ILLUSTRATED
CREATIVE ALLIANCE Aerin Lauder on her collaborative design project at The Colony
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ALVIN’S ISLAND
All hail the King of Pants
THE ARTS ISSUE 50 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Discretion, efficiency and value for discerning yacht owners and charter guests.
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VAN CLEEF & ARPELS Diamond Necklace, Detachable Bracelet BULGARI Natural Unheated Burma Sapphire and Diamond Ring
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Photography – Ian Jacob Studios Hair/Make up – Deborah Koepper Styling – Logan Horne
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CONTENTS
NOVEMBER 2021 FEATURES 84 / ICONIC EVOLUTION Aerin Lauder joines forces with The Colony to create a villa reflective of her stylish Palm Beach heritage By Heather Graulich
90 / PERFECT FIT Designer Alvin Valley changes with the times, always with the modern woman in mind By Paige Bowers
96 / DRESSING THE PART A behind-the-scenes look at Miami City Ballet’s inspirations and renowned costume designs By Susie Stanton Staikos
102 / ON THE EDGE Glam attire for the season—with an edge Photography by Gabor Jurina
112 / MAKING WAVES Water-skier Elizabeth Montavon shares stories of her sports struggles and successes By Paige Bowers
Dolce & Gabbana tulle bodysuit and crystal and jersey bodysuit For buying information, turn to page 186.
GABOR JURINA
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l palmbeachillustrated.com for the latest in all things luxury 14
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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CONTENTS DEPARTMENTS
71
28 / FROM THE EDITOR 32 / PARTY PICS
PBI’s 2021 Education Awards and more
INSIDER 43/ LOCAL FOCUS The new Town of Palm Beach Marina
44 / NEW & NOW Marissa Collections, Mtn Space Gallery
48 / SPOTLIGHT Local actor Reed Alexander
50 / HEROES Prioritizing mental health in schools
52 / LIVING WITH IVEY Eat your way to a healthier brain
STYLE 59 / THE LOOK Whimsical creations and retro mod style
62/ THE EDIT Editors’ picks for haute hostess gifts
64 / BIJOUX Jewelry depicting the human form
66 / BEAUTY Products that will make you glow
ESCAPE 71 / WANDERLUST Educational conservation experiences By Daphne Nikolopoulos
76 / QUICK TRIPS A luxe, all-inclusive visit to Riviera Maya
78 / TRAVEL JOURNAL Anushka Blau’s guide to Buenos Aires
PHOTO COURTESY OF AMAN
80 / HIGH ROAD
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Infiniti’s all-new QX60 scores big By Howard Walker
82 / HIGH SEAS The Burger Boat Company’s 50 Cruiser By Howard Walker
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Hand-woven 18k black & white gold enhanced by natural white diamonds ETHIOPIA COLLECTION
TOWN CENTER MALL
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BOCA RATON
(561) 391 5119
Palm Beach
New York
Jerusalem
Tel Aviv
Haifa
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CONTENTS TASTE 117 / TRY THIS
129
The sweetest Saturday doughnuts
118 / LOCAL BITES
Chefs’ favorite side dishes, a festive hot chocolate recipe, and more
126 / OFF THE VINE
Emerging wine regions, explained By Mark Spivak
HOME 129 / DESIGN
An abode with charming vibes
130 / INSPIRED LIVING
Expert advice on home aquariums
JOEY DUHON OF DRONE HOME
132 / ELEMENTS
Splashes of bright color for the kitchen
134 / HERITAGE
The historic evolution of Casa Ananda
136 / THAT’S ENTERTAINMENT! Cocktail essentials for every host By Steven Stolman
BALANCE 159 / WARM-UP
Work out with Coach Lil
160 / HEALTH & FITNESS
Guiltless game-day grub, DIY organic facials, and more
166 / WEALTH
What you need to know about SPACs By Judy Martel
AGENDA 171 / TOP BILLING
MAC Fine Art opens in Delray Beach
172 / CALENDAR
192
What to see and do this month
SEEN 188 / PALM BEACH MAGAZINE Hot parties, beautiful people
PHOTOGRAPHER: GABOR JURINA MODEL: AERIN LAUDER LOCATION: THE LAUDER RESIDENCE, EAST HAMPTON, NEW YORK CLOTHING: GIAMBATTISTA VALLI HAIR AND MAKEUP: @ALEXARODULFO FOR T3 MICRO & LA MER ESTÉE LAUDER
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ASHLEY MEYER
ON THE COVER:
LAST WORD 192 / REAL TALK WITH...
Iconic shoe designer Manolo Blahnik
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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TAMARA COMOLLI BOUTIQUE PALM BEACH 150 Worth Avenue Suite 115 Palm Beach FL 33480 T: 561 659 3700 Mo—Fr 10am— 5pm Sa 12am— 5pm
www.tamaracomolli.com
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SATISFY YOUR CRAVINGS
DELECTABLE BRUNCH
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For information or reservations, call (561) 422-4872 | thebreakers.com | @DineTheBreakers | Complimentary valet parking.
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AKRIS • ALTONA • AMINA RUBINACCI • ANNE FONTAINE • BADGLEY MISCHKA • BRADFORD PORTRAITS • CHRISTOFLE • EDWARD BEINER EYEWEAR EMILIO PUCCI • GUCCI • HUBLOT • LOUIS VUITTON • NEST SEEKERS INTERNATIONAL • PANERAI • PROVIDENT JEWELRY • SAKS FIFTH AVENUE STARBUCKS • TAMARA COMOLLI FINE JEWELRY • UNSUBSCRIBED • WOODY MICHLEB BEAUTY SALON • WORTH AVENUE YACHTS • WYNN FINE ART
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Congratulations to our 26 National Merit Scholars in the Class of 2022
#1 School in Palm Beach County #5 Private School in the Nation National Merit Scholars: Palm Beach Campus
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Semifinalists Ramsey Alsheikh Cole Anderton Justin Berke Mariana Garcia George Golden-Bankier Sruthi Karanam
Youval Kashuv Kausthubh Konuru Jared Ladrach Lucas Lippeatt Lauren McDonough
Angelina Ning Ashwin Parthasarathy Jesse Polsky Abia Rahman Ruhi Reddy
Carolina Senhorini Seixas Shreya Shenoy Krishna Sorna Lily Stein Justin Sun
Lara Symons Avery Teman Ashley Ulbrich Isabella Velez Riley Wurst
Commended Scholars: Congratulations to our additional nationally recognized scholars! Julia Abcug Jordan Appelbaum Bernardita Baschkier Alessa Bennardo Samantha Berner
Katherine Coyle Andrew Jones Matthew Kidd Kamilla Konstantinova Alexa Lapore-Paternostro
Sydney Litten Giulianna Mejia Nicholas Neuner Eric Pengili Neeraja Poonjolai
William Rhodes, IV Nadaroopa SaraswathiMohan Cameron Silverman Emberlynn St. Hilaire
Ritvik Teegavarapu Jackson Vangiessen Evan Vera Kyla Wetherington Michael Yao
AmericAn HeritAge ScHoolS
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I L L U S T R A T E D
AVANT TOI NORMA KAMALI CAMILLA RICK OWENS
Editor in Chief Daphne Nikolopoulos Creative Director Olga M. Gustine Executive Editor Mary Murray
NILI LOTAN OFFICINE CREATIVE
Senior Editor Kristen Desmond LeFevre Associate Editor Allison Wolfe Reckson Fashion Editor Katherine Lande Wine & Spirits Editor Mark Spivak Lifestyle Editor Liza Grant Smith Automotive Editor Howard Walker Travel Editor Paul Rubio Web Editor Abigail Duffy
TRANSIT
DESIGN Senior Art Director Ashley Meyer Art Directors Airielle Farley, Jenny Fernandez-Prieto Digital Imaging Specialist Leonor Alvarez-Maza CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Melissa Puppo CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jules Aron, Paige Bowers, Heather Graulich, Sam Kerrigan, Ivey Leidy, Judy Martel, Alyssa Morlacci, Marie Penny, Skye Sherman, Susie Stanton Staikos, Steven Stolman CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Kent Anderson, Gabor Jurina, Irving Martinez, Nick Mele
Raquel Allegra
ROYAL PALM PLACE - BOCA RATON 561-367-9600 LAS OLAS - FT. LAUDERDALE 954-524-2585 CRYSTAL COVE COMMONS - NORTH PALM BEACH 561-410-5700
SOCIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS Tracey Benson, Janis Bucher, Capehart, Davidoff Studios, Jacek Gancarz, Corby Kaye’s Studio Palm Beach, LILA Photo, Paulette Martin and Amy Meister, Annie Watt CUSTOM PUBLISHING Editor Cathy Chestnut SUBSCRIPTIONS 800-308-7346
Emerging Designers Personal Style DeborahJames.com
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PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Publisher Terry Duffy ADVERTISING
Community Partnered Public Safety: Better Together Palm Beach Crime Watch exists to help educate the local community about taking a more active role in crime prevention, risk reduction and emergency preparedness.
CRIME WATCH BASIC MEMBERSHIP
CRIME WATCH Advanced MEMBERSHIP
$25 INDIVIDUAL $50 FAMILY
BENEFACTOR: $10,000+ PARTNERSHIP: $5,000 LEADERSHIP: $2,500 SPONSORSHIP: $1,000 SUPPORTING: $500 CONTRIBUTING: $250
Become a Member Visit palmbeachcrimewatch.com today for more information! Membership is valid for one year and renews annually. Mail checks to: Palm Beach Crime Watch 139 N. County Road, Suite 26 Palm Beach, FL 33480 561-508-3547 | palmbeachcrimewatch.com @PalmBeachCrimeWatch Facebook.com/PalmBeachCrimeWatch The Palm Beach Police & Fire Foundation, DBA Palm Beach Crime Watch, Inc. is a 501(C)(3) organization and contributions may be tax deductible. Palm Beach Crime Watch is a membership division of The Palm Beach Police & Fire Foundation. Tax ID# 83-0462-654
Associate Publisher Deidre Wade, 561-472-1902, dwade@palmbeachmedia.com Account Managers Melissa Zolin Schwartz, 561-472-1922, mschwartz@palmbeachmedia.com; Dina Turner, 561-472-2201, dturner@palmbeachmedia.com
Advertising Services Coordinators Emily Hauser, Christopher Link PRODUCTION Production Director Selene M. Ceballo Production Manager Kayla Earle Digital Pre-Press Specialist George Davis Digital Production Coordinator Kassandre Kallen Advertising Design Coordinators Anaely J. Perez Vargas, Jeffrey Rey
OPERATIONS Chief Operating Officer Todd Schmidt Office Manager Sue Martel Circulation/Subscriptions Administrator Marjorie Leiva Distribution Manager Judy Heflin Accounting Specialist Lourdes Linares Accounts Receivable Specialist Ana Coronel SUBSCRIPTIONS 800-308-7346 In Memoriam Ronald J. Woods (1935-2013) HOUR MEDIA, LLC CEO Stefan Wanczyk President John Balardo PUBLISHERS OF: Palm Beach Illustrated • Naples Illustrated • Fort Lauderdale Illustrated • Orlando Illustrated Palm Beach Charity Register • Naples Charity Register • Florida Design • Florida Design Naples Florida Design Miami • Florida Design Sourcebook • Palm Beach Relocation Guide • Southwest Florida Relocation Guide • Fifth Avenue South • The Jewel of Palm Beach: The Mar-a-Lago Club Traditions: The Breakers • Palm Beach 100 • Naples 100 • Art & Culture: Cultural Council for Palm Beach County • Pinnacle: Jupiter Medical Center Foundation • Waypoints: Naples Yacht Club • Naples on the Gulf: Naples Chamber of Commerce • Jupiter • Stuart • Aventura Community Foundation of Collier County Community Report • Advances: Tampa General Hospital
Published by Palm Beach Media Group North, LLC, P.O. Box 3344, Palm Beach, FL 33480, 561-659-0210 • Fax: 561-659-1736 ®Palm Beach Illustrated, Palm Beach Magazine, and Palm Beach Social Observer are registered trademarks, and ™Palm Beach Living is a trademark of Palm Beach Media Group North, LLC.
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PINK
ISN’T JUST A COLOR, IT’S AN...
attitude Coming to The Royal, November 2021
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FROM THE EDITOR
I always know it’s November when there’s not only a nip, but also creativity, in the air. The sheer number of cultural performances, gallery openings, and artistic collaborations happening community-wide attests to this. This season, perhaps more than ever, there is so much to take in. Maybe because of a pent-up desire to gather in concert halls and gallery spaces once again, or because recent transplants have caused our population to swell, the cultural calendar is brimming with possibilities. Turn to our Agenda section, beginning on page 172, to see the full scope of events for our entertainment and enrichment. This month alone, we present eight pages of happenings—and that’s just the beginning! One of the most notable performances this season will be the North American premiere of Alexei Ratmansky’s Swan Lake, staged by Miami City Ballet. In “Dressing the Part,” on page 96, we explore the costume design for Ratmansky’s interpretation of the beloved classical ballet, and the synergy between costumes and the intention of the choreographer. I, for one, can’t wait to see it when it comes to the Kravis Center in February. Artistic expression takes many forms, and it really reaches its zenith when two creatives collaborate. There’s no better example of this than the design partnership of Sarah Wetenhall and Aerin Lauder. Aerin, who graces our cover this month, and Sarah share a vision of Palm Beach that is rooted in island history yet very much of the present. Aerin’s design of Villa Jasmine at The Colony, which Sarah co-owns with her husband, Andrew, is the aesthetic manifestation of that vision—and there’s much more to come. Read about their collaborative projects, and Aerin’s creative process, in “Iconic Evolution” on page 84. This season we introduce a few collaborations of our own. “Serial entertainer” Steven Stolman shares his expertise on the subject, along with tips and fun anecdotes, in “That’s Entertainment!” (page 136). Preservation Foundation archives director Marie Penny unveils historical insight and fun facts about the most iconic residences of Palm Beach in “Heritage” (page 134). CBS12 reporter Sam Kerrigan celebrates some of the area’s unsung “Heroes” (page 50). And don’t miss new content by our own editorial team: The Edit, featuring our editors’ must-haves and recent obsessions (page 62), and fashion editor Katherine Lande’s “Real Talk” with fashion’s biggest names, including this month’s headliner, Manolo Blahnik (page 192). Here’s to an art-filled season!
CAPEHART
Where the Art Is
November #Goals Daphne Nikolopoulos daphne@palmbeachillustrated.com
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WEAR MORE PANTS Alvin Valley wears success well. The mega-talented King of Pants’ designs speak for themselves. Page 90.
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CLEAN SELF-CARE Props to Skin Apeel Day Spa for sharing four DIY recipes for homemade beauty treatments, including an anti-aging chocolate facial. Page 162. PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Breathtaking power and utter serenity. A magical fusion.
The New Flying Spur.
Discover more at 2801 Okeechobee Boulevard, West Palm Beach or contact Bentley Palm Beach by calling us at 561-257-4833 or visiting BramanBentleyPalmBeach.com The name ‘Bentley’ and the ‘B’ in wings device are registered trademarks. © 2021 Bentley Motors, Inc. Model shown: Flying Spur.
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BENTLEY PALM BEACH
10/1/21 1:36 PM
O N
F L A G L E R
NEW DIMENSIONS IN PALM BEACH LIVING VISIONARY DESIGN | EXPANSIVE VIEWS | IMPECCABLE STYLE 24 Floors Featuring Half- and Full-Floor Luxury Residences SELECT RESIDENCES REMAIN — STARTING FROM $6.7M
SALES PRESENTATIONS BY APPOINTMENT 1217 South Flagler Drive | West Palm Beach, FL 33401 ForteWPB.com | 561.903.4702
Broker Participation is welcomed and encouraged. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SELLER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A SELLER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. This project is being developed by Flagler Residential LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, which was formed solely for such purpose. Two Roads Development LLC, a Florida limited liability company (“Two Roads”), is affiliated with this entity, but is not the developer of this project. This condominium is being developed by Flagler Residential LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“Developer”), which has a limited right to use the trademarked names and logos of Two Roads pursuant to a license and marketing agreement with Two Roads. Any and all statements, disclosures, and/or representations shall be deemed made by Developer and not by Two Roads and you agree to look solely to Developer (and not to Two Roads and/or any of its affiliates) with respect to any and all matters relating to the marketing and/or development of the Condominium and with respect to the sales of units in the Condominium. Prices, availability, artist’s renderings, dimensions, specifications, and features are subject to change at any time without notice.
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PARTY PICS
ARIANA MURPHY
DAPHNE NIKOLOPOULOS, CLAUDIA SHEA, JORDAN BARENBURG, TERRY DUFFY
JERRY CRANK, DENISE PONCHOCK, CHARLES HAGY
2021 EDUCATION AWARDS WHO: Palm Beach Illustrated WHAT: 2021 Education Awards WHERE: Hilton, West Palm Beach HIGHLIGHTS: Guests celebrated the winners for Educator of the Year, Institutional Excellence, and Outstanding Academic Program. Tree of Life Foundation International and Schumacher Auto Group sponsored the event.
KEVIN KOVACS, JONATHON ORTIZSMYKLA, ROBERT HAMON
LAUREN AND JULIANY DENIS DAPHNE NIKOLOPOULOS, JOE MURRAY, MATTHEW PATTERSON, ALEXIA BETANCES, TERRY DUFFY DEE WADE, MELISSA SCHWARTZ, MARY MURRAY, ABIGAIL DUFFY
PAUL SKOMRA AND PRANOO KUMAR SKOMRA WITH ROHINI
DAPHNE NIKOLOPOULOS, TERRY DUFFY, KIMBERLY PALACIOS-ROLSTON, AMANDA SCHUMACHER
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TRACEY BENSON
SETH COHEN
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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PAUSE. PLAY. Perfect.
Eau Spa is a wonderland of playful relaxation — devoted to you and everything you love most. Here, lounging and living come naturally with bespoke treatments, private villas, a bath lounge, a self-centered garden and endless Champagne and cupcakes. Coming soon: our brand new Spa Terrace, a serene outdoor café where guests can relax before, after or between treatments. For appointments: 844.572.6663 or concierge@eauspa.com
EAU PALM BEACH RESORT & SPA 100 SOUTH OCEAN BLVD. MANALAPAN FL 33462 | EAUSPA.COM
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PARTY PICS
MARGIE BETTEN, ALI REHM
SARAH GAYMON, AISHA ALI
ANDREW PACKER AND TAYLA LERMAN
LYNDSEY MAYER, BRANDON RINKER
FRIENDS FOREVER WHO: Young Friends members WHAT: Networking happy hour WHERE: Meat Market, Palm Beach HIGHLIGHTS: More than 90 Young Friends members of the Kravis Center, Norton Museum of Art, Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League, and Promise Fund Next Gen gathered at the Palm Beach restaurant to mix and mingle with their philanthropic peers.
JEFF REHM, LARRY TRAVERS, TONY COMORAT, PETER APOSTOL MICHAEL MANUEL, TINA MUNROE
KRISTEN BISSETT, KATE GUINN
ESPERANZA AND GEORGE MAYER
JENNIFER BELLIS, DARLENE DZUBA
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MARY STUCCHI AND ANNIE WATT
JANET PLEASANTS, DIANE BERGNER
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Palm Beach location now open 230 Sunrise Avenue, Suite B, Palm Beach, FL 33480 | (305) 576 4662 4040 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, FL 33137 | (305) 576 4662 | info@lignerosetmiami.com
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PARTY PICS
JAY ZEAGER WITH TRIATHLETES AT THE START OF THEIR SWIM
CANDY HELMS, KENDALL KARSTEN
RACE TO THE FINISH
DAVID AND KELLEY LIGHT
WHO: Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce WHAT: Tampa General Hospital Loggerhead Triathlon WHERE: Carlin Park, Jupiter HIGHLIGHTS: Athletes from across Florida flocked to Jupiter to complete the iconic race’s 3/8-mile swim, 13-mile bike ride, and 3.1-mile run. FINISHER MATT HARMON’S CHEER TEAM
SEAN FERREIRA, NICK CONIGLIO, DAN CASTRO, BOBBY LEIDY
KENNETH MIKULSKI JR., KRISSI NEVILLE, LISA SMITH
CHRIS GANNON
CATHY WEECH, WENDY BRISCO, HENRY ARENDSE
MAX NEWLAND
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KENNETH MIKULSKI JR.
CAPEHART
SUPPORTERS CHEERING ON THEIR RACERS
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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PRISM AWARD WINNER FOR
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Turn Daydreaming into DREAM LIVING Residences by Stock Custom Homes are remarkably stunning with masterful craftsmanship visible in every detail. They are designed in collaboration with a team of highly renowned architects, interior designers, and construction professionals. Select from these custom grand estates in Palm Beach and Wellington, or design and build the home of your dreams on your own homesite.
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BROKER PARTICIPATION WELCOMED. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. NOT AN OFFERING WHERE PROHIBITED BY STATE LAW. PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.
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Better together. Baptist Health Cancer Care is better. For you.
We’re stronger when we work together. That’s why Lynn Cancer Institute and Baptist Health’s Miami Cancer Institute, partners in Baptist Health Cancer Care, are integrating their programs to become the largest provider of cancer services in South Florida. Our cancer experts combine their vast expertise with the most innovative technologies and treatments, from minimally invasive procedures to all of the latest radiation modalities, to provide our patients with the personal care they deserve, from diagnosis through survivorship and beyond. Our patients benefit from the latest cancer innovations without having to travel out of town for the latest treatments, keeping them close to family and friends when it’s most important.
Learn more at BaptistHealth.net/CancerCare
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Extraordinary Science, Every Day.
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Extraordinary science happens every day at Scripps Research. The I Love Science project was created to enable everyone to voice support for the researchers dedicated to improving human health.
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The Stiles-Nicholson Foundation’s generous $100,000 commitment to match donations means that every
dollar you donate through the end of the year could have double the impact empowering our
researchers to better understand and treat devastating diseases. Together, we truly can make a difference.
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Voice your support for scientific research by emailing ilovescience@scripps.edu. Your note of encouragement will be shared with Scripps Research scientists.
To learn more about supporting Scripps Research’s life-changing mission, visit us at give.scripps.edu or call us at (800) 788-4931.
10550 N. Torrey Pines Rd, TPC-2 La Jolla, CA 92037 (800) 788-4931
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130 Scripps Way #4B2 Jupiter, FL 33458 (800) 788-4931
scripps.edu
9/29/21 9:41 AM
“ LIFE STARTS
ALL OVER AGAIN WHEN IT GETS CRISP IN THE FALL. — F. Scott Fitzgerald
”
NEINSTEIN PLASTIC SURGERY, EXPERTS IN LIPOSUCTION AND BODYSCULPTING, PROUDLY SERVING NYC AND THE WORLD.
FOLLOW ALONG @ DRNEINSTEIN WWW.NEINSTEINPLASTICSURGERY.COM 212 249 0949 | 4 W 58TH ST 12TH FLOOR NEW YORK NY 10019
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INSIDER By Skye Sherman
JACOBER CREATIVE
Staying CURRENT
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Forty million dollars can’t buy happiness, but it can buy some splendid upgrades—and an increased capacity for superyachts. This month, the shiny new Town of Palm Beach Marina makes a splashy debut following its first major overhaul since it was built in the 1940s. Anchoring the southern side of the Royal Park Bridge on the western shoreline of Palm Beach, the renovated docks will reestablish their longtime presence along Australian, Brazilian, and Peruvian avenues while also introducing a new 250-foot Royal Palm Dock. Completion of the landmark project is set to alter the face of the town forever. Turn the page for a deep dive.
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INSIDER
JACOBER CREATIVE
The new Town of Palm Beach Marina offers a worldclass, multifaceted lifestyle experience (left and above). A look at the new marina (below).
“The vision was to upgrade the facility, because it hadn’t been touched in years,” says Mike Horn, who has presided as dockmaster since 2013. While the docks were updated with aluminum decking and increased shore power in the 1990s, the recent renovation marks the first total makeover of the entire facility, which is the only public marina on Palm Beach. “We’re accommodating the move to the larger vessels people are requiring these days and their desire to be in Palm Beach,” Horn explains. “People want to be in Palm Beach— the island itself is really the amenity, between Worth Avenue, the beach, and proximity to the airport, restaurants, and clubs.”
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Now vessels between 60 and 294 feet can find a home at the Town of Palm Beach Marina. Prior to the reconstruction project, there were 88 slips, and the marina was able to accommodate boats from 50 to 262 feet; there are now 84 state-of-the-art slips, including 10 spaces to accommodate yachts sized 200 feet and up. The modernized, glamorized marina includes a Bellingham Concrete floating dock system plus technological upgrades like FAST FACTS high-speed WiFi, ADDRESS: 500 AUSboosted shore TRALIAN AVENUE power, and LONGITUDE: 80 02. top-of-the-line 66’ W LATITUDE: 26 42. 18’ N SLIPS: 84 security thanks to CAN ACCOMMODATE: improved lighting, YACHTS MEASURING cameras, and 60 TO 294 FEET gated docks with
access control. The adjacent park also benefited from landscaping improvements. During the 17-month construction phase, general contractor Murray Logan Construction dug slips wider and deeper in order to facilitate modern superyachts, and a new marina office was constructed along with three new Mediterranean-style amenity buildings housing shower facilities and a lounge. The main pier is now 14 feet wide, and finger piers are extra-wide, too. “The whole process has been interesting and impressive, from them building the seawall to the amount of dredging that had to be done in order to accommodate these larger boats, watching them put the floats together here on-site, running the cable for the shore power—Murray Logan has done an outstanding job,” says Horn. “When you look at the plans, you can envision it, but it’s pleasantly surprising to see the finished product.” Environmental sustainability was another goal of the renovation, and the reopened docks will present a streamlined recycling process, a paperless workplace, and efforts to conserve energy using technology such as automatic light sensors. On top of amenities including cart and porter concierge services, marina patrons are also provided complimentary access to the Morton and Barbara Mandel Recreation Center, the Seaview Park and Phipps Ocean Park tennis courts, and the Palm Beach Par 3 Golf Course. The marina is accepting seasonal, annual, and transient slip reservations; as of press time, the marina was at 82 percent occupancy, with all slips 125 feet and under spoken for. (townof palmbeachmarina.com)
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AN EXPERT APPROACH TO SURGERY & INJECTABLES The doctors and team at Hass Plastic Surgery have been the beauty PICTURED L TO R: HILLARY SHEITELMAN PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT ANDREA HASS BOARD CERTIFIED OPHTHALMIC SURGEON BRIAN HASS BOARD CERTIFIED PLASTIC SURGEON ASHLEY ERIKSON NURSE PRACTITIONER
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cornerstone of Palm Beach for over 26 years, and have earned the reputation as the area’s top plastic surgeons for surgical and non-surgical rejuvenation. When it’s time for surgery or simply a refresh, let us be the team to help you look and feel younger. We look forward to meeting you.
