context does it have? “I met another teacher, January Miller, and we began to realize that the achievement gap was the direct result of a social gap that needed a different type of intervention our education system was not offering. January and I had to take matters into our own hands, and we started to go to restaurants, theaters, plays, and universities [with our students]. We saw a huge spike in kids who were engaged in these extracurricular experiences, so we began to fund that through our pockets. One day we were carpooling, and I was like, ‘January, we can’t just keep paying for this out-of-pocket. This is going to get hard, but we need to get more kids. How about we launch a nonprofit?’ “[Embarc] started with 30 kids [and] two teachers. The next year, we got demands from some friends who were teaching at other schools to have the program. This fall, we’ll be at 10 schools serving 650 kids. It’s a three-year program that’s integrated directly within the school day, so students can go to an Embarc class that’s focused on providing this intense experience and curriculum intervention. The Embarc program itself is connecting powerful experiences with models of success to drive a passion and perseverance for long-term goals, and conTinued on pAge 80

photography by anjali pinto

after founding embarc to expose students to the world beyond the classroom, Imran han continues to push for a future without limits. as told to meg mathis



PEOPLE Spirit of Generosity

from top: Khan leads students through a

Whole Foods for a lesson on organics and healthy eating (here at the cheese counter); at 1871 for an introduction to Chicago’s thriving start-up culture, including what it takes to launch a company.

“The achievemenT gap is The resulT of a social gap ThaT needs inTervenTion.” teaching our kids the action steps it takes day in and day out to achieve. “I have a student, Deonte Tanner, [whom] I taught during his freshman year: single-parent family, about nine people living in the same house, didn’t want anything to do with people. He almost got into some fights and was spending a bit of time on the streets—he could have gone either way at that point. We started to do the Embarc program, and he had very mixed results. He stuck through it, and by the time he became a senior, [he was] one of Harper High School’s first Gates Millennium Scholars. He’s at Marquette University, and he has started many of his own antiviolence marches; he’s done a lot of work to feed the hungry and the homeless. Here’s a person who had a lot of anger, and now he’s committed his life to making the world a better place and becoming successful himself. I can’t think of a more powerful story of how change can happen with a person based on their exposure, based on their experiences seeing the world. “We want the Embarc program to exist as proof of how education needs to evolve, and it needs to be something that is transcending the borders that are dividing us. As we continue to scale up and reach, hopefully, 15 schools serving some 2,000 kids within Chicago, we are proving that experiential education needs to be integrated directly in every school. We’ve had interest from the Department of Education in Washington, DC, and they’ve mentioned that we should consider a national model, but a lot of our plans for right now are to be a Chicago program—and as we are doing our work, to let it speak for itself as a way that education should be done, and to hopefully have people replicate that.” For more information, visit embarcchicago.org. MA

photography by Christina noel photography

—imran khan


Charity register Opportunities to give.

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by meg mathis

Respect 90 Main event What: chicago cubs manager Joe Maddon welcomes guests for a night complete with a buffet dinner, scotch tastings, cigars, and an amateur boxing event, with proceeds benefting englewood’s crushers club. When: september 2, 6 pm Where: Ravenswood event center, 4011 n. Ravenswood ave. tickets: visit cubscharities.org.

Gala of the aRts What: Join catholic charities of the archdiocese of chicago for its 14th annual black-tie-optional art show and sale at this fundraiser for the nonproft’s emergency assistance programs. When: september 11, 6 pm

Th e

es t ur nt

Where: navy pier Grand Ballroom, 600 e. Grand ave. tickets: visit catholiccharities.net/events/signatureevents/galaofthearts.aspx.

celestial Ball What: themed “over the Moon,” the Women’s Board of the adler planetarium’s black-tie event features a cocktail reception, silent auction, dinner, and dancing to support the institute’s steM (science, technology, engineering, and math) education programs. When: september 12, 6:30 pm Where: adler planetarium, 1300 s. lake shore Dr. tickets: call livia Kenney at 312-553-2000, or e-mail lkenney@pjhchicago.com.

26th annual Benefit Gala What: enjoy a reception, dinner, and panel discussion with aspen institute president and ceo Walter isaacson at this chicago humanities festival celebration. When: september 15, 6:30 pm Where: four seasons hotel, 120 e. Delaware pl. tickets: call 312-553-2000, or visit chicagohumanities.org/gala.

Th e Cuisine

conceRt to enD hunGeR What: the steve chapin Band (featuring original members of the harry chapin Band) headlines loaves & fishes’ beneft concert, whose proceeds go toward the nonproft’s mission of ending hunger. When: september 19, 7:30 pm Where: arranmore farm & polo club, 34 Rance Road, oswego tickets: visit loaves-fshes.org.

illuMination 2015 What: chicago loop alliance foundation’s 11th annual black-tie gala welcomes guests for an evening of dining and dancing to support the organization’s artistic and cultural initiatives in the loop. When: september 25, 6:30 pm Where: palmer house hilton, 17 e. Monroe st. tickets: call 312-782-9160, or visit loopchicago.com/gala.

Enjoy Private Dining in Chicago’s Gold Coast Neighborhood. Book your holiday event now! From large parties to intimate gatherings, Café des Architectes offers versatile menus for all event types. Call (312) 324-4031 for details. www.cafedesarchitectes.com


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InvIted Hebru Brantley

Hometown Hero PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF SCHEAR

Michigan avenue and Expo ChiCago toasted

Summer cover artist Hebru Brantley with a 200-guest reception at Dolce Italian in The Godfrey Hotel. Throughout the evening, guests sipped specialty Hennessy cocktails while mingling with the Chicago-based painter. “As a kid growing up in Chicago that decided to become an artist and not an athlete… it was a struggle,” Brantley confessed. “Without certain people to support what I do and my vision, I wouldn’t be standing here.” continued on page 86

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INVITED Hebru Brantley and Angela Carroll

Sara Allison

Billy Dec Sherry Prisk and Joanna Slusky Steve Weber and Michael Rosen

HEBRU BRANTLEY COVER PARTY

Hana Koussa, Jamie Bhairoo, and Jessica Gonzalez

TWO HUNDRED GUESTS

gathered at Dolce Italian to celebrate Summer cover artist Hebru Brantley. Partygoers sampled light fare while rubbing elbows with boldfaced names like Linda Johnson Rice, Andrew Barber, and Israel Idonije. Lauren King

Alex Gonzalez and Chrissy Cox

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Linda Johnson Rice

Guests imbibed Hennessy cocktails throughout the evening.

Nandi Ballard and Chanel Coney

PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF SCHEAR

Ruben Trejo



INVITED Brad Freas and Katie Jones

// kicking back //

ASHORE THING AFTERPARTY PINSTRIPES WELCOMED Lori Allen, Sharon Uslan, and Jennifer Sutton-Brieva

ASHORE THING SAILING ENTHUSIASTS GATHERED at Navy

Monica Deegan, Clarise Stockley, and Amy Corrado

GUESTS FOR AN ASHORE THING AFTERPARTY. GUESTS ENJOYED LIBATIONS AND BITES WHILE UNWINDING OVER ROUNDS OF BOCCE BALL.

Pier for Ashore Thing, presented by BMO Harris Bank, to celebrate the Chicago Yacht Club’s 107th Race to Mackinac. Sponsor pavilion guests relaxed on Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams furniture while imbibing Peroni, Leinenkugel’s Summer Shandy, Veuve Clicquot, Belvedere Vodka, and Voss water. Attendees also refreshed their warm-weather wardrobes at the Spex sunglasses tent and 900 North Michigan Shops’ Kate Spade pop-up shop, and lounged in Celebrity Cruises’ Adirondack chairs.

Justin Pauly and Shannon Wysocki

Julie Adler, Lindsay Essi, Danielle Newman-Biczak, and Elizabeth Scruggs

Kathi and Don Heatherly

Pat Mangan and Kimberly Burt

Taylor Brown and Erin Mulligan

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Mary and Danielle Ivanovich

Sebastien Vitry and Bianca Anderson

Sebastian Barba and Gustavo Bilbao

PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF SCHEAR AND DANIEL BOCZARSKI

AJ and Jill Gauthier with Veronica Mellado



INVITED Voted #1 Steakhouse In America Tom Horan's Top Ten Club Four Consecutive Years

Jack Doron

Best of Award of Excellence Wine Spectator HIGH EXCELLENT Rating Zagat's Guide Gabe Garza and Scott Kohler

Best Steakhouse Wine List Best Boneless New York Strip Chicago Magazine DiRoNA Chicago Sun-Times

 Chicago Tribune



Sean Thomas, Carlos Quimbo, and Mooki Lee

BIGGS SUMMER PARTY BIGGS WELCOMED AN INTIMATE group to its

new Gold Coast cigar emporium for a private reception. Partygoers toured the sprawling mansion while indulging in cigars paired with Champagne and Johnnie Walker Scotch.

60 West Ontario Street, Chicago 312-787-7100

chicagochophouse.com

Lisa McMullan and Curtis Johnson

PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF SCHEAR

Biggs Mansion


common things, done uncommonly well virgin hotels chicago

//

203 n. wabash, chicago

//

312.940.4747


INVITED Andrea Riedl and Theodore Bonav

George Cain and Michael Tatar

NORTH WATER GRAND OPENING A CROWD OF 250 movers and shakers gathered at North Water Apartments for its debut bash, checking out the Streeterville high-rise’s sample units while imbibing to the backdrop of lakefront views, complete with a Navy Pier fireworks display.

tm

Beria Sipahi and Jeff Jameel

tm

Bradley Murray and Onasis Odelmo

945 N. Rush Street, 3rd foor Chicago, IL 60611 312-923-9444 www.georgethesalon.com

Jason Knowles and Chase Vedrode

PHOTOGRAPHY BY TIMOTHY HIATT

Eric Mungovan and DeCarlo Pittman


Drive

feel

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The Corona can has arrived.

Another way to find your beach Please drink responsibly. 速

Corona Extra Beer. Imported by Crown Imports, Chicago, IL.


taste At Cindy’s, a cast-iron pot of garlicky Frogmore Stew overflows with crab claws, shrimp, clams, sausage, potatoes, and corn on the cob.

Cindy’s in the City

photography by neil burger

the ChiCago athletiC assoCiation hotel’s new rooftop dining concept aims to seriously elevate the loop’s dining scene. by elaine glusac On a 13th-floor rooftop opposite Millennium Park, a Gatsby-worthy party is already underway by the office-cheating hour of 5 pm. Revelers have breezed past the hostess and the dining room’s lacquered picnic tables to the outdoor terrace, disoriented and giddy from the Bean-to-Indiana panorama spread before them. And while there is no bootlegging mystery host presiding at new rooftop restaurant Cindy’s, there is a parallel social spirit in its namesake. Cindy’s is the capstone to the structure below, the former Chicago Athletic Association building originally constructed by the city’s biggest names in business—think Wrigley and Comiskey—to prove to attendees of continued on page 98

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taste

Drink this Executive Chef Christian Ragano; the bar and picnic tables are enclosed by a light-filled glass conservatory; hamachi crudo with corn relish.

the 1893 World’s Fair that Chicago was not the rough­ neck Wild West. They imported Italian mosaics for the floors, installed carved wood fireplaces, and had whole staircases made of marble. Now, with the building having just undergone a three­year restoration and redesign as a 241­room hotel, an elevator whisks guests from the Old World–ornate lobby to the wholly unexpected Cindy’s, a light­flooded knock­out enclosed by a glass conservatory and opening onto a 50­capacity deck with stunning Lake Michigan views. “We wanted a counterpoint to the very masculine men’s club—a feminine counterpoint that was breezy and light,” says Michael Mason, director of restaurants and bars at the hotel. Elegant but playful, Cindy’s suggests a nightly

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garden party on a Great Lakes estate, with strings of bulb lights that trace the metal seams of the glass roof and jars of honey that glow on the backlit bar. Cindy’s crowd­friendly dishes could feed a Mackinac Island yacht crew. Raw shellfish platters pile fat lobster tails, pumped­up shrimp, oysters, and crab legs on a bed of crushed ice. Cobs of corn and spiky crab claws overflow the cast­iron pot that holds the garlicky Frogmore Stew. What looks to be a full pound of burrata cheese oozes across a platter, piqued by aged balsamic vinegar. “Food is meant to bring people together,” says Executive Chef Christian Ragano, a former chef de cuisine at NoMI. “With a family, are you going to do 15 small plates or a few massive ones?” If Ragano’s heart­on­his­ sleeve­tattoos approach

“We Wanted a counterpoint to the very masculine men’s club—a feminine counterpoint that Was breezy and light.” —michael mason

roots its charm in honesty, Nandini Khaund, who left James Beard Foundation Award–winning mixology spot The Violet Hour to design Cindy’s bar menu, provides the mystery. Take, for example, the Golden Boar, featuring aquavit and spices like dill and caraway, which was inspired by a Viking ship that sailed from Norway to Chicago for the 1893 World’s Fair. “I wanted to do something strong but feminine,” she says. “I like to

introduce people to things they maybe don’t know yet.” As the weather cools to a chill, management promises blankets on the patio in fall and snow­chic waiter wear in winter, in addition to menus that channel ski chalet hideaways. Perhaps hiberna­ tion season will frost this foodie hot spot’s allure—but with more than 100 revelers already filling the place by 4 pm nightly, don’t count on it. 12 S. Michigan Ave., 13th Fl., 844-312-2221; chicagoathletichotel.com MA

Cindy’s shuns the punch bowl (too sloppy) in favor of elegant glass tabletop dispensers called “apothecaries” (above) for those who agree on the same quaff. “You end up talking about the drink and sharing the experience,” says mixologist Nandini Khaund. “It’s like going to a show and you’re fush about the same band.”

Movie Magic Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch (below) of design frm Roman and Williams certainly know how to cast a mood at Cindy’s: They started out as Hollywood set designers before doing homes for the likes of Gwyneth Paltrow and retro-chic hotels like Ace Hotel New York.

photography by neil burger (cindy’s); Winnie au (standefer)

clockwise from far left: Cindy’s



TasTe Cuiscene Chef Satoru Takeuchi (inset) puts out food with a cosmopolitan flair, such as the beef tartare with Korean chili bean paste.

The Inn Crowd

Indulge your wanderlust wIthout leavIng the wIndy CIty at ChICago’s best hotel bars. by nicole schnitzler

Chicago’s hotel scene boasts some of the best bars in the city. Here are five worth checking into.

own vinyl, so long as it fits the genre ( Johnny Cash and Wu-Tang welcome). Soho House, 113–125 N. Green St., 312-521-8000; foxbar.com

Best Bar for Practicing Your French

... for Feeling Lik

id Again

With pétanque, croquet, and giant Jenga, festivities abound at Streeterville Social, a 9,000-square-foot rooftop newcomer. Between rounds, head to one of the bars for tiki-inspired creations like the Streeterville Mai Tai. Loews Chicago Hotel, 455 N. Park Dr., Third Fl., 877-868-8232; loewshotels.com/chicago-downtown

Take-ing Charge

at nomI, sAtoru tA EuChi brIngs frenCh teChnIque to bear on foods from far-flung plaCes. by nicole schnitzler NoMI’s new executive chef, Satoru Takeuchi (known as Chef Take), may be from Japan’s fourth-biggest city, Nagoya, but his heart resides in the countryside. After learning French technique in esteemed Japanese venues like Le Lapin and Ne Quittez Pas, he worked his way through France, harnessing a strong appreciation for rustic specialties along the way. “We saw dishes like cassoulet and duck conft 200 or 300 years ago, and people are still making these recipes,” he says. “That’s why I love French food.” At NoMI, he applies that discovery to the Japanese philosophy that drives his dishes: Respect the product. “We try to avoid any extra ingredients,” says Takeuchi, whose globe-spanning work includes plates like Maine lobster salad with avocado and passion fruit coulis, and beef tartare with Korean chili bean paste and crispy rice crackers. Park Hyatt Chicago, 800 N. Michigan Ave., Seventh Fl., 312-239-4030; parkchicago.hyatt.com/en/hotel/dining.htm

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... for Audiophiles

On Wednesdays, the tucked-away tavern Fox Bar hosts BYOV, encouraging folks to bring their Streeterville Social atop the Loews Chicago offers pétanque, croquet, and giant Jenga.

... for Cutting-Edge Cocktails

Come to the second outpost of Miami-based concept The Broken Shaker for its quirky concoctions, from Cocoa Puff old-fashioneds and banana rum Manhattans to Chicago-centric creations like The Godmother, a mezcal-meets-roasted corn dram inspired by a tamale hot dog from the South Side. Freehand Hotel/ Hostel, 19 E. Ohio St., 312-9403699; thefreehand.com/chicago/ venues/the-broken-shaker ... for a Nightcap

The turndown service at the Loop’s Hotel Allegro gets boozy with the nightcap program at Bar Allegro, an invitation for guests to swing by the bar for their pre-sleep sip of choice. If you’re not a hotel guest, don’t fret: Between the classic cocktail riffs, candied bacon, and to-go growler service, sleep will come just as easily. Hotel Allegro, 171 W. Randolph St., 312-325-7120; allegrochicago.com/downtownrestaurant/bar-allegro MA

photography by derek richmond (le bar); anthony tahlier (beef tartare)

The terrace of the Gold Coast’s luxe Le Bar beckons Francophiles with a “je ne sais quoi” vibe ideal for sipping cocktails like the French Mule, a bubbly riff on the classic with St-Germain and Champagne. Round out your rendezvous with Gallic bites like escargots, truffle frites, and a oui-worthy plate of house-made cheese. Sofitel, 20 E. Chestnut St., 312-324-4000; cafedesarchitectes.com/le-bar


Gold Coast Residences D E L I V E R I N G E A R LY 2016

HALF FLOOR HOMES · $2.2 TO $4.1 MILLION

312.542.1144 • 4EastElm.com Dev Lic 2327162


TASTE Spotlight new in town

SIENA, TOO

COOKBOOK AUTHOR JOCELYN DEL ADAMS STIRS UP AFFECTION FOR MISSISSIPPISTYLE DESSERTS.

Chicago native Jocelyn Delk Adams says she believes firmly in combining “the art of family and food,” and that’s clear from her debut cookbook, Grandbaby Cakes, which was inspired by recipes passed down from her Southern grandmother. Adams grew up taking trips to visit family in Mississippi, becoming well-versed in the rich baking style of the region; the cookbook features family favorites such as a buttered rum and candied sweet potato crumb cake. Adams redeveloped some recipes, while others—like her aunt’s caramel recipe in the Real-Deal Caramel Cake (SHOWN)— she left untouched. Laughs Adams, “I really don’t believe in messing with perfection in that one.” grandbaby-cakes.com MA

OFF THE HOOK

Chicago’s seafood trend continues with three buzzy new gourmet destinations for fresh fish. Chef Matt Danko’s modern coastal menu focuses on small plates like gin-cured salmon and pickled mussels at Sink/Swim (3212 W. Armitage Ave., 773-486-7465; sinkswimchicago.com). At Wixter Market (2110 W. Division St., 312-248-2800; wixtermarket.com), it’s all about sustainable seafood frozen at the peak of freshness. And Gold Coast institution Hugo’s Frog Bar & Fish House (1024 N. Rush St., 312-640-0999; hugos frogbar.com) is the new home of a luxe oyster shucking station featuring dailychanging East and West Coast varieties. FROM TOP: Hugo’s highlights its daily catch with

Bar Siena’s popular bomboloni.

// food life //

fried oyster sliders; sustainable shop Wixter Market offers chef-prepared tinned seafood from around the world; Sink/Swim’s pastramicured shrimp shows a modern touch.

PACKAGED GOODNESS

The Terlato name is synonymous with luxury wines and spirits—and now gourmet foods, with the launch of Terlato Kitchen. “People always said [of our family meals], ‘This is such a great recipe, can you share it with us?’” says John Terlato of the inspiration to create the line. It draws heavily on family recipes for its pomodoro, vodka, and arrabbiata sauces, and ventures into the sweets arena with Wisconsin maple syrup (SHOWN) and Napa Valley strawberry preserves. Available at all Mariano’s stores and at terlatokitchen.com

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PHOTOGRAPHY BY © JOCELYN DELK ADAMS (CARAMEL CAKE); YOU ME US NOW (SINK/SWIM); GALDONES PHOTOGRAPHY (WIXTER MARKET)

Southern Sweets

Lucas Stoioff and David Rekhson have Italian on the brain. The pair’s Fabio Viviani–helmed Siena Tavern has been packed since opening in 2013, and now they’ve rejoined with Viviani to open a sibling concept: Bar Siena. Stoioff says the bilevel West Loop space is designed to “walk the line between the casual and the refined worlds,” with an emphasis on cicchetti, or Italian small plates. One carryover from Siena Tavern that’s sure to draw a crowd is the bomboloni. These popular filled doughnuts are served alongside coffee, gelato, and pastries at the adjacent BomboBar, which is accessible from the east side of the restaurant in its own storefront on Green Street. 832 W. Randolph St., 312-4927775; barsiena.com


W

R E H T EA

R O

T NO CHICAG O ’ S LAR G EST IND O O R |O U T D O O R R O O FTO P LO U NG E O P E N A LL SE ASO N S A M A Z I N G SKY LI N E VI E WS CHEF CRAFTED COCKTAILS UPSCALE BAR MENU

AT THE GODFREY HOTEL CHICAGO 127 WEST HURON AT LASALLE IOGODFREY

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312 374 1830

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IOGODFREY.COM

IOGODFREY


taste On the town

Over dinner at dOlce italian, JOffrey Ballet artistic directOr Ashley WheAter and fashiOn designer PAmellA DeVos gather tO celeBrate the JOffrey’s 60th anniversary—and the start Of a stylish new seasOn. by j.p. anderson

Ashley Wheater and Pamella DeVos at Dolce Italian. below, from left: One of the restaurant’s signature Northern Italian–style pizzas, featuring a distinctive upturned crust; orange leather accents give the dining room a chic pop of color.

How did you two first connect? Pamella DeVos: I danced, and my children were involved with the Grand Rapids Ballet. And we got involved with the Joffrey when we did a benefit fashion show. Ashley Wheater: Yes, in ’08 or ’09. PD: We did that very first show—we’ve done several at this point—and it was so much fun. And now my husband, Dan, and I are part of the board, and we got to know each other through that. It’s a big year for the Joffrey. AW: I was looking back to when we had the 30th anniversary of the Joffrey, and I happened to be in the company at the time. And it was the same thing—Robert Joffrey kept looking forward, and we’re also looking forward. In September we have the Millennials program, which closes with Christopher Wheeldon’s Fool’s Paradise, which is beautiful. We’re in for a really good year. PD: Talk about what Christopher is doing for the Joffrey. AW: The end of the 2015–16 season will be the premiere of a new Nutcracker by Christopher Wheeldon. I think it’s going to be a Nutcracker for today—it will be very relevant for everyone today. The Joffrey is also being honored this month. AW: On the opening night of our Millennials program on September 16, we will be receiving the Fifth Star Award, which is the city’s Kennedy Center Honors. So that’s going to be a big night. How meaningful is that? AW: I think it’s huge, coming from the city, since Chicago has so many people to celebrate and recognize. It’s wonderful. September 16. PD: Fashion week. [Laughs] AW: So it’s a crazy week for you. PD: Our show is actually September 11 at the Whitney in New York. Isn’t that great? But the craziest thing is on September 19, my daughter is getting married. That’s quite a week! So what do you think of Dolce Italian’s space? PD: I love the location, because my townhome is in River North. It’s a great neighborhood. AW: Yes, very cool, very clean, slick. But coNtiNued oN Page 106

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photography by anjali pinto

Pas de Deux

Dance is an obvious passion for Ashley Wheater, the veteran artistic director of the Joffrey Ballet, but it’s also something that Pamella DeVos, the designer behind sumptuous women’s fashion line Pamella Roland, is wholeheartedly committed to. As the Joffrey celebrates its 60th anniversary and longtime Joffrey supporter DeVos prepares for New York Fashion Week, the pair met up for a lively dinner at River North hot spot Dolce Italian to discuss fashion, food, and the excitement of the coming season.



taste On the town

A wide-open display kitchen allows guests prime viewing of the chefs at work. right: Pistachio vinaigrette adds a nutty kick to Dolce’s tender grilled octopus with chickpeas, farro, and frisée.

“Once Our dancerS cOMe TO chicaGO They fall in lOve wiTh The ciTy, becauSe creaTively There’S a lOT haPPeninG here.”—ashley wheater

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With all the work I do I’m in New York, and Midwestern people stick together. AW: I agree with you. There is an integrity about Midwestern people: considerate, passionate about their city. PD: Your dancers are from all over, though. AW: Once they come to Chicago, they fall in love with the city, I think because creatively there’s a lot happening in Chicago. PD: It’s interesting how people dress here, too. It’s not New York. But I feel like fashion’s coming back again. People are buying high-end again. AW: I think fashion is becoming more interesting for men as well. PD: Oh, absolutely. [Pizza with prosciutto, burrata, arugula, San Marzano tomatoes, and parmigiano; and whole roasted branzino with lemon, thyme, and Palermo sauce are served.] AW: From an artistic-director point of view, I enjoy fashion because more fashion is arriving on the stage, and I

love that. It would be so great to have Pamella do something for the Joffrey. PD: My team’s excited about the idea already. We just want to pick the right choreographer—the team is so important, because it allows each of you to create your own world, and when they come together, it’s seamless. How would you describe your personal style? PD: Clean lines; I don’t wear a ton of big jewelry. Some would say I’m classic. AW: Lines are really important when dressing. It’s the same in dancers. You want to show the beautiful lines of the body. How is the pizza? AW: Very thin, really light. I’m not generally a big cheese eater, but I loved all of it. PD: Unfortunately, my waistline doesn’t. [Laughs] AW: And the branzino is delicious— really beautifully cooked. Any final thoughts about the Joffrey’s role in Chicago?

AW: The thing about the Joffrey is it has always tried to reflect our culture, whether it’s doing a work with cowboy boots… PD: They make even cowboy boots look graceful. AW: And it’s great to be celebrating 20 years in Chicago and now 60 years as an American dance company. Those are testaments to our community—because the arts are fragile, and they always will be. But when you have a committed audience that believes in the power of the arts, they’ll always be around. MA

DAnCe PArtners WHAt:

dinner and conversation between ballet enthusiasts. WHen:

a stormy June evening. WHere:

dolce italian, 127 w. huron St., 312-754-0700; dolceitalianrestaurant.com

photography by anjali pinto

also down to earth. PD: The orange accents are very ’70s, which I love. [Grilled octopus with chickpeas, farro, frisée, and pistachio vinaigrette is served.] Pamella, you mentioned Fashion Week. What’s coming up in your fall collection? PD: The inspiration for this fall was Paris in the ’70s. That’s why I was saying it’s very ’70s-looking here—the lighting, the colors. That was an exciting time for artists, photographers, dancers. AW: I remember being there a lot. Are there any particular pieces that are your favorites? PD: What’s really big right now are the jumpsuits. [Trying the octopus] Wow, that’s good. The spices are great, it’s grilled, it’s perfectly done. AW: It’s tender—a nice charred exterior but soft in the middle. Really good. Let’s talk Chicago. How does the city inspire you? PD: First of all, it’s the Midwest.