CALL 561.624.7777 OR VISIT HASSPLASTICSURGERY.COM 2401 PGA BLVD., SUITE 150, PALM BEACH GARDENS 171 S. STATE ROAD 7, SUITE 100, WELLINGTON
2/3/21 2:05 PM
INSIDER SHOP LOCAL
CHIC New Spot
Fans of Marissa Collections, a Naples fashion institution since 1975, will no longer have to drive across the state to peruse the family-owned and -operated boutique’s curated selection of designer garb. Coming this month, a new outpost at The Royal Poinciana Plaza brings the store’s collection of fine jewelry, apparel, handbags, shoes, and accessories to Palm Beach shoppers. “If you have visited our Naples location, you know pink is our signature color, so there’s no better place than Palm Beach for our home away from home,” says Jay Hartington, CEO and son of founders Marissa and Burt Hartington. “Our family is bringing the best of our Naples boutique to Palm Beach, where we’ll focus on one-of-a-kind products and the client experience.” The Palm Beach location will center on fine jewelry—with many designers chosen exclusively for the local set—as well as evening wear and accessories. (marissacollections.com)
FLYING HIGH VETERANS DAY IS A WELCOME ANNUAL EXCUSE TO HONOR OUR HEROES. THIS YEAR, CONSIDER SPENDING A WHOLE WEEKEND IMMERSED IN ALL THINGS MILITARY. THE STUART AIR SHOW WILL RETURN NOVEMBER 12-14 AT WITHAM FIELD IN STUART (STUARTAIRSHOW.COM; TICKET PRICES RANGE). EXPECT GRAVITY-DEFYING AEROBATIC PERFORMANCES AND A VIETNAM-ERA LAND BATTLE WITH A PARACHUTE DROP FROM A VINTAGE PLANE COORDINATED BY STUART’S ROAD TO VICTORY MILITARY MUSEUM (FACEBOOK.COM/ROADTOVICTORY).
VILLA EN VIVO DEANA JO BOOKER
Made famous by society photographer Slim Aarons in 1955, Villa Artemis has long been an icon of Palm Beach life. Artist Shannon Torrence will place it in the spotlight once again when he paints a composite take on the historic estate live at the Mtn Space Gallery in Lake Worth Beach this month. The interactive installation gives art fans a chance to observe Torrence as he creates Liquid Asset Management, which will serve as his flagship work for a 2022 show. Torrence doesn’t have to work solely from images—he has memory to rely on, too, thanks to a personal history with the villa. As a master finisher, Torrence has worked in Palm Beach homes— including some of the island’s most prominent—since 1988. “I worked in Villa Artemis in 2013, restoring two fireplaces,” he shares. “It was love at first sight for me. Having seen the images of this house and pool across
the island’s coffee tables for the last 30 years, you can only imagine the sensation I had to find myself standing in it.” Torrence adds that Villa Artemis features so prominently in his forthcoming painting because of its immediately recognizable pool, and that the piece aims to celebrate the pride of good workmanship. (mtnspace.com)
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10/4/21 10:23 AM
The Kaufman Katz Group at Morgan Stanley R. Jo Kaufman
Executive Director Financial Advisor
Cindy Katz Morton Executive Director Financial Advisor
1801 North Military Trail Suite 300 Boca Raton, FL 33431 561-620-5028 www.morganstanleyfa.com/ kaufmankatzgroup ©2019 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC, Member SIPC
Mother, daughter, wife, sister…friend. As a woman, you play many roles for the people who are most important to you and, by choice or circumstance; wealth manager may be in your repertoire. In fact, in one out of four U.S. households with a net worth of $1 million or more, a woman is calling the shots when it comes to investing and spending money. 1 Since your wealth touches many lives in many ways, it’s vital to get advice from a reliable source. At Morgan Stanley, you can expect to work with a Financial Advisor who invests time in understanding your specific situation and has the experience and resources needed to help you prepare for the future.
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC (“Morgan Stanley”), its affiliates sand Morgan Stanley Financial Advisors or Private Wealth Advisors do not provide tax or legal advice. Clients should consult their tax advisor for matters involving taxation and tax planning and their attorney for matters involving trust and estate planning and other legal matters. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC member SIPC 1. Phoenix High Net Worth Market Insights, August 2010 CRC2420147 3/19
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INSIDER SPOTLIGHT
REPRISING His Role
WALL STREET REPORTER, DELRAY BEACH RESIDENT, AND ACTOR REED ALEXANDER REJOINS THE CAST OF ICARLY
Reed Alexander reprised his role as Nevel Papperman in 2021 for the Paramount+ revival of iCarly, appearing in the “iRobot Wedding” episode.
knew he wanted to become an interviewer. Alexander earned his bachelor’s degree in business with a minor in journalism from NYU and his master’s degree from Columbia Journalism School. Now he reports on investment banking for Business Insider. While this typically would require Alexander to live in New York, he has worked from his Delray Beach apartment during the pandemic. “Choosing to come back PARMOUNT+
Leaving the Business Insider newsroom in New York’s Financial District, Reed Alexander answers his phone with cars honking and crosswalk signals ticking in the background. Then, someone approaches and asks, “Are you Nevel?” The 26-year-old journalist gets this question often, usually while dining on Atlantic Avenue in Delray Beach, where he resides. The requests for photos have increased this summer since the hit Nickelodeon show iCarly, in which Alexander plays villain Nevel Papperman, launched a revival on Paramount+. Alexander grew up in Boca Raton and attended Pine Crest School, where the drama teacher encouraged him to pursue acting. At age 8, Alexander took it upon himself to call talent agents throughout South Florida, and when his mother got home from work, there were at least half a dozen messages on the answering machine. “I think she probably recognized at that point that this was a serious matter,” Alexander says. After training with acting coach Lori Lively (actress Blake Lively’s sister), Alexander was asked to audition for iCarly in 2007. When he got the call that he’d landed the role, Alexander never anticipated how his life would change. “iCarly blew up in this massive way,” he says of the show that aired for half a decade. During that time, Alexander appeared on Today, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and the Kids’ Choice Awards. From these experiences, he
TATIANA KATKOVA
By Alyssa Morlacci
here as home base has been a great feeling of safety and security in spite of everything during such an uncertain year,” he says. Alexander heard whispers about the iCarly revival in early 2021. In March, he was asked to appear in episode five, during which Alexander’s character marries a woman whom Carly (played by Miranda Cosgrove) suspects to be a robot. “I remember on the plane out there being so nervous,” he says. “But then, seeing all of them, it was just like nothing had changed.” For Alexander, filming was a fun reprieve from breaking Wall Street news, but it also came at a “really challenging, devastating time, and people needed something they could relate to from a period that perhaps was more carefree for them,” he says. When fans of the show recognize him on the sidewalk in New York or out dining in Delray, Alexander says it’s the sentiments after the selfies, about how the show helped them through hard times, that ultimately convinced him to return to the screen. «
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INSIDER HEROES
Breathing Room
How a local school therapist is making mental health a priority for students and staff By Sam Kerrigan
BRANSEN DILLON
At Galaxy E3 Elementary School in Boynton Beach, students are learning a lesson in mindfulness, thanks to a special new room that offers a space to just be. Over the summer, school therapist Callie Reda created a room where kids and teachers can come to focus on their mental health. “There’s definitely been an increase in anxiety and worry this year among the kids. They’re all valid worries and fears,” says Reda, who works at Galaxy E3 Elementary through the Palm Beach County School District’s partnership with the Center for Child Counseling. Reda was thrilled to find that her idea was also an
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important initiative for the school’s administration. “I didn’t expect to get a whole classroom, if I’m being honest,” she says. “The fact that they made it a priority to make this space large enough to encompass more kids and teachers showed how important it was to all of us.” This sanctuary of sorts is filled with resources to help ease minds and provide a space away from the stresses of the classroom. Students can work on a puzzle, read, draw, or just sit quietly while gentle music plays in the background.
Reda is always present, helping guide students to find peace during their time in the room. She loves being there for the kids and staff, giving them a chance to open up about whatever is on their minds. “I’m a safe person for them, so they can come into the mindfulness room and just talk and vent and let it out and then go back to class,” she says. As the school year goes on, Reda hopes more of the school community will take advantage of this resource— bringing what they learn in the mindfulness room back to their classrooms and home to their friends and family members. But for now, she’s grateful for the kids who have had the courage and self-awareness to take that first step through the door, especially at such a young age. “The fact that they know the resource is here and they’re voicing their need for it makes me feel proud that I’m making an impact,” she says. «
“
THERE’S DEFINITELY BEEN AN INCREASE IN ANXIETY AND WORRY THIS YEAR AMONG THE KIDS. THEY’RE ALL VALID WORRIES AND FEARS.” — CALLIE REDA
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RELAX
We’ll do the fighting for yo THE LAW OFFICES OF
NUGENT ZBOROWSKI
FLORIDA BAR BOARD CERTIFIED IN MARITAL AND FAMILY LAW Matthew S. Nugent, Esq. & Adam M. Zborowski, Esq.
561.844.1200 • NugentLawFirm.com
Serving Palm Beach and Martin Counties since 1982 with offices in N th Palm Beach Experience Matters.
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INSIDER LIVING WITH IVEY
Food for Thought How to eat your way to a HEALTHIER BRAIN By Ivey Leidy Photography by Kent Anderson
O
ur earth provides us with everything we need to survive. But in an era of over-the-counter meds and processed foods, we tend to forget what nature has already designed for us. While the development of Western medicine is nothing short of miraculous, whole foods and specific nutrients can be a first line of defense, treating current ailments and promoting longevity. Certain foods can prevent chronic disease and protect against neurological damage, while others support the brain’s performance of vital functions. Here, I outline some of the power players to add to your diet. Turmeric: Known as nature’s antiinflammatory, turmeric contains a medicinal compound called curcumin that fights FOR KIDS THAT inflammation and relieves pain. Studies have HELP GRAY shown it to improve memory in people with MATTER GROW Alzheimer’s, as well as boost serotonin levels. Broccoli: Broccoli is rich in anti• Berries: Smoothies inflammatory antioxidants as well as Vitamin K, are a great way to get which is linked to better memory and cognitive these in. function. When eaten together, broccoli and • Sweet potatoes: tomatoes work synergistically to make the Hello, sweet potato nutrients in both more bioavailable. fries! Ginger: This powerhouse root’s • Salmon: Try appeasantioxidants reduce inflammation within the ing picky eaters by brain, improving overall functioning. dredging and dipping Blueberries: All berries, but especially the salmon in breadblueberries, contain antioxidants known as crumbs before you polyphenols that protect the brain against cook it. oxidative stress and inflammation, both of which cause aging and neurological disease. The same antioxidants also improve the brain’s signaling power, helping it to communicate with the rest of the body. Citrus: Vitamin C, an antioxidant that helps protect brain cells, plays a key role in preventing brain decline. Mushrooms: Often referred to as medicinal
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mushrooms, this superfood can improve brain health and prevent decline. All mushrooms boost brain health, but the most powerful varieties are lion’s mane, reishi, and cordyceps. Pumpkin seeds: These are rich in antioxidants as well as nutrients like zinc, magnesium, copper, and iron that protect against brain decline and neurological disease. Walnuts: Found in walnuts, Vitamin E decreases inflammation and prevents brain aging. Walnuts are also the best plant source of DHA, an omega-3 fatty acid that makes up 90 percent of the total omega-3 fatty acids in the brain. DHA is extremely important for brain development, but it also improves memory and function in aging brains. Quinoa: Whole grains, especially quinoa, are rich in fiber and antioxidants to help keep the brain active and sharp. Salmon and tuna: The brain is 60 percent fat and uses omega-3 fatty acids to build brain and nerve cells. A diet rich in omega-3s helps improve memory and protect the brain against decline. Omega-3s also increase gray matter, which naturally decreases as we age. Within the brain, there is gray matter and white matter. White matter, which makes up 60 percent of the brain, sends nerve signals up and down the spinal cord and is necessary for proper movement and reflexes. Gray matter, which makes up the other 40 percent, contains most of the nerve cells that control decision-making, memory, and emotion.
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Brain BOWL (SERVES 2)
Brain Power Smoothie » INGREDIENTS
» INGREDIENTS 1 cup cooked quinoa, rinsed and drained in a colander 1 garlic clove, minced 1 shallot, peeled and sliced 2 cups broccoli florets 2 cups cherry tomatoes, halved 1 7-oz. jar of tuna, drained in a colander 1 tbsp. raw pumpkin seeds 1 tbsp. sunflower seeds 2 tbsp. balsamic vinaigrette Pinch of flaked sea salt Ground pepper to taste
1 frozen banana 2 cups blueberries 1/4 cup walnuts 1 tbsp. raw almond butter 1 tbsp. chia seeds 1 tbsp. ground flax seeds 1 tbsp. hemp seeds
» Blend all ingredients in a high-speed blender until creamy.
»
Combine rinsed quinoa with 2 cups of water and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce heat to low and let simmer until water is absorbed and quinoa is fluffy (10-15 minutes). Allow quinoa to cool. Using a lidded sauté pan, add garlic, shallot, broccoli, tomatoes, and olive oil, and sauté over medium heat for 3 minutes. Add 2 tbsp. of water, reduce heat to low, and cover with a lid. Cook for 3-5 minutes, until water is evaporated. Gently combine tuna with tomato broccoli medley. Arrange quinoa in bowls and top with tomato broccoli medley. Drizzle each bowl with 1 tbsp. of balsamic vinegar. Garnish with pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, flaked sea salt, and ground pepper.
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1 tsp. freshly grated ginger (about a 1-inch cube) 1/2 tsp. raw, unfiltered honey 1/2 cup unsweetened almond milk
DID YOU
KNOW? 1
Low magnesium levels have been linked to migraines, depression, and epilepsy.
2
Iron deficiency is often
associated with brain fog.
and dementia.
3 Studies show that diets high in saturated fats cause inflammation within the brain, leading to memory impairment and cognitive decline.
5 Low levels of DHA have been linked to dementia.
4 Diets high in refined sugar and processed foods are not only linked to high blood pressure, obesity, and diabetes, but also memory impairment
6 Artificial sweeteners, especially Aspartame, have been shown to interfere with the brain’s production of neurotransmitters and increase its susceptibility to oxidative stress, increasing risk of dementia.
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BROWN JORDAN, Luna Collection
TM
1700 UPLAND ROAD, WEST PALM BEACH, FL 33409 | 561.683.7373 | ISLANDLIVINGPATIO.COM
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WORLD’S BEST HOSPITALS 2021
POWERED BY
Award-winning physicians and advanced technology enable Jupiter Medical Center to provide a broad range of services with numerous specialty concentrations and centers of excellence including: The Anderson Family Cancer Institute brings together a multidisciplinary team of renowned surgical, medical and radiation oncology experts and state-of-the-art technology rivaling that of any academic medical center. The Robson Heart & Vascular Institute provides the full spectrum of adult cardiac care from minimally invasive heart procedures to our open-heart surgery program. Our dedicated team uses the latest techniques and advanced technology to deliver high success rates, low complication rates, and the best patient outcomes. The Anderson Family Orthopedic and Spine Center of Excellence is the only program in the State of Florida to hold Joint Commission Certifications for hip, knee, shoulder and spine surgery and the Blue Distinction Center + designation for total knee and hip replacement for spine surgery for delivering exceptional care and results for patients undergoing these surgeries. Women’s & Children’s Services include the Florence A. De George Obstetrics Unit where over 1,800 babies are born each year and the Level II De George Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. Pediatric Services include the Mastroianni Family Pediatric Emergency Department, the De George Inpatient Pediatric Unit, pediatric imaging, surgery and both inpatient and outpatient pediatric therapy.
The Neuroscience Institute includes Jupiter Medical Center’s Thrombectomy-Capable Stroke Center (TSC). The center is certified by the Joint Commission in collaboration with the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association ensuring that we have met rigorous national standards, clinical guidelines, and outcomes of care.
Other Programs and Services: • Margaret W. Niedland Breast Center • Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation • Tansky Concierge Unit • Frenchman’s Creek Center for Excellence in Digestive Health • Imaging Services including Interventional Radiology • Pain Management • Cary Grossman Health & Wellness Center including outpatient rehabilitation • Sleep Disorders Center • Wound Care & Hyperbaric Medicine
For more information about Jupiter Medical Center visit jupitermed.com.
WORLD-CLASS HEALTHCARE IS HERE.
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Photo by Laura Pedrick
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Divorce Law
Retaking the helm of your life is about new horizons. Leave the exhaust in your wake.
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2701 PGA Boulevard, Suite C Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410
9/29/21 9:41 AM
STYLE
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The Artisans
Embrace whimsical creations handmade for the home By Katherine Lande
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1. Anemone Mistral II archival pigment print, limited edition of 75 ($850), Claiborne Swanson Frank, claiborneswansonfrank.com | 2. Dancing Poppies dinner plate in ivory, handmade and painted by artisans in Turkey ($98), Rebecca de Ravenel, rebecca deravenel.com | 3. Geranium plant, handmade from hand-dried paper, wire, and an aged terra-cotta pot ($375), The Green Vase, modaoperandi.com | 4. Hand-blown glass vase in coral with white/red swirl ($625), Paul Arnhold, paularnholdglass.com | 5. Spring Flowers hand-embroidered napkins, stitched by Mariana Barran Goodall (price upon request), Hibiscus Linens, hibiscuslinens.com | 6. Provence needlepoint canvas backgammon board ($370), Lycette, lycettedesigns.com
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STYLE GARDEN GROW Vine-wrapped cocktail ring in pastel colors ($2,953), Bea Bongiasca, bea bongiasca.com
THE LOOK
MOD Squad RETRO SILHOUETTES AND PASTEL PALETTES MAKE A MODERN COMEBACK
STYLE NOTES
By Katherine Lande
SQUARE DEAL: Update your wardrobe with a classic day-to-night box bag. SOFT SHADES: Opt for pastel colors for an effortless take on the trend. GO LONG: Cascading jewelry pieces make a chic evening statement.
LOUD AND CLEAR Roxy pearl clear pumps ($428), Cult Gaia, cultgaia.com
ON THE PROWL Valentino Garavani Roman Stud kitten heels ($1,150), Valentino, Palm Beach, valentino.com
SET THE CURVE Fall/ Winter 2021 earrings ($2,050), Chanel, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, chanel.com
EMILIO PUCCI RESORT 2022 A signature Pucci print minidress evokes international jet-setting reminiscent of the 1960s.
MADE YOU LOOK Micro Lady Dior vanity (price upon request), Dior, dior.com
GREEN DREAM Grace small leather box bag ($2,290), Mark Cross, markcross.com
FRESH MINT Solia PVC sandals ($845), Manolo Blahnik, manolo blahnik.com
BUBBLEGUM BLISS Since 1854 Petite Malle handbag ($5,650), Louis Vuitton, Louis Vuitton locations, louisvuitton.com 60 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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STYLE WILD STYLE Animalia coasters ($78), Jonathan Adler, jonathanadler.com This set of four coasters features a menagerie of favorite safari creatures. Crafted from high-fired porcelain and finished with gleaming gold luster, they’re sure to create a wild and wonderful impression for any occasion. —Allison Wolfe Reckson, associate editor
THE EDIT
Haute Hostess
SURPRISE YOUR HOST WITH CREATIVE GIFTS THAT GO BEYOND BASICS By Melissa Puppo BUNDLE OF JOY Cotton blanket ($125), Wasi Clothing, wasiclothing.com Made ethically and sustainably in Los Angeles, this 100-percent cotton blanket pays homage to Inti, the Incan sun god worshipped as the world’s source of light and warmth. The textile’s rich color palette, abstract design, and super soft feel will bring comfort to any home for the holidays. —Abigail Duffy, web editor
MAKE A WISH The Wishing Basket ($39), Expedition Subsahara, expeditionsubsahara.com Handmade from cattail stalk and recycled materials, wishing baskets like this one are said to be a space for wishes to come true. Plus, it’s a hostess gift that gives back: 20 percent of every sale is earmarked to build a girls’ STEAM school in Senegal. —Kristen Desmond LeFevre, senior editor
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IN BLOOM Le Mini round ($49), Venus et Fleur, venusetfleur.com I love the idea of gifting roses that last a year, and Venus et Fleur makes it easy with lovely offerings that exude elegance and style. Instead of a bouquet, opt for the minis from the Continent Collection. These pint-sized picks are ideal for those with an affinity for a specific destination. —Melissa Puppo, contributing editor
BOTANICAL BEAUTIES Flower pressed shortbread cookies ($48 for a dozen), Loria Stern, loriastern.com Nobody needs one more “thing,” so I tend to gift something consumable but creative and luxe. These edible-botanical, hand-crafted shortbread cookies by L.A.-based baker Loria Stern are not only melt-in-your-mouth delicious, they are as gorgeous as a petite garden. Not surprisingly, Stern grows and harvests many of the flowers herself. Check out some of her seasonal and vegan creations as well—while they last. —Daphne Nikolopoulos, editor in chief
READY TO POP Poppin’ Off popcorn seasoning kit ($36), Cravings by Chrissy Teigen, cravingsbychrissyteigen.com For that moment when any host or hostess is ready to relax and spend a day on the sofa binging a series or two, this popcorn seasoning set will liven up their couch concessions. —K.D.L.
LEMON SQUEEZY Whipped honey with lemon ($18 for 12 oz.), Savannah Bee Company, savannahbee.com; Meyer lemon Moravian cookies ($10.49 for 4.75 oz.), Dewey’s Bakery, deweys.com. I’m always on the hunt for lemon treats when I travel, and these are two of my favorite finds. Savannah Bee Company uses organic lemon oil to add tartness to its honey. And the Moravian cookies from Dewey’s, which I discovered in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, are the perfect accompaniment to tea. —Mary Murray, executive editor
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PERFECT FROM EVERY ANGLE
T H E
KIND
OF
KARM A Y OU NEED
B ROWA RD
KARMA PALM BEACH o: 561.998.5557 I sales@excellauto.com karmapalmbeach.com 1001 Clint Moore Rd. Ste 101 Boca Raton, FL 33487
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KARMA BROWARD - NOW OPEN o: 954.900.1753 I sales@excellauto.com karmaofbroward.com 1717 SE 17th Street Fort Lauderdale. FL 33316
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STYLE
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BIJOUX
BODY Talk
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Say it all with jewelry depicting the HUMAN FORM
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By Mary Murray
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1. EYE SPY Sydney Evan evil eye earrings with gray cat’s eye beads and diamonds set in 14-karat gold, $1,805. Marissa Collections, Palm Beach (marissacollections.com) 2. BLUE CHIP Tiffany & Co. 2021 Blue Book Collection Jean Schlumberger surreal shell necklace with sapphires and diamonds set in platinum, price upon request. Tiffany & Co. locations (tiffany.com) 3. FACE FIRST Rush Jewelry Design signature two-faced Harriet bracelet in 18-karat gold, $3,250. (rushjewelrydesign.com) 4. SEE CLEARLY NOW Hamilton Jewelers evil eye earrings with sapphires and diamonds set in 14-karat gold, $475. Hamilton Jewelers, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens (hamiltonjewelers.com) 5. HIGH FIVE L’Atelier Nawbar necklace with diamonds and enamel set in 18-karat gold, $1,125. (lateliernawbar.com) 6. KISS ME Delfina Delettrez ruby lips piercing ring with rubies and a freshwater pearl set in 18-karat gold, $1,650. (delfinadelettrez.com) 7. PEACE OUT Buddha Mama hamsa ring with enamel and diamonds set in 20-karat gold, $6,800. Provident Jewelry locations (providentjewelry.com) 8. POINT OF VIEW Arman Sarkisyan evil eye bracelet with sapphires and diamonds set in 18-karat gold and oxidized silver, $8,860. (armansarkisyan.com)
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Oxbridge Academy kicks off its Football program starting in Fall 2022.
An Oxbridge education goes beyond the classroom by encouraging all students to participate in athletics and offering a well-rounded program that is an integral part of the Oxbridge experience. Register for an Admission event to learn more at oapb.org/visit.
Celebrating 10 Years A N I N D E P E N D E N T, C O - E D U C AT I O N A L S C H O O L F O R G R A D E S 7 - 1 2
West Palm Beach, FL | admission@oapb.org | 561.972.9826
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STYLE BEAUTY
Let it GLOW
ASHLEY MEYER
Antioxidant-rich oils, superfood ingredients, brightening vitamin C, and exfoliating acids fight late-fall dullness and restore that radiance-from-within look in these glowing recommendations: Truly Vegan Collagen Anti-Aging Face Serum ($35, Ulta locations); Chanel Hydra Beauty Camellia Glow Concentrate ($90, Chanel counters); Saje Glow On Oil Cleanser with parsley seed, squalene, and oat ($22, saje.com); Deborah Koepper Palm Beach Vitamin C Serum ($100, Deborah Koepper Salon, Palm Beach); Payot My Payot Masque Sleep & Glow with glowenhancing silk tree extract ($33, us.payot.com); and Goop Beauty Goop Glow Lotion ($25, Sephora locations). —Abigail Duffy
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It’s Your Time To
Shine
Make sure you shine this holiday season! K2 Motorcars, the only in-house Modesta-certified detailing team in Palm Beach, offers a wide range of detailing services - from basic washes to Concours-level detailing. We also specialize in collection management, sales, consignment and brokerage services. K2 Motorcars will get your classic, exotic, or luxury vehicle ready for this holiday season.
Our premium services: • • • •
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BEAUTIFUL NEW BEGINNINGS Experience pure bliss in bespoke face, body, and scalp treatments, the latest rejuvenating spa technologies, and ultra-exclusive skin care you won't find anywhere else. Welcome to your one-stop wellness haven in West Palm Beach.