LE Y1 L N O

FT!



queeN of throNes SMART. BEAUTIFUL. FIERCE. THE GENERAL CONSENSUS ON BOTH SIDES OF THE POND IS THAT ENGLISH CHARMER NATALIE DORMER RULES. by DAVID HOCHMAN photography by TONY DURAN

N

atalie Dormer is on a pool terrace overlooking Los Angeles, doing what can only be described as the happy dance. In an entertainment world where things so often go wrong, everything appears to be going exactly right for Dormer, and you sense her good fortune as she casually pirouettes and pliés— she was a ballerina before becoming an actor—for a photographer’s camera on this sparkling-blue day in Beverly Hills. But then she stops, cocks her hip, and scrunches her lips into a mischievous little pucker that edges up on one side. Dormer has very large, bright blue eyes that somehow loom larger in that instant. The English actress is so well known for this facial fourish that there is a highly traffcked Tumblr page called “Natalie Dormer’s Smirk.” For the record, she is okay with that. “I have a lopsided smile; what can I say?” she says, when I ask about it later. “And if that message flters down to some girl looking in the mirror who feels she’s not completely symmetrical, then I am glad to have helped in some small, albeit ridiculous, way.” At the moment, Dormer is not smirking so much as suppressing laughter or perhaps primal screams. It has been an intense week and one that’s about to get crazier. She just arrived via London, where she lives, from Serbia, where she flmed her frst honest-to-goodness lead role in a supernatural horror flm called The Forest. Tomorrow, she heads to San Diego for the restorative Zen retreat that is Comic-Con. Over three frantic days there, she will promote roles in The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2, which opens November 20; Patient Zero, an upcoming bio-thriller about a global pandemic; and the sixth season

of HBO’s Game of Thrones, in which Dormer stars as Margaery Tyrell, Queen of the Seven Kingdoms. Press panels, parties, hordes of furry green-haired cosplayers—“The trick will be remembering which Natalie Dormer I need to be and when,” she says as her grin starts to curl again. “I’m trying to remain sane and not go totally schizophrenic.” Madness might be justifable. At 33, Dormer somehow fnds herself in two of the biggest pop culture sensations of our time. Hunger Games and Game of Thrones attract so much frenzied analysis and commentary that they are international events. Game of Thrones—which has garnered a whopping 24 Emmy nominations this year, more than any other show—will once again simulcast across more than 170 countries when it returns next year, and the three Hunger Games flms alone have grossed over a billion dollars worldwide. Dormer, who frst appeared in Mockingjay Part 1, was the number-one choice to play Cressida, the propaganda flm director whose scalp ripples with vine tattoos. “Natalie had to shave part of her head for the role, and she wore the look with absolute ferceness,” says Hunger Games producer Nina Jacobson. “She gives you everything as an actor, and yet, on screen, you still can’t quite pinpoint what she’s thinking. The more you watch her, the more you want to know. I suspect it’s why audiences are so drawn to her.” One casualty has been Dormer’s anonymity. “Recognition can be a many-times-a-day occurrence,” she says, kicking back on a pool chaise. She’s wearing black stretch pants and a gray T-shirt under a black jacket glittering with zippers. “I get oil paintings from fans, computer-generated art from fans, fans approaching me in the toilet, fans approaching me in the sauna. It’s a Champagne problem, but I can’t really go anywhere without a ‘Wait, aren’t you…?’”

opposite page: Gown, Chanel ($6,550). 935 N. Michigan Ave., 312-787-5500; chanel.com. beauty: Leonor Greyl Baume Bois de Rose ($49), Éclat Naturel Nourishing and Protective Styling

Cream ($46), and Serum de Soie Sublimateur ($46). Anthony Cristiano Salon, Trump International Hotel & Tower, 401 N. Wabash Ave., Level 1M Ste. B, 312-268-2440; leonorgreyl-usa.com. Clé de Peau Radiant Fluid Foundation in O10 ($125), Luminizing Face Enhancer ($95), Eye Color Quad in 313 ($80), and Extra Rich Lipstick in 101 ($65). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-6500; saks.com. Dior Dior Vernis in Trianon ($27). Saks Fifth Avenue, see above

michiganavemag.com  111



opposite page: Patterned dress,

Marc Jacobs ($3,900). 11 E. Walton St., 312-649-7260; marcjacobs.com

this page: Coat, Dries Van

Noten ($2,535). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com

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D

ormer grew up in Reading, England, where a thriving Hollywood career seemed about as probable as an invite for a play date with Prince William. “I didn’t know any actors and had no idea how to get into the profession, so I kept really quiet about it,” she says. Dormer’s father worked as a computer programmer and her mother was a housewife, but it was her grandmother who inspired Dormer, the eldest of three, to perform. “She would take me to see Shakespeare’s tragedies in the ruins of the Reading Abbey, knocked down by Henry VIII and Cromwell, and my eyes totally opened up to the possibilities.” A straight-A student who speaks multiple languages, Dormer was accepted to Cambridge University but chose instead to enroll at drama school in London. Just months after graduating, director Lasse Hallström cast her as a bumbling virgin opposite Heath Ledger in Casanova. Dormer’s role was written as a bit part, but Hallström gave her more screen time when he saw she had real potential. David Goyer, the screenwriter behind Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy and the writer and coproducer of The Forest, says, “When you meet Natalie, what distinguishes her is this sense that ‘here’s someone who’s going to be a star.’ It’s partly her ambition—she has clearly decided she’s going to be a big success—but it’s also her rare combination of razor-sharp wit, unusual intelligence, and unique, timeless looks.” That mix made her a natural to play Anne Boleyn in the 2007 Showtime series The Tudors. By the time another costume project, Game of Thrones, came along, Dormer might as well have stitched herself permanently into a corset. “You say that,” she says a touch defensively, when asked about the period roles, “but I’ve actually only done three corset dramas in 10 years. Kate Winslet’s spent more time in a corset than I have. Helena Bonham Carter has spent more time in a corset than I have. What Americans tend to forget is that I can carry a semiautomatic weapon and run around in jeans and T-shirts, too.” That’s true. Her role as Sherlock Holmes’s only love, Irene Adler, in the CBS series Elementary showed that Dormer could be powerful and sexy without ruffes. But it is the character of Margaery Tyrell on Thrones that is her greatest creation. Here, too, the role was not conceived as a major one—Margaery is a marginal fgure in the original fantasy novels—but Dormer turns her into a politically savvy woman in charge who dominates whatever scene she’s in. Last season found Margaery in what might have been the most uncomfortable sex scene ever broadcast on television that did not actually involve sex. The boy king, Tommen Baratheon, played by Dean Charles Chapman, made Margaery his queen—with all the carnal clutching and gasping such a royal union involves on a show like Thrones. Fans were agog. Chapman is 17 but playing 12, an age gap that set off a Twitter storm even though the hook-up was mostly implied (viewers saw the couple waking up in bed without their clothes, and there was a brief kiss). Dormer fnds the fuss a little irritating. “After what we’ve done on this show—the rape, the

incest, the child murdering—it baffes me that two people in a reasonably good, reasonably affectionate relationship is what gets the wide eyes and the questions.” As for questions about Dormer’s own relationship, let’s just say it might be easier to extract answers from Ser Pounce, the Game of Thrones cat. Dormer’s partner of four years is Anthony Byrne, a flmmaker and director. He created Hozier’s latest music video, which features Dormer. Byrne is across the pool today, tapping on his phone as Dormer talks, but she doesn’t say much about him. “I couldn’t possibly comment,” is all she says when asked about recent reports that the couple was spotted ring shopping or about the double date paparazzi caught them on in Serbia last June with Lady Gaga and her fancé (and Dormer’s costar in The Forest), Taylor Kinney. Dormer treasures her privacy, which is partly why she stays off social media. “I’ve been busy enough playing four different roles in the last four years,” she says, “and I don’t have energy to put out some perfect image of Natalie Dormer that’s not the real me anyway.” To stay grounded, she spends as much time as possible with friends she’s had since childhood. “Most of my closest pals have nothing to do with the industry. They watched me struggle fnancially. They know my sob stories and the roles I missed out on and the nights when I never thought I’d work again.” She is also devoted to philanthropy. Dormer ran the London Marathon last year to raise money for Barnardo’s, the UK’s largest children’s charity. “She put us all to shame by somehow managing to train in the middle of Hunger Games,” Nina Jacobson laughs. If Dormer’s schedule allows, she’ll run the New York Marathon this November in support of Team for Kids, the New York Road Runners’ charity. She also appeared in a campaign on behalf of Plan UK, which works to eliminate forced underage marriage and female genital mutilation around the world. Whether future roles will involve bodices and bustles remains unclear. Margaery did not appear in the Game of Thrones’ fnale last season, leaving fans to wonder if she might become yet another victim of brutality in Westeros and Essos. But Dormer will be okay no matter what happens. She says she’d love to do a comedy (“I’m a huge fan of Veep,” she says) or a naturalistic drama, and being a Bond girl might be cool, too. Dormer looks out to LA, her eyes glimmering, as that confdent, cryptic facial expression returns. “My fve-year, no, 10-year, hell, my 55-year take is that I’m going to keep doing this as long as I can keep doing this,” she says. “You look at my countrywomen like Judi Dench and Vanessa Redgrave and Diana Rigg—they’re gonna drop doing what they love to do. That’s where I’m heading.” Corset or not, she says, “Someone’s going to have to carry me out.” ma

“I get oil paintings from fans, computergenerated art from fans, fans approaching me in the toilet, fans approaching me in the sauna. It’s a Champagne problem, but I can’t really go anywhere without a ‘Wait, aren’t you…?’”


Embroidered silk dress, Erdem ($5,280). erdem.com. Bra ($275) and panties ($295), Dolce & Gabbana. 68 E. Oak St., 312-250-0630; dolcegabbana.com Photography by Tony Duran/tonyduran.net Styling by Martina Nilsson at Opus Beauty Hair by Christian Marc at Forward Artists using Leonor Greyl Makeup by Matthew VanLeeuwen at The Wall Group using ClĂŠ de Peau Manicure by Sarah Chue for Dior Vernis First photo assistant: Justin Schwan Second photo assistant: Arthur Lang Video: Adriano Valentini Location by Sources Locations/ Nancy Rigoli, 323-493-8844

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look to the west

The spiriT of The fronTier lives on This season wiTh flowing, feminine silhoueTTes and wesTern-inspired accenTs of leaTher and lace. photography by renĂŠ & radka

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styling by martina nilsson


opposite page: Silk crepon dress, ChloĂŠ ($5,695). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; chloe.com. Skinny tie, Ralph Lauren Collection ($215). 750 N. Michigan Ave., 312-280-1655; ralphlauren.com. Red floral necklace (in hand), Dries Van Noten ($1,775). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com. Suede boots, Gianvito Rossi ($1,025). Barneys New York, see above this page: Yellow and black jacket ($3,950), tweed dress ($5,290), and dark blue crystal and tassel necklace ($990), Lanvin. 116 E. Oak St., 312-765-7075; lanvin.com. Ruffled silk chiffon and organza bib shirt, Oscar de la Renta ($1,390). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; oscardelarenta.com. Dreambox studded knee-high lace-up boots, Altuzarra (price on request). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com


Lantern-sleeve lace turtleneck dress, Donna Karan New York ($6,800). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-6500; saks.com. Black lace bustier ($745) and black satin high-waisted panty ($295), Dolce & Gabbana. 68 E. Oak St., 312-2550630; dolcegabbana.com. Black belt with tassels, Lanvin ($690). 116 E. Oak St., 312-765-7075; lanvin.com. Aqua velvet boots, Dries Van Noten ($735). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com

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Coat, Derek Lam (price on request). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; barneys.com. Sleeveless ball gown ($8,310) and open-toe boots ($915), Elie Saab. Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; neimanmarcus.com opposite page: Winter white crocheted

daisy dress, Stella McCartney ($4,080). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; neimanmarcus.com. Black lace bustier ($745) and black satin high-waisted panty ($295), Dolce & Gabbana. 68 E. Oak St., 312-255-0630; dolcegabbana.com. Suede lace-up boots, Giambattista Valli ($1,575). Saks Fifth Avenue, 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-6500; saks.com

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Teint irisé ladder-stitch high-neck dress, Alexander McQueen ($2,645). Neiman Marcus, 737 N. Michigan Ave., 312-642-5900; neimanmarcus.com. Les Cuissardes Cabriolet gloves, Perrin Paris ($850). Barneys New York, 15 E. Oak St., 312-587-1700; perrinparis.com. Anneli open-toe boots, Jimmy Choo ($2,395). 63 E. Oak St., 312-255-1170; jimmychoo.com beauty: Chanel Perfection Lumière Velvet Foundation in Beige 10 ($47), Joues Contraste Powder Brush in Malice ($45), Les 4 Ombres Quadra Eye Shadow in Prélude ($61), and Rouge Allure Intense Long-Wear Lip Colour in Coromandel ($36). 935 N. Michigan Ave., 312-7875500; chanel.com. Bumble and bumble Styling Lotion ($29), Thickening Hairspray ($29), and Hairdresser’s Invisible Oil ($39). The Manchester Salon, 400 N. Wells St., 312-291-9662; bumbleandbumble.com

Styling by Martina Nilsson at Opus Beauty Hair by Laurent Mole at Forward Artists using Bumble and bumble Makeup by Kathy Jeung at Forward Artists using Chanel Model: Erika @ Next Management LA Photography assistance by Adam Londou

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Luxe .