550 OKEECHOBEE BLVD. E C -3, E LM BE CH, L 33401 5 1-3 -104 | BE MB DE.COM
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ONE OF THE NATION’S BEST HOSPITALS. AND YOUR BEST CHOICE FOR SPECIALIZED CARE.
For nearly two decades, U.S. News & World Report continues to recognize Tampa General Hospital as your best choice for lifesaving care. As one of Florida’s leading academic medical centers, Tampa General Hospital has a world-renowned team of experts that performs more procedures, has more expertise and delivers better results. Our strong collaboration with USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, our private practice physicians, Tampa General Medical Group physicians, and our dedicated team of nurses and health care professionals makes this award-winning care possible. NAMED ONE OF THE NATION’S BEST AND HIGHEST RANKED IN FLORIDA
TOP 10% IN THE NATION
• Diabetes & Endocrinology
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TGH.org
Primary teaching hospital for the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine
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ESCAPE Adventure Seekers Amanyara partners with Frost Science to introduce young travelers to conservation education at its year-round SEEK camps By Daphne Nikolopoulos
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF AMAN
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rmed with masks, snorkels, and underwater cameras, the Reef Rescue team enters the glacier-blue water at Amanyara in the Turks & Caicos. Their leaders: conservation educators from the Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science in Miami. Their mission: to swim out to Northwest Point Marine National Park and document reef-dwelling creatures, including some endangered ones. Their ages: 10 to 12. It’s a good 10-minute swim to the edge of the park, but the budding conservationists—members of Science Explorers and Environmental Keepers (SEEK)—are undaunted. They’ve been told there’s a rare variety of squid out there, and they’d swim a mile if they had to. Besides, the sun is shining and the water is so clear they can make out the pores on the sand dollars. For squid-spotting, they couldn’t have asked for a better day.
The perfectly blue and clear water off Amanyara is the backdrop for a host of activities for adults and kids alike.
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Clockwise from top left: The main pool Salas make a perfect perch for sunset viewing; fun and games at the Nature Discovery Center; Ocean Cove Pavilion bedroom; the four-bedroom Tranquility Villa.
At the first glimpse of the underwater park, the SEEKers’ eyes widen. A reef “ball”—a huge, man-made concrete structure introduced to build up reefs—is covered with diverse corals and teeming with fish darting in and out of holes. A kaleidoscope of Caribbean sea life is represented: porcupine fish, snapper, grunt, queen triggerfish, you name it. Annie, a 12-year-old, snaps a photo of a parrotfish munching the algae off a brain coral. London, who just turned 10, points to a stingray, and they all gather round, eager to touch it. A few minutes later, lead museum educator Jamie Hardcastle spots The Prize: a school of Caribbean reef squid with golden, torpedo-shaped bodies that can change color to green, brown, red, and even blue depending on their objective. Mesmerized, the kids watch the cute cephalopods propel themselves by doing “the wave” in their endless hunt for food. “Reef squid are so rare,” Hardcastle says during an educational activity that interprets what SEEKers saw in the water. “This is my fifth time out here, and I hadn’t seen one before.” 72
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Discoveries like these come courtesy of a partnership between Frost Science and Amanyara, designed to offer young travelers an enriched camp experience. In addition to Reef Rescue, kids can sign up for Coastal Conservation, which is a deep dive into mangroves and coastal habitats, or Sun, Moon, and Stars, a nighttime program that delves into the science of the stars. SEEK camps aren’t the usual crafts-and-movies fare found at hotel kids’ clubs. They’re hands-on, in-the-field experiences based on actual science and a serious goal: to foster a love of the environment in the next generation. “We take what we do at Frost and make it experiential,” Hardcastle says. “It’s a great way [for kids] to see firsthand how a healthy coastline impacts not only marine life, but people as well.” Amanyara, with its 18,000-acre nature reserve and immaculate waters, is the ideal backdrop for such a program. And it comes with a bonus: While the kids are off on their coastal adventures, parents can lounge by their private infinity-edge swimming pool, or strike a Warrior II on their personal yoga pavilion,
Clockwise from top left: Splashing around at Nature Discovery Center; the spacious living room of the four-bedroom Tranquility Villa; private beach beyond Ocean Cove
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Pavilion; the Grand Reflecting Pond showcases the resort’s tropical modern architecture, which is open to ocean breezes; pizza making is one of the favorite kids’ activities.
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ESCAPE Amanyara’s circular bar and main restaurant (far left) recall Balinese architecture, with its wood construction and open spaces. Left: The SEEK program teaches kids about conservation and the environment through fun, educational programs.
or wander down a path to a secluded stretch of beach. Amanyara’s villas, which come in two- to six-bedroom configurations, are gorgeous island homes with plenty of room for the entire family and amenities like personal cooks and housekeepers, open-plan living areas, and extensive terraces for sunbathing and outdoor dining. Who’d ever want to leave? (Actually, with the At Home with Amanyara extended stay program, you don’t necessarily have to.)
As a top destination for multigenerational travel, Amanyara offers a wide range of activities for families to do together. Nature walks and beach cruiser rides are popular with all ages, and water sports like Hobie Cat sailing and kayaking are perfect ways for parents and kids to bond. And everyone looks forward to s’mores night on the beach, when they can gather round a barrel bonfire to toast marshmallows as the sun sets on another day of diversions and discovery. (aman.com/resorts/amanyara) «
Promotion and Events
JUNIOR LEAGUE OF THE PALM BEACHES The Junior League of the Palm Beaches will kick off its 13th Annual Deck the Palms Boutique Market outdoors at the Palm Beach Outlets on Saturday, November 20, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, November 21, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Deck the Palms is a shopping extravaganza featuring a variety of select local and international purveyors of fine goods, including jewelry, home decor, men and women’s apparel, children’s goods, artisanal foods, and much more. Tickets for Deck the Palms are $5 and children 18 and under are free. For details: JLPB.org/Deck-the-Palms
2021 Deck the Palms Co-Chairs Kirsten Davis and Wallis O’Hagan
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Ashley Scharber
470 Columbia Drive, Bldg. F | West Palm Beach 561-689-7590 | JLPB.org
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Festive holiday decor, special treats, raffles and more on each of the '12 Days' by appointment only!
MONDAY 11.22 ALLĒ DAY! BETTER THAN BOTOX (1st of 4 Allē days)
FRIDAY 12.3 THE ABS YOU’VE ALWAYS WANTED
TUESDAY 11.23 GET YOUR HALO GLOW
MONDAY 12.6 “CORE TO FLOOR” REJUVENATION
Buy 3 areas of Botox, receive 1/2 syringe of Volbella FREE!
25% off Halo and BBL treatments; 25% off any two skincare products.
MONDAY 11.29 LOVE YOUR HAIR MON THIS HOLIDAY SEASON
25% off series of three Keravive treatments. Cleanse, nourish and hydrate your scalp for healthier, fuller hair and hair rejuvenation.
TUESDAY 11.30 LIPS, LASHES AND BROWS
25% off Lip Blushing and FREE Ormedic Pink Lip with purchase. $100 off full set Nova Lashes, 25% off Microblading, 25% off Latisse.
WEDNESDAY 12.1 ALLĒ BODY DAY (2nd of 4 Allē days)
25% off Coolsculpting packages of 8 or more cycles; 25% off Kybella.
THURSDAY 12.2 VIVACE
25% off series of three Vivace radio frequency microneedling treatments and 25% off Skinceuticals CE Ferulic with purchase of Vivace treatments. 25% off Pre - Vivace Hydrafacial.
Purchase four or more cycles of Emsculpt Neo and receive Alastin Transform FREE. ($195 value)
Introducing HIFEM Pelvic Floor Rejuvenation! Emsella treats stress incontinence using completely non-invasive high intensity focused electromagnetic energy. This season get back to all the activities you love with this break thru technology! Introductory Emsella session for $100 with purchase of any additional spa service. 25% off package of 6 Emsella treatments.
TUESDAY 12.7 ALLĒ FILLER DAY! (3rd of 4 Allē days)
Buy one syringe (Juvederm Ultra Plus, Volbella, Vollure or Voluma), get one 50% off.
WEDNESDAY 12.8 BEACH READY
25% off QWO cellulite treatment, 25% off SaltFacial treatment for stretchmark reduction, 25% off 1 oz Alastin Body Inhance and FREE Silagen Arnica Bromelain complex tablets with purchase of QWO.
THURSDAY 12.9 GALDERMA DAY - ONE MORE KYSSE!
Buy any one Restylane syringe or any one vial of Sculptra, get one 50% off; Buy 2 areas of Dysport, get one FREE!
FRIDAY 12.10 ALLĒ DAY THE POWER OF THREE! (Final Allē day)
Buy 2 areas of Botox, get one FREE. 25% off all SkinMedica Skincare. All Allergan promotions will be honored on all Allē days.
Shoppes & Offices at PGA West
5540 PGA Boulevard, Suite 200. Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33418
Downtown Palm Beach Gardens
11701 Lake Victoria Gardens Avenue, Suite 3110. Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410
This holiday season, Lickstein Plastic Surgery and Lickstein Plastic Surgery Medical Spa are proud to support the important work of Place of Hope and JAFCO.
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ESCAPE QUICK TRIPS
MAYAN Magic
With luxe accommodations and fine cuisine, Grand Velas Riviera Maya redefines the all-inclusive experience By Daphne Nikolopoulos
Clockwise from left: The Presidential Suite in the resort’s luxe “Grand Class” accommodation category; the lobby in the “Zen Class” enclave, overlooking the lush Mayan jungle; cenotes, rainwater-filled natural pits or caves, abound in Mexico; black bean cappuccino with cotija foam and chipilín leaves.
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ver the past 18 months, travelers have divided into two categories: those who were so ready for cool experiences that they jumped in with both feet, COVID be damned; and those who tiptoed in by choosing places that felt safe. Destinations that satisfied both of those urges shot straight to the top of must-go lists, especially if they were close to home, luxurious, and inclusive of elevated
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dining and activities. Enter the AAA Five Diamond Grand Velas Riviera Maya in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Early on, Grand Velas made a commitment to guest safety by limiting capacity and sanitizing suites extensively and sealing the doors before the next guests arrived. With the ubiquitous sanitation mats, temperature check stations, distanced dining tables, and PPE worn by staff, it’s impossible not to feel safe at this property. This is a good thing, since it leaves you free to think about more important things, such as which restaurant to book for dinner. The flagship here is Cocina de Autor, which is billed as a multisensory experience. Chef Nahúm Velasco deconstructs and reinterprets Mexican and Caribbean dishes in a creative way, coming up with such molecu-
lar delights as shaved foie gras with poblanos and corn, or ceviche with squid ink–infused leche de tigre. In the Mexican food category, Frida is the destination of choice for traditional dishes with a modern twist, including a standout black bean cappuccino with cotija foam and chipilín leaves. Piaf, with its sexy red damask panels and dripping chandeliers, serves French classics like mustardblackened fish with homemade choucroute, and a beautiful slow-cooked lamb Navarin. Throughout the Grand Velas restaurants, the variety is broad and the quality high, so there’s little chance of epicurean boredom.
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The Mayan-inspired architecture of Grand Velas (left) sets the stage for indulgent dining (above and below) and activities such as movies on the beach under the stars (top right). The Se Spa is known for its hydrotherapy journey and healing water experiences (top left).
Or boredom, period. There’s an incredible array of diversions at the 206-acre resort, whether you’re traveling solo or on a multigen vacation. Boaters will love the Sunset VanDutch Experience, which includes a visit to an underwater museum, watersports galore, and a gourmet menu with ancestral beverage tastings (bacanora, sotol, and tuxca, to name a few). Another favorite is the Gourmet Cenote Experience, where guests can dine 60 feet beneath the pristine Chukum cenote. Touring the caverns is mind-blowing in its own right, but dining among the stalagmites is definitely one for the books, even for those who have been there, done that. One can choose, of course, to do nothing but be pampered for days, and the Se Spa is ideal for that. Treatments like the Bacal Massage, which utilizes corn and honey, and
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the Úumbal Shawl Massage, rooted in preHispanic methods, are inspired by the destination’s Mayan ancestry. It’s always a good idea to precede a treatment with the Riviera Maya Water Ceremony, a blissful 50-minute hydrotherapy journey in a clay room, ice room, sauna, and a Sensation Pool with waterfalls, water bubble beds, and other relaxing and detoxifying activations. For a getaway close to home yet exotic enough for bragging rights, this luxe oceanfront (and all-inclusive!) treasure is worth finding. (rivieramaya.grandvelas.com) « PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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ESCAPE TRAVEL JOURNAL
BOUND to Buenos Aires
Anushka Blau, founder of Anushka Spa, Salon, and Cosmedical Center in West Palm Beach, has devoted nearly five decades of her life to bringing out the best in every woman—a passion perhaps inspired by the beauty of her Argentinian homeland. “Similar to Manhattan, Buenos Aires is a city that doesn’t sleep,” Blau says. “There is a liveliness and vitality that is contagious and makes you feel part of the city’s heartbeat. My affinity for its rich culture runs deep and is a foundational part of who I am today.” Blau lives in Palm Beach Gardens, but since most of her relatives still reside in Buenos Aires, she typically returns at least once per year. Her favorite tradition on every visit is enjoying high tea at the luxurious Alvear Palace Hotel with her family. —Skye Sherman
VIBE Cosmopolitan, sophisticated, trendy
WHERE TO SHOP Must-visit shopping galleries are Galerías Pacífico (galeriaspacifico.com. ar), where you can view original frescos and representations from famous Argentine painters, and the historic Patio Bullrich (shoppingbullrich.com.ar), which also houses art.
FASHION ESSENTIALS FOR DAY Gucci jeans, a white linen shirt, an Hermès belt, Boniface kneehigh leather boots, and a leather tote bag with an Hermès scarf tied on the side. HOW TO START THE DAY Going for a brisk walk down one of my favorite avenues, such as Avenida Santa Fe or Avenida del Libertador.
Galerías Pacífico
GUILTY PLEASURE Going dancing after dark and staying up until it’s light. The place to be is Jet BA (jet.com.ar) at Avenida Costanera.
SIGNATURE DRINK The wine, the wine, the wine—Malbec, Bonarda, and so many more.
Mar del Plata
WHEN TO GO Springtime (end of September to November) has ideal weather, and everything is in bloom.
A MUST-DO EXPERIENCE The energy and enthusiasm of an Argentine soccer game is like no other sporting event.
A NEARBY EXCURSION Take a day trip to Mar del Plata, which is an hour flight from Buenos Aires.
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La Boca
DEENSEL
A SOLO OUTING Visit El Ateneo Grand Splendid—the most incredible bookstore! It was once a movie house and theater but has been converted into a beautiful bookstore that has a delicious café on the theater’s stage.
LOCAL DISHES TO DREAM ABOUT Pasqualina, which is a spinach pie with hard-boiled eggs inside; empanadas de humita (corn-filled—yum!); mariscada (seafood extravaganza); alfajores de maizena; and flan con dulce de leche.
El Ateneo Grand Splendid
A CULTURAL ACTIVITY Visit La Boca to see where tango was born. HOMETOWN GOODS TO SAMPLE AND STOCKPILE Havanna alfajores and havannets are divine—the best yummy gifts to bring back to family and friends.
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PA L M BE ACH GARAGE R E PAIR - RE ST ORAT ION - MAINT E NANCE - ST ORAGE
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HIGH ROAD
GAME Changer
Infiniti’s all-new QX60 raises its game in the midsize luxury crossover market, and scores big By Howard Walker In the words of Toy Story’s Buzz Lightyear: “To infinity and beyond!” Okay, switch the “y” in “infinity” to an “i,” and Buzz could have been talking about Infiniti’s brand-new QX60 three-row sport-ute and how it’s set to take Nissan’s luxury brand beyond and into the future. Truth is, for the past decade, Infiniti-with-an-i has been on somnambulant snooze control, offering slim pickings in the way of new products or innovation. Sedans, SUVs, and coupes that were cool when they came out, are now definitely cruising past their sell-by dates. Take the previous-gen QX60. This bland Jello-O mold on wheels has been around since 2012. In car years, that’s older than Betty White. Yet, amazingly, it was Infiniti’s top seller last year.
But Infiniti’s image is all about to change with the arrival in showrooms of the stylish 2022 QX60. Its sleek, sexy design will definitely have you at hello. There’s a touch of Range Rover Velar and Lincoln Aviator in the longish hood, sweptback windshield, swooping roofline, and high waist. The 20-inch rims and shimmery Moonbow Blue paint on our top-of-the-line $65,000 Autograph model tester will have you looking back as you walk away. And it’s overflowing with detailing: the slash of Zorro LEDs above the headlights, the curvy clamshell hood, the intricate pattern of the grille inserts, the bold rear. There’s plenty to feast your eyes on here. Slide behind the wheel and you’ll see a cabin transformed. Even the $46,850 base model gets
wall-to-wall leather, while our fancy Autograph is lavished with semi-aniline hides stitched and quilted to mimic the ripples created when dropping a pebble in a pond. I kid you not. Add to this the matte-finish wood, piano-black features, and satin metal accents, and there’s no doubt that this is a proper high-luxe ride. For families, the QX still offers the flexibility and versatility of three-row seating. While that third row is just about big enough for adults on short trips, it’s perfect for kids. And Infiniti has nailed the entry-and-exit bit with middle-row captain’s chairs that flip forward at the touch of a button. With the second-row seats in place and the third row folded flat, you get a cavernous 41 cubic feet of load-carrying space. With everything folded, you can expect more than 75 cubic feet. For me, the biggest change between the new QX60 and its predecessor is the way it drives. We’re talking night and day. Yes, the Teflon-smooth 3.5-liter V6 carries over pretty much unchanged—thankfully Infiniti resisted the temptation to trade it for a hyperactive turbocharged four—and it continues to add a true luxury dimension to the Q. As before, the V6 brings a muscley 295 horsepower
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POWER FILE
PRICE: FROM $47,875 ENGINE: 3.5-LITER V6 TRANSMISSION: 9-SPEED AUTOMATIC POWER: 295 HP TORQUE: 270 LB-FT 0-60: 6.6 SECONDS TOP SPEED: 120 MPH LENGTH/ WIDTH: 198/86 INCHES WEIGHT: 4,500 POUNDS (EST) WHY WE LOVE IT: BECAUSE IT SETS A NEW CLASS BENCHMARK IN LUXURY.
to the party. But the big upgrade here is the switch from a lackluster continuously variable transmission (CVT) to a more responsive 9-speed automatic with paddle shifters. Now when you crush the gas pedal from standstill, the QX60 scampers off the line like a Learjet on takeoff. Even as the revs soar, the V6 is bank-vault silent, due in part to the new acoustic glass and 35 pounds of sound-deadening packed in. At freeway cruising speeds, the lack
of wind and road noise is uncanny. Slightly stiffer suspension and quicker, recalibrated electric-assist steering gives the QX a nimble, athletic feel through the twisties while the ride always remains smooth and calm. All QX60s come with front-wheel drive standard, with all-wheel drive a two-grand option. (Infiniti charges $3,000 for the same feature on the top Autograph model.) It’s not intended for mud-up-to-the-axles off-roading, but it will give you confidence in wet and slippery conditions. This section of the market is brimming with terrific offerings—everything from the Acura MDX
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FOLLOW HOWARD WALKER’S THE WHEEL WORLD BLOG ON PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM
and the Volvo XC90, to Lincoln’s Nautilus, Lexus’ RX, and the new Genesis GV80. But this QX60 is a terrific contender that goes straight to the top of the class. It’s going to create quite the “buzz.” «
Promotion and Events
MAC FABRICS & DESIGN CENTER Mac Fabrics & Design Center is a historic, 68-year-old retail business specializing in exquisite home interiors. A visual adventure awaits you in luxurious fabrics, unique furniture, lamps, rugs, pillows, outdoor cushions, and accessories. Visit our upholstery shop and workroom to view the creation of handmade draperies and custom pillows. Our complimentary design professionals are available to assist you with your next project. 535 24th St. | West Palm Beach 561-833-7000 | macfabrics.com
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ESCAPE
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Class ACT
The Burger Boat Company’s 50 Cruiser has the grandeur of a superyacht in a smaller package By Howard Walker
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There’s this term, “gentleman’s yacht.” Can’t say I know precisely what the definition is. But for me, it conjures an image of vintage style and elegance, with sleek, simple, timeless lines—and lots of varnished mahogany and mirror-polished stainless steel. See a yacht like this on the water and it moves with grace and pace, parting waves like a hot knife through butter. And being a true gentlemanly vessel, it would have a sunkissed George Clooney at the helm. The artisans at Wisconsin-based Burger Boat Company have been building gentlemen’s yachts since the early 1900s. Their newest is the compact Burger 50 Cruiser, which carries on those traditions yet seamlessly merges eons-old boatbuilding techniques with some very cool technology. Just gazing at the yacht makes my heart soar. It is strong and purposeful, with curves in all the right places, miles of varnished cap rails, and decks of teak. It oozes class in the same way a Hinckley, Hunt, or Hood does. But it doesn’t sacrifice function for form. I love the 50 Cruiser’s tall, glass-filled pilothouse, with its slender pillars that ensure a
360-degree, CinemaScope view from the wheel. Top marks as well for the wide decks and high rails for safe line-handling. Not to mention that deep foredeck sofa with wellpositioned cupholders and music speakers for cocktail-hour cruises. Yes, I wish the hull was 5 feet longer at the bow to visually stretch the lines. From some angles, the Cruiser does look a little on the stubby side. But 50 feet bow to stern is just about the perfect size for an owner/driver to comfortably work the boat. And comfort is the watchword here. Much of that is due to the unique shape of the aluminum hull that came off the computer screens of legendary Dutch naval architects Vripack. Using their patented Slide Hull design, cleverly positioned underwater strakes lift the boat and channel air underneath. Additional win-win benefits of the hull design include improved fuel efficiency, an impressive turn of speed, and a smoother ride in gnarly seas. Speaking of efficiency and top speed, the Burger gets its power from a pair of 600-horsepower Volvo Penta D8s. They’re
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POWER FILE
PRICE: UPON REQUEST LENGTH: 50 FEET BEAM: 15 FEET, 2 INCHES DRAFT: 4 FEET, 3 INCHES POWER: 2 X 600-HP VOLVO PENTA D8 DIESELS TOP SPEED: 31 KNOTS WHY WE LOVE IT: BECAUSE IT’S THE TRUE DEFINITION OF AN ELEGANT, CUSTOM-BUILT GENTLEMAN’S YACHT.
coupled to spacesaving IPS drives with joystick controls for magical, slide-it-sideways maneuvering. Those muscley twin-turbo straight-sixes can punch the 50 to a top speed of 31 knots, or throttle back for an easy 26-knot cruising speed. Burger makes sure they’re well-insulated and whisper quiet too; no gentleman likes to raise his voice. The interior layout is the work of Miami-
based De Basto Designs, which has kept the theme bright, especially in the airy salon, with cream-colored fabrics and veneers. The narrowish cabin has a well-equipped galley on the starboard side, opposite the U-shaped sofa-cum-dinette. The power-sliding sunroof adds light and air and makes for perfect dining under the stars. The back deck features an almost full-width sofa and mirror-varnished table for entertaining. A barbecue, a sink, and counter space is
built into the transom, and a huge hydraulic swim platform makes it possible to launch a tender—or a 10-year-old swimmer—into the water. To stow all those must-have water toys, there’s even an in-hull garage at the stern. Back inside, steps leading down from the salon take you below decks, where there’s a gorgeous, full-beam owner’s suite with massive hull windows. Up in the bow there’s an equally spacious forward VIP cabin. While there’s no bunk room for the kids, Burger is quick to point out that the 50 Cruiser, like all Burger boats, is very much a custom build. Within reason, you can get whatever layout you want. For now, Burger is staying mum as to the price of this new 50 Cruiser. But the astonishing quality and craftsmanship, wonderful fit and finish, and high level of equipment will ensure it isn’t cheap. But then again, a true gentleman wouldn’t dream of asking the price. Naturally, money is no object. «
Promotion and Events
SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER AND AQUARIUM Join the South Florida Science Center on Saturday, December 4, for an evening of electrifying entertainment, captivating cuisine, and exhilarating craft cocktails as it celebrates 60 years of science with shocking performances from ArcAttack and immersive experiences highlighting the center’s transformative future. Sponsored by PNC Bank and Palm Beach Illustrated. 4801 Dreher Trail N. | West Palm Beach 561-832-1988 | sfsciencecenter.org
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ICONIC n o i t u l o Ev Aerin Lauder joins forces with The Colony, channeling her Palm Beach heritage to design a villa that embodies the island’s contemporary allure
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By Heather Graulich | Portrait photography by Gabor Jurina
Above: The Aerin Villa Jasmine at The Colony Opposite page: Sarah Wetenhall and Aerin Lauder Portraits shot on location at the Lauder residence in East Hampton, New York Aerin Lauder’s wardrobe: Giambattista Valli Hair and makeup: @AlexaRodulfo for T3 micro & La Mer Estée Lauder
Walking from The Colony’s playful pink lobby, with its pagodaframed fireplace and bespoke de Gournay wallpaper of cavorting monkeys and bejeweled panthers, it’s just a few steps to cross Hammon Avenue, the hotel’s home since 1947. There, tucked in a hedge, an unassuming gate leads to a shaded path and the pecky cypress front door of Villa Jasmine. But it feels miles away from the posh Palm Beach “Pink Paradise” hotel you’ve just left. That’s by design. When Sarah Wetenhall, president and CEO of The Colony, wanted to reimagine the seven apartment-style “villas” located in the hotel’s historic Casa Mañana founders’ residence, she envisioned spaces that felt just as welcoming as the main building, but differed from its fanciful aesthetic. For the Aerin Villa Jasmine, a 2,200-square-foot ground floor apartment, that meant partnering with another of Palm Beach’s power players: Aerin Lauder, the granddaughter of cosmetics trailblazer and longtime Palm Beacher Estée Lauder, and a beauty and design icon herself with a namesake lifestyle brand, Aerin. “It was a desire to offer a palette in which different Palm Beach personalities could express their interpretation of what Palm Beach style and design looks like,” Wetenhall says of the Casa Mañana villas. “When people ask me what makes Palm Beach style different from the Hamptons or Nantucket, it’s that sense of whimsy, and I think Aerin gets that to a T. There’s an ethereal quality to the island, but she can appreciate it without taking it too seriously. And that’s a big part of The Colony’s appeal. I’m blessed to be the steward of a giant pink building!” For her part, Lauder says she was excited to join in The Colony’s latest design refreshments, which began in 2017, shortly after Sarah and her husband, Andrew, purchased the hotel. It was a homecoming of sorts for all of them. Lauder remembers how her grandparents, Estée and Joseph, loved going to The Colony for dinner and parties. There’s a framed black-and-white photo of them hanging in the hotel,
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painted wallpaper, and a gleaming restoration of the original black terrazzo flooring. The ballroom and other public spaces received makeovers, as well. In early 2020, the Wetenhalls teamed up with Robert Caravaggi, original owner of the now-closed New York social hot spot Swifty’s, to turn the hotel’s restaurant into a pop-up version of the intimate dining experience with a tropical twist. The concept stayed around this year with both indoor dining and alfresco service by the pool. The celebrity design collabs are continuing in the villas. Along with Lauder’s touch on Villa Jasmine, Kemble Interiors designed Villa Poinciana, while sisters Beth Aschenbach and Danielle Norcross, the team behind popular lifestyle blog Palm Beach Lately, partnered with Cali-chic decor brand Serena & Lily for the Sisters’ Suite villa. With help from Kemble Interiors, Wetenhall herself remodeled Villa Bougainvillea, often referred to as the Owners’ Villa, with its private terrace and courtyard boasting a historic circa-1929 fountain. Another villa will soon receive a high-end touch, this time by L.A.-based designer Mark D. Sikes, who is known for his timeless blue-and-white palettes and his design credo to “make it beautiful.” In designing Villa Jasmine, Lauder also set out to make it beautiful while creating an immediately welcoming space reminiscent of her friend Kelly Klein’s Palm Beach home, designed with David Piscuskas of 1100 Architect. “Her style and sensibility are so beautiful, and I love the simplicity of her home—light wood furniture, white cushions, really clean, and pure,” explains Lauder. “You can really enjoy the flowers, the palms, the beauty of the environment. I wanted the villa to feel effortless, tropical, inviting. “With every project we work on, we always have a beautiful vestibule with wonderful light fixtures, a console, fresh-cut palms, or flowers. At Villa Jasmine you have a straw console, palms in a pretty vase. It has this wonderful, inviting, homey feel and that’s what we wanted.” Lauder adds that she used fabric by the British company Colefax & Fowler on the curtains for “whimsy and fun that’s still modern and fresh.”