20 The Luxury Education Foundation’s board members and leaders of our favorite iconic brands—Dior, Graff, Chanel, Hermès, Salvatore Ferragamo, and Lalique—talk about new strategies, core values, and how new talent is driving success. moderated by Hitha Herzog illustrations by Jessica May Underwood photography by Tanya Malott

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Michigan Avenue recently sat down with the CEOs and presidents of top luxury brands to get their read on the new luxury economy, how millennials will impact this vital sector, and what’s hot in luxury across the US. The gathering dovetailed with the 10th anniversary of the Luxury Education Foundation (LEF), a public, not-for-profit organization that focuses on educational programs for design and business students at both the undergraduate (Parsons School of Design) and graduate (Columbia Business School) levels. The programs, studying the creation and marketing of luxury goods, also allow students to learn about this highly competitive sector of retailing by interacting with senior executives from iconic firms. In turn, these firms benefit by gaining fresh perspectives about their brands from a new generation of talent.

brand. If you take the Dior brand, it goes back to Christian creating and designing for the brand, and you want students to understand that. Today, when you have Raf Simons designing, he’s very involved in the art world, so he collaborates with artists to create fabric for dresses—it modernizes and keeps it going in a very contemporary way.

tell us about your relationship to leF and how your involvement has benefited your brand.

ottomanelli: We learned that we are not recession-proof. Customers weren’t shopping at the same level. But here’s the thing: For brands like ours—true luxury brands—you don’t start manipulating or changing your approach. So we took a little bit of a hit in 2008, but I think we rebounded very quickly because we didn’t change our formula.

the 2008 financial crisis impacted all market sectors. How did your consumer change during the last five to seven years? Chavez: I would say nothing changed for Hermès. We found that even during the crisis customers were willing to invest in certain items. The 2008 holiday season was a very interesting time because we saw very loyal clients still wanting to purchase those investment pieces.

robert Chavez: It’s really great to get a new perspective from students. Sometimes when we’ve presented projects and they come back with their observations we think, Wow, we never looked at it that way. This fall we’ll ask them to focus on the traditional Hermès scarf and come up with new ideas to market and wear it, and to present the scarf digitally in unique and innovative ways.

maz zouhairi: It was similar with us. In 2010 things turned around, and 2011 and 2012 were better years. I would say that the recession did remind us that we have to be relevant, exciting, and fresh to today’s world and time. Luxury is a dream, not a necessity.

vincent ottomanelli: We learn what the students’ perceptions of our brand are from the outside looking in, so we benefit from learning how we can communicate to different generations. Barbara Cirkva: What’s so interesting with LEF is how the program has expanded. Obviously, we are famous for the Master Class [where luxury brands and their executives work on case studies involving current business situations] and now, over the last several years, we have added five or six different programs. Just 10 days ago, we hosted 25 students from Columbia Business School at Chanel. They spent the day with us so that, from their standpoint, they can understand what happens every day in the world of luxury. What was so rewarding for us on the Chanel side was having the opportunity to interact with the students and learn what was important to them. the maker culture has taken root strongly with millennials in this country. are american students interested in developing craftsmanship skills? or do you find that more likely to happen in europe? Chavez: When you visit the ateliers in France, you’ll be surprised at how youthful many of the new craftspeople are. There’s been this surge in interest of people wanting to do something with their hands, whether it’s making jewelry, working with silk, or stitching leather. With LEF we’re always looking for new programs to offer students, just like the craftsmanship program we launched this year, the 10th program in our 10th year. Pamela Baxter: Students need to be exposed to luxury from the very beginning. You can’t separate craftsmanship from the brand because it goes back to the beginning of the

Moderator HitHa Herzog, Retail Analyst and Contributor at Fox Business Network Panelists Henri Barguirdjian, USA CEO and President, Graf

millennials, the so-called first generation of “digital natives,” are projected to be the biggest generation of spenders since the Boomers. However, millennials are dealing with economic issues Boomers didn’t have to—a long-term slow-growth economy, which is postponing their arrival at certain levels of affluence. they have more debt and less spending power than other generations did at equivalent ages. How are you marketing to them versus how you market to Boomers or their successors, gen x? Baxter: If you look at brands like Chanel and Dior, we are seeing new, young couture clients every day. There is always going to be that customer where there’s no price ceiling— they want something that’s exclusive to them.

Pamela Baxter, CEO and President, LVMH Perfumes and Cosmetics North America BarBara Cirkva, Division President of Fashion, Chanel roBert CHavez, CEO and President, Hermès vinCent ottomanelli, President and Regional Director, Salvatore Ferragamo maz zouHairi, CEO and President, Lalique North America

“Communicating with social media makes our lives easier because you get instant reaction.” —henri barguirdjian, usa ceo and president, graff

Graff necklace


HIGHER LEARNING How the Luxury Education Foundation teaches all things luxe.

Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, the Luxury Education Foundation (LEF) was established to help students acquire the specialized skills Chanel clutch

needed to succeed in luxury retail. Since LEF’s founding,

Chavez: Maybe we’re not seeing as many millennials as we’d like to. And who we do see are at an entry price point. So it’s their first scarf, first tie, first watch. Regardless of age, there is one consistency: People are genuinely interested in quality and craftsmanship. They want something that is very well made, that’s going to last a long time. But, for example, in the case of ties, a younger customer wants a thinner tie—same quality, just thinner.

over 500 students from

Cirkva: I think it’s less a generational issue than a lifestyle issue. There are certain badges of honor you want to acquire at different stages in your life. For some individuals, it might be 10 days at an Aman resort. For other people, it’s going to be a Chanel haute couture dress, or handbag, or something from Dior or Lalique. But it’s much more individual than it was in the Boomer years, where there was more consistency to “what’s your first badge, what’s your second badge?” Today, it’s based more on personality and lifestyle.

about half have gone on to

Zouhairi: It’s also about having collaborations that are relevant to a younger audience. All brands are searching for ways to be relevant to the millennials.

exponentially over the last

In terms of being more relevant, I recently visited a Graff store in Vegas and found Beats By Dre headphones with Graff diamonds on them.

billion in 2014).

Henri Barguirdjian: The idea of doing something with Beats By Dre was a cool way to show that we’re not old and stodgy, we can also be hip—so there you go. It was a fun collaboration. Ottomanelli: It’s interesting what you did with the Beats product. The heritage of our brands is about product. I don’t think it’s necessarily generational; it’s about the quality and the craftsmanship that each of our brands represent. We have been around for over 100 years and everything we do has to be product-focused, and then secondly, it is how can we communicate that to stimulate [interest from] different generations?

Columbia Business School and Parsons School of Design

Chavez: People want to make a subtler statement. Society has become a bit over the top in terms of celebrity status. I’m just fascinated by this. It’s like how much less can you wear to a black-tie affair today? And it’s getting crazier and crazier. So you know it’s reaching a tipping point with people starting to think, Wow, where does this all end? I think the real big change with millennials is the concept of less is more. They don’t want lots of anything; they just want a few very good things. And fortunately for us, it plays into who we are. If you’re just going to have one, let me have the best one that I can have. Zouhairi: It depends on the audience. Some of the younger consumers are attracted by celebrities, and that’s their way into a luxury brand like Graff or Lalique. Our classic, luxury consumer varies also. There are those who want the limited, one-of-a-kind product, and there are those who want something not limited but with the same levels of craftsmanship and effort behind the design. Barguirdjian: Our customers want pieces that are understated but with gems of extreme rarity and quality. Nothing ostentatious—I hate to use the word “bling.”

have taken courses focusing on the creation and marketing of luxury goods;

work in the sector. The number of executives and brands involved—among them Cadillac, Chanel, Cartier, Dior, Hermès, and Louis Vuitton—has grown

decade like the global goods market itself (more than $950

The LEF program offers 10 classes, varying from Corporate Classroom, in which students spend the day at headquarters of luxury brands for a glimpse of dayto-day operations, to a new Luxury Craftsmanship Workshop established this year, where design students participate in a two-week

What do you think are the priorities for luxury customers today? Have buying patterns changed?

Lifestyles are more casual. Everything is global.

program with master artisans CONTINUED ON PAGE 128

What is the consumer buying in the luxury category? What are the hottest items to have this year? Cirkva: We are seeing growth in ready-to-wear and, more specifically, in knitwear. Additionally, shoes continue to be an area of growth for the brand, and the newest US Chanel boutiques feature dedicated shoe salons, which showcase the breadth of the shoe collection. Chavez: Our single-best category this year is the home area. We are finding an exorbitant interest and increase in our home business—decorative items, accessories, furniture. It seems that people really want this Hermès lifestyle in their homes. Barguirdjian: There is such scarce supply to demand, and our customers are looking for pieces with great rarity and value. This year our Butterfly line [where gems for jewelry and timepieces are crafted in butterfly shapes] has done extremely well. Zouhairi: We’re investing significantly in the Lalique Art Division. Collaborations with the Yves Klein Foundation, Anish Kapoor, Zaha Hadid, Rembrandt Bugatti, Elton John, and Damien Hirst have helped drive interest from a younger customer. What does the luxury customer want today, and how are you addressing these wants? Barguirdjian: I think that there are two things happening. Number one, new consumers have educated themselves very quickly, Hermès scarf

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Moderator Hitha Herzog greets Maz Zouhairi as (from left) Barbara Cirkva, Vincent Ottomanelli, and Pamela Baxter look on. top right: Baxter. bottom right: Robert Chavez

“We sell more shearling coats in South Beach than we do in New York City. You have to be ready for surprises like that in every market.” —vincent ottomanelli, president and regional director , salvatore ferragamo

Salvatore Ferragamo shoe

Henri Barguirdjian. left: Cirkva


the Master Class that students—who each work on a design and marketing case study prepared by a luxury firm—might see their efforts make it to the marketplace.

Cirkva: When we survey customers after a shopping experience in our own stores, one thing that’s always consistent, and I’m always amazed that it doesn’t change, is how they are hungry for more of the story. When you say, “What would have made your experience better?” it’s always that they want to know more of the story. The story of the brand, or Coco Chanel, or that handbag...

When we talk about major markets, who is the primary customer? The resident or the tourist?

Lalique case study repurposed the iconic Mossi

Cirkva: Seventy percent local.

vase design as a shot glass.

Zouhairi: We have a very strong local and strong international consumer. I think that would apply to the major cities.

participants involved in a

and their knowledge of our world and our product is very impressive. If anything, the whole new way of communicating with social media makes our lives easier because you get instant reaction whether you are doing something right or wrong. Usually you hear much more about the wrong than the right, but it doesn’t matter. It’s information that is thrown out there by the thousands, which before, you had no way of knowing. It becomes an important element of how we react to our clients.

Zouhairi: In Miami, where there’s a more Latin influence, there are other aspects that depend on lifestyle. The Latin culture is much more about weddings.

Chavez: The majority, about 65 percent of our customers in New York, are local. They do travel a lot, so they purchase elsewhere. But the other 35 percent would be pied-à-terre New Yorkers or visitors who are here for one or two weeks at a time.

This year, for instance,

Dior handbag

colorful jewelry in Florida than you do in other places.

Other groups created My Travel Games—a game carrier for Loro Piana’s gift collection—or responded to Van Cleef & Arpels’s challenge to create jewelry pieces with a spring theme. Ketty Pucci-Sisti Maisonrouge, president of

Ottomanelli: For Ferragamo, it’s a little bit less, around 60 percent. But our stores in New York are the most significant in terms of total revenue. Baxter: In our Dior freestanding stores, it’s almost 80 percent local, and if you go to a lease department like Saks or Bergdorf or Bloomingdale’s, it changes because they get more tourist traffic, so it varies from store to store. Beauty is a whole different situation; you don’t even know who your customer is a lot of the time.

LEF, notes that the Master

How has corporate sustainability factored into the marketing of your brand?