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Top right: Sarah Wetenhall and Aerin Lauder Left column and opposite page: Curated details from the Aerin Villa Jasmine reflect Lauder’s style.
smiling with friends and bedecked in costumes for a 1972 soiree. “We were approached to work with The Colony and, as you know, I love Palm Beach,” says Lauder. “Estée first started [coming here] in 1937, so it’s always been very special to us as a family. I was honored, and it was a wonderful partnership.” For the Wetenhalls, The Colony is a family legacy. Andrew’s father, Bob, was a partner in the hotel from 1969 to the late 1990s, and he still maintains a penthouse residence there. When the opportunity to bring it back into the family arose, Sarah and Andrew jumped. “We had so many memories of sitting by the hotel pool, saying, ‘Gosh, only if,’” Sarah says, reminiscing on family visits to The Colony before the purchase. “We felt the shine had come off the jewel. Our decision [to buy] was rooted in a love for Palm Beach, that island ethos that we all know and understand intrinsically. It was without a doubt the right choice.” Since buying the hotel, the Wetenhalls have completed a number of projects in partnership with Mimi McMakin and Celerie Kemble of Kemble Interiors. The lobby refresh, managed by Shapiro Pertnoy Companies, included the three-dimensional pagoda, hand-
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Other touches in the two-bedroom, twobath villa are from the Aerin line, such as faux-shagreen serving pieces, raffia candle sleeves, and lighting that evokes organic, natural elements. These blend seamlessly with the 1929 structure’s cypress beams, terracotta flooring, and arched windows to simultaneously pay homage to old Palm Beach and speak to more modern island aesthetics. There is more to come for The Colony property and Wetenhall and Lauder’s partnership. The pair will collaborate again to decorate the lobby for the holidays. And both women shared how they used the time afforded by pandemic business disruptions to tackle new creative projects, exploring what their clients will want and need as travel and retail landscapes react and evolve. A new green version of Lauder’s popular Paulette entertaining collection is now available, and this spring, she will launch a bridge set inspired by one her grandmother owned. As people have spent more time at home, games, serving pieces, and scented candles have been top sellers at Aerin, so those will remain a focus as families enjoy new routines of being together. Lauder notes that she was delighted to partner with Colefax & Fowler on a line of travel bags in Eloise (a white fabric with green and gray flowers) that debuted at Aerin in October. And she’s especially excited about her latest book with Assouline on Estée’s life, which she co-wrote with her sister, Jane, and was produced completely through Zoom meetings. Estée Lauder: A Beautiful Life will be released this month. “What gave me the green light to start the Aerin brand almost 10 years ago was Estée’s dream and following the passion in your heart,” says Lauder of her grandmother, who passed away in 2004. “Her vision gave me the courage to do it. And there’s a lot of heritage
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Each room in the two-bedroom Aerin Villa Jasmine features sea-inspired decor, numerous historical details, and products from the Aerin collection. Opposite page: Aerin Lauder
inspiration in our brand. She loved the idea of a fragrance ‘wardrobe’—that you wouldn’t wear the same fragrance to play tennis as you would to go to dinner. That’s why we have 22 fragrances in our line. There’s so much inspiration from the past but also a lot of newness.” And Estée’s love of Palm Beach continues to inspire Lauder in her own life and work. “Palm Beach was her happy place,” Lauder says. “The flowers and the beautiful colors and smells. It’s a wonderful place to live, to bring up a family, to retire to. What’s interesting is that even though Palm Beach is evolving, getting younger, and feeling very buzzy, there’s a sense of tradition.” Come Fall 2022, The Colony plans to do a full decor renovation of all 79 guestrooms and suites, again in collaboration with Kemble Interiors. This effort will be in conjunction with further improvements to guest services, the beach program offerings, and other experiences throughout the property—all while keeping those Palm Beach traditions in mind. Wetenhall says the past five years have been a whirlwind of growth as she’s learned new things about herself and hospitality. Having shifted from a career in luxury public relations, she’s discovered a more creative, visual side to herself while leading the hotel’s transformation, inspired by her surroundings and the muse of The Colony herself. “Everyone who knows the property has an emotional attachment to it,” says Wetenhall. “That’s why we call The Colony a ‘she.’ It’s like a person. We learned pretty quickly in our first year of ownership that the pace of change is not always as fast as you’d like, particularly at a historic property and in a town like Palm Beach, which is entrenched in all the best ways with generations of people who know and love it. Change has to be very organic and patient. You’ve got to look at who your guests are, talk to the town, and marry what people want and what the hotel needs. We want to lead her forward in a gentle and gracious fashion, honoring the past while catering to today’s traveler.” «
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Fi T PERFECT
BY PAIGE BOWERS PHOTOGRAPHY BY NICK MELE
Hair and makeup: Deborah Koepper, Deborah Koepper Beauty, Palm Beach Photographed on location at the Kips Bay Decorator Show House Palm Beach
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ALWAYS WILLING TO CHANGE WITH THE TIMES, ALVIN VALLEY IS DESIGNING FOR THE MODERN WOMAN— NO MATTER WHAT LIFE THROWS HER WAY
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W
hen the pandemic upended everything in March 2020, designer Alvin Valley rode shock waves of shutdowns and canceled orders before leaving Manhattan to regroup at his Long Island home. For a moment, it was a difficult time to be the “King of Pants,” a moniker that evolved from the title “Lord of the Pants,” which he earned in 2001 when his Classic 111 pant became the must-have piece in every stylish woman’s wardrobe. But last spring, as people spent more time nesting than socializing, joggers and yoga pants seemed to become de rigueur. Or were they? Valley started thinking about who his customer truly is, coming to the conclusion that she is “a hypersocial woman who needs that constant entertainment of being in front of people.” She would not be an athleisure-wearing hermit forever. If anything, she would change the way she entertained—and she’d still need something great to wear. “I went to the Hamptons and signed a lease right away on a store,” Valley says. “I built it up in two or three weeks, and clients started coming around. It was word of mouth, just quietly done, and it was a success. We started getting data from our clients about where they’d be going next, and they told us Miami and Palm Beach. I knew we needed to go there too, because when they got there, they were not going to shop at a big store or a mall.” By anticipating his clients’ future wants and addressing them in a graceful, nimble manner, Valley has earned the love and loyalty of the women he has dressed. Where Valley once worked behind the scenes, he’s now more public-facing, with well-located storefronts that cater to his clients’ new dressing needs. In the Hamptons, in Palm Beach, and at a pop-up at The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach, Valley is navigating the new normal by providing his clientele with softer looks that reflect the moment. “He is the pure essence of creativity,” says Maria Buccellati, a personal friend and the chief executive officer of Faith Connexion. “He has such good energy and great taste, and his pieces are really feminine and beautiful.” Valley says he developed this flair as a teenager, when he would sketch clothes for himself and his sisters, then bring them to a seamstress who turned his concepts into reality. “Some of these designs were outrageous,” he recalls. “I’d make
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them during the summer and then go back to school and tell people that I spent the summer in London and this was what they were wearing. It wasn’t true, but it seemed that people would accept that story more than if I told them that the ideas came from my own head.” Though some of Valley’s early designs showed creative promise, he pursued an architecture degree before recognizing that fashion was where he really belonged. An architect’s life, he says, was just too monk-like for his tastes; designers “need more attention and spotlight and company from their clients, who amuse them and push them to create.” After raising money from family and friends, Valley opened a store in Coconut Grove, aiming to dress private school teenagers, evolving with them and their changing tastes. He hired a patternmaker who was especially skilled at pants, gleaning many of his own ideas about how to design them from her. But a cotton Lycra tank top with an adjustable bra—called the Tie Top—was his first big hit because it could work for a lot of girls, regardless of their size. “I put my label on the outside, so you could read my name
Above: Alvin Valley with his muse, Devon McCready, co-owner and gallery director of Samuel Owen, Palm Beach. McCready wears Alvin Valley’s black-and-white check dress. Opposite page: Valley adjusts his iconic pink jumpsuit on McCready, who calls his designs “timeless and elegant with a modern flair.” She adds, “I always feel sexy and empowered when i wear his pieces.”
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HE HAS SUCH GOOD ENERGY AND GREAT TASTE, AND HIS PIECES ARE REALLY FEMININE AND BEAUTIFUL.” —Maria Buccellati
Above: Devon McCready in a black lace skirt and white blouse by Alvin Valley Opposite page: McCready in an Alvin Valley pink two-piece ensemble with the designer
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on the back of the top where you tied the strap,” he explains. “I sold that top night and day, and it was literally paying all my expenses for the shop and the employees. One time I was on a date at the movies, and while we stood in line to buy tickets, there was an ocean of girls in front of us, all wearing that top in different colors. It was a total ‘Oh my God’ moment.” Ultimately, Valley set his sights on New York and moved there in 2000 to launch his first full collection. “A buyer from Saks saw the collection, and she said to me, ‘Let me give you a piece of advice. This collection is amazing, but I will buy all the pants. If you just show the pants, you will have a hit.’ I had no ego at the time, so I did just that and everyone bought the pants. The deliveries went out before September 11. Two weeks after that happened, there were 100 messages from stores wanting more pants, even though New York had just been through this tragedy.”
Valley believes he has been driven by moments like this, when, despite an upheaval, he realizes what his clients need most and delivers. He loves when he has a hit, and that hit becomes a trend. But pants are what put him on the map, and while he won’t reveal his secrets, he says it all comes down to how he views a woman’s leg. “It’s about paying attention to the inner thigh and buttocks and giving that lift and push that creates a smaller bum. I tweak that depending on the client, because it’s all about proportion. If I ever lost my eyesight, it’d be over.” Alexandra von Furstenberg has been a loyal Valley customer, in large part because of his great eye. “Finding a good-fitting pant is not so easy,” she says. “His fit so well. So [when you buy from him] you stay consistent.” Buccellati says she prefers his lace dresses and loves his sense of color. Valley appreciates the trust he has from clients like these, who allow him to push them into new shapes and proportions. He creates for all bodies, he notes, because he wants everyone to wear something that makes them feel good. So, as it turns out, the Alvin Valley woman is not a monolith. Yes, she’s social, but she also has other interests. “She’s a woman with ideas and ambition, a woman like Sharon Stone, who is amazing and has something to say. I love dressing her,” says Valley. “She’s like Angela Bassett, who is nonstop and knows how to wear clothes well. Or she’s like Jill Biden, who I love seeing in the White House now, and I love being able to help her dress the part.” As the world reopens and Valley looks into his crystal ball, he sees his clients traveling for extended periods of time, donning “resort-like things that you can wear easily as you go from the beach to your temporary home.” He’ll be opening additional pop-up shops to meet that need, in El Dorado, Puerto Rico, and Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, and undoubtedly in any locale where a gaggle of his girls stay for any period of time. “In these closer and more intimate situations, it’s a great opportunity in a creative sense, but also to see where the clothes I create go,” he says. “I always want to be sure the kitty goes to a good home.” «
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Nathalia Arja in Firebird. Choreography by Jerome Robbins and George Balanchine. 96
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Miami City Ballet’s production of Firebird. Choreography by Jerome Robbins and George Balanchine.
BY SUSIE STANTON STAIKOS
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Ballet dancers communicate through movement, utilizing flexibility and muscular agility to create poetic shapes. Their costumes are the icing on the cake, conveying character, time, and place, and enhancing the telling of a visual story. In the same way that high fashion and streetwear influence how we dress, ballet has produced its own evolving trends ever since its origins in the Renaissance courts of France and Italy. Full-length ballets remain a spectacle, and costumes continue to add to the magic, either introducing a fresh look to a beloved perennial or helping to set the tone in a contemporary production. Thinking outside the box is one of Miami City Ballet’s hallmarks, and MCB’s artistic director, Lourdes Lopez, is the visionary who leads the process. When it comes to the technical aspects of a production, it can take 18 months to twoand-a-half years to bring ideas from the page to the stage. The vision is set in motion when Lopez and the choreographer collaborate to select costume, set, and technical
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As the Miami City Ballet prepares to stage the North American premiere of choreographer Alexei Ratmansky’s Swan Lake, we explore the company’s approach to costume design and the inspiration behind the new look of one of the most iconic ballets of all time
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By Ivey Leidy Photography by Kent Anderson
designers. Discussions begin with how the choreographer envisions the characters and whether they will be in tutus, chiffon skirts, or unitards. The designer comes up with the colors, fabrics, and materials, using shapes to give depth to what the choreographer is trying to accomplish. “It’s fascinating to hear those conversations,” Lopez says of this process. “It’s my favorite thing that I do, to bring everyone together and watch it evolve PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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before my eyes. To be honest, I like giving artists free range to a very large extent. I’m not a choreographer. What I love to do is bring artists together. Sometimes I’m asked, ‘What do you think?’ and I give my opinion. For the most part, I trust their talent.” Designers with different backgrounds have brought their unique talents to several recent MCB productions. For the company’s 2016 staging of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Lopez called upon Miamiborn, New York–based visual artist Michele 98
Costume Department Director Eleanor Wolfe fits a dancer at Miami City Ballet.
Oka Doner to bring a more modern feel to the ballet choreographed by the great George Balanchine. Oka Doner transported Shakespeare’s comedy from the woods outside Athens to an underwater forest of sargassum seaweed and mangroves. This inspired nod to Florida added a new dimension to the place where fairies cause mischief in the romantic lives of humans. The project, which took two years to complete, was Oka Doner’s first foray into designing for dance. She conducted research
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Miami City Ballet dancers Katia Carranza and Carlos Quenedit in Swan Lake. Choreography by Alexei Ratmansky.
at the University of Miami’s Museum of Marine Invertebrates, eventually transforming the creatures of the watery world into sets, backdrops, and 150 costumes. Organza and soft leather fabrics were embellished with shimmering crystals, beads, sequins, pearls, and metallic thread. Where the source text calls for the character Bottom to don a donkey head, Oka Doner instead used the head of a manatee. When planning for MCB’s 2020 production of Firebird, Lopez sought to channel the
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ballet’s roots. Based on a medieval Russian folk tale, Firebird shot composer Igor Stravinsky to fame. It premiered in 1910 under Ballets Russe director Sergei Diaghilev. A 1970 revival of George Balanchine’s original 1949 production in collaboration with Jerome Robbins included costumes and sets by the Russian artist Marc Chagall. Lopez wanted to go back to an authentic setting and briefed set and costume designer Anya Klepikov, a professor of theater at UMass Amherst, to create a different Russian feel from that of Chagall’s. “I spoke to Anya and said I wanted Firebird to look truly, truly, truly Russian, like the vibrant colored lacquered boxes,” says Lopez. Klepikov grew up with Russian fairy tales, having spent her childhood in the former USSR before coming to the U.S. She was the perfect choice to realize this vision. In 2017 Lopez decided the time had come to reimagine MCB’s 27-year-old production of The Nutcracker. Once again, she wanted the new staging to reflect the Miami community. “The winter holidays look very different in Miami than they do up north with the fireplace, chestnuts, and hot chocolate in the world where The Nutcracker lives,” she notes. Lopez called upon celebrated Cuban
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American design duo Isabel and Ruben Toledo. Isabel, who passed away in 2019, was a fashion designer who etched her name in history when she dressed Michelle Obama for President Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration. Ruben is a set designer who often worked alongside his wife to create magical dreamscapes that would make her costumes pop. “I knew their vision would make Nutcracker have a Miami tropical feel to it,” adds Lopez. For Nutcracker, Firebird, Midsummer, and every MCB show, after the sketches have been completed, the work in the costume shop begins. This is when Eleanor Wolfe, the director of the costume department, steps in. She is an experienced patternmaker who worked in New York for 28 years before joining MCB. Wolfe explains that while designers know what the costumes should look like, they don’t always know how they should be made. “Structure, fabrics, color, scope, shape, and style are dictated by the designer,” she says. “I collaborate with the designer to develop how we’re going to make the costume. The costume artisans and I are the ones who craft it and adapt it for movement.” A sample costume is made for the designer to see. Once it is ready to fit, the
© JÉRÔME KAPLAN
Miami City Ballet dancers in Swan Lake. Choreography by Alexei Ratmansky.
Above: Costume sketch of Pas Espanol by Jérôme Kaplan for Alexei Ratmansky’s Swan Lake. Choreography by Alexei Ratmansky. PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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Clockwise from top left: Shimon Ito as Puck in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, choreography by George Balanchine; Jordan-Elizabeth Long in A Midsummer Night’s Dream; sketches for Michele Oka Doner’s costumes for Titania and Puck from A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
CITY BALLET.
an army of makeup artists, hairstylists, and dressers equipped with sewing machines should anything need on-thespot upkeep. Miami City Ballet will again thrill audiences this season with the North American premiere of choreographer Alexei Ratmansky’s Swan Lake. Originally co-produced by Ballett Zürich and La Scala Milan, the production boasts sets and costumes by internationally renowned French ballet, opera, and theater designer Jérôme Kaplan. MCB will tour it in South Florida in early 2022, at the Adrienne Arsht Center (February 11-13), the Kravis Center (February 19-20), and the Broward Center (February 26-27). Surprisingly, this was Kaplan’s first time designing for the Tchaikovsky-composed ballet. While Kaplan toyed with many ideas, Ratmansky urged him to keep it simple. After all, “it’s just a fairy tale in the middle COURTESY MIAMI
dancers are often the ones who provide notes on how well they’re able to move in it. “They are more aware of the steps they are going to [take] and the balance they are going to need,” says Wolfe. “If you try to put something really large on top of their heads, it looks great to us, but we don’t know how it’s going to throw off the balance for the dancer. We don’t want to overwhelm the dancer with the costume because the audience comes to see the dance. Firebird had a lot of elaborate costumes, but a lot of attention was given to making sure you saw the movement of the dancer.” Costumes take a lot of beating. They are often wet after a performance, so the fabrics must be able to withstand such rigors and have durability. The wardrobe supervisor is responsible for the care, storage, and transport of the costumes. When in storage, the costumes hang on rows of rails in climatecontrolled conditions. They travel in special wardrobe boxes on wheels, accompanied by
ages,” he advised. They agreed to hearken to the original 1895 Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov revival. “To come back to what it was, something really romantic, because Swan Lake is a really romantic ballet and I reflect that in my costumes,” Kaplan stresses. He was inspired by archival documents Ratmansky showed him and other research into the nineteenth-century costumes. “We came back, more or less, to the tutu at the time
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© THE GEORGE BALANCHINE TRUST. PHOTO © ALEXANDER IZILIAEV
© THE GEORGE BALA NCHINE TRUST. PHOTO © ALEXANDER IZILIAEV
© THE GEORGE BALANCHINE TRUST. PHOTO © ALEXANDER IZILIAEV
of the original Swan Lake,” says Kaplan. “It’s a short, knee-length, romantic tutu. It’s not a skirt and not a flat tutu; it’s in between. It is very soft and must move a little bit.” It proved rather technical to make, but the final product comes close to the original form, albeit slightly lighter and not as stiff. The costume includes a small round hat at the back of the head, with hair hanging in ringlets—a fashionable style at the time that also emphasizes that the swans are really maidens under a spell. Having the ballet performed in Milan,
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Kaplan fell upon the idea to introduce a touch of Italian Renaissance for a warmer feel, instead of the more somber Northern European look. He also turned to Fortuny— the Spanish designer and creator of pleated silk fabrics who worked in Venice during the same timeframe as the original ballet—and to Pre-Raphaelite English paintings of the same period, combining these elements for the brides’ costumes in Act III. As well as gleaning inspiration from history, Kaplan wove his own style into the costumes. “I wanted to create beautiful lines and shapes,
Left column: Miami City Ballet School students in George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker, choreography by George Balanchine Above: Costumes from George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker
and for the men also; something pretty, sexy, and fresh,” he notes. He worked a lot on Rothbart, the antagonist who casts the spell on Princess Odette, turning her into a swan by day. Kaplan told Ratmansky that he intended to make an impressive Rothbart—a strong figure in black with big, articulated wings that move like real ones. Kaplan believes costumes without music, movement, and choreography are lifeless. “I need somebody inside the costume,” he says. “It’s a package, and I try to make a nice package. I try to help the dancers and the choreographer show something true and to make the choreographer happy and comfortable in the work.” He also views classical ballet as a cultural treasure, one that he is fortunate enough to contribute to. “For me, classical ballet is a part of our heritage, our Western heritage, and we need to fight to try to refresh classical ballet but not too much, only slightly; to put a nice frame around it. This is Swan Lake.” « PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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ON THE
PHOTOGRAPHY BY
GABOR JURINA Shot by Palm Beach Illustrated on location at One Thousand Museum, Miami Marie France Van Damme metallic swimsuit; Versace embellished skirt; Roger Vivier pumps; Jimmy Choo mesh handbag. For buying information, turn to page 186. Fashion editor: Katherine Lande
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Dolce & Gabbana tulle bodysuit, crystal embellished bodysuit Opposite page: Marie France Van Damme metallic swimsuit; Gucci coat, black beaded necklace, choker necklace. For buying information, turn to page 186.
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Chanel cardigan, pants, tweed jacket, leather handbag, chain belt; Roger Vivier embellished sandals. Opposite page: Carolina Herrera sequin gown; Jimmy Choo heels. For buying information, turn to page 186.
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Versace gown with embellished belt; Roger Vivier pumps. Opposite page: Louis Vuitton metallic dress, jacket For buying information, turn to page 186.