Class “allows students to

Barguirdjian: It’s part of our DNA and part of what we

experience why a true collaboration between design and business is the basis for

Today brands are global, but how do you market to your customers differently from city to city? How does the product mix differ from store to store? Baxter: I think it’s a matter of lifestyle, so yes, we do merchandise the stores very differently. For example, in Miami, they like a lot more color. Ottomanelli: Believe it or not, we sell more shearling coats in South Beach than we do in New York City. So you have to be ready for surprises like that in every market. Cirkva: We all just have one brand collection, so we don’t create specific things for other markets, but we might tailor our assortments for them. But I have to say, if there’s something that’s really hot and key on the runway, it’s hot everywhere, everybody wants it. So if it’s very heavyweight, and you’re in California, you still have to have it. Barguirdjian: Jewelry moves much more slowly than fashion; we don’t have six collections a year. The trends in jewelry go from decade to decade. When you acquire a piece of high jewelry, there has to be a perennial aspect to it, that it’s going to work for years, and eventually become a family heirloom. Having said that, yes, you sell much more conservative, understated jewelry in Chicago. The Beats By Dre items are fun in Vegas. You’ll sell more

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success in the luxury industry.” Some project results are so spot-on, they are picked up by the firms: One LEF team took Hermès’s Balcon du Guadalquivir porcelain pattern and transferred it to an enamel bracelet (BELOW). Today it is an Hermès best seller. —Suzanne Charlé

FROM LEFT:

Barguirdjian, Cirkva, Ottomanelli, Baxter, and Zouhairi.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANNA DEMIDOVA (HERMÈS)

from LEF brands. But it’s in


“All brands are searching for ways to be relevant to the millennials.” —maz zouhairi, ceo and president, lalique north america

The Changing FaCe oF Luxury Once confined to a few tony streets, the luxury scene now abounds across Chicago. by seth putnam

For decades, Michigan avenue and the adjacent oak street district have been the undisputed centers for fashion and luxury in Chicago. No longer. Though these two districts certainly continue to grow—couture giants Versace and Dior are set to move into the old Urban Outfitters space on Rush

Lalique vase

Street, amping up the neighborhood’s luxe factor even further—opulence is popping up all over the city in areas that once might have been considered

do. The jewelry industry in particular has been, should we say, targeted, more than others. It forced the industry in general and then the individual companies to send out the message that this isn’t the way we do things. Baxter: Younger generations and particularly the millennials are very interested in sustainable practices and ask a lot of questions about where you’re sourcing materials, or how you’re producing. All our companies that have been around for 50 to 100 years have to have responsibility, credibility, and followthrough on these topics, because they are going to get more and more important as the customer gets younger and younger. Cirkva: Another aspect of sustainability is an approach we started taking 10 years ago, of buying small artisan [businesses] where the craft itself was in danger of becoming extinct. I think many of you have done the same thing. Mr. Lagerfeld creates the Métiers d’art collection once a year—that only uses those five to six specialist houses. When we think about sustainability long-term, and for all of us, the story of our brand is so much tied to what is unique and special, that giving these people a lifeline, if you will, to continue their craft is what it’s about as well. ma

hinterland territory. “You talk about the Magnificent Mile [and Oak Street], with those big brands like Gucci, Prada, Burberry, and their massive build-outs, but things are changing,” says Rob Wilce, one of the owners of Notre, a menswear and home goods boutique that opened in the Far North Side neighborhood of Andersonville last November. Luxury has always been defined by craftsmanship and price point, but Wilce would contend that it’s about rarity and backstory as well. The highly selective shop carries luxe lines—Visvim shirts ($670), Yohji Yamamoto sneakers ($400), Viberg

“It has everything to do with Chicago building

boots ($740)—that are incredibly hard to find not just in other stores in Chicago but

up and supporting

globally. Wilce points to Stephan Schneider, a line out of Antwerp, which is available in

itself. You walk

only a handful of stores across the world. “It has everything to do with Chicago building

around the Gold

up and supporting itself,” Wilce says. “You walk around the Gold Coast, and it looks like

Coast, and it looks

Rodeo Drive.” Tastes are evolving, too, argues Greta de Parry, who trained in sculpture at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and now applies her expertise to crafting fine art fur-

like Rodeo Drive.”

—rob wilce

niture. While luxury brands used to assume that the buyer they needed wasn’t here, they’re finding eager customers in the Windy City who aren’t restricted to professions centered on finance, medicine, or law. “In the last year, locals have become a huge part of my clientele,” says de Parry, whose custom pieces include a $10,000 bench crafted from 136 pieces of individually cut and hand-finished hardwood. “It seems like Chicago is cultivating itself.” Andrew Perez, who hand-makes precision timepieces that range from $575 to $2,000 in the Fulton River District under the label Astor+Banks, agrees. As the de facto capital of the Midwest, Chicago has long embodied a down-home sensibility and a reluctance to embrace designer labels. But the city is no longer isolated, thanks to the digital world, which has brought down the virtual walls that once made it difficult for shoppers to access new looks and trends. “Little by little it’s shedding that skin, that Midwestern reputation,” he says. “It’s a world-class city that has access to culture.”


FALL, GLORIOUS FALL

STUNNING FOLIAGE IS JUST THE BEGINNING. FROM SUPERB SEASONAL DINING TO AN INCREDIBLE SLATE OF CULTURAL EVENTS, AUTUMN IN CHICAGO IS PACKED WITH REASONS TO SAy SAyONARA TO SUMMER.

photography by shutterstock

by KATE ROCKWOOD

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Summer in Chicago gets all the love, but fall may be the true star of the city’s seasons. The cooler temps herald a surge of artistic energy far and wide, while foodies and fashionistas alike revel in what’s in season this time of year. We asked four Chicago VIPs to share the can’t-miss favorites they look forward to most as autumn rolls in....

SEASONAL STYLE For fashion designer Maria Pinto, fall is the Goldilocks of Chicago style: cool enough to embrace the fun of layers, but still warm enough to keep our coats in the closet.

M

ichelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey have both embraced the easy, chic comfort of Maria Pinto’s designs, and versatility is at the core of the designer’s M2057 by Maria Pinto fall collection of dresses, pants, wraps, and jackets. This season, the machine-washable pieces include two-way zippers for the first time, allowing for adjustable slits and necklines. It’s a capsule collection perfectly suited The open kitchen at Nico Osteria.

for Chicago’s mercurial fall weather, which keeps residents and visitors alike on their toes. “I can’t imagine living somewhere without seasons,” says Pinto. “Spring is this big explosion of growth, then summer we’re all revved up, and then fall comes and it’s a cool, quieting-down time. You start cocooning back in. “I think eating comfort food on the outdoor patio of Nico Osteria (1015 N. Rush St., 312-994-7100; nicoosteria.com) perfectly captures that. The patio is just gorgeous—you can really feel that you’re outside. I remember last fall sitting next to a heat lamp in a cashmere wrap, sipping a glass of red wine, and just feeling so strongly that fall had arrived. “Fall is this incredible period of renewal for me. It ushers in a different way of being. You can have a 90-degree day, but there’s still that coolness in the air. We start transitioning to light layers, but we don’t have to pull out the heavyduty pieces yet. Everything feels different, and I want to be outside as much as possible. “When I buy fall clothes, one of my go-to stores in Chicago is Blake

(212 W. Chicago Ave., 312-202-0047). The owners do a really great job curating brands and including up-and-coming designers. And they always have new kinds of sweaters with beautiful yarns. Even if I’m not buying one of the sweaters on that particular trip, I want to touch and look and feel everything.

Blake’s impeccably curated styles range from established brands to up-and-comers.

“Robin Richman (2108 N. Damen Ave., 773-278-6150; robinrichman.com) is another go-to fall destination for me, but it has a very different point of view. I always find these really special pieces—like they carry Goti jewelry, but it’s not

the Goti that you see everywhere else, because here they took a leap and bought some really unique pieces. I’m an accessories person, and I love that you can still show them off in the fall. “For my designs, I take inspiration from things like architecture and nature. Lurie Garden (at the southern end of Millennium Park; luriegarden.org) is stunning this time of year. I like to go there at least once a month. It’s not that big—just five acres—but it’s beautifully designed by the Dutch garden designer Piet Oudolf, who also did the High Line in New York City. Lurie Garden feels very contemporary and unlike more traditional gardens. In the fall, all of the grasses and flowers start to shift, so you’ll have fields of purple aster and pops of goldenrod and later eulalia grass. It’s so serene during that fall transition time. It’s probably where I’d want to live, if given the choice. “Painting is a big part of my life right now, and I find it so much easier to do those more disciplined, solo projects when the weather drops and the daylight grows shorter. There are more than 100 artists at Mana Contemporary Chicago (2233 S. Throop St., 312-850-0555; manacontemporary chicago.com), where I have a painting studio. The energy is incredible; it gives me such a boost. “I like to grab a bite just a short walk away, at Dusek’s (1227 W. 18th St., 312-526-3851; duseks chicago.com). My favorite dish they make is this roasted quail with cornbread and scotch quail egg. It’s amazing. A meal there is always comforting and deeply inspiring.”

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Outdoor dining at Piccolo Sogno under a canopy of fall colors is a must.

Donnie Madia, managing partner of One Off Hospitality Group and 2015 James Beard Award winner for outstanding restaurateur, shares his favorite ways to savor fall.

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ost kids might spend autumn afternoons playing baseball or early football, but young Donnie Madia was already immersed in food. The Chicago native spent the breezy early autumn canning tomatoes with his mother. “It was probably not my favorite thing to do as a kid, but I remember picking tomatoes with her in September, and she’d show me how to skin them and crush them,” he says. “I vividly remember the taste of her tomato sauce—the best sauce I’ve ever had in my life—and those are my strongest memories of fall in Chicago. When I crave homemade sauce now, I head to Tufano’s Vernon Park Tap (1073 W. Vernon Park Pl., 312-7333393; tufanosrestaurant.com). It’s been around since 1930, and I worked there when I was young. It’s a great red-sauce spot.

DAY-TRIP DESTINATIONS

Squeeze in one last trip before the winter hibernation begins.

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“Our winters seem to be getting longer rather than shorter, so I try to get as much dining alfresco in before it’s gone. Piccolo Sogno (464 N. Halsted St., 312-421-0077; piccolosogno restaurant.com) is an outstanding spot. Because of the foliage in the trees that surround all the tables, it doesn’t seem like you’re dining out on a concrete slab at all. Chef Tony Priolo has one or two pizzas that change with the seasons, and anything he does is fantastic. My wife and I are both of Italian descent, and our 2-year-old, Bronson, loves pizza, so we can spend a long time here in the fall. “On Sundays, we try to enjoy family days when we’re not working—and, trust me, my business partners and I work a ton. I like taking Bronson to the Adler Planetarium (1300 S. Lake Shore Dr., 312-922-7827; adler planetarium.org) during the fall because

Buchanan, Michigan: The charming old mill town has a tiny shopping district that’s a magnet for home décor and antiques shoppers. And the surrounding rolling hills are dotted with vineyards, many open for tastings and tours. 90 miles east on I-90; buchanan.mi.us

it has these sweeping views of the city and the lake. You can admire the changing colors of the season outside, and the inside feels cozy despite the museum’s size. And noticing the excitement on his face while he’s there is the best feeling in the world.”

cUrtAiNS Up For new Steppenwolf Theatre Artistic Director Anna Shapiro, fall in Chicago is bursting with potential.

A

lifelong resident of Evanston, Anna Shapiro returned this summer from a year in New York City, directing This Is Our Youth

Kettle Moraine State Forest, Wisconsin: The 30,000-acre Northern Unit of the forest offers kaleidoscopic vistas of fall foliage, which you can take in on the Kettle Moraine Scenic Drive and Lake-to-Lake Bike Trail. Pitch a tent under the stars at one of the campgrounds or head to nearby Kohler Waters Spa for a bit of pampering. 130 miles north on I-94; dnr.wi.gov

Lookingglass Theatre

Geneva, Illinois: Nestled on the Fox River, Geneva has become a playground for adults looking to soak up the fall sunshine: Think canoeing, scenic strolls, tandem bike rentals, and outdoor markets aplenty. The annual Festival of the Vine draws a crowd September 11–13. 40 miles west on I-88; genevachamber.com

photography by Daniel ribar (shapiro); illustration by shutterstock

tAStE OF AUtUMN

and Fish in the Dark on Broadway. Though she’s been a Steppenwolf ensemble member for years, this fall she takes the reins as its new artistic director. “I have two school-aged kids and I’m a teacher, so fall is always the beginning in every aspect of my life,” says Shapiro. “For me, this fall is also the beginning of a job I’ve dreamed of having my whole life. I want to be in every day of September and October and November and feel every moment of the fall season at Steppenwolf. I’m very excited because [former Artistic Director] Martha Lavey chose John Steinbeck’s East of Eden to open the season (September 17–November 15, 1650 N. Halsted St., 312-335-1650; steppenwolf.org). “If you’re a theater maker or a theatergoer or both, the fall is like opening the first chapter of a book. All of the companies are starting a story that they want to tell you that’s going to last all year long. I always want to see anything that the Lookingglass Theatre (821 N. Michigan Ave., 312-337-0665; lookingglasstheatre.org) or Goodman Theatre (170 N. Dearborn St., 312-443-3800; goodman theatre.org) does. But I love the smaller companies, too, like the Griffin Theatre (1624 W. Granville Ave., 773-769-2228; griffintheatre.com) and Steep Theatre (1115 W. Berwyn Ave., 773-649-3186; steeptheatre.com).


“My favorite restaurant is right across the street, Balena (1633 N. Halsted St., 312-867-3888; balena chicago.com). It’s set up to fit the kind of evening you want to have, whether that’s sitting for a longer dinner or standing at a tall table and grabbing drinks. The food is seasonal and exquisite. I don’t tend to order chicken in restaurants, but the salt-and-pepper chicken thighs are insanely good. And the bar has great ice cubes, which I know sounds insane. But trust me—order a drink with ice cubes in it. “My twins are 6, and the one fall ritual we always do as a family is visit the Chicago Botanic Garden (1000 Lake Cook Road, Glencoe, 847-8355440; chicagobotanic.org). It’s a beautiful

photography by getty images (tree); sandro (cave); illustration by getty images

Fall in Chicago signals a fresh start in Windy City food, theater, and fashion.

time of year there, full of autumnal orange and really deep reds and browns. The restaurant there sits on top of the water with a bunch of patios and bridges. The kids like to watch the ducks while we eat. My kids get so excited in the fall in general, but it’s almost a bittersweet time for me. With the start of school and theater season, fall has this emotional weight. It’s filled with so much excitement, but it also marks the passing of another year.”

Maude’s Liquor Bar is the perfect spot for an intimate gathering. right: Chicagoans get in one last visit to Randolph Street Market Festival’s outdoor market at the start of autumn.

cool-weather culture The temperatures may be cooling down, but for artist and internationally known tastemaker Nick Cave, autumn is when Chicago’s cultural scene heats up.