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Michael Kors Collection jersey twist dress; Jimmy Choo heels. For buying information, turn to page 186. Model: Maggie Jablonski, Muse Management, New York Hair and makeup: Heather Blaine, Creative Management, Miami Digital tech: Javier Sanchez PBI would like to extend a special thank you to ONE Sotheby’s International Realty, Miami
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SHARING THE STORIES OF HER SPORTS STRUGGLES AND SUCCESSES GIVES WATER-SKIER ELIZABETH MONTAVON A WAY TO ENCOURAGE OTHERS—AND LEAVE HER COMPETITION IN HER WAKE
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BY PAIGE BOWERS PHOTOGRAPHY BY IRVING MARTINEZ Elizabeth Montavon wanted nothing more than to compete at the prestigious Masters Waterski and Wakeboard Tournament this past Memorial Day weekend. The 27-year-old professional skier had been training hard for it—both on the lake and in the gym—and sharing that journey with her 11,000 Instagram followers. But in her last chance to qualify for the meet, Montavon fell short. Her Instagram account went silent as she worked through the disappointment. Online, she presented an image of a fighter focused on victory. After a few days offline, Montavon began to realize that she was still the fighter she’d always been (if not more so now), and that only she had the power to craft what came next in her competitive story. She decided it was time for a post. “Working hard quietly only benefits you,” she wrote underneath an Instagram video clip of her in the middle of a workout. “But working hard and sharing your story, the ups and downs, the
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“I FEEL A RESPONSIBILITY TO KEEP SHARING. STAYING QUIET IS SELFISH. TELL YOUR STORY.”
wins and losses, the good and bad, helps other people be better too. ... It’s not fun or easy to talk about the disappointing moments after working hard all off-season. However, I feel a responsibility to keep sharing. Staying quiet is selfish. Tell your story.” Whether it’s online, via her Ski or Die podcast and affiliated clothing line, or by slaloming behind a boat on a local lake, Montavon—who, at press time, was ranked No. 9 in the world—is telling a story of hard work and commitment to a physically demanding sport that has been important to her family for three generations. Yes, she’s hungry to win. Yes, she’s keen to make skiing look cool. But she’s also eager to be a positive role model for girls who might envision themselves competing at the same level someday too. “Elizabeth is not just trying to do good things with her personal life, skiing, and training,” says
Chet Raley, who has coached Montavon for the past three years. “She is out there being a role model for the next generation of girls who want to ski. For them to see a hometown girl with ambition and drive, who digs in and won’t take no for an answer, and who rides through the ups and downs is a good thing. Elizabeth is showing a generation that doesn’t like failure, that success and failure are actually pretty close bedfellows.” Montavon grew up in Dixon, Illinois, a small riverside town two hours west of Chicago. As a child, she lived in the house next door to the one in which her mother, Sally, was raised. At age 3 she learned to ski on the same river where her mother first picked up the sport. Skiing was no casual pastime in the Montavon household. Born into a family of competitive water-skiers, Montavon’s mother was the first American woman to compete as a trick skier at the same level as her male counterparts. Russian
coaches used to visit Dixon to tape Sally on the sly as she trained, and then bring the videos back to train their own athletes. As an 8-year-old, Elizabeth knew she liked skiing enough to start competing at a high level, and her parents stepped in to guide her nascent career. Because Florida is the epicenter of competitive skiing, the Montavons brought Elizabeth and her younger brother, Zach, south to train at some of the state’s prestigious ski schools. That training set her up for success as a junior professional—and later as an adult pro. But it wasn’t all calm waters. Sally Montavon says she saw her strong, intelligent daughter put her trust in people who ended up letting her down. Being a teenager is hard enough without the high expectations that come with competing in professional sports. But as Elizabeth was finding her way, she says she was surrounded by an unhealthy party culture, and there was no
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one there to stand up for younger athletes like her. Elizabeth would rather skip the specifics, but she says that at a time that was confusing enough without the pressures of competition, this particular pressure was more than she was ready for. “It didn’t make sense to me,” she recalls. “If we are trying to be better athletes, then why are we doing this stuff that makes us feel worse about ourselves? When you go back and look at the ranking lists from that time, there are a lot of junior athletes who don’t ski at all anymore.” Elizabeth almost became one of those athletes. She made the ski team at Rollins College, but says she endured such severe hazing—including teammates tinkering with her equipment—that she struggled in school and fell out of love with the sport. She left Rollins, her mother says, with her confidence shattered. Worse, was her outlook; she’d developed a firm belief that she deserved whatever bad things were coming to her. Then she met some people who convinced her otherwise. The University of Alabama offered her a full ski scholarship, an experience that was incredibly healing, she says. “They gave me the space to figure out what I was doing with my life, and the grace of skiing again,” she says. “I earned
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All-American honors for two of the three years I was there, and they made me feel safe while I was doing it.” She began to believe in herself. Raley’s coaching was helpful, as was her friendship with fellow skier George Levien, who she says looks out for her every day when she skis with him at Palm Beach Training Center in Boca Raton. “Elizabeth is always in attack mode,” Levien says. “She doesn’t just lollygag through sets like I get accused of doing. She is dedicated to being
the best skier in the world and it’s in the cards. She’s devoted and has the physical ability and puts in the time. She could really be the face of waterskiing, the poster girl.” Her mother doesn’t count that out. “It was incredibly brave of Elizabeth not to give up on herself and see that she was worthy of success,” she says. “Success is a process, not a destination. Elizabeth knew she would have to apply this to all aspects of her life, and it has been amazing for me to watch her overcome the things she was believing about herself that weren’t true and to see her grow as a result.” After her spring setback, Elizabeth recommitted herself to training hard and enjoying it—before taking on a series of summer competitions that could help her rise in the world standings. She is on the lake every day by 8 a.m., skiing her heart out as she strives to become the best. “She pushes herself until her hands are bleeding and her body is sore,” Raley says. “As long as she stays motivated, and continues to enjoy it, the sky’s the limit for her.” Whatever comes next, all odds are on Elizabeth Montavon showing up as her real and relatable self, as she fights her way to the top of the waterskiing world. «
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TASTE TRY THIS
Those who frequent southern West Palm Beach are familiar with Aioli, which has gained a cult following for its divine daily specials and baked goods. On Saturdays, families know to head there as early as possible to score some doughnuts. “The kids are still in PJs when they roll in with their parents,” says Melanie Hackman, who runs Aioli with her husband, chef Michael Hackman. “In season there is a line before the doors open. It’s a roll of the dice. Some mornings we are sold out by 9, some days you get lucky.” The doughnuts are available only on Saturdays. The process begins with a weekly meeting between chef Michael and his pastry team, led by Sabrina Fiorentino. The doughnuts start with a brioche dough that is transformed with seasonal flavors. Think: pumpkin spice, Dutch apple, bourbon pecan, and even s’mores. As Melanie notes, the endeavor is a labor of love. “Our bakery runs 20 hours a day, and Saturday’s bake is the largest of the week. First shift begins at 10 p.m. on Friday night. Music is cranked high to keep the team rolling.” (aioliwpb.com) —Mary Murray
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ASHLEY MEYER
Saturday SWEETS
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VIEW SOME WINTRY DOUGHNUT FLAVORS BY AIOLI AT PALMBEACH ILLUSTRATED.COM/AIOLI
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TASTE RECIPES
Chefs’ Favorite SIDE DISHES WHILE TURKEY WILL LIKELY BE THE CENTERPIECE OF YOUR THANKSGIVING TABLE, SIDE DISHES ARE WHERE THE HOME COOK GETS TO SHINE. HERE, FOUR LOCAL CHEFS SHARE THEIR PERSONAL FAVORITES.
«
LILA PHOTO
By Mark Spivak
TRUFFLED LOBSTER MACARONI AND CHEESE Anthony Sicignano, Executive Chef: Restaurants, The Breakers Palm Beach “Our truffled lobster macaroni and cheese is an elevated version of the childhood classic that takes comfort food to a new level,” explains Sicignano. “At Flagler Steakhouse, we recommend pairing this side with our bone-in filet mignon, but the richness of this dish will complement any holiday meal.” The sauce is a reduction of heavy cream along with Gruyère and Manchego, and the dish is topped with panko breadcrumbs, shaved black truffle, and a lobster claw. (thebreakers.com)
JORDAN VILONNA
«
«
CHEF MICHAEL BURGIO
PAPAS BRAVAS Aaron Black, Chef de Cuisine, PB Catch This savory potato dish is a great complement to the richness of a Thanksgiving meal. Potatoes, onions, olives, and garlic are sautéed until golden brown, sprinkled with zaatar (a Middle Eastern spice mix), and garnished with a sherry vinaigrette. “Thinking back to the Thanksgiving dinners of my childhood, everything was tasty, but the textures tended to be the same,” Black notes. “The Spanish accents in this dish offer another layer of flavor and texture.” (pbcatch.com)
CAULIFLOWER GRATIN Michael Burgio, Chef de Cuisine, Pistache “My mother used to buy a frozen version for herself because no one else liked it,” Burgio recalls of the gratins of his youth. “When I became a chef, I thought of that horrible, microwaved dish and created one with her in mind.” Gruyère, smoked gouda, white cheddar, and parmesan cheeses are melted in a bechamel sauce, which is then lightly seasoned and mixed with the cauliflower in a buttered baking dish. Bake uncovered until bubbling and golden brown, and sprinkle with chives before serving. (pistachewpb.com)
GRANDMOTHER’S RELISH TRAY « MY Lisabet Summa, Culinary Director, Big Time Restaurant Group “My grandmother always set her Thanksgiving table with a cut-crystal relish tray,” says Summa. “I didn’t like the pickled items as a child, but as a chef I appreciate the bright, acidic flavors they add to a meal. Making your own lacto-fermented pickles in sterile glass jars is fun, easy, and delicious. All you need is a salt brine, an assortment of favorite vegetables, and pickling spices. Let the jars sit for several weeks for the veggies to ferment completely.” l VIEW THE FULL RECIPES FOR THESE DISHES AT PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM/THANKSGIVINGSIDES (bigtimerestaurants.com) 118 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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GRAB AND GO
ALISSA DRAGUN
Serial restaurant entrepreneur Memphis Garrett has opened two new concepts in West Palm’s Grandview Public Market. The market’s food hall now houses the second location of Point Break Poke House, which debuted in Fort Lauderdale in 2016. Sharing the space is the first brick-and-mortar rendition of Blue Wave Sushi. Point Break Poke House focuses on the traditional Hawaiian seafood dish, enabling guests to build their own bowls by first choosing a base (white rice, quinoa, or forbidden rice), followed by a protein (tuna, salmon, hamachi, or tofu) topped with one of more than 20 sauces. Blue Wave Sushi specializes in fresh nigiri and rolls, delivered in a one-serving bento box. (garretthospitality group.com; grandviewpublic.com) —M.S.
COURTESY OF BLUE WAVE SUSHI
WAVE BREAK
Fresh poke and sushi offerings from Point Break Poke House and Blue Wave Sushi
A selective guide to Palm Beach-area restaurants THE LISTINGS The Palm Beach County dining scene has something for everyone, from funky burger bars and gastropubs to the glam style of iconic Palm Beach lounges. Here, find a listing of area standouts, organized by cuisine type, with descriptions, contact information, and price details for each. What the icons mean: $ $$ $$$
Dinner entree under $10 Most entrees $10-$25 Most entrees $25 or more
While not all-inclusive due to space limitations, our dining listings may vary every month and are constantly updated to showcase the culinary diversity of the area. Find more information on local dining options on palmbeachillustrated.com. NOTICE TO RESTAURATEURS: The establishments listed and their descriptions are printed at the discretion of the editors of Palm Beach Illustrated. They are not a form of advertisement, nor do they serve as a restaurant review. For more information, email editorial@palmbeachmedia.com
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AMERICAN 11 MAPLE STREET The inventive daily menu fuses organic produce, fresh seafood, and free-range game. 3224 N.E. Maple Ave., Jensen Beach (elevenmaple.com) $$$ 1000 NORTH The Jupiter Lighthouse serves as the backdrop for global takes on classic dishes. 1000 North U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter (1000north.com) $$$ AMERICAN CRAFT ALEWORKS This brewery and gastropub pairs a large menu with entertainment like vintage video games and live music. 200 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (americancraftaleworks.com) $$ AVOCADO GRILL Chef Julien Gremaud offers flavorful Florida-Caribbean bites served in a vibrant setting. 125 Datura St., West Palm Beach (avocadogrillwpb.com) $$ BEACON This waterfront grille is inspired by Mediterranean dishes tinged with a contemporary American feel. 1107 Lighthouse Rd., Jupiter (thebeaconjupiter.com) $$$ THE BLIND MONK Amid darkened environs, this tapas bar focuses on wine, craft beer, and small bites. 410 Evernia St. #107, West Palm Beach (theblindmonk.com) $$ BREEZE OCEAN KITCHEN Enjoy craft beer, specialty cocktails, and distinctly Floridian cuisine at this seaside gem at the Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa. 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan (eaupalmbeach.com) $$ BUCCAN Chef Clay Conley offers a wide-ranging menu of small plates that changes with the seasons. 350 S. County Road, Palm Beach (buccanpalmbeach.com) $$ THE BUTCHER SHOP BEER GARDEN & GRILL Located in a former airplane hangar, this spot features a spa-
cious dining area with a custom butcher case. 209 6th St., West Palm Beach (butchershopbeergarden.com) $$ CITRUS GRILLHOUSE Chef Scott Varricchio turns out artful seafood dishes at this casual bistro. 1050 Easter Lily Lane, Vero Beach (citrusgrillhouse.com) $$ CITY CELLAR WINE BAR & GRILL Offering pizza, dryaged steaks, fresh pasta, and seafood. 700 S. Rosemary Ave., West Palm Beach (citycellarwpb.com) $$ THE COOPER Practicing farm-to-table cooking in PGA Commons. 4610 PGA Blvd. Suite 100, Palm Beach Gardens (thecooperrestaurant.com) $$ CROSBY KITCHEN & BAR This stylish new American bistro offers a Manhattan-meets-Palm Beach vibe. 1406 S. Cypress Drive, Jupiter (crosbykitchenandbar.com) $$ DEATH OR GLORY This gastropub prioritizes outstanding cocktails and new-wave bar bites. 116 N.E. 6th Ave., Delray Beach (deathorglorybar.com) $$ ENTRE NOUS BISTRO Home-style cooking commingles with gourmet fare. 123 U.S. Hwy. 1, North Palm Beach (entrenousbistro.com) $$$ FARMER’S TABLE This establishment is committed to clean eating. 951 N. U.S. Hwy. 1, North Palm Beach; 1901 N. Military Trail, Boca Raton (farmerstableboca.com) $$ GALLEY This spot in the Hilton West Palm Beach offers grilled coastal-inspired delicacies. 600 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach (hiltonwestpalmbeach.com) $$$ GARY RACK’S FARMHOUSE KITCHEN At this healthy hangout, farm-fresh ingredients reign supreme. 204 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach; 399 S.E. Mizner Blvd., Boca Raton (farmhousekitchenboca.com) $$ PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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The History of HOT CHOCOLATE
EL LO
SIP WITH PBI
VI CO SCA FRANCE
Who doesn’t enjoy a nice cup of cocoa during the holiday season? The sweet, rich beverage is perfect for cool evenings and always seems to get us in the festive spirit. Yet the drink we are accustomed to has evolved significantly since its early beginnings in ancient Mesoamerica, a region that included portions of modern-day Mexico. It’s here that the Olmec—one of the earliest civilizations in Latin America—first discovered cacao plants and turned them into chocolate. They used the naturally antioxidant-rich chocolate, or xocoatl, as medicine in rituals. Centuries later, the Mayans continued to enjoy the “food of the gods” by grinding and roasting cacao seeds with chili peppers, cornmeal, and water to create a foamy, bitter drink. By 1528, explorer Hernán Cortés is rumored to have brought chocolate back to Spain after an expedition to the Americas. The exotic treat takes almost another century to reach France, by way of Anne of Austria, daughter of King Philip III of Spain, who, in 1615, married Louis XIII and celebrated the union with the indulgent libation. By 1657, the first chocolate house opened in London and ignited the trend that brings us that much closer to the cozy drink we love this time of year. Upgrade your next experience with this festive red velvet hot chocolate, as you contemplate the fascinating journey this magical bean has taken over the centuries. —Jules Aron
TAYLOR AMOS
RED VELVET HOT CHOCOLATE Ingredients 1/2 cup oat milk (or milk of choice) 1/4 cup beet juice 1/2 oz. honey syrup (or sweetener of choice) 2 tsp. raw cacao powder 1 1/2 oz. bitter liqueur (or spirit of choice, optional) 1 drop rose water (optional)
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GREASE BURGER BAR The high-end burgers elevate pub cuisine to a divine experience. 213 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (greasewpb.com) $ THE GROVE Michael Haycook opened this restaurant in a commitment to bringing a food and wine culture reminiscent of Northern California to Delray Beach. 187 N.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (thegrovedelray.com) $$$ HENRY’S A throwback to a less-complicated era, Henry’s serves American comfort food. 16850 Jog Road, Delray Beach (henrysofbocaraton.com) $$ HENRY’S PALM BEACH This upscale Americaninspired bistro is perfect for dinner, drinks, or week-
Add milk, beet juice, sweetener, and cacao powder to saucepan and stir until smooth and creamy. Simmer over low heat until just under a boil. Remove from heat. Pour into a cup and add spirit/liqueur and/or rose water.
end brunch. 229 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (thebreakers.com) $$$ HOWLEY’S This circa-1950 diner serves tried-andtrue classics. 4700 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (sub-culture.org/howleys) $ KITCHEN Matthew Byrne opened this intimate eatery to serve sophisticated but not intimidating fare. 319 Belvedere Road #2, West Palm Beach; 5250 Donald Ross Road #100, Palm Beach Gardens (kitchenpb.com) $$$ LE BAR Á VIN This wine and cocktail bar offers a range of drinks and light dishes. 380 S. County Rd., Palm Beach (lebarpalmbeach.com) $$
THE LEOPARD LOUNGE AND RESTAURANT In the Chesterfield Hotel, chef Gerard Coughlin oversees the culinary program at this unique restaurant and bar. 363 Cocoanut Row, Palm Beach (chesterfieldpb.com) $$$ THE OFFICE This hip, trendy gastropub offers wellprepared, remarkably good comfort food. 201 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (theofficedelray.com) $$ PALM BEACH BRISKET & BBQ This slow-roasted barbecue joint takes its time to produce quality products. 801 Village Blvd. #307, West Palm Beach (palmbeachbrisketandbbq.com) $$ PARK TAVERN Everything from the bread to the condiments is handmade using locally sourced ingredients. 32 S.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (parktaverndelray.com) $$ PROPER GRIT Using only locally sourced ingredients, this gastropub in The Ben hotel pays homage to Old Florida. 251 N. Narcissus Ave., West Palm Beach (propergrit.com) $$$ REBEL HOUSE An eclectic atmosphere and fun menu make Rebel House a favorite. 297 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton (lifetastesbetter.com) $$ RESTAURANT 44 Creative, award-winning cuisine and contemporary classics served in a sleek, updated setting. Palm Beach Towers, 44 Cocoanut Row, Palm Beach (restaurant44palmbeach.com) $$$ RH ROOFTOP The top floor of Restoration Hardware boasts a dazzling dining space with plush seating and luxe comfort food. 560 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach (restorationhardware.com) $$ SEASPRAY INLET GRILL Ocean views, live entertainment, and a seasonal menu can be found at this restaurant fit for any occasion. 999 E. Camino Real, Boca Raton (seasprayboca.com) $$ SOURBON KITCHEN & BAR If you are in search of contemporary American dining with a botanical atmosphere, look no farther than Sourbon. 215 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (sourbon.com) $$ SURFSIDE DINER This casual breakfast and lunch spot serves classic comfort food like blueberry pancakes and turkey sliders in a quintessential diner space. 314 S. County Road, Palm Beach (surfsidediner.com) $ SWIFTY’S AT THE COLONY Cosmopolitan dining meets island ease. 155 Hammon Ave., Palm Beach (thecolonypalmbeach.com) $$$ TABLE 26 Presenting classics in a setting fit for both romantic dates and business luncheons. 1700 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (table26palmbeach.com) $$$ TA-BOO Ta-boo has been serving American comfort food since 1941, and no one does it better. 221 Worth Ave., Palm Beach (taboorestaurant.com) $$ TEMPLE ORANGE This seaside spot marries American, Italian, and Palm Beach flavors. 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, in the Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa (templeorangerestaurant.com) $$ TROPICAL SMOKEHOUSE Chef Rick Mace brings his culinary prowess to Floridia barbecue. 3815 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (eattropical.com) $$ TRUE FOOD KITCHEN Based on founder Dr. Andrew Weil’s anti-inflammatory diet principles, the menu features a rotating selection of seasonal, organic plates in gluten-free, vegan, and vegetarian options.
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700 S. Rosemary Ave., West Palm Beach; 3101 PGA Blvd. #O-200, Palm Beach Gardens, in The Gardens Mall; 6000 Glades Road Unit 1015A, Boca Raton, in the Town Center at Boca Raton (truefoodkitchen.com) $$ TUCKER DUKE’S LUNCHBOX Guilty pleasures—like tots topped with pulled pork and creative cheeseburgers— dominate the menu at this Boca lunch spot. 1658 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (tuckerdukes.com) $$ THE WOODS Tiger Woods’ take on an upscale sports bar. 129 Soundings Ave., Jupiter (thewoods.tigerwoods.com) $$$
CAVIAR HOUSE
ASIAN BUDDHA SKY BAR This Asian-style bar interprets Chinese and Japanese cuisines in an expansive menu. 217 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (buddhaskybardelraybeach.com) $$ ECHO The Asian restaurant of The Breakers offers dishes from China, Japan, Thailand, and Vietnam. 230A Sunrise Ave., Palm Beach (echopalmbeach.com) $$$ IMOTO Influenced by his time in Tokyo, chef Clay Conley presents Asian bites and a sushi menu that tempts all senses. 350 S. County Road, Palm Beach (imotopalmbeach.com) $$ KABUKI For an intimate night out, come here for traditional and modern sushi in a dimly lit and sexy environment. 308 N. Clematis St., West Palm Beach; 5080 PGA Blvd. Suite 105, Palm Beach Gardens; 2465 S. State Rd. 7 #100, Wellington (kabukiwpb.com) $ NITROGEN BAR, GRILL, AND SUSHI This Jupiter outpost features a speakeasy-style bar, impeccable rolls, and innovative hot dishes. 6779 W. Indiantown Road #18, Jupiter (nitrogenrestaurant.com) $$ RAMEN LAB EATERY Both the noodles and the rich, umami broth are made in-house at this funky ramen joint. 25 N.E. 2nd Ave. #114, Delray Beach; 100 N.E. 2nd St., Boca Raton (ramenlabeatery.com) $$ SUSHI JO American sushi chef Joseph Clark offers a diverse sake collection for a laid-back, cosmopolitan Japanese dining experience. 319 Belvedere Road #112, West Palm Beach; 14261 U.S. Hwy. 1, Juno Beach; 640 E. Ocean Ave. #4, Boynton Beach (sushijo.com) $$ TALAY THAI CUISINE Chef Charlie Soo blends power and delicacy to create beautifully traditional Thai and Japanese dishes. 7100 Fairway Drive, Palm Beach Gardens, in the LA Fitness Center (thaipalmbeachgardens.com) $$ YAMA Veteran sushi master Kiyonori “Yama-san” Yamamoto prepares raw and cooked Japanese dishes, Korean barbecue, and Thai curries at this hidden gem. 200 N.E. 2nd Ave. #110, Delray Beach (yamadelray.com) $$
155 North County Road ~ Tel. 561. 832. 0201 ~ AmiciMarket.com
As South Florida’s Premier Caterer, we provide Full Production Catering for all your private and corporate needs. Whether it’s at the National Croquet Center or your home, yacht or other venue, our experienced and friendly staff will work with you to customize and make your next event spectacular!
ECLECTIC DELRAY BEACH MARKET This hot spot has it all, from hip environs to an array of vendors slingling global cuisine, healthy bites, and comfort food. 33 S.E. 3rd Ave., Delray Beach (delraybeachmarket.com) $ GRANDVIEW PUBLIC MARKET This chic, industrial food hall features Zipitios’ tacos, Mediterranean eats from Lokanta, coffee from Pumphouse Coffee Roasters, and fresh poke and sushi offerings from Point Break Poke House and Blue Wave Sushi. 1401 Clare Ave., West Palm Beach (grandviewpublic.com) $$
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TASTE Q&A
Double Your Pleasure
BILL MILNE
Earlier this year, executive chef Joe Zanelli arrived in Delray Beach to oversee operations at The Ray Hotel’s two restaurants, Ember Grill and Rosewater Rooftop. The hotel, part of the Hilton Curio Collection, opened in September in the Pineapple Grove district. Zanelli, an 18-year veteran of some of Las Vegas’ top kitchens, recently sat down with PBI to discuss his latest project. (therayhotel.com) —M.S.
COURTESY OF EMBER GRILL/THE RAY
Joe Zanelli oversees the culinary programs at Rosewater Rooftop and Ember Grill, which offers upscale American cuisine such as lobster sweet corn ravioli (below).
LOLA 41 From Italian-imbued plates to innovative sushi, this vibrant restaurant bases its menu off of the flavors found along the forty-first parallel. 290 Sunset Ave., Palm Beach (lola41.com) $$$ TARU AT SUNDY HOUSE Featuring an international concept menu by chef James Strine. 106 S. Swinton Ave., Delray Beach (sundyhouse.com) $$$
FRENCH ALMOND This Bridgehampton mainstay recently brought its take on classic French comfort food and global-inspired plates to Palm Beach. 207 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (almondrestaurant.com) $$$ CAFÉ BOULUD This four-star restaurant boasts the same French flair as its famed Manhattan cousin, with a dash of South Florida flavor. 301 Australian Ave., Palm Beach, in the Brazilian Court Hotel (cafeboulud.com) $$ KATHY’S GAZEBO CAFÉ With an Old World feel, Kathy’s specializes in French Continental dishes and wine pairings. 4199 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (kathysgazebo.com) $$
PBI: What inspired you to become a chef? Zanelli: Starting at age 8, I helped my grandmother in the kitchen—she was Sicilian, cultivated her own garden, and made everything from scratch.... Two chefs I worked with had a huge impact on me: Andrew Carmellini of Café Boulud in Manhattan, who challenged us to do research on cuisine, and Mark LoRusso of the Mina Group in Las Vegas, who had a great work ethic and respect for ingredients. Describe the differences between Ember Grill and Rosewater Rooftop. Ember is our main restaurant; it’s a full-service, upscale-casual room where you would sit down for a three-course meal. Rosewater is geared toward craft cocktails and small plates, with influences from the Mediterranean and Japan. Tell us about the Josper oven at Ember. It burns hardwood charcoal imported from Spain, and it can reach temperatures of 1,000 degrees, with the heat controlled by airflow. The sear and the char that it puts on meat is absolutely beautiful. What are some of your more interesting dishes? At Ember we do a Peking duck for two in the Josper oven. Another unique item is our flaming crab dip, which we ignite in the dining room with some brandy and serve with oven-roasted naan bread. Some of the Rosewater highlights include Wagyu carpaccio, an hamachi tostada, a chicken shawarma roll, and assorted sushi. What’s it like cooking in Florida as opposed to Las Vegas? The quality of seafood stands out as the biggest difference. It’s not that I can get fish here that I can’t get elsewhere, but it’s much fresher. We use suppliers with connections to fishermen who pull the catch out of the water and deliver it the same day.
LA GOULUE This island newcomer brings the flavors of France to Palm Beach. 288 S. County Road, Palm Beach (lagouluepb.com) $$$ LA NOUVELLE MAISON Savor the light and delicate cooking of chef Gregory Howell and indulge in some artful and hedonistic desserts. 455 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton (lnmbocaraton.com) $$$ LE BILBOQUET Visit this chic resto for quintessential French fare in upscale environs. 245 Worth Ave., Palm Beach (lebilboquetpb.com) $$$ LE BOUCHON FRENCH BISTRO Owner Brice Riou invites guests to savor classic dishes like savory crepes or a croque monsieur. 11701 Lake Victoria Gardens Ave., Palm Beach Gardens (lebouchonpbg.com) $$ PARIS IN TOWN, LE CAFÉ This casual outpost offers pastries, crepes, and more from French speakers in an authentic setting. 11460 U.S. Hwy. 1 at PGA Blvd., North Palm Beach (parisintown.com) $ PISTACHE FRENCH BISTRO Presenting French bistro bites with a Mediterranean twist. Light and elegant dishes blend with rustic country favorites. 101 N. Clematis St., West Palm Beach (pistachewpb.com) $$
VINCENT’S BISTRO Chef Vincent Durin boasts more than 30 years of experience in French cuisine. 516 Lucerne Ave., Lake Worth Beach (vincentsbistro.com) $$
ITALIAN 123 DATURA This hangout serves sharable versions of Italian favorites, like nonna’s meatballs. 123 Datura St., West Palm Beach (123datura.com) $$ ARTURO’S RISTORANTE Built as a replica of a Tuscan villa, Arturo’s presents authentic flavors of Italy in every dish. 6750 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (arturosrestaurant.com) $$$ BICE Homemade pastas, excellent service, and tiramisu will make you feel like Italy isn’t so far away. 313 Worth Ave., Palm Beach (bice-palmbeach.com) $$$ BUONASERA RISTORANTE Enjoy perfectly executed Northern Italian dishes in an intimate setting. 2145 S. U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter (buonaserajupiter1993.com) $$$ CAFÉ SAPORI This café’s menu offers classics from every region of Italy. 205 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach (cafesapori.com) $$
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CASA D’ANGELO Angelo Elia’s Boca Raton outpost succeeds in every possible way. 171 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton (casa-d-angelo.com) $$$ CHLOE’S BISTRO This on-the-boardwalk spot has both Italian and French flair throughout the menu. 6885 S.W. 18th St. Suite B7, Boca Raton (chloesbistro.com) $$ CUCINA PALM BEACH After indulging in classic Italian dishes at this recently redecorated resto, clear your table for the nightclub. 257 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (cucinapalmbeach.com) $$$ ELISABETTA’S This sleek eatery slings up handmade Italian delicacies, including to-die-for pasta and pizza. 32 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach; 201 N. Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach (elisabettas.com) $$ EVO Chef Erik Pettersen is on a mission to re-create the cooking of his Sicilian relatives. 150 N. U.S. Hwy. 1, Tequesta (evoitalian.com) $$ HULLABALOO An Italian gastropub with creative cuisine and an even more unique cocktail menu. 517 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (sub-culture.org/hullabaloo) $$ JOSIE’S RISTORANTE This family-owned Italian restaurant is known for its classic plates and desserts. 1602 S. Federal Hwy., Boynton Beach (josies ristorante.com) $$ LA MASSERIA The South Florida location of this popular Manhattan restaurant serves authentic, uncompli-
cated Southern Italian plates. 5520 PGA Blvd. Suite 104, Palm Beach Gardens (lamasseriapbg.com) $$$ LA SIRENA This Northern Italian beauty focuses on the cooking of the Amalfi Coast. 6316 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (lasirenaonline.com) $$ LOUIE BOSSI’S This beloved addition to the Boca dining scene specializes in sharable Italian favorites. 100 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton (louiebossi.com) $$ LYNORA’S A true family affair, Lynora’s excels at modernizing classic Italian dishes. 207 Clematis St., West Palm Beach; 1548 North U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter (lynoras.com) $$ PARADISO RISTORANTE Chef Angelo Romano serves traditional Italian meals along with some surprises. 625 Lucerne Ave., Lake Worth (paradisolakeworth.com) $$$ PIZZA AL FRESCO This casual eatery offers some of the best pizza and views on the island. 14 Via Mizner, Palm Beach (pizzaalfresco.com) $$ RENATO’S Renato’s produces first-rate Italian and continental fare in a European setting. 87 Via Mizner, Palm Beach (renatospalmbeach.com) $$$ RISTORANTE SANTUCCI Emilio Santucci channels his Sicilian childhood into great, authentic food. 610 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (restaurantsantucci.com) $$ SANT AMBROEUS Sant Ambroeus pairs the essence of Old World Milan with fine dining. 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (santambroeus.com) $$$
SCUSI TRATTORIA Transporting diners to the Amalfi Coast, one bite at a time. 4520 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (scusirestaurants.com) $$ TREVINI RISTORANTE Trevini serves Northern and Southern Italian dishes with taste and refinement. 223 Sunset Ave., Palm Beach (treviniristorante.com) $$$ VIC AND ANGELO’S Offering both light and savory Italian delights as well as an impressive wine selection. 290 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (vicandangelos.com) $$$
LATIN AMERICAN AND MEXICAN AVOCADO CANTINA Chef Julien Gremaud brings his fine dining prowess to Mexican street food. 11701 Lake Victoria Gardens Ave., Palm Beach Gardens (avocadocantina.com) $$ ANDALUCIA TAPAS BAR & RESTAURANT The Spanish menu and marketplace allows customers to take a little bit of Spain with them. 187 Tequesta Drive, Jupiter (andaluciatapasbar.com) $$ BARRIO This sangria and tapas bar offers traditional Latin street food. 700 S. Rosemary Ave., West Palm Beach (barriowpb.com) $$ DUKE’S TACOS AND MARGS This hot spot makes nontraditional Mexican dishes at an affordable price. 1155 Main St. Ste. 120, Jupiter (dukestacos.com) $$
FOOD THAT TASTES AS GOOD AS FALL FEELS. We invite you to cozy up to the warm and savory flavors of the season. Because there’s comfort in fall’s bountiful harvest - and it’s as delicious as it looks. Rosemary Square | 700 S Rosemary Ave. West Palm Beach, FL 33401 | 561.345.2155
www.truefoodkitchen.com
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TASTE PIO PIO Colombian and Peruvian roots come together to create original Latin American eats. 510 E. Ocean Ave., Boynton Beach (piopioocean.com) $$ ROCCO’S TACOS AND TEQUILA BAR Every day is Cinco de Mayo at Rocco’s. 224 Clematis St., West Palm Beach; 5090 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens; 110 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach; 5250 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton (roccostacos.com) $$
ACQUA CAFÉ This chic resto delivers a coastal Italian take on seafood. 2875 S. Ocean Blvd. Suite 103, Palm Beach (acquacafepb.com) $$$ BENNY’S ON THE BEACH Celebrity chef Jeremy Hanlon has created a casual beachside dining experience along the Atlantic. 10 S. Ocean Blvd., Lake Worth Beach (bennysonthebeach.com) $$ BOCA LANDING Boca Landing inside the Waterstone Resort & Marina offers seafood dishes infused with chef Matthew Mixon’s Italian and French roots. 999 E. Camino Real, Boca Raton (bocalanding.com) $$$ CITY OYSTER AND SUSHI BAR With a full sushi bar, fresh oysters, and a bakery, City Oyster offers a plethora of options for all tastes. 213 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (cityoysterdelray.com) $$$ DECK 84 Burt Rapoport’s casual alfresco eatery, situated off Atlantic Avenue along the Intracoastal, highlights local Florida catches and seafood specialties. 840 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (deck84.com) $$ LIONFISH Committed to sustainability, this chic eatery presents an array of innovative seafood. 307 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (lionfishdelray.com) $$ LITTLE MOIR’S FOOD SHACK Put on your jeans and enjoy some of the freshest and most creatively prepared seafood in the area. 103 S. U.S. Hwy. 1 #D3, Jupiter (littlemoirs.com) $$ OKEECHOBEE PRIME SEAFOOD Savor superb ocean products in elegant surroundings from the family behind Okeechobee Steak House. 2888 Shawnee Ave., West Palm Beach (okeeprimeseafood.com) $$$ PB CATCH This contemporary seafood restaurant is the brainchild of Pistache’s Reid Boren and Thierry Beaud. 251 Sunrise Ave., Palm Beach (pbcatch.com) $$ RACKS FISH HOUSE + OYSTER BAR Enjoy steam kettles, Prohibition-style cocktails, and a Grand Centralinspired oyster bar in a New England setting. 5 S.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (racksdelray.com) $$$ SEAWAY Fresh ocean ingredients and Latin flavors commingle at this oceanfront eatery at the Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach. 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach (fourseasons.com/palmbeach) $$
RAW/VEGAN/VEGETARIAN CHRISTOPHER’S KITCHEN Chef Albert Crifaci Molla can turn the heartiest meat eater into a raw-food fanatic with his creative presentations. 4783 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (christopherskitchenfl.com) $$ DARBSTER This vegetarian bistro faithfully re-creates new American dishes with organic ingredients—
LAUREN GLANCY
SEAFOOD
Buccan fusilli with Maine lobster and uni butter
although meat eaters will never suspect. 8020 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (darbster.com) $$ PLANTA A wholly plant-based menu presents vegetarian and vegan options that are sustainable and locally sourced. 700 S. Rosemary Ave. Suite 142, West Pam Beach (plantarestaurants.com) $$ PURA VIDA This health food location offers organic options in Rosemary Square. 460 S. Rosemary Ave. Suite 186, West Palm Beach (puravidamiami.com) $$
SMALL PLATES HMF The Breakers’ glamorous cocktail lounge is a fashionable mix of modern and classic. Asian influences dot the menu, including a full sushi bar. 1 S. County Road, Palm Beach (hmfpalmbeach.com) $$ SALUTE MARKET This upscale hangout offers small plates, gourmet sandwiches, salads, and a killer happy hour. 5530 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (salute2u.com) $$ STAGE Through small dishes packed with flavor, Stage presents delicious curries, to gluten-free veggie options, to Korean specialties. 2000 PGA Blvd. Suite 5502, Palm Beach Gardens (stagepga.com) $$
STEAK HOUSE ABE & LOUIE’S In addition to serving outstanding beef, Abe & Louie’s features classic New England seafood dishes. 2200 W. Glades Road, Boca Raton (abeandlouies.com) $$$ CUT 432 This modern steak house has a hip, highenergy environment. 432 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (cut432.com) $$$ FLAGLER STEAKHOUSE Operated by The Breakers, this elegant steak house offers hand-selected cuts of beef in country club environs. 2 S. County Road, Palm Beach (flaglersteakhousepalmbeach.com) $$$
HOUSTON’S Focusing on American classics, this Hillstone steak house prepares its flawless dishes from scratch. 1900 N.W. Executive Center Circle, Boca Raton (houstons.com) $$$ MEAT MARKET The Palm Beach outpost of the famed Miami Beach steak house offers a dynamic menu and a sexy ambiance similar to its original location. 191 Bradley Place, Palm Beach (meatmarket.net) $$$ OKEECHOBEE STEAK HOUSE Credited as the oldest steak house in Florida, the Okeechobee Steak House opened in 1947 and has been an institution ever since. 2854 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach (okeesteakhouse.com) $$$ PALM BEACH GRILL Emphasizing freshness and consistency, the Palm Beach outpost of Houston’s offers beloved items we have come to expect: ribs, steaks, and seafood. The wine list includes the best of the New World’s smaller wineries. 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (palmbeachgrill.com) $$$ RUTH’S CHRIS STEAK HOUSE Ruth’s Chris is a classic American dining experience, offering large portions of high-quality ingredients and specialty dishes that echo the restaurant’s New Orleans roots. 651 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach; 225 N.E. Mizner Blvd., Boca Raton (ruthschris.com) $$$ SALT 7 Steak is the top draw at this late-night favorite, but make sure to savor the truffle mac and cheese as well as sashimi, specialty sushi rolls, and raw bar bites. 32 S.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (salt7.com) $$$ STONEWOOD GRILL AND TAVERN At once casual and classy, Stonewood presents a savory menu in an intimate setting. Start with the bruschetta and end with the chocolate bread pudding. 10120 Forest Hill Blvd., Wellington (stonewoodgrill.com) $$ III FORKS The elegant bar and lounge create a trendy atmosphere for this modern evolution of the classic steak house. 4645 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (3forks.com) $$$
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DECEMBER 9-12, 2021
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Sponsors and Participants as of October 1, 2021. All events, prices, personalities, venues, dates and times are subject to change without notice. No one under 21 will be admitted, unless otherwise noted (no infants, children or pets). Tickets to PBFWF are not tax deductible. The Festival urges all adults to consume alcoholic products responsibly. Tickets are non-refundable and non-transferable between events.
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TASTE The Terra Madre Winery, Komarna Appellation, Dalmatia
OFF THE VINE
In With the NEW
Bored with the same old wines? Looking for a new flavor profile? Then it’s time to investigate these emerging wine regions now available in the U.S.
By Mark Spivak ARMENIA Probably the oldest wine-producing region on the planet, Armenia is the site of wineries dating to 4,000 B.C. Wine cultivation has experienced a renaissance since Armenian independence in 1991, and the country is once again a star in the Caucasus region. Storica Wines (storicawines.com), an import compaZulal is one of Armenia’s premier wine labels
ny focused on marketing, production, and direct-to-consumer sales, has spearheaded distribution. It has partnered with visionaries such as Syrian-born, Italian-trained Vahe Keushguerian, who repatriated to Armenia and founded WineWorks, a consulting firm and “winery incubator.” Varieties such as Voskehat and Khatouni may not be household names, but the wine is delicious. Properties to watch: Keushguerian’s label, Keush, specializes in sparkling wines such as Origins ($21) and Blanc de Blancs Extra Brut ($31); his daughter Aimee’s label, Zulal, offers an Areni Noir ($19) and Areni Reserve ($30).
ZENITH PHOTO STUDIO
CROATIA With 130 indigenous grape varieties, 300 wine regions, and a history nearly as long as Armenia’s, Croatia has much to offer wine drinkers—and those in the U.S. are beginning to discover it thanks to importers such as Croatian Premium Wine (croatianpremiumwine.com).
Quality has been steadily improving since the country emerged from Yugoslavia’s communist regime. While much of the output is white, the country claims to be the birthplace of the Zinfandel grape, known locally as Plavac Mali. Major cultivation areas include the eastern and western continental regions, as well as Dalmatia and Istria. Top estates: Fans of California wine will be familiar with Grgi Vina, which legendary winemaker Miljenko “Mike” Grgich of Napa’s Grgich Hills established in 1996. Other labels to seek out include Terra Madre, Duboković, Bibich, Stina, Korta Katarina, Milo,š and the Meneghetti Winery. BAJA CALIFORNIA More than 150 wineries are situated within two hours of the San Ysidro border crossing, primarily along the Ruta del Vino in the Guadalupe Valley. The valley has a Mediterranean climate, thanks to sea breezes coming inland
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SARDINIA Most Sardinian wine was traditionally consumed on the spot, due in part to the island’s lackluster economy. While that has started to improve, an unfamiliar group of native grape varieties—Torbato, Semidano, and Cagnulari—has hampered international trade, to an extent. Vermentino, the signa-
DAVID JOSUE
ture white wine grape, largely gained fame by being produced on Antinori’s Tenuta Guado al Tasso estate hundreds of miles away. The bestknown red variety, Cannonau (aka Grenache), is reputed to be loaded with antioxidants, and some experts equate its consumption with the longevity that has made Sardinia a recognized Blue Zone, areas around the world with a high number of residents who live longer than average. Familiar labels: The renaissance in Sardinian wine is reflected in the bottles from Sella & Mosca, Santadi, Argiolas, and Jankara that are turning up on our retail shelves. In the forefront of that renaissance are properties such as Vigne Surrau, a “young company with an old soul” that specializes in estate-grown Vermentino and Cannonau. «
Bodegas de Santo Tomás is one of the three largest wine producers in the Baja California region.
DAVID JOSUE
from the Pacific Ocean. Quality has been soaring in recent years, and the wines are becoming available here through importers such as Baja United Wines (bajaunitedwines.com) and LMA Wines (lmawines.com). Popular varieties are similar to those grown in California, with the addition of Chenin Blanc and Nebbiolo. Noteworthy producers: The three largest producers (L.A. Cetto, Casa Domecq, and Bodegas de Santo Tomás) account for three-quarters of the production, but boutique operations such as Bichi, Casa de Piedra, and La Casa Vieja are demonstrating just how good the wines from this hot, arid climate can be.
Come make history with us!
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HOME
JOEY DUHON OF DRONE HOME
By Liza Grant Smith
DESIGN
Works Like A CHARM
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Nestled in the heart of a newly revitalized neighborhood near Lake Ida in Delray Beach, this home inspired designer Nikki Levy of Nikki Levy Interiors with its charming vibes. The clients were first-time homeowners, and her team’s goal was to create a supremely beautiful, homey, and comfy space. “This house spoke to us in a way that established its own style,” says Levy. “Just as the homeowners were such a lovely and naturally charming couple, we styled the home in a way that truly matched their energy.” Material selections—including ceramic tiles, wood flooring, concrete, and natural elements—were all nods to the home’s organic modern style, with a keen eye toward preserving its inherent charisma. Gentle details such as the combination of whitewashed woods and visual layering brought a distinct softness to the space. (nikkilevyinteriors.com)
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HOME INSPIRED LIVING
Tanks for the Memories Make a splash in the aquatic realm with JEFF TURNER
NICK SARGENT PHOTOGRAPHY
From top: A living room wall creates a backdrop for an aquarium; an interior/exterior pool area boasts a showpiece aquarium; a curated collection of coral and fish.
There is perhaps no better “stop you in your tracks” decor accent than a gorgeous built-in aquarium. Jeff Turner, founder of Reef Aquaria Design, has delivered his share of showstopping moments with residential projects that have ranged up to a 6,000-gallon reef tank. Based in Fort Lauderdale, the company’s clients are spread throughout Palm Beach County and Florida, as well as other parts of the country. Turner dives into the basics of tank creation with PBI and what people can expect when becoming aquarium owners. (reefaquariadesign.com) PBI: What’s your background with aquariums? Turner: I built my very first glass aquarium with my dad when I was just 7 years old. Now I have more than 50 years of experience with marine aquarium design and construction—the entire time here in South Florida. I have scuba dived in Hawaii, Mexico, Costa Rica, all over the Caribbean, Tahiti/
French Polynesia, the Maldives, Indonesia, Guam, Singapore and truly love the underwater world. Seeing firsthand the natural coral reefs in so many places affords me a greater perspective of the natural underwater coral reef environment itself. When “working,” I’m really just having fun creating a new underwater environment and focused on the end result of creating a beautiful and healthy aquarium that will last for years to come. What trends are you seeing in residential aquariums? We have seen an increase in people desiring to have jellyfish aquarium displays within their homes. The jellyfish are super cool and mesmerizing, plus the colors of the jellyfish can change easily with LED lighting. Additionally, living coral reef aquariums have really taken off and can provide a beautiful array of colorful fish and growing corals that will thrive with a high-quality aquarium installation and continued care by our team of professional aquarium technicians. How do you create an aquarium’s environment? Typically, a jellyfish aquarium is only jellyfish and they spin in their aquarium home to the proper currents that keep them suspended in a saltwater aquarium. Reef aquariums are a whole different animal, where you create a reef scape. That allows for planting of live corals, and many that we utilize we grow here in our Florida State Certified Aquaculture Facility. These corals will grow in over the years to create a beautiful living coral reef. What are your favorite fish to use in a residential tank? Colorful fish are best and it’s very important to recognize which fish are compatible living
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Clockwise from above: Crane delivery of an aquarium; a freshwater aquarium complements an apartment’s water views; a custom pond under the stairs.
thing that you can do with sharks, eels, and lobster in a closed marine aquarium system. Please go to a zoo or public aquarium to see them. What components really make a home aquarium dynamic? The location in the home is really important. It’s best to have the aquarium in a space, or spaces, that allows for viewing in an area that you spend lots of time. We have created some fantastic aquariums in living rooms, kitchen areas, and entryways—it’s easier these days with the open floor plans of newer homes.
NICK SARGENT PHOTOGRAPHY
together in an aquarium. Also, you have to take into consideration what the fish need to be happy and healthy for many years to come. Colorful angelfish, tangs, anthias, gobies, blennies, wrasses, and other reef-safe fish are best. How do you determine the right mix of fish for a client? We have an internal “recommended” fish portfolio that we provide to clients that helps guide them through the process of selecting fish that are compatible with each other and with a living coral reef aquarium. What types of fish do you typically advise against? Sharks are a big one as they need lots of space to swim and grow, and eventually you may have to take the shark out of the tank because it gets too big. And you can’t just let it back into the ocean, as that’s illegal. Eels and lobster tend to eat other fish at night. They are cool to look at, but the color and array of beautiful fish and coral that you can place in a living coral reef aquarium simply blow away any-
Want to see Reef Aquaria Design’s creations come to life? Visit the company’s YouTube channel to watch videos of construction and installation.
A R T A DVISORY • Artwork Acquisitions, Curatorial Expertise • Extensive Experience, Unparalleled Individual Attention • Modern and Contemporary Fine Art • Global Network of Resources in USA, Europe and Asia • Private and Corporate Projects • Site Specific Commssions • Framing and Installation • Packing, Shipping and Storage Solutions
P A L M
CATHERINE MCCULLOCH Executive Director
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B E A C H
N E W
Y O R K
L O N D O N
W W W. M C C U L L O C H A R T. C O M catherine@mccullochart.com | 561-818-9952
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HOME ELEMENTS
Cooking Up Some COLOR
DAVID DUNCAN LIVINGSTON
Turn up your kitchen decor from a simmer to a sizzle with BRIGHT SPLASHES of color
COUNTER OFFER Choose your spice level from 30 hand-applied finishes that range from mild to more wild for this powder-coated rattan frame David Francis counter stool ($2,570) with its Chinese Chippendale craftsmanship. Clive Daniel Home, Boca Raton (clivedaniel.com)
GARDEN PARTY With designs by Irish architect Nigel Peake serving as a muse, these Hermès dinner plates from the A Walk in the Garden collection ($160 per plate) celebrate the fresh energy found in springtime. Mary Mahoney, Palm Beach (marymahoney.com)
PRETTY IN PINK Let your kitchen’s dynamic personality shine through with this posh pink hanging lantern fixture with aged brass accents ($1,190) from Mitzi. Artistic Elements, Boca Raton (theartisticelements.com) BRIGHT IDEA Designer Annie Lowengart of Ann Lowengart Interiors made sure this kitchen echoed the vivacious spirit of her client. “My goal for the space was to express the client’s super vibrant and fun personality,” Lowengart says. “She absolutely loves color, so the multi-hued tile was an obvious win. She also has a glam and girly side, [and] the chandeliers expressed that perfectly. Both my client and her husband appreciate bold moves, so the oversized cabinet knobs and exaggerated shaker-style doors served to complete their wish of something special and different.” Palm Beach (annlowengart.com)
STAND AND DELIVER Whether your culinary quest is nine dozen cookies or shredded chicken for Taco Tuesday, KitchenAid’s Artisan Series 5-quart 10-speed stand mixer ($430) is your knight in shining yellow (or one of 20-plus other colors) armor. Crate & Barrel, Boca Raton (crateandbarrel.com)
RITZY RANGE SMEG, known for its 1950s retro-style appliances, teamed up with iconic fashion house Dolce & Gabbana to create this 36-inch Maiolica range ($10,000). The Sicilian kitchen–inspired range is engineered for professional performance, with a 20,000BTU stovetop and eight cooking modes. Williams Sonoma, Palm Beach Gardens, Boca Raton (williams-sonoma.com)
SPIRITED SIPPING Oomph up your libation station with Vietri’s Finestra tumblers ($20 each), whose vibrant tints are a nod to Milan’s colorful Brera District. T is for Table, West Palm Beach (tisfortable.com) PARISIAN SOJOURN Take a trip to the City of Lights with Toile De Paris cotton tea towels ($100 for set of four) from storied French brand Le Jacquard Français. Pioneer Linens, West Palm Beach (pioneerlinens.com)
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SHOWROOM & WORKROOM
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HOME
KIM SARGENT
HERITAGE
By Marie Penny
Clockwise from top left: A historic image of Casa Ananda from the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach’s archive; the current Three Seasons property; a cartoon of Elizabeth Kay from The Palm Beach Post (1925); archival image of Elizabeth Kay, also from the Preservation Foundation’s collection.
What makes a landmark unique? It’s not only the architectural style but the history and the people who make it a home. Three Seasons is a stately Mediterranean Revival–style house on South Ocean Boulevard that embraces indoor and outdoor living. Originally named Casa Ananda—Sanskrit for joy—Three Seasons’ first owners were Alfred and Elizabeth Kay, who contracted builder Cooper Lightbown to construct the house in 1924. Elizabeth Kay is often attributed as the designer of the house, although there is no record confirming this. However, she was cited as the designer of another residence on County Road and a remodel of The Villas Hotel. In addition to her design expertise, Kay was known for her community involvement. She was president of the Garden Club of Palm Beach, and authored and edited books on botany with her husband. She also helped start Palm Beach Day Academy and founded the Pine Jog Environmental Education Center. The southern portion of the estate was once a place of controversy. Kay gained notoriety in 1925 when she erected a fence for privacy from her neighbor Harold Vanderbilt, who occupied nearby El Solano at the time. When The Palm Beach Post published a story about the dispute, it took an astonished tone— what woman would dare inconvenience a Vanderbilt? The estate boasts a number of interesting architectural features, but its southern portion houses two very unique components. First, a breezeway bridge connects the main house to the guest quarters and garage, creating an elegant feeling of separation between the structures. Second is the loggia overlooking a walled garden with a glazed tile fountain. Kay wrote about
NEWSPAPE RS
Casa Ananda—now known as Three Seasons—is a piece of Palm Beach history that’s worth the work
.COM
A Peaceful Place
her gardens, describing them as being “pervaded by a peace that passeth understanding.” It’s evident that Kay thought of her home as a sanctuary, and perhaps this contributed to her desire to protect it from her neighbor. Through her cultivation of outdoor spaces, she brought that peace into her home. Seventy-four years after the Kays made Casa Ananda their home, it was saved from demolition and designated as a landmark in 1998. It was protected, but it sat vacant for close to 20 years before the Pattersons purchased it in 2009. Best-selling author James Patterson and vice chairman of the Landmarks Preservation Commission Sue Patterson are passionate about historic preservation. They say they enjoyed rehabilitating the house. In fact, the process inspired Sue Patterson to join the Landmarks Preservation Commission. The Pattersons solidified their new home with a new name: Three Seasons. Due to the state of the structure and previous renovations, it was difficult to preserve all of the historical elements in their original location. But the Pattersons were committed to repurposing remnants—for instance, the cast-stone staircase became a decorative feature on the back-garden wall, and the wood from the original ceiling was incorporated into the north loggia outside. Through their efforts, the Pattersons have revitalized this historic home. It’s filled with warmth and offers spectacular views of the ocean from its many windows and vantage points. All of those windows bring in natural light, illuminating the rooms and highlighting the openness of the space. Sue Patterson says that all of the rooms and the layout work perfectly, and that she “loved being able to save something that’s part of Palm Beach history.” Marie Penny is the director of archives for the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach. «
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Challenging sites, fasttrack schedules, arduous approvals, exceedingly personal tastes, for nearly 40 years and two generations, flexibility is our luxury.
entertaining 2022 commissions
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HOME THAT’S ENTERTAINMENT!