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s a professor and head of the Fashion, Body, and Garments graduate program at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Nick Cave—who has gained global recognition for his ongoing “Soundsuit” project, a series of costumes made from found materials—is more in tune than most with the back-to-school season. But autumn brings a renewed energy and focus to his art as well. This fall, he begins construction on a 15,000-squarefoot building project in the Irving Park neighborhood that will eventually house art studios and rotating storefronts. “If summer is about relaxing and hanging out, fall is this signal of a cultural jump-start in Chicago,” muses Cave. “It’s like the New Year beginning, in terms of the arts and culture scene. Expo Chicago (September 17–20, Navy Pier; expochicago.com) is one of the anchor events that mark the start of that season. More than 100 contemporary and modern galleries participate from around the world; it can be so exciting. “The Randolph Street Market Festival (September 26–27, 1340 W. Washington St.; randolphstreetmarket.com) hosts its final outdoor event in the early fall, and that’s a real marker of the season. I love sneaking in one last visit and the festivities around that. It seems everyone wants to visit the outdoor antique market and vintage market one

last time—it’s no less crowded than during the summer. “Many of the art galleries in the West Loop open on the same day, the first Friday in September. It’s really become part of the DNA of the city, a community-based effort with all kinds of creative people gathering together. And in terms of fall favorites for hanging out, it’s always upstairs at Maude’s Liquor Bar (840 W. Randolph St., 312-243-9712; maudesliquorbar.com) for me. The upstairs has a very lounge-y feel to it, with all sorts of sofas and candles. But you eat dinner at the same time. It’s very dark and cozy. I like the intimacy of it. “In many ways the Chicago Cultural Center (78 E. Washington St., 312-744-6630) has the opposite feel: It’s airy and open. But it’s another fall favorite of mine. It’s just two blocks from the Art Institute of Chicago, so I often go on my lunch break or sometimes take my students there. Performances, exhibitions, lectures—it’s such a cultural hub in the center of the city. “I live in the South Loop, two blocks from the lake. I get up every morning and by 6 [I’m] on the lakeshore path. There’s no one out there at that time, and I need a bit of isolation sometimes. In the fall, you can really tell the difference in the air. There’s such a sense of space and independence. The trees are turning; the grasses are changing colors. It’s really sort of nice to be able to be in the presence of all that change as you’re starting your day.” MA

an apple a Day

The best places to enjoy all manner of the season’s signature fruit.

Apple Picking at More Than Delicious Orchard: Skip the carnival explosion of most u-pick places in favor of this well-kept rural orchard that grows 80 varieties of apples (including Honeycrisp) and pears. 9905 Thompson Road, Woodstock, 815-5759650; morethandelicious.com Apple Fritters at Old Fashioned Donuts: The line regularly snakes out the door for these handmade fritters studded with chunks of apple. Bring your appetite or a friend—the fritters are the size of dinner plates. 11248 S. Michigan Ave., 773-995-7420 Cider Tour at Virtue Farms: A Goose Island brewing veteran opened this cider press, which uses heirloom apples from Michigan. The cidery tour—and the bourbon barrel-aged cider— is well worth the drive. 2170 62nd St., Fennville, Michigan, 269-561-5001; virtuecider.com Apple Cider Donuts at Dinkel’s Bakery: The apple cider is refreshingly flavorful in these old-fashioned cake doughnuts, which are coated with cinnamon sugar. 3329 N. Lincoln Ave., 773-281-7300; dinkels.com Cider cocktails at Longman & Eagle: An appletini it’s not. Ask for the Innocence Lost, a discerning blend of Anthem Hops cider, Aperol, North Shore Distillery Aquavit, and grapefruit bitters. 2657 N. Kedzie Ave., 773-276-7110; longmanandeagle.com

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

NOT TO BE MISSED EVENTS • HAPPENINGS • PROMOTIONS

STEP UP

September 16, 2015 | 5:00pm Join mentorship nonprofit Step Up for a “View from the Top” panel discussion with Chicago executives and Step Up teens on Wednesday, September 16, at 5:00 p.m. Enjoy a pre-panel reception, connecting with professional women, and a dynamic conversation on women’s leadership in the workplace. To RSVP, visit suwn.org/events/201

14TH ANNUAL GALA OF THE ARTS

September 11, 2015 | 6:00–11:00pm Navy Pier Grand Ballroom 600 East Grand Avenue Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago hosts its annual art show and sale showcasing original art pieces created by 15 local and nationally recognized artists. Enjoy cocktails, dinner, raffle prizes and live entertainment by ABBAFAB: The Premier Abba Tribute Show! Proceeds benefit The Catholic Charities Emergency Assistance Programs. Visit catholiccharities.net

WOODGATE ESTATE A ridiculously cool house with an “East meets Midwest’ vibe... Woodgate Estate is a gorgeous and serene haven offering beautiful modern architecture, a 5-acre Japanese Garden within its 26 acres of lush landscape, full home automation, and a sound system capable of handling a Nine Inch Nails concert. A residential paradise! For more information, contact Debra Dobbs/@properties at 312.307.4909 or debra@debradobbs.com | woodgateestate.com

GILDA’S CLUB CHICAGO

Great Gatsby Casino Night September 19, 2015 | 7:30–11:30pm Roar into the 20’s with a Great Gatsby Casino Night, presented by Erie-LaSalle Body Shop to benefit Gilda’s Club Chicago, a free cancer support community. Enjoy an evening of live music, dinner by Gibsons, cocktails, casino tables and raffle. Montgomery Club | 500 West Superior, Chicago, IL gildasclubchicago.org | $150 individual tickets For tickets, visit erielasallecasinonight.com

EXPO CHICAGO

September 17–20, 2015 | Navy Pier EXPO CHICAGO, the International Exposition of Modern & Contemporary Art, returns to Navy Pier September 17 – 20, 2015. Now in its fourth year, EXPO CHICAGO presents 140 leading international galleries from 16 countries and 46 cities. In addition, EXPO CHICAGO will present the return of its key programs including panel discussions, video works, site-specific instillations and more. Visit expochicago.com or call 312.867.9220

DUCK DUCK GOAT Stephanie Izard, in partnership with Boka Restaurant Group, will bring her take on Chinese cuisine to the West Loop neighborhood when she opens her third restaurant, Duck Duck Goat. Located at 857 West Fulton Market, two blocks away from her current establishments, the restaurant will open in late fall 2015. Visit duckduckgoatchicago.com



Stop looking, start fnding速 atproperties.com


HAUTE PROPERTY News, Stars, and Trends in Real Estate Soaring to 33 stories, the 350-unit Arkadia Tower offers 360-degree views and a host of luxury amenities, including a pool, locker room, gym, and in-building convenience store.

Greektown Luxe

With a West Loop Location and an abundance of amenities, the neW Luxury rentaL Ar AdiA Tower is staking its cLaim in the chicago skyLine. by stephanie sims

The West Loop is one of Chicago’s hottest residential neighborhoods these days, but when it comes to grand luxury rentals, Greektown hasn’t seen much of the action. Surprising, since this section of the neighborhood is arguably the most convenient, with its prime location adjacent to I-90/94 and Randolph Street’s Restaurant Row, a shorter walk to the Loop for downtown commuters, and resources like a Whole Foods Market, Mariano’s, and Walgreens—not to mention the city’s top Greek restaurants and bakeries—all within walking distance. Arkadia Tower takes advantage of the setting, says Richard Blum, managing continued on page 138

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haute property News, Stars, and trends in real estate “We didn’t necessarily go for ‘trendy.’ We Went for solid and sustainable— and long-term success.” —richard blum The sixth-floor lounge and game room. below: A penthouse unit kitchen, equipped with white quartz countertops and Frigidaire stainless-steel appliances, also features floor-to-ceiling windows and custom wide-plank flooring.

principal of the developer White Oak Realty Partners, noting the site was one of very few remaining east of Halsted Street that allowed for high-rise developments of Arkadia’s type. Buildings west of Halsted must not exceed 11 stories, while Arkadia Tower’s location across the street means it can soar 33 stories, with 350 units and “unmatched 360-degree views” from each floor, according to Blum. “We didn’t necessarily go for ‘trendy,’” he adds. “We went for solid and sustainable—and long-term success.” Luxury rental amenities are nothing new in Chicago—several other city properties (primarily in River North and the Gold Coast) offer the requisite pool and fitness center as well as party rooms and conveniences like Pressbox, a dry-cleaning

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service that picks up residents’ laundry in lockers— but Arkadia Tower goes much further. A tricked-out midlevel floor boasts a pool, a locker room, a gym, towel service, an expansive party room with a kitchen, a technology lounge, a “beverage room” with complimentary Starbucks coffee, and an inbuilding convenience store where tenants can pay by key fob. There’s also an outdoor dog run on the ground floor. Along with its sleek, soaring glass-and-steel design, Arkadia also manages to incorporate the neighborhood’s Hellenic heritage, including Acropolis imagery and Greek runners rendered in etchings and metal artwork on the garage exterior. “We worked very hard with our architect, FitzGerald Associates Architects, and Greektown to create a beautiful yet modern structure that would fit within the context of the neighborhood,” Blum says. “We didn’t want to alienate the community; we wanted something the restaurants and neighbors would be proud of. Yet with our high visibility from the expressway and pretty much the entire city, we also tried to create a building that was visually dynamic, creative, and modern.” From grad students at the University of Illinois at Chicago and young professionals to 35- to 50-year-olds looking for a new or second home, Arkadia’s demographic is further proof that the West Loop has staying power as a destination neighborhood for living well. And while Blum recognizes that just a few things differentiate Arkadia Tower from the city’s other luxury rentals, they’re serious factors—like lower rents, less traffc in the neighborhood, and a convenient location. “Our goal was to provide a luxury building with an unmatched amenity program,” Blum says—and with Arkadia Tower, they’ve done it. 765 W. Adams St., 312-454-5001; arkadiatower.com MA

Prime rentals

Discover three of the city’s poshest properties. K2

Located just down the street from Arkadia Tower, K2 features amenities like an expansive pool/deck area with TV cabanas and a fre pit, a terrace lounge with fat-screen TVs and a freplace, an exercise room with locker and steam rooms, a separate basketball court and yoga studios, a movie theater, and a business center with a boardroom and six computers. 365 N. Halsted St., 855-886-7774; k2apts.com 73 E. LaKE

The ninth and 10th foors in this building are devoted to amenities, including a huge ftness complex, a cybercafé, a business center, an indoor pool, and a sauna and steam room, as well as Club 73 on the 42nd foor, which features a private dining area, a lounge area, and a terrace with a fre pit and cabanas. 73 E. Lake St., 312-2699900; experience73.com 500 LaKE ShorE DrivE

This luxury rental separates its amenities by room: The Feature, a lounge with TV screens and a wet bar; The Library, with a freplace, several cozy couches, and bookshelves, all overlooking Lake Michigan; The Midway, a game room with billiards, shuffeboard, and video games; The Deck, where the outdoor pool is located; and The Café, featuring Starbucks coffee. 500 N. Lake Shore Dr., 312-2797181; related.com/apartment-rentals/chicago/ streeterville/500-lake-shore-drive


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Maker & Muse Women and early TWenTieTh CenTury arT JeWelry

on view through January 3, 2016

40 East Erie Street, Chicago, IL 60611 312.482.8933 | DriehausMuseum.org presenting sponsor: Photograph by John Faier, 2013, ©The Richard H. Driehaus Museum


haute property real estate roundtable

clockwise from far left:

The 41 residences at The Ronsley range from twobedrooms starting at $950,000 to a $5.2 million five-bedroom penthouse; a unit from CA Condos on Adams showing the kitchen and living area; developers Alan Lev and Brian Goldberg.

Think Small

The newesT Trend in The luxury markeT? smaller buildings wiTh jusT The righT bells and whisTles. by lisa skolnik Gone are the soaring luxury condominium skyscrapers of the oughties that sported dozens of units in multiple sizes. Instead, Chicago developers are building boutique properties with fewer units and outstanding—yet very specifc—amenities. Brian Goldberg of LG Construction + Development (773227-2850; lgdevelopmentgroup.com) and Alan Lev of Belgravia Group (312-751-2777; belgravia group. com) defne the shift and explain why it’s dominating the Chicago market. Why are we seeing this spate of smaller bigticket buildings? Alan Lev: It’s a shift in living patterns. Millennials want more fexibility and are delaying homeownership and marriage. Rather than buying in their mid- to late 20s, they’re renting. So when they’re ready to buy at 35 to 40, they need bigger frst homes because they’re starting families immediately. This translates into bigger units with more bedrooms and bathrooms. But it’s also economics, thanks to the times. Risk is a big issue. Land and construction costs have

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increased enormously, so fewer units coupled with the higher demand we’re seeing now means buildings sell out. Brian Goldberg: Yes, banks don’t want to take chances, so they’re requiring 30 percent presale rates before you can break ground. So to build something, developers are going smaller, asking buyers to put at least 10 percent down, and making [the deposit] nonrefundable to lower their risk. Also, land in the most desirable locations is really expensive, so we’re getting smaller lots, which means smaller buildings. What about the amenities? AL: Most of these units have large foor plates, luxury fnishes, three bedrooms and bathrooms, a balcony, and at least one parking space. There’s usually a party room, exercise facility, and an outdoor roof deck, but no pool or doorman. BG: Residents want more control, and in big buildings everything is done by committee. That’s not typically an effcient process. No doormen and edited amenities keep assessments down. What are you building that proves this premise?

AL: We’ve done three—CA23, CA3, and now CA4 at 1130 West Adams Street, with 50 units that are all three-bed, three-bath, and 2,000 square feet with one or two parking spaces. It sold out before construction started in 2014 and is 75 percent closed now. We’re breaking ground on 367 West Locust Street in the fall with 45 units, and 10 of them are two-bedrooms because of the size of the site. We’re marketing them now, and prices start at $450,000 for the smaller units and $685,000 and up for the larger ones, with parking at $35,000 a spot. And our next project will be a 42-unit, 13-story high-rise at 403 North Wabash Avenue, just north of Trump Tower, also selling this fall. Units will range from 1,800 to 2,600 square feet, have unobstructed river views, and cost about $700 per square foot. BG: We broke ground on The Ronsley at 676 North Kingsbury Street in April with 15 of its 41 units sold. Units range from 1,600-square-foot two-bedrooms starting at $950,000 and go to a fve-bedroom penthouse for $5.2 million, but many are three-bedrooms. Parking is $50,000 a spot or $72,000 for a tandem. ma


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the guide Chicago’s Finest

Michigan Avenue 101

Look no further for chicagoLand’s most sizzLing restaurants, bars, and boutiques.