Raising THE BAR Elevate your hosting game with COCKTAIL essentials
Clockwise from left: Steven Stolman’s bar features a custom Lucite tray and all of the requisite cocktail components; the author raises a glass; a selection of classic cocktail glasses at the ready.
By Steven Stolman Photography by Nick Mele For me, part of being a grown-up is having a wellstocked bar always at the ready to entertain guests, whether planned or last minute. I fully recognize that there are many people who, for whatever reason, do not drink. This article is probably not for them, although I have several friends who are teetotalers yet still maintain a little bar of some kind in the spirit of hospitality. Whether one does or does not is a personal decision, but it is one that I gladly make as it involves a few of my favorite things: hosting and arranging things in an attractive manner. As a child growing up in the Connecticut suburbs, the basement bar was a common sight. It generally involved knotty pine, some irreverent signage having to do with drinking, and, perhaps, a hanging Tiffany-style lamp or—far worse—a ’90s globe light displaying the words, “Bar is Open.” Our basement bar was a cross between a Tyrolean ski lodge and the set of Mad Men. The ceiling had rough-hewn beams, and the bar had a brown Naugahyde bumper but was also encircled by wonderful, round, mid-century modern barstools with hairpin legs. My fondest memory is that of my aunt and uncle’s rec room bar that sported mod graphic wallpaper with the phrase, “Drink to me only with thine eyes.” It was a time. Today my bar is a decidedly scaled-down affair. My other half, Rich, and I live in a 1970s condo on the beach, which was built at a time when wet bars and card rooms were de rigueur for sophisticated snowbirds, along with mirrored walls and that classic feature of South Florida design: the illuminated kitchen ceiling. Now the only thing still in favor is the wet bar, and we love it. We did eliminate the sink, as it is steps from the kitchen. Instead, we used the plumbing in place for something we have always wanted: an ice machine. I’m not talking about your runof-the-mill icemaker that comes with most fridges. I’m talking about a marvel that makes crystal clear, round cubes ’round the clock, like one would find down the hall at a Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge. It is our pride and joy. A proper bar needs a tray. It’s a great way to confine and showcase your spirits. Ours is made of Lucite and is a piece I actually designed and enlisted a local fabricator to create. Then there needs to be an ice bucket for wine or Champagne as well as some pieces of barware—that evocative classification of stuff that includes a cocktail
shaker, a strainer, a long stirring spoon, a corkscrew, and, for the more detail-oriented, little metal picks for olives, onions, and such. Then there are glasses, which should be within easy reach on shelves or an adjacent server. There are crystal double old-fashioned glasses stacked in a way that exudes excess, classic martini glasses, all-purpose wine glasses, and Champagne flutes. I maintain that one of the best helpers in overcoming reluctance to entertain is having lots of matching glasses, in a quantity that will take you from drinks à deux to an impromptu gathering for a dozen or so. On to the booze. Pare it down to the basics: vodka (hands down the most popular), gin, tequila, bourbon, scotch, dark rum, white wine, red wine, and Champagne or Prosecco. Then, aperitifs and digestifs such as vermouth (both dry and sweet), Campari, and, for the stylish, Aperol. Should you want to go further, also stock rye whiskey, brandy, and Angostura bitters. In the pantry, have a sparkling water such as Pellegrino or Perrier and tonic at the least, as well as cranberry juice and a smattering of sugar-free sodas. In the fridge, you will need lemons, limes, an orange, pimento-stuffed green olives, maraschino cherries, and cocktail onions. I know this sounds like a lot, but much of this is a one-time purchase. Trust me, you will never run out of maraschino cherries or Angostura bitters. However, having a proper bar will turn you into an effortless entertainer, which if done with some ease and, more importantly, frequency, will result in others entertaining you. The reality is, if you want to get invited, you have to do some inviting. And that’s really what it’s all about, isn’t it? «
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TOP DESIGN FIRM on Peruvian Ave Driving down Peruvian Ave, it is hard to miss Palm Beach Design Masters, a full-service design studio with the most eye-catching storefront. Since opening their new retail showroom in 2019, the firm s deep roots on the island have only continued to grow. The retail arm of the company offers residential and commercial interior design, luxury furnishings and home accessories, hand selected gifts, custom floral art, fine fabrics, and wall coverings. The duo team, Carl Vasile and Joy Pahlavan are also busy developing and redesigning exceptional homes around the Palm Beaches and beyond.
Carl Vasile and Joy Pahlavan
326 Peruvian Avenue, Suite #9 Palm Beach, FL 33480 palmbeachdesignmasters.com 561.318.8142
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WOULD YOU LIKE TO
sell your home before it goes on the market? DO YOU WANT TO KNOW
about properties before they are actually listed? IN TODAY’S RAPIDLY CHANGING MARKET… KNOWLEDGE MATTERS. FOR DETAILED INSIGHTS, CALL ROB THOMSON TODAY
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The Bretzlaff Group Proven Leaders in the Luxury Real Estate Industry
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The Bretzlaff Group is led by married business partners Craig and Heather Bretzlaff. Specializing in luxury sales, their focus is on residential properties including waterfront estates, exclusive golf and country club communities, new construction/renovation and equestrian. The Bretzlaff Group capitalizes on their unique set of qualifications to set them apart in today’s ever-changing market. Their knowledge spans over 50 years of combined experience in real estate.
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Selling your home? We have motivated buyers. Looking to buy? Contact us today for more information on how we can help.
Craig A. Bretzlaff
Heather Bretzlaff
Executive Director of Luxury Sales
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M 561.601.7557 craig.bretzlaff@elliman.com
M 561.722.6136 heather.bretzlaff@elliman.com
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340 ROYAL POINCIANA WAY M302 PALM BEACH 33480. 561.655.8600 © 2021 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES *BY 2020 GROSS COMMISSION INCOME AT DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE.
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OR
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Top 2% of Agents Company-Wide*
OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
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Palm Beach. Nice to visit. Better to own.
Palm Beach | 854 S County Road | $55,000,000 | 6 BR, 8 BA, 2 HALF BA | Web# RX-10744051 | Gary Pohrer: M 561.262.0856
#1 Brokerage In Palm Beach and Miami-Dade Counties*
elliman.com
340 ROYAL POINCIANA WAY, M302 PALM BEACH, FL 33480. 561.655.8600 © 2021 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. *AS RANKED BY BROKERMETRICS® SOURCE: MIAMIRE MLS AND BEACHES MLS. FOR TOTAL SALES VOLUME AND MARKET SHARE IN MIAMI-DADE COUNTY AND PALM BEACH COUNTY 1/1/21 TO 10/31/21.
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WHERE STYLE LIVES
T O L I S T E N . T O E N V I S I O N . T O C R E AT E . T O C O L L A B O R AT E . W W W. G I LWA L S H . C O M
PALM BEACH | MARTHA'S VINEYARD | NEW YORK
561.932.0631
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Prestigious Sailfish Point Boulevard 7,600 sf home was taken down to the studs and completely renovated in 2017 and updated again in 2021. This 4 bed, 4.1 bath, 3 car garage pool home boasts two large walk in closets (one with washer & dryer) in the master bedroom with separate sitting room, steam shower and soaking tub. Second washer & dryer in utility room. The kitchen has Wolf appliances, Miele built-in coffee maker & side-by-side Sub Zero refrigerator & freezer. 3 fireplaces. High ceilings. Wine room with 240 bottle wine cooler. Impact windows & doors. Air Conditioned garage. Heated pool & spa. Sold furnished.
Offered at $5,100,000
DEDICATED TO SERVING SAILFISH POINT SINCE 1996
Your member-owned real estate office is here to assist you with both the sale and purchase of properties within our community. 1648 S.E. Sailfish Point Blvd., Stuart, FL 34996 • 772.225.6200 • SailfishPoint.com Sailfish Point Realty is a licensed Real Estate Broker. Each office is independently owned and operated. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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Kevin Condon & Cristina Condon Your Global Real Estate Advisors and Palm Beach Experts
East Inlet Direct Oceanfront Price Upon Request | EastInletOceanfront.com
KEVIN CONDON Senior Global Real Estate Advisor / Broker Associate kevin.condon@sothebyshomes.com 646.457.8919
CRISTINA CONDON Senior Global Real Estate Advisor cristina.condon@sothebyshomes.com 561.301.2211 | cristinacondon.com
© 2021 Sotheby’s International Realty. All Rights Reserved. The Sotheby’s International Realty trademark is licensed and used with permission. Each Sotheby’s International Realty office is independently owned and operated, except those operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. The Sotheby’s International Realty network fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. All offerings are subject to errors, omissions, changes including price or withdrawal without notice.
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O L D PA L M R E A L E S TAT E , L L C . FIND YOUR PERFECT HOME IN OLD PALM GOLF CLUB
#1 IN LISTINGS AND SALES SINCE THE COMMUNITY'S INCEPTION
The Old Palm Real Estate team of Connie McGinnis and Becky Ardizzone make clients their top priority. We ensure our clients' best interests are at heart and use our knowledge of the community and 30+ years of experience within the luxury real estate industry to provide you with the most professional and seamless transaction. When looking to buy your dream home in Old Palm, choose the real estate professionals who value and understand your lifestyle the best. Connie McGinnis & Becky Ardizzone
Contact Us Today To Schedule Your Private Tour!
Open 7 Days a Week | Phone: (561) 493-7220 | OldPalmGolfClub.com
©2021 Old Palm Real Estate, LLC., Licensed Real Estate Broker. All rights reserved. Prices subject to change without notice. All references to clubs, golf clubs, and membership opportunities and other amenities are subject to fees, dues, and availability. This is not an offering in jurisdictions where prior qualification is required unless the developer of Old Palm Golf Club has previously met such qualifications. Void where prohibited. Broker participation welcome. Print Date: 11/21
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FURNITURE ACCESSORIES INTERIOR DESIGN 287 E. Indiantown Road
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Local leadership • community involvement • exceptional agents
Jamie Sauer is a Realtor who speaks the LANGUAGE of Community Service. Meet one of our extraordinary agents and LOCAL LEADERS in the industry and Palm Beach County.
JAMIE SAUER President of the Junior League of Boca Raton. Fulfilling the needs of over 100 nonprofits. Distributed over 5,000,000 diapers through JLBR Diaper Bank. Mentoring and motivating volunteers to care for the community as she does.
561.212.6662 j.sauer@langrealty.com
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE JUNIOR LEAGUE OF BOCA RATON
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NORTH PALM BEACH 1400 Old Dixie Hwy. 561.845.3250
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MODERN AND SOPHISTICATED ELEGANCE Palm Beach, FL
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JUST SOLD
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3400 N. Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, FL
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333 Clematis St., West Palm Beach, FL 33401
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www.providentflorida.com
10/4/21 2:36 PM
ART SHOULD BE CELEBRATED Enjoy Year-Round Exhibitions, Pop-Ups and Events! A one-of-a-kind showroom featuring 30+ world-class galleries representing a broad range of collectibles across all eras, mediums and disciplines
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SETTING THE STANDARD
Palm Beach Media Group is a renowned publishing company with print publications representing a mix of proprietary titles and custom magazines, along with digital solutions, serving the entire state of Florida and more.
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PUBLISHER OF: Naples Illustrated Orlando Illustrated Palm Beach Illustrated Naples Charity Register Palm Beach Charity Register Southwest Florida Relocation Guide Waypoints: Naples Yacht Club Palm Beach Relocation Guide Traditions: The Breakers The Jewel of Palm Beach: The Mar-a-Lago Club Jupiter Magazine South Florida Baby and Beyond Magazine Stuart Magazine Fort Lauderdale Illustrated Aventura Magazine Naples 100 5th Avenue South: 5th Avenue South Business Improvement District Palm Beach 100 Go561 Community Report: Community Foundation of Collier County Pinnacle: Jupiter Medical Center Foundation art&culture: Cultural Council for Palm Beach County Florida Design Florida Design Naples Edition Florida Design Miami Edition Florida Design Annual Sourcebook Naples on the Gulf: Greater Naples Chamber
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TRUST YOUR FACE TO THE SPECIALIST
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BALANCE By Liza Grant Smith
WARM-UP
Belle of the BALL Lila Ristevska is a 15-time Australian freestyle wrestling champion who was ranked fifth in the world in 1995, but her training took a toll. She had knee and elbow reconstructions, endured a fractured vertebrae, and suffered from numerous other injuries and pain. To heal her body, she began to develop a program using a large plastic stability ball along with a system of exercises to help the body stretch and strengthen the core. The OzzyBall System, as it would come to be known, was inspired by yoga, Gyrokinesis, Pilates, belly dancing, functional training, Brazilian jiujitsu, and overall intuitive movement.
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Now, as a Palm Beach–based personal trainer, Coach Lil utilizes this system that she has spent 25 years perfecting with her clients to help improve body awareness, develop balance, and strengthen the whole body. Adaptable to the ability of the person doing it, the OzzyBall System acts as a “motivator to get people moving because it’s a fun, feel-good way to exercise” that can be used for everything from ab development and leg work to spinal stretching. “I find people enjoy it because they can be challenged and work out without beating up their bodies as with many other programs,” says Ristevska. (coachlil.com)
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GUILTLESS GAME-DAY GRUB p
Meet
MARKET
Launched this past summer, JoJo’s Farmers Market offers visitors to Jupiter’s Carlin Park a oncea-month opportunity to explore the world of local wellness and healthy eating. Co-founder Riley Burns shares the seeds of her brainchild as well as its sprouting story. (jojosfarmersmarket.com) PBI: What was the genesis of the market? Burns: JoJo’s Farmers Market was started as a means to expose the community to the wellnessbased lifestyle that we truly believe in. My mother, Joanna, passed away from cancer when I was only 8, and it pushed me toward a path of healing and self-betterment; not just for me, but also for those around me. I started this path as a pre-med student at Florida Atlantic University, but quickly realized Western medical practices as a sole preventive and treatment option was not for me, nor was it the way I envisioned myself helping others to heal. This led me to drop out of college and pursue a career in yoga as a teacher. JoJo’s Farmers Market is the next step toward a bigger vision. What was the biggest surprise for you? The need for an event like this in the community. Because I started this market while
COVID regulations are ongoing, I didn’t know what to expect. One good thing that did emerge as a result of these trying times, however, is a willingness to discuss mental, emotional, and spiritual health. Communities of people have come together in their realization that self-care is something that needs to happen every day, and we are no longer limiting our definition of health and wellness. Health happens at the dinner table and outside in the park. Health happens through activity, togetherness, and self-reflection. We were surprised by just how thoughtful and intentional people are with their time. Why is it important? JoJo’s Farmers Market doesn’t just give people an opportunity to buy and sell products/services. It gives us an opportunity to connect, to tell our stories, to share values. And because everything is locally sourced and created by our vendors, everybody in attendance becomes a part of a larger narrative. It is very personal. People are learning more about how to be well and how to support the health of their community. Kids are free to explore and learn and play, and pets are adored. It’s very, very special.
What would football season be without the tailgate fare? To watch your waistline while watching your favorite team, try these healthy gameday substitutions from local eateries. WANT WINGS? Farmer’s Table has crowd-pleasing oven-roasted Buffalo cauliflower “drumettes” served with vegan ranch dip. (dinefarmers table.com) WANT NACHOS? Vegan restaurant Darbster offers nachos with “chickn,” “steak,” or tempeh taco meat atop blue corn chips, queso, black beans, lettuce, guacamole, pico de gallo, sour cream, and jalapeños. (darbster.com) WANT FRIES? Kick up the swank quotient with Planta’s cauliflower tots with lemon aioli and truffle almond parmesan. (planta restaurants.com)
CHECK OUT THESE VENDORS WHEN YOU’RE STROLLING THE MARKET
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NATIVE ARMOR HARNESSING THE IMMUNE-BOOSTING POWER OF ANTIOXIDANT-RICH ELDERBERRY, THE COMPANY’S SYRUPS INCLUDE A KETO-FRIENDLY VERSION AND A BLEND WITH GOJI BERRIES, ROSE HIPS, AND ECHINACEA FOR EXTRA IMMUNE SUPPORT. (NATIVEARMOR.COM)
Christina’s Clean Creations THIS LINE OF ORGANIC, ECO-FRIENDLY CLEANING PRODUCTS HAS ESSENTIAL OILS ADDED TO PRODUCE FABULOUS AROMAS. (CHRISTINASCLEANCREATIONS.COM)
« POP SHACK 561 THIS ARTISAN ICE POP MAKER OFFERS VEGAN, GLUTEN-FREE, DAIRY-FREE CREATIONS IN FUN FLAVORS LIKE PINEAPPLE BASIL LEMONADE AND CHOCOLATE SEA SALT. (POPSHACK561.COM)
WANT PIZZA? Choose from a variety of gourmet pizzas from Christopher’s Kitchen such as Hawaiian barbecue and jackfruit, or this Farmers Market pizza with cashew cheese and Brazil nut parmesan. (christopherskitchenfl.com) WANT CHEESE STICKS? Fit Foodz Café has baked quinoa cheese sticks with mozzarella and parmesan and a side of tomato sauce. (fitfoodzcafe.com)
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Dr. Ilona Fotek is a Biological Cosmetic and Restorative Dentist. She defines herself as an artist of the smile and a physician of the mouth. She utilizes the safest available methods to restore teeth and reinstate dental and overall health. Her feminine touch, artistic finesse, and special attention to details makes her sought after and highly recognized by the community. Dr. Paul Fotek is a board-certified periodontist and implant specialist who also shares a passion for biologic approach in surgical treatment. Their combined expertise in smile design and complex dentistry is an art of its own. Drs. Ilona and Paul Fotek only work with people who are equally meticulous, high quality products they thoroughly researched and small dental laboratories they trust with own family. Working as a team, they understand the issues and concerns their patients experienced and focus on a biologic approach to help patients achieve the smile rejuvenation, employing natural processes that minimize toxic load on the body. Dental Healing Arts takes a holistic approach to dental health, treating issues that occur in the mouth and body by tackling the underlying root cause, be it poor nutrition, jaw under-development and TMJ, Sleep Apnea or environmental toxins.
ILONA FOTEK DMD, MS • • • • • • • • • •
Cosmetic and Reconstructive Dentistry Ozone Therapy (cavities, gums, ears and nasal) Safe Mercury Removal (IAOMT protocol) Comprehensive Holistic Dentistry Biocompatibility Material Testing Fluoride- free & Mercury- free office BPA-free fillings Metal free Crowns and Bridges Laser Treatment (tissue healing and cell repair, TMJ) Sleep apnea and growth appliances
PAUL FOTEK DMD, MS • • • • • • • • • • •
PRF - body’s own growth factors Biocompatible Zirconium Implants Ozone Therapy IV and oral sedation Cavitation New generation 3D CBCT Recession/Gum Loss treatment Laser Bacterial Decontamination Extractions & Bone Regeneration IV vitamin infusions Facial PRF and laser rejuvenation
HOLISTIC, AESTHETIC & IMPLANT DENTISTRY 4600 Military Trail, Suite 210 | Jupiter, FL 33458 | 561.626.6116 | dentalhealingarts@gmail.com | www.dentalhealingarts.com
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BALANCE
EXPERT RESULTS
Homegrown BEAUTY
Before
After
WHAT ATTRACTS PATIENTS TO SEEK OUT ENNIS PLASTIC SURGERY OVER OTHER PRACTICES IN SOUTH FLORIDA?
We are very fortunate to have clients from all over the world coming to see us in Boca Raton. With a team of professional and caring employees, our practice differentiates itself from the rest in that it offers an expert husband-and-wife team working together to achieve results.
IS THERE A SPECIALTY THAT DRAWS THEM?
The majority of our patients who travel to our practice in Boca Raton do so for our facial work and the very natural results we always aim to achieve. As the face ages it loses muscle elasticity, which affects the appearance of the skin, thus the misconception that lines and wrinkles are only ‘skin deep.’ By addressing the muscle underneath, we achieve a beautifully refreshed and natural result.
ARE THERE OTHER PROCEDURES YOU ARE RENOWNED FOR?
We recently introduced the latest technology in hair transplantation that leaves no linear scar on the back of the head, and a rejuvenated hair line for the patient. Our breast implant technology achieves very natural results without a scar on the breast, preferring an underarm incision. Finally, our boutique practice approach in Boca Raton caters to a very sophisticated and well-educated group of patients who seek us out based on their research of cutting-edge procedures and our excellent reviews, which speak for themselves.
233 S Federal Hwy, Suite 110 • Boca Raton, FL 33432 561-266-4439 • ennismd.com SPECIAL PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
Instead of buying expensive products when you’re between spa visits, try looking in your pantry—you may already have all the makings of a beauty treatment that is both clean and effective. The specialists at Boca Raton’s Skin Apeel Day Spa share a few of their favorite DIY organic facials you can whip up at home. (skinapeel.com)
SENSITIVE SKIN CLEANSER For those with easily irritated skin, this delicate skin cleanser will not only cleanse your skin but leave it moisturized and soft. Ingredients 3 tbsp. extra-virgin coconut oil 1 tsp. raw honey 1 tsp. baking soda Directions Stir coconut oil by itself in a small bowl until creamy. Stir in honey and baking soda until thoroughly mixed. Apply a small amount to skin in a circular motion and let it sit to pull out toxins. Remove with a warm washcloth and rub any residual product into your skin.
EXFOLIATING & MOISTURIZING FACIAL MASK It’s essential to remove dead skin cells daily with a gentle exfoliator or cleanser. Ingredients 1 tbsp. raw organic honey 1/ of an avocado 2 1 tbsp. raw sugar Small handful ground oats Directions Mix honey, avocado, sugar, and ground oats. Apply the mixture to a clean face and allow to sit for 15-20 minutes. Remove with a warm washcloth.
ANTI-AGING CHOCOLATE FACIAL Use this organic facial mask as a skin-repairing and anti-aging treatment. Or, you can put it on your ice cream as a dessert topper—it’s really up to you. Ingredients 1 tbsp. extra-virgin coconut oil 2 tbsp. dark cacao powder Directions Stir together softened coconut oil with cacao powder. Apply to face and let sit 15-20 minutes before removing the mask with a warm washcloth.
APPLE CIDER VINEGAR SKIN PEEL Because our skin turns over roughly every two weeks, it’s just as essential to dissolve dead skin cell build-up. Apple cider vinegar contains beneficial doses of acetic, lactic, citric, and malic acids to exfoliate the skin gently. Ingredients 1 tsp. apple cider vinegar 1 tbsp. organic applesauce Directions Mix apple cider vinegar with applesauce. Apply to the face evenly, being careful to avoid the eye area. Let sit for 15-20 minutes before removing with cool water.
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Donna S. Ennis, ARNP T h e S. G e nEnnis, t l e I n j e c tARNP or Donna Donna ARNP Self-Care IsTNot An h e S. G e Expense, nEnnis, t l e I n jIt’s e c tAn o r Investment The Gentle Injector
Self-Care Is Not An Expense, It’s An Investment Self-Care Is Not An Expense, It’s An Investment For over twenty-five years, Donna has used her clinical experience and expertise to help For over look twenty-five years, used her patients and feel their Donna best. Athas Ennis Plastic clinical experience and Donna expertise to help Surgery, specializes in weight loss and For over Donna twenty-five years, has used her patients and feeland theirisbest. At Ennis injectable treatments well known inPlastic Boca clinical look experience and expertise to help Surgery, Donna specializes indue weight loss and Raton aslook “theand gentle her gentle patients feelinjector” their best. AttoEnnis Plastic injectable treatments and providing is in wellweight known in Boca touch and comfort when treatments. Surgery, Donna specializes loss and Raton as “the gentle injector” dueknown to heringentle injectable treatments and is well Boca Licensure: touch as and“the comfort providing Raton gentlewhen injector” due totreatments. her gentle • Double board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner touch and comfort when providing treatments. • ANCC - American Nursing Credentialing Center Licensure: • - American Academy of Nurse Nurse Practitioner Practitioners • AANP Double board-certified Family Licensure: • Licensed in the state of Florida as an Advanced • American Nursing Credentialing Center • ANCC Double- board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner Practice Nurse • ANCC AANP - -American of Nurse Practitioners • AmericanAcademy Nursing Credentialing Center • Licensed in the state of Florida as an Advanced • AANP - American Academy of Nurse Practitioners Experience: • Practice LicensedNurse in the state of Florida as an Advanced • Skin Consultation Practice Nurse • Obagi Blue Peel Experience: • I Dysport I Xeomin I Jeuveau • Botox Skin Consultation Experience: • Radiesse I Juvederm I Restylane I Revance • Blue Peel • Obagi Skin Consultation • Boutique Weight Loss • Dysport • Botox ObagiI Blue PeelI Xeomin I Jeuveau • I Juvederm I Restylane I Revance • Radiesse Botox I Dysport I Xeomin I Jeuveau • Loss I Restylane I Revance • Boutique Radiesse Weight I Juvederm • Boutique Weight Loss
ENNIS PLASTIC SURGERY 561-266-4439 I 233 S. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton, FL I www.EnnisMD.com
BEAUTIFUL MEDICINE™
561-266-4439 I 233 S. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton, FL I www.EnnisMD.com 561-266-4439 I 233 S. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton, FL I www.EnnisMD.com
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BALANCE POMPANOS BOUTIQUE GRAND OPENING 11.13.2021 Beach to Bistro Emily McCarthy Hilton Hollis Jennifer Landis Melissa Nepton Nouvelle
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KEEP A GRATITUDE JOURNAL Robert Emmons, the world’s leading scientific expert on gratitude, found that people who practice gratitude consistently can increase happiness by as much as 25 percent. One way to do that is by keeping a gratitude journal. Use it to write down three things you’re thankful for at the end of each day. Local source: Treat yourself to a Reflect box from Jupiter-based Sparrow Box Co. In addition to a gratitude journal, it includes shortbread cookies, cozy socks, English breakfast tea, and vanilla sugar cubes. (sparrowboxco.com)
2
GET A DOG (OR JUST PET ONE) Countless studies have shown that pet owners are happier, healthier, and more outgoing. However, even shorter interactions with dogs can boost a person’s mood. Simply petting a dog releases serotonin and dopamine—the “feel good” chemicals that improve mood and affect happiness. Local source: Visit Big Dog Ranch Rescue, the largest cagefree, no-kill dog rescue in the United States, to pick a forever friend or to volunteer your time helping their residents and getting your petting fix. (bdrr.org)
3
SPEND MONEY (ON EXPERIENCES, NOT THINGS) According to a Cornell study, money may be able to buy happiness—as long as you spend it on doing things rather than owning things. Spending money on experiences provides long-lasting happiness due to both the anticipation associated with it as well as the memory you will hold onto once the event is over. Local sources: Schedule a West Palm Beach Food Tour (westpalm beachfoodtour.com), book a private Splatter Room painting event (uptownpaintandsip.com), spend a day exploring the Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens (morikami.org), or plan a getaway.