PhotograPhy by Monica Kass rogers

Dine Baker Miller Breakfast is served all day, every day at this Lincoln Square bakery and millhouse from the husband-and-wife team behind Bang Bang Pie. 4610 N. Western Ave., 312-208-5639; bakermillerchicago.com Bascule Wine Bar Pair old-world vino with charcuterie and cheese at this new Little Italy gem. 1421 W. Taylor St., 312-763-6912; basculewinebar.com Big Star Enjoy people-watching with a side of guacamole on the patio of this Wicker Park taco hot spot. 1531 N. Damen Ave., 773-235-4039; bigstarchicago.com Boeufhaus Gourmet goes grass-fed at this brasserie between Ukrainian Village and Humboldt Park. 1012 N. Western Ave., 773-661-2116; boeufhaus.com Bom Bolla A tapas-style cava bar from the team behind Pops for Champagne. 1501 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773-698-6601; bombollabar.com The Brass Monkey Feast on hearty dishes like pork chop with applesauce and seared duck breast at this buzzing Fulton Market concept boasting an American Hustle vibe. 401 N. Morgan St., 312-763-3316; brassmonkeychicago.com C Chicago The restaurateurs behind Chicago Cut Steakhouse and The Local are making a splash with this regal seafood concept. 20 W. Kinzie St., 312-280-8882; cchicago.net Charlatan West Town welcomes inspired Italian fare like black kale spaghettini and whole oxtail. 1329 W. Chicago Ave., 312-818-2073; charlatanchicago.com Cherry Circle Room After working up an appetite playing bocce in Chicago Athletic Association’s bustling Game Room, head to this tucked-away nook for the supper club treatment. 12 S. Michigan Ave., Second Fl., 312792-3515; cherrycircleroom.com Community Tavern This Portage

Park steakhouse is gaining acclaim for dishes like hand-cut fettuccine and a 24-ounce grilled porterhouse. 4038 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773-283-6080; communitytavern.com de Quay Indonesian favors are married to Dutch sensibilities at this cozy oasis in Lincoln Park. 2470 N. Lincoln Ave., 872-206-8820; dequay-chicago.com Dinosaur Bar-B-Que The buzzy East Coast barbecue restaurant arrives in Chicago. 923 W. Weed St., 312-4621053; dinosaurbarbque.com Formento’s Though plates like carbonara and Chicken Vesuvio may be the main event at this red-sauce throwback, no meal is complete without the decadent chocolate cake. 925 W. Randolph St., 312-690-7295; formentos.com Furious Spoon Shin Thompson’s much buzzed-about ramen shop in Wicker Park. 1571 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773-687-8445; furiousramen.com Gene & Georgetti A Chicago icon beloved for steaks and chops. 500 N. Franklin St., 312-527-3718; geneandgeorgetti.com Heating & Cooling Pizza, beer, and live music in Wrigleyville. 3530 N. Clark St., 773-789-8864; hvacpub.com IO Urban Roofscape Ascend to the Godfrey Hotel’s rooftop lounge for sweet city views. 127 W. Huron St., Fourth Fl., 312-649-2000; godfreyhotelchicago.com La Sirena Clandestina Latininspired bites by veteran chef John Manion. 954 W. Fulton Market, 312226-5300; lasirenachicago.com Le Colonial Relish people-watching on Rush Street from the chic patio of this Gold Coast institution. 937 N. Rush St., 312-255-0088; lecolonialchicago.com Mariposa Neiman Marcus’s new culinary oasis boasts menu items like steak frites and Mandarin orange

soufflé. 737 N. Michigan Ave., Fourth Fl., 312-694-4050; neimanmarcus.com Mastro’s Steakhouse A glitzy River North destination for steaks and sushi. 520 N. Dearborn St., 312-521-5100; mastrosrestaurants.com Momotaro The latest sizzler from Boka Restaurant Group scores with favorful sushi like the momomaki (bigeye tuna, spicy octopus, lotus root). 820 W. Lake St., 312-733-4818; momotarochicago.com Nando’s Peri-Peri Flame-grilled, butterfy-cut chicken is now available at the cult South African chain’s new outpost in Lakeview. 670 W. Diversey Pkwy., 773-634-7153; nandosperiperi.com Pane Caldo Ristorante The Gold Coast institution is back with Maine lobster risotto and braised beef short ribs. 111 E. Chestnut St., 312-649-0055; panecaldo.us Parachute Korean-American dishes by Top Chef alum Beverly Kim and husband Johnny Clark in Avondale. 3500 N. Elston Ave., 773-654-1460; parachuterestaurant.com

Remington’s At this airy space across from Millennium Park, chef Todd Stein plates classics like grilled artichokes, crab toast (pictured), and prime rib. 20 N. Michigan Ave., 312-7826000; remingtonschicago.com

Perennial Virant Award-winning chef Paul Virant crafts seasonal, sustainable fare at this eatery a stone’s throw from Green City Market. 1800 N. Lincoln Ave., 312-981-7070; perennialchicago.com Piccolo Sogno Alfresco dining extraordinaire. 464 N. Halsted St., 312421-0077; piccolosognorestaurant.com Pinstripes A 30,000-square-foot dining destination complete with bowling lanes and bocce courts in River East. 35 E. Illinois St., 312-527-3010; pinstripes.com Prime & Provisions Following River North hits Siena Tavern, Public House, and Bull & Bear, DineAmic Group

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the guide Chicago’s Finest

thE promontory The team behind Dusek’s and Longman & Eagle creates a community dining experience in Hyde Park; the Kentucky Burgoo (shown) is a musttry. 5311 S. Lake Park Ave., 312801-2100; promontorychicago.com

and lobster pappardelle. 3213 W. Armitage Ave., 773-486-7465; sinkswimchicago.com Sophie’s Savor jumbo lump crab cake and a killer view of the Mag Mile at this stylish spot in Saks Fifth Avenue. 700 N. Michigan Ave.,

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Seventh Fl., 312-525-3400; sophies.com Vermilion Rohini Dey’s must-try concept fuses Indian and Latin favors. 10 W. Hubbard St., 312-527-4060; thevermilionrestaurant.com The Winchester West Town’s beloved brunch destination is back with an updated dinner menu to boot. 1001 N. Winchester Ave., 773-6988703; winchesterchicago.com

Drink 25 Degrees Spiked milkshakes and burgers in River North. 736 N. Clark St., 312-943-9700; 25degreesrestaurant.com/chicago 52Eighty Sip a classic mojito while soaking up stunning Streeterville views. 166 E. Superior St., 29th Fl., 312-787-6000; 52eightylounge.com The Allis This buzzing haunt on the ground floor of Soho House attracts a prime people-watching crowd. 113–125 N. Green St., 312-521-8000; theallis.com The Betty Make tracks to the West Loop for a nightcap courtesy of mixologist Peter Vestinos. 839 W. Fulton Market, 312-733-2222; thebettychicago.com Bin 36 Toast to this vino-driven concept’s return with the “New World, All Stars” red wine fight. 161 N. Jefferson St., 312-995-6560; bin36.com Celeste Savor the last days of the season with the Chicago Summer beer cocktail (tequila, Campari, grapefruit, and Stiegl Radler) in this supper club’s rooftop garden. 111 W. Hubbard St., Fourth Fl., 312-828-9000; celestechicago.com Cerise Drink in the views at Virgin Hotels’ stunning new rooftop cocktail lounge. 203 N. Wabash Ave., 312-940-4774; virginhotels.com CH Distillery Beat the West Loop heat with a house-made limoncello snow cone. 564 W. Randolph St., 312-707-8780; chdistillery.com The Dawson The patio at this West Loop spot is the perfect place to savor the Octopus’s Garden, a large-format punch made with Bacardi 8 rum, white port, local and house-grown fruits, and herbs, bitters, and citrus. 730 W. Grand Ave., 312-243-8955; the-dawson.com The Dec A rooftop cocktail lounge

at the Ritz-Carlton. 160 E. Pearson St., 12th Fl., 312-573-5160; decarestaurant.com Drumbar Soak up the sights atop Streeterville’s Raffaello Hotel while sipping a savory cocktail by new beverage manager Whitney Morrow. 201 E. Delaware Pl., 18th Fl., 312-943-5000; drumbar.com Elle on the River Bask in The Langham’s river views while enjoying a Golden Hind (Bacardi Oakheart, Malibu, and Smith & Cross Overproof rums mixed with fruit juices). 330 N. Wabash Ave., 312-923-7705; travellechicago.com/#/elle-on-the-river Howells & Hood This bustling patio is home to 114 unique craft beers. 435 N. Michigan Ave., 312-262-5310; howellsandhood.com Ivy Sky Terrace Streeterville’s hidden gem serves heady cocktails such as the Eminence (pisco, lime juice, pineapple juice, white wine, Prosecco, and homemade grenadine). 233 E. Ontario St., 16th Fl., 312-335-5444; ivyskyterrace.com The J. Parker Thanks to a new retractable roof, the Hotel Lincoln’s sleek cocktail patio is now a yearround hot spot. 1816 N. Clark St., 13th Fl., 312-254-4747; jparkerchicago.com The Kensington Roof Garden & Lounge Perched above Parliament, this outdoor lounge serves grown-up popsicles like the tequila-flled melon

Expat This alfresco pop-up adjacent to Nellcôte is gaining a cult following for boozy Sno Cones (pictured) in flavors like rosé, limoncello, and Hennessy sidecar. 118 N. Green St., 312-432-0500; expatongreen.com

margarita. 812 N. Orleans St., 312-380-0004; kensingtonroof.com Lost Lake Paul McGee’s tiki oasis in Logan Square. 3154 W. Diversey Ave., 773-961-7475; lostlaketiki.com Maude’s Liquor Bar This West Loop hot spot offers cocktails and Frenchinspired bites. 840 W. Randolph St., 312-243-9712; maudesliquorbar.com NoMI Garden The Park Hyatt’s scenic terrace offers a picturesque vantage point for imbibing. 800 N. Michigan Ave., Seventh Fl., 312-239-4030; parkchicago.hyatt.com Owen + Alchemy Hit refresh at this goth-inspired juice bar, where a rainbow of citrus and nut-seed blends awaits. 2355 N. Milwaukee Ave., 773-227-3444; owenandalchemy.com Presidio Bucktown welcomes a Bay Area–inspired craft cocktail lounge. 1749 N. Damen Ave., 773-697-3315; presidiochicago.com Punch House Head to Thalia Hall’s lower-level lounge for contemporary libations like the Fish House Jelly,

PhotograPhy by Clayton hauCk (the Promontory); PotluCk Creative (exPat)

ventures to the Loop with a hot new steakhouse. 222 N. LaSalle St., 312726-7777; primeandprovisions.com Rockit This reinvented River North favorite boasts a sleek look and a new menu. 22 W. Hubbard St., 312-645-6000; rockitbarandgrill.com RPM Steak Bill and Giuliana Rancic’s second smash restaurant. 66 W. Kinzie St., 312-284-4990; rpmsteak.com Rural Society Helmed by Jose Garces, this Argentinian steakhouse inside the Loews Hotel is gaining acclaim for wood-fred wagyu. 455 N. Park Dr., 312-840-6605; chicago.ruralsocietyrestaurant.com Sink/Swim This retro-inspired concept in Logan Square plates dishes like monkfsh liver torchon


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the guide Chicago’s Finest

Shanghai Terrace The Peninsula Hotel’s tucked-away courtyard beckons with cucumber martinis and bitter-orange old-fashioneds. 108 E. Superior St., Fourth Fl., 312573-6695; chicago.peninsula.com

Three Dots and a Dash A subterranean Polynesian paradise. 435 N. Clark St., 312-610-4220; threedotschicago.com Vertigo Sky Lounge The Dana Hotel’s gravity-defying libation

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destination. 2 W. Erie St., 26th Fl., 312-202-6060; vertigoskylounge.com Villains A craft beer-focused pub in the South Loop. 730 S. Clark St., 312-583-0283; villainschicago.com The Violet Hour The original Chicago mixology bar. 1520 N. Damen Ave., 773-252-1500; theviolethour.com

Shop Alice + Olivia The witty, whimsical fashion label makes its Mag Mile debut. 919 N. Michigan Ave., 312-273-1254; aliceandolivia.com Athleta Fashionable fitness apparel for women on the go. 101 E. Oak St., 312-640-0223; athleta.com Boga The new West Loop showroom stocks a full range of menswear, from dress shirts and blazers to tees and socks. 133 N. Jefferson St., Fifth Fl., 312-801-8662; boga.com Bucketfeet This Chicago-grown shoe label is turning heads for its bold designs. 1647 N. Damen Ave., 773-904-8709; bucketfeet.com Burberry Chicago finds its London calling at the gleaming Michigan Avenue flagship. 633 N. Michigan Ave., 312-787-2500; us.burberry.com CH Carolina Herrera Elegant silhouettes get pops of color in the iconic designer’s jewel box of a boutique. 70 E. Oak St., 312-988-9339; carolinaherrera.com Christian Louboutin Paint the town red with fabulous French pumps. 58 E. Oak St., 312-337-8200; christianlouboutin.com Escada Add elegance to your wardrobe with European-inspired designs. 51 E. Oak St., 312-915-0500; escada.com Graff Diamonds Brilliant baubles in the Gold Coast. 103 E. Oak St., 312-604-1000; graffdiamonds.com Hermès The ultimate in aspiration, straight from Paris. 25 E. Oak St., 312-787-8175; hermes.com Ikram Definitive fashions from Chicago’s own style maven Ikram Goldman. 15 E. Huron St., 312-587-1000; ikram.com Les Néréides Ultra-feminine, whimsical pieces from the City of Light. 108 N. State St., 312-255-7042;

lesnereides-usa.com Louis Vuitton Monogrammed leather bags and luxury trunks galore. 700 N. Michigan Ave., 312-255-0470; louisvuitton.com LuLu’s on the Avenue An unmatched selection of vintage jewelry and couture. 900 N. Michigan Ave., Third Fl., 312-888-9149; lulusbellekay.com Madison Hall This highly anticipated boutique by the retailers behind Space519 stocks labels like Eddie Borgo, Rachel Comey, Apiece Apart, Illesteva, and Sandqvist. 71 E. Madison St., 312-683-9586; madisonhallchicago.com Marshall Pierce & Company This family-owned jeweler adds sparkle to Chicago. 29 E. Madison St., Ste. 600, 312-372-2415; marshallpierce.com Porsche Design Luxe looks in The Shops at North Bridge. 520 N. Michigan Ave., Second Fl., 312-321-0911; porsche-design.com Rag & Bone American staples get the British tailoring treatment at the in-demand label’s new shop in the Gold Coast. 25 E. Delaware Pl., 312-483-1122; rag-bone.com Saint Laurent The iconic label returns to Chicago with a sleek boutique. 11 E. Walton St., 312-202-0166; ysl.com Salvatore Ferragamo Put your best foot forward in classic Italian designs. 645 N. Michigan Ave.,

renT The runway The online retailer’s brick-and-mortar outpost in River North boasts a library of gala season-friendly names like Badgley Mischka, Nha Khanh, Monique Lhuillier, and Vera Wang. 710 N. Wabash Ave., 312-288-7570; renttherunway.com

312-397-0464; ferragamo.com Shinola Bicycles, watches, bags, and more are now available at the Motor City import’s brick-and-mortar outpost in Wicker Park. 1619 N. Damen Ave., 773-904-2417; shinola.com Tabula Tua A treasure trove in Lincoln Park for the consummate host. 1015 W. Armitage Ave., 773-525-3500; tabulatua.com Tom Ford One of the kings of Oak Street. 66 E. Oak St., 312-605-5041; tomford.com Two Penny Blue With every Technicolor jacket purchased, a school uniform is donated to a girl in Africa. 3738 N. Southport Ave., 872-802-0158; 2pennyblue.com Vineyard Vines A preppy dose of Nantucket chic in the Gold Coast. 932 N. Rush St., 312-475-2951; vineyardvines.com Zadig & Voltaire Rock ’n’ roll looks hit Oak Street. 114 E. Oak St., 312-643-1240; zadig-et-voltaire.com MA

PhotograPhy by rent the runway (rent the runway)

1732/1830s (Philadelphia fish house punch, gelatin, spiced whip, mint). 1227 W. 18th St., 312-526-3851; punchhousechicago.com Real Good Juice Co. Cool off postworkout at this Old Town juice bar, which is gaining a cult following for clever cold-pressed concoctions like Punky Juice-Ster and Kal E. Kapowski. 1647 N. Wells St., 312-846-1897; realgoodjuiceco.com RM Champagne Salon Toast to sultry nights with a glass of bubbly on the cobblestone patio of this Restaurant Row oasis. 116 N. Green St., 312-2431199; rmchampagnesalon.com Roof TheWit Hotel’s top-foor lounge welcomes lively crowds for bottle service. 201 N. State St., 27th Fl., 312-239-9502; roofonthewit.com


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INVITED Anna Borowiec and Maria Gamboa-Vargas

Hayley Fisher and Jordie Flick

Dara Jenthanomma, Susan Hoelterhoff, and Laura Middleton

Jayna Cooke and Andrew Hilbert

LOEWS HOTEL GRAND OPENING LOEWS CHAIRMAN Jonathan Tisch welcomed hundreds of guests, including Mayor Rahm Emanuel, for the hotelier’s Chicago debut. Throughout the evening, partygoers imbibed and rubbed elbows on the expansive outdoor patio while admiring trapeze artists’ aerial acrobatics. Roopa Akkineni and Christine Lee

Jonathan Tisch and Mayor Rahm Emanuel

Jane Stickland, Grace Bagnole, Jeff Funke, Terri Trost, Dave Buss, Tracy Whitesell, Randy Stevenson, John DeWald, and Debra Quillen

SWAINSON’S HOUSE PRESENTATION SUSTAINABLE LIVING ENTHUSIASTS spent a sunny Saturday previewing Serosun Farms’ Swainson’s House. Attendees toured the model luxury home, outfitted with paintings by local artist Sarah Raskey, while enjoying the chords of The Vaguely Familiar Acoustic Guitar Duo. The Vaguely Familiar Acoustic Guitar Duo

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Sarah Raskey

PHOTOGRAPHY BY CORY DEWALD (LOEWS); TIMOTHY HIATT (SWAINSON’S)

Swainson’s House


21st Annual Luncheon and Fashion Show! SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2015 10 a.m. Donald E. Stephens Convention Center 555 N. River Rd. Rosemont, IL


INVITED

Tom Endres

Dwyane Wade and Lucas Stoioff

Paul Ioriatti, Heather Morris, and Nick Ioriatti

WADE’S WORLD FOUNDATION DINNER MESIROW FINANCIAL HOSTED VIPs at Prime & Provisions for an evening with Dwyane Wade. Chicago’s Best host Brittney Payton moderated a Q&A session between the NBA star and his sister Tragil Wade while guests enjoyed a sumptuous plated dinner. Jacques Panis

Nicole Suarez, Jennifer Park, Michelle Larson, Kathleen Henson, Rohini Dey, and Barbara Gaines Kelsey Cairo, Adam Kolrzan, and Reina Gabbud

Teresa Panico and Mark Seume

WOMEN OF INFLUENCE CELEBRATION MICHIGAN AVENUE PARTNERED WITH Moroccanoil to recognize nine leading Chicago women in the Grand Salon of the Park Hyatt. Supporters capped the evening with a special Veuve Clicquot toast to attending honorees Barbara Gaines, Jennifer Park, Kathleen Henson, Michelle Larson, Nicole Suarez, and Rohini Dey.

Jeanette Cutler, Andrew Stroth, and Lynsey Psimas

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PHOTOGRAPHY BY DANIEL BOCZARSKI (WADE’S WORLD FOUNDATION); TIMOTHY HIATT (WOMEN OF INFLUENCE)

Lester Coney, Brittney Payton, and Mary and James Bell


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ARCTIC BLAST MORE THAN $1.1 MILLION

Chris Randolph and Sarah Beardsley

Alayna and D.C. Crenshaw

An ice carving set the evening’s mood.

Kimberly Gleeson, Vonita Reescer, and Cheryl Lawrence

Georgina and Tommy Pappas

Lecretia Johnson and Larry Capista

Marion Macsai and David Donnersberger

Helen and Ralph Applegate

Sri and Brian Sullivan

Alua Annor, Brian Herst, and Rachel Epstein

A VISIONARY VOYAGE THE PENINSULA HOSTED 200 guests

Fred Tokowitz and Mamie Walton

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for Eversight Illinois’s 17th annual benefit. Invitees mingled to the melodies of The Stanley Paul Orchestra while indulging at the Eye Candy dessert bar by Spex. Susan Gohl and Jonathan Rubenstein were minted the Woman of Vision and Gift of Sight honorees, respectively.

Michael Caputo and Lauren Pappas

Linda Katz and Randy Epstein

PHOTOGRAPHY BY ALAIN MILOTTI, ANNA CHASE, BOB CARL, AND VIOLET DOMINEK (ARCTIC); JOHN REILLY PHOTOGRAPHY (VISION)

John Ettelson, Denise Stefan Ginascol, Kim Theiss, Karen Eisenbart, and Kevin Bell

was raised at the Women’s Board of the Lincoln Park Zoo’s 38th annual Zoo Ball. Throughout the glacial-glam evening, nearly 900 guests sampled light bites by Jewell Events Catering and specialty cocktails like The Aurora Borealis.


14th annual

Benefiting the Emergency Assistance Department

Gala Goes Retro Featuring the music of

ABBAFAB The Premier Abba Tribute Show

Friday, September 11, 2015 at 6 p.m. Grand Ballroom at Navy Pier, Chicago

Join more than 500 of Chicago’s philanthropic, civic, and community leaders gathered in

Hosted by NBC 5’s Allison Rosati Entertainment by ABBAFAB: The Premier Abba Tribute Show

will feature original works by local and nationally recognized artists in a wide variety of media

For tickets call (312) 948-6864 or visit www.galaofthearts.com

the Grand Ballroom at Navy Pier for an elegant evening of art, great food, and fabulous entertainment to beneft Catholic Charities Emergency Services Department. The 2015 Art Show for purchase. Commissioned pieces will also be available for sale by many of the artists.

PRiNT mEDiA SPoNSoR


Dillon Dalton, Tristen Slemmons, Israel Idonije, and Julie Sanchez

ISRAEL IDONIJE FOUNDATION

DaLeesia Underwood, Ruben Trejo, and Olga Alday

Ryan Chiaverini and Val Warner Dominique Turner and Constance Brewer

Charles Tillman

Attendees bid on auction items including sports memorabilia.

FORMER CHICAGO BEAR Israel Idonije

welcomed a crowd to the Trump Hotel for his eponymous foundation’s annual black-tie dinner. Emceed by Windy City Live’s Ryan Chiaverini and Val Warner, the gala recognized former Bears teammate and current Carolina Panthers star Charles “Peanut” Tillman for his humanitarian efforts. Ryan Baker

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Jeff Wigen and Candice Spotted Elk

Melissa Wirtz, John Burford, and Dana Slager

Steve Zick, Sunny Uraitch, and David Nelson

Tracee Badway and Nick Stocking Robin Dluzen

STARVING ARTIST GALA CULINARY AND CREATIVE minds

converged at Chicago Artist Coalition’s annual fundraiser. The soirée, which generated more than $100,000 for the nonprofit organization’s endeavors, boasted offerings from hot spots including Trenchermen, Formento’s, and The Bristol. Nuria Sheehan and Maurene Cooper

Casey McMullin and Anna Livermore

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Thank you for making Shine & Dine benefting Step Up a success!

Ready to take the next step? Join us for a ‘View From The Top’ panel discussion with Chicago execs and Step Up teens! Wednesday, September 16 | 5:00-7:30 p.m. | RSVP: suwn.org/events/201

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gold coasting september 2015

Fall Fashion, ChiCago style

Design hounDs elsewhere may race to copy runway trenDs, but chicago chic has its own school of thought. by paige wiser And in the colder months (yes, they’re coming soon), we have too few opportunities to show off our best assets. One of the biggest colors for fall and winter—and a trend we do embrace—is orange. This is not optional, and will more than make up for the dangers described above. In orange, obviously, you will not risk being flattened by a snowplow. And in ballrooms, it should be noted that wallflowers are never in shades of citrus. Local fashionistas may have noticed that the runways were packed with wool, quilting, ponchos, knits, and capes for fall. Well, darling designer divas, tell us something we don’t know. These materials are not cutting-edge in Chicago in any season. Much as we try to avoid it, occasionally we must face the extreme elements head on. Our foes are gusts, cold, hail, polar vortices, street splatter, potholes, distracted nannies…. We need all the armor we can get. We would wear a designer tarp if it was slimming and had a provocative pop of color. (One day, we’ll tell those West Coast ladies all about down parkas. Some reach all the way to your triple-Scotchgarded suede boots!) So, loose outerwear in sturdy fabrics is in style this season? This one we can be blasé about. We’re ahead of the trend; in this case, by more than a century. And what could be more fashionable than that? MA

illustration by daniel o’leary

Fashion? We adore fashion! Forget the other coasts: Windy City residents are as stylish as they come, making careful note of everything that comes down the runway. We accept without question the fact that puffy sleeves couldn’t be more now, and we embrace them with Marshmallow Man–like arms. Asymmetrical hemlines are making a comeback, and we have the scrapbooking scissors and the know-how to adapt our entire wardrobes. But sometimes, in the face of weather and wearability challenges, we must do what Chicagoans do best—improvise. For instance, consider the new ostrich feathers movement: Michael Kors, Alice + Olivia, Naeem Khan, Balenciaga, Roberto Cavalli—they must have plucked every last flightless bird to get their plumage on the runways. But is this a look for Chicago? No, poppets, no. The nickname “the Windy City” may have originally referred to our shameless politicians, but “the Blustery City” is right on target. Those feathers will waft toward Lake Michigan the second you step on Oak Street, and then you’ll look like a hairless cat. Best to avoid. Another worrisome trend: loose, flowing pants and skirts. In Chicago, wearing them would be signing your death warrant. Excess fabric around the lower leg is the equivalent of “No capes!,” the decree from The Incredibles’ formidable supersuit designer, Edna “E” Mode. Slam your billowing trousers in the door as you exit the taxi? You’re done. Strut to The Langham in a sludge-dripping floor-length skirt? Dead from ankle pneumonia within a week. (That may or may not actually be a thing, but why risk it?) Attempt winter culottes at a luncheon for ladies who will naturally mistake them for your fat pants? Utter social annihilation. Statement necklaces are also getting out of hand this season. Yes, they can be striking. But the designers are showing necklaces el grande, with gumball-size beads, tassels, padlocks (no words), buckles, roaring lion heads, and even brooches piled on. Chicago women know that in a city where layering is an art, bulky is not beautiful.

160  michiganavemag.com


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