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BALANCE
WEALTH
Investing with PURPOSE
What you need to know about SPACs—and why you should proceed with CAUTION
By Judy Martel SPACs (special purpose acquisition companies) might well be the exciting new investment kids on the block. A decade ago, these entities—formed for the sole purpose of raising capital to acquire existing private companies and take them public—were littleknown outside the financial community. But within the past year, they’ve emerged from the shadows, driven in part by some notable initial public offerings (IPOs) such as spaceflight company Virgin Galactic and online sports betting company DraftKings. Investors seeking a big payoff from buying into a company before it goes public can purchase shares of SPACs through a brokerage account. They are typically more accessible to the average investor than a more
traditional IPO managed by investment bankers, and they can also circumvent some of the red tape, giving them more agility in the marketplace. But the relative speed and ease with which they can operate is the very reason potential investors should use caution when investing in SPACs, according to Deanne Butchey, a teaching professor in the department of finance at Florida International University and a former investment banker at Credit Suisse. “Investors often want to jump on the bandwagon immediately and don’t dig deep enough in their due diligence,” Butchey says. “They are relying on the expertise of the originator of the SPAC.” SPACs are sometimes referred to as “blank check companies” because investors put money in without knowing what company will eventually be acquired. Typically, if the SPAC doesn’t purchase a company within two years, the money is returned to the investors. The originators, called sponsors, are highly regarded experts in a particular
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field and often have a target company in mind when forming the SPAC, but investors are still putting their faith in the sponsor’s ability to do the proper research, Butchey explains. For an example of one SPAC investment that didn’t turn out as planned, Butchey points to the electric-vehicle company Nikola. “The original SPAC originators didn’t dig deep enough,” she says, and when the media reported that Nikola allegedly exaggerated claims about vehicle performance and production from the beginning, short sellers came calling and helped drive the stock valuation down, potentially leaving SPAC investors with a loss. “With any equity investment, whether in an individual company stock or a SPAC, shareholders should be looking at making money over the long term and holding it for at least 10 years while continuing to follow the company and do due diligence,” Butchey notes.
An immediate payoff from a SPAC IPO can be huge, and the hope is that the investment will continue to grow. But there’s always a possibility prices will fluctuate wildly, particularly because it’s not unusual for SPACs to often invest in start-up companies, which are considered riskier than blue-chip company stocks. If shareholders panic, they could sell at the wrong time and take a loss. What’s more, cashing in on an immediate price increase will have tax implications that Butchey says are often overlooked; taxpayers will owe short-term capital gains tax on any shares sold within a year. Butchey encourages investors to view SPAC investing with the proper risk perspective because she believes it is appropriate only for the sophisticated individual willing to take a gamble. “Investors are hoping these SPAC originators will find the next big company, and I’ve seen people lose money basically at the flip of a coin.” «
December 4-5, 2021 CAPEHART
Promotion and Events
Donald Osborne (center) with Frances and Jeffrey Fisher
ANN NORTON SCULPTURE GARDENS The 5th Annual Sculpture in Motion steers into the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens on Saturday, November 13, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event honors Gold Star Families of Palm Beach County and other veterans, concluding with a Grand Tour Parade of Cars, tracing a scenic route along the Intracoastal through the island of Palm Beach. 253 Barcelona Road | West Palm Beach | 561-832-5328 | ansg.org
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Visit the Center’s official website kravis.org or call 561.832.7469 or 800.572.8471 DREYFOOS HALL Photo credit: ©Steven Caras. All rights reserved
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REACH THE MOST INFLUENTIAL RESIDENTS IN PALM BEACH AND BEYOND. ADVERTISE ON OUR PAGES AND GET NOTICED.
Contact: palmbeachillustrated.com/contact-us
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PALM BEACH SYMPHONY
SEASON 2021-22
MASTERWORKS
Featuring a choice selection of all-time favorite works by Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Rachmaninoff, Dvořák and more.
Concert Information:
TIMOTHY GREENFIELD-SANDERS
• Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony November 7, 2021 • Mozart’s Requiem December 2, 2021 • Romantic Rachmaninoff January 10, 2022
Jon Manasse
Midori
Yefim Bronfman
• Beethoven & Mahler March 7, 2022
Each concert will be performed live in Dreyfoos Hall at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts
Hélène Grimaud
M AT H E N N E K
• Dvořák’s Eighth Symphony April 10, 2022 Maria João Geissberger Pires
SUBSCRIBE: For tickets, call (561) 281-0145 or single tickets can be purchased online at palmbeachsymphony.org
PALM BEACH SYMPHONY FIFTH ANNUAL
HOLLY JOLLY SYMPHONY FÊTE A Christmas feast without the craziness–your joyous luncheon awaits! Relax and celebrate the holiday season with champagne and cocktails, extensive silent auction, glorious music, fine food, camaraderie, and presentation of the 2021 award for Palm Beach Symphony Instrumental Music Teacher of The Year.
YOUR SUPPORT IS ESSENTIAL!
This festive holiday event supports Palm Beach Symphony’s mission to provide world-class music, community outreach, and music education programs to Palm Beach County. All proceeds go to music education programs reaching more than 15,000 students in Palm Beach County and impact the people of all ages and every corner of the community we serve. You can make a difference.
Date & Time
Tuesday, December 7, 2021 10:30 AM
Location
The Beach Club, Palm Beach 755 N County Rd, Palm Beach, FL 33480
See your generosity in action To reserve your ticket or support this event go to:
www.palmbeachsymphony.org/ support/holly-jolly
For more information: Contact Hulya Selcuk by calling (561) 568-0265 or email hselcuk@palmbeachsymphony.org
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AGENDA By Abigail Duffy
NEW In Town
Clockwise from top left: Frank Arnold’s New Entrance, Dream 8, Five X, Balance, Me Two, Presume, and Some Day (below) will be on view at MAC Fine Art in “The Messengers” from November 1 to December 1.
MAC Fine Art will charge onto the Delray Beach arts scene with the grand opening of its third brick-and-mortar South Florida gallery this month. To celebrate, the gallery will debut “The Messengers,” a showcase of acclaimed abstract figure painter and sculptor Frank Arnold’s masterful works, on view from November 1 to December 1. Curated by principal gallerist Mary Ann Cohen, the collection of the native Californian’s new and established creations will set a “sophisticated, powerful, and timeless” tone for the local icon’s new space, which is set to house pieces by contemporary artists René Romero Schuler, Jason Myers, Elena Bond, Bette Ridgeway, and Estella Fransbergen, among others. Guests are welcome to toast to the gallery’s debut at an opening reception with the artist on November 20, from 6 to 9 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. (macfineart.com)
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AGENDA NOVEMBER 2021
ARTS & CULTURE
GOINGS ON 1 Boca West Children’s Foundation Annual $100,000 Golf Challenge, Boca West Country Club, $650. (bocawestfoundation.org)
TimberTech Championship, Old Course at Broken Sound, Boca Raton, to Nov. 7, $30. (timbertech championship.com)
Twilight Yoga, Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse & Museum, also Nov. 8, 15, 22, and 29, $10. (jupiterlighthouse.org)
3 Lighthouse Sunset Tour, Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse & Museum, also Nov. 10 and 17, $25. (jupiter lighthouse.org)
5 Feast of Little Italy, Downtown Abacoa, Jupiter, Clockwise from above: Family of Dragonflies, Seung Lee, Mtn Space Gallery; Preciously Secure, Valerie Collins Stanescu, Cultural Council for Palm Beach County; C.J. Chenier, Arts Garage, November 12-13; Summer Borders, Parc Du Luxembourg, Paris, Charles Neal, Findlay Galleries.
to Nov. 7, free. (feastoflittleitaly.com)
“Humanized Naturalism: Japanese Gardens as Therapeutic Spaces” lecture with Kendall Brown, Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach, $5. (morikami.org)
Neil S. Hirsch Wellington Golf Classic, benefiting the Boys & Girls Clubs of Palm Beach County, Wellington National Country Club, $1,200. (bgcpbc.org)
Stories in the Gardens, Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, also Nov. 12, 19, and 26, free. (ansg.org)
6 LagoonFest, Waterfront Commons, West Palm Beach, free. (thepalmbeaches. com) 172 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi
GET GROOVIN’ SHERVIN LAINEZ
“Everybody’s Talkin’” about the arrival of the Tedeschi Trucks Band to the Kravis Center in West Palm Beach November 11. The 12-member troupe will bring its inimitable soul to the Dreyfoos Hall stage, led by husband-and-wife duo Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi. Tedeschi’s stunning vocals melt into Trucks’ masterful guitar, bringing a quintessential funk to rock and roll anthems and a crushing power to ballads that have won the world over. The band’s remarkable chemistry and towering talent have earned them standing ovations—and goosebumps—among audiences near and far for almost 11 years. As of press time, Kravis Center guests ages 2 and older must wear CDC-approved face masks, and those ages 5 and older must present digital or printed documentation of a negative COVID-19 test or proof of full vaccination status. (kravis.org)
10 Legends and Lore of Fort Lauderdale’s New River lecture with Donn Colee, Richard and Pat Johnson History Museum, West Palm Beach, free. (pbchistory.org)
11 Tomb of the Unknown Soldier: A Century of Honor, 1921-2021 lecture with Philip Bigler, Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, contact for ticket prices. (flagler museum.us)
Veterans Day Observance, Mizner Park Amphitheater, Boca Raton, free. (myboca.us)
Veterans Salute, Veterans Plaza Amphitheater, Palm Beach Gardens, free. (pbgfl.com)
12 Hispanic Heritage Night, Boynton Beach Arts & Cultural Center, free. (boynton-beach.org)
Junior League of Boca Raton’s Woman Volunteer of the Year Luncheon, Boca Raton Resort & Club, contact for
2 PICKS GET A RUNNING START ON THANKSGIVING AT THE TOWN OF PALM BEACH UNITED WAY’S ANNUAL TURKEY TROT, TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 25 AT BRADLEY PARK. PROCEEDS FROM THE EVENT WILL PROVIDE THANKSGIVING MEALS TO LOCAL FAMILIES IN NEED. (PALMBEACH UNITEDWAY.ORG)
BOCA STAGE IS DIALING UP THE DRAMA WITH STAGINGS OF KENNETH LIN’S WARRIOR CLASS NOVEMBER 4-21. THE CHARACTERS’ DARK SECRETS AND THE POLITICAL THRILLER’S UNEXPECTED TWISTS WILL LEAVE AUDIENCES ON THE EDGES OF THEIR SEATS. (BOCASTAGE.NET)
Food for Thought: An Evening of Great Conversation Gala, Mandel Public Library of West Palm Beach, $350. (wpblf.org) Lighthouse Story Time & Crafts for Kids, Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse & Museum, $25. (jupiterlighthouse.org)
Sculpture in Motion: The Art of Pre- and Post-War Automobiles, Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, $8-$25. (ansg.org)
14 Hanley Foundation Brice Makris Memorial Picnic, Boca West Country Club, Boca Raton, $50-$125. (hanleyfoundation.org)
18 Young Friends Murder Mock Trial, Richard and Pat Johnson History Museum, West Palm Beach, contact for ticket prices. (pbchistory.org)
Ofrenda, Ivan Loboguerrero, Rosenbaum Contemporary
19 History & Architecture Walking Tour, Richard and Pat Johnson History Museum, West Palm Beach; also Nov. 20, GreenMarket, West Palm Beach, $10. (pbchistory.org)
Lighthouse Moonrise Tour, Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse & Museum, $25. (jupiterlighthouse.org) Up film screening, Gubelmann Auditorium, The Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $10. (fourarts.org)
ticket prices. (jlbr.org)
Screen on the Green presents Dolittle, Waterfront Commons, West
Zoo Lights, Palm Beach Zoo, West Palm Beach, select dates to Jan. 2, contact for ticket prices. (palmbeachzoo.org)
Palm Beach, free. (wpb.org)
13 Art Talk with Caren Hackman, Cultural Council for Palm Beach County, Lake Worth Beach, contact for ticket prices. (palmbeachculture.com)
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Warrior Class at Boca Stage
THESE EVENT DETAILS ARE CURRENT AS OF PRESS TIME, BUT PLEASE CONTACT THE VENUE OR PRESENTER FOR THE MOST UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION.
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AGENDA
Still Life Millions of eyes have gazed upon (and shed tears at) the spectacular sights of Michelangelo’s David at the Galleria dell’ Accademia di Firenze and Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne at the Borghese Gallery and Museum in Rome, but few have managed to capture their magnitude on film. Italian photographer Aurelio Amendola is the exception. The Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach will showcase Amendola’s work in “An Eye on Michelangelo and Bernini: Photographs by Aurelio Amendola,” on view from November 13 to January 30. The exhibition features 30 of Amendola’s dramatic blackand-white shots of Michelangelo’s and Bernini’s works. Each photograph maintains the majesty of these towering exemplars of Renaissance creation, even from more than 5,000 miles away. From full-scale depictions to abstract cropped shots that offer a new perspective on the marble masterpieces, the exhibition is nothing short of breathtaking. Admission is $10. (fourarts.org)
Aurelio Amendola’s striking images of Michelangelo’s David (above left) and Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne (above) will be on view beginning November 13.
Tree Lighting, Downtown Delray Beach, free.
Gubelmann Auditorium, The Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $15-$20. (fourarts.org)
(downtowndelraybeach.com)
Junior League of the Palm Beaches’ Deck the Palms Boutique Market, Palm Beach Out-
PERFORMANCES 1 Mamma Mia!, The Wick Theatre, Boca Raton, to Nov. 14, $75-$115. (thewick.org)
Rendezvous at the Light, Jupiter Inlet Light-
Club Colette, Palm Beach, $450. (darbster.com)
2 “2 Guys & A Doll Do Broadway,” Delray Beach Playhouse, also Nov. 3, $44; also Nov. 4, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $34-$44. (delray beachplayhouse.com; miznerparkculturalcenter.com)
25 Town of Palm Beach United Way Turkey Trot, Bradley Park, Palm Beach, $100. (palmbeach
(artsgarage.org)
house & Museum, $25. (jupiterlighthouse.org)
21 Fur Ball, benefiting The Darbster Foundation,
unitedway.org)
27 Shop Small Business Saturday, Downtown
Beach, also Nov. 6, $55-$60. (artsgarage.org)
Deon Cole, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, to Nov. 7, $30-$40. (palmbeachimprov.com)
20 Frida Kahlo documentary screening,
lets, West Palm Beach, also Nov. 21, free. (jlpb.org)
5 Ann Hampton Callaway presents “The Judy Garland Songbook,” Arts Garage, Delray
Comedy Night, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $5. 3 Heather Land, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm
An Evening with The Box Tops, Crest Theatre at Old School Square, Delray Beach, tickets start at $55. (oldschoolsquare.org)
Joe DeVito, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton; also Nov. 6, Delray Beach Playhouse, $25$35. (miznerparkculturalcenter.com; delraybeachplay house.com) 6 Elements: Earth, Wind, & Fire Tribute Band, Veterans Plaza Amphitheater, Palm Beach Gardens, free. (pbgfl.com)
Gilberto Santa Rosa, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $39-$129. (kravis.org)
Beach, $30-$99. (palmbeachimprov.com)
Judy Gold, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $40-$55. (miznerparkculturalcenter.com)
PBA Brass Ensemble presents “A Salute to Veterans,” Persson Hall, Palm Beach Atlantic
Kathleen Madigan presents “Do You Have Any Ranch?,” Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $47. (lyrictheatre.com)
Delray Beach, free. (downtowndelraybeach.com)
29 “Michelangelo Sculptor” lecture with Philip Rylands, Gubelmann Auditorium, The Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $20. (fourarts.org)
30 The Daughters of Yalta: The Churchills, Roosevelts, and Harrimans, A Story of Love and War lecture with Catherine Grace Katz, Dixon Education Building, The Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $20. (fourarts.org)
University, West Palm Beach, $5-$10. (pba.edu)
4 Orleans, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $47. (lyrictheatre.
7 Divas Through the Decades, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $40-$45. (artsgarage.org)
com)
Warrior Class, Sol Theatre, Boca Stage, Boca Raton to Nov. 21, $45-$50. (bocastage.net)
Joe Posa as Joan Rivers, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $25-$35; also Nov. 12, Delray Beach Playhouse, $35. (miznerparkculturalcenter. com; delraybeachplayhouse.com)
174 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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EDEN
on view oct 22nd - nov 28th
magnus sodamin, blood banana 2018, acrylic on canvas, 70” x 60”
mtnspace.com
MTNSPBI1121.indd 1
@mtnspacegallery
502 lake avenue, lake worth beach, fl
10/4/21 10:37 AM
AGENDA
CAPEHART
2021-22
OCTOBER 23 – FEBRUARY 6
purchase tickets 10% off at norton.org
Make a run for it at the Town of PAlm Beach United Way Turkey Trot on november 25.
Palm Beach Symphony presents Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, tickets start at $25. (kravis.org)
9 All Arts Open Mic Night, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $5. (arts garage.org)
The Sicilian Tenors, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $50. (lyrictheatre.com) 10 Trifecta of Folk Greats: The Kingston Trio, The Brothers Four, and The Limeliters, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $25$95. (kravis.org)
the norton channel tune in for live events and videos on youtube.
norton.org
the exhibition is organized by the vergel foundation and mondomostre in collaboration with the instituto nacional de bellas artes y literatura (inbal). premier sponsors: rita and charles bronfman, jane carroll and leo arnaboldi, jane b. holzer, leonard and judy lauder, point gammon foundation; major sponsors: y. michele kang, bonnie mcelveen-hunter, anonymous benefactor; sponsors: cary brown & steven epstein, pam and bob goergen, mr. and mrs. richard e. salomon, robbi and bruce toll, william and sarah ross soter, anonymous benefactor; supporters: roger w. ferguson, jr and annette l. nazareth, ronnie heyman, michelle and joseph jacobs, ann and tom johnson, betty and john levin, hilarie and mitchell morgan, jean s. sharf, dorothy and craig stapleton, kelly williams and andrew forsyth, sue and beau wrigley premier corporate sponsor:
11 National Geographic Live presents “View from Above,” Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $52. (lyrictheatre.com)
Newsies, StarStruck Academy Theatre, Stuart, to Nov. 14, $20-$43. (starstruckfl.org)
Nicole Byer, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, $25-$35. (palmbeachimprov.com)
Tedeschi Trucks Band, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $44-$124. (kravis.org)
12 Chris Pinnella presents “Sinatra at the Sands,” Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $35-$45; also Nov. 13, Delray Beach Playhouse, $35-$45. (miznerparkculturalcenter.com; delraybeachplayhouse.com) 176 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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ART EXHIBITIONS An Eye on Michelangelo and Bernini Photographs by Aurelio Amendola
Aurelio Amendola has devoted his career to documenting the works of great masters of the Italian Renaissance. This exhibition features 30 stunning black and white photo details of some of Michelangelo’s and Bernini’s most-beloved sculptures, showing the intimate dialogue Amendola shares with the artists and unveiling the style and intensity of the Italian masters. Aurelio Amendola, detail of Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne (1622–25, marble, Borghese Gallery and Museum, Rome, Italy), print on baryta paper with silver salts mounted on aluminum, printed 2021
A Beautiful Mess
Weavers & Knotters of the Vanguard This vibrant contemporary textile exhibition features a diverse selection of fiber arts, including wall-hangings, installations, and monumental pieces. The all-female roster of conceptual artists displays twisted, tied, and braided works made from tactile and utilitarian materials like rope, yarn, clay, and wire, elevating the status of weaving and knotting from craft to fine art. Kirsten Hassenfeld, Millefleur, 2019, salvaged textiles with mixed media
ON DISPLAY NOVEMBER 13, 2021 THROUGH JANUARY 30, 2022 Tickets: $10. Hours: 10-5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday-Saturday; 1-5 p.m. Sunday. Closed Tuesdays. Visit www.fourarts.org to reserve tickets and view our season policies and procedures.
www.fourarts.org
| 102 FOUR ARTS PLAZA | PALM BEACH, FL
A Beautiful Mess: Weavers & Knotters of the Vanguard is organized by Bedford Gallery at the Lesher Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek, CA. An Eye on Michelangelo and Bernini: Photographs by Aurelio Amendola is organized by The Society of the Four Arts.
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Join us ...
AGENDA C.J. Chenier & the Red Hot Louisiana Band, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, also Nov. 13, $40-$45. (artsgarage.org)
Michael Rapaport, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, to Nov. 14, $30$40. (palmbeachimprov.com) h e n r y
m o r r i s o n
FLAGLER MUSEUM
Mike Marino, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $37-$47. (mizner parkculturalcenter.com)
One Whitehall Way • (561) 655-2833
Quinteto Astor Piazzolla, Rinker Playhouse, Kravis Center, West Palm
palm beach, florida
for a new season of programming!
Beach, also. Nov. 13, tickets start at $39. (kravis.org)
Steep Canyon Rangers, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $47. (lyrictheatre.com) 14 Christone “Kingfish” Ingram, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $47. (lyric theatre.com)
Johnny Rawls, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $40-$45. (artsgarage.org) Neil Zirconia presents “The Ultimate Neil Diamond Tribute Experience,” Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $29-$39. (mizner parkculturalcenter.com)
15 Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach Season Opening Night Concert, The Breakers, Palm Beach, contact for ticket prices. (cmspb.org)
Poetry Night, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $5. (artsgarage.org) Gilded Age-style Tea Service by the Café des Beaux-Arts
16 Come From Away, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, to Nov. 21, contact for ticket prices. (kravis.org) 17 Pop Rock Concert, Palm Beach Atlantic University, West Palm Beach, $5-$10. (pba.edu) Victoria Vox, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $25. (artsgarage.org)
Unknown Soldier cture: Tomb of the ities Christmas festiv
Veterans Day Le
Indulge in sweet treats and family fun at the Feast of Little Italy in Downtown Abacoa November 5-7.
NEW! Together, at the Table series
Swank Farm presents Florida's Fall Harvest at the Flagler Museum November 18, 2021 at 6:00 pm A culinary adventure prepared by Chef Pushkar Marathe
Request a Season Program Guide by calling (561) 655-2833 or read the digital version online at
www.flaglermuseum.us/illustrated These programs are funded in part by
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s
and the golden empires of peru
OPENS OCTOBER 16, 2021
SCAN FOR INFO
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BOCAMUSEUM.ORG
10/1/21 1:18 PM
AGENDA 18 An Evening of Orchestral Dances, University Theatre, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, contact for ticket prices. (fauevents.com)
Evenings at the Council, Cultural Council for Palm Beach County, Lake Worth Beach, contact for ticket prices. (palmbeachculture.com)
John Mayall, Crest Theatre at Old School Square, Delray Beach, tickets start at $40; also Nov. 19, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $45. (oldschoolsquare.org; lyrictheatre.com)
Karen Oberlin presents “Secret Love: The Life and Music of Doris Day,” Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $35-$45; also Nov. 19-20, Delray Beach Playhouse, $44. (miznerpark culturalcenter.com; delraybeachplayhouse.com)
Tubes of Erotic Concentration (inset) and Thirst (below) by Carol Prusa
New Faces of Comedy Turkey Contest, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, $5. (palmbeach improv.com)
30 A Swingin’ Little Christmas with Jane Lynch, Kate Flannery, Tim Davis, & The Tony Guerrero Quintet, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $57.
O-Town Motown, Lyric Theatre, Stuart, $47. (lyric theatre.com)
19 Rocky Mountain High: A John Denver Tribute, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton,
(lyrictheatre.com)
to Nov. 21, $55. (miznerparkculturalcenter.com)
GALLERIES
Sara Gazarek Quartet, Arts Garage, Delray
Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach. “Unknowing (Between Day and Night) by
Beach, $35-$40. (artsgarage.org)
20 America: Fiftieth Anniversary Tour, Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce, tickets start at $64.50. (sunrisetheatre.com) Chris Stapleton, Sheryl Crow, and Kendell Marvel, iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre, West Palm Beach, tickets start at $76. (westpalmbeach amphitheatre.com)
Hotel California: The Original Tribute to the Eagles, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, also Nov. 21,
Carol Prusa,” Nov. 3 to Jan. 2. (ansg.org)
Christian Finnegan, Mizner Park Amphitheater, Boca Raton, tickets start at $35. (comedyonthe green.org) Cirque Dreams Holidaze, Dreyfoos Hall, Kravis
$45-$50. (artsgarage.org)
Center, West Palm Beach, to Nov. 28, tickets start at $29. (kravis.org)
Pure Zeppelin Experience Celebration, Lyric
The Marlow Rosado Latin Jazz Ensemble, Arts
Theatre, Stuart, $30-$40. (lyrictheatre.com)
Garage, Delray Beach, $40-$45. (artsgarage.org)
To Fall in Love, Theatre Lab, Florida Atlantic Uni-
Mike Rivera and Michael Murillo, Delray
versity, Boca Raton, to Dec. 12, contact for ticket prices. (fau.edu/theatrelab)
Beach Playhouse, $25-$35; also Nov. 27, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton, $35. (delraybeach playhouse.com; miznerparkculturalcenter.com)
21 FAU Band-O-Rama, Mizner Park Amphitheater, Boca Raton, contact for ticket prices. (fauevents.com)
The Winter Spectacular with Marilyn Maye and Nicholas King, The Wick Theatre, Boca Raton, to Dec. 19, $75-$115. (thewick.org)
26 Assisted Living, The Musical: The Home for the Holidays, Mizner Park Cultural Center, Boca Raton,
27 Paul Nelson featuring Johnny Winter, Arts
to Nov. 28, $33-$45. (miznerparkculturalcenter.com)
Garage, Delray Beach, $40-$50. (artsgarage.org)
Armory Art Center, West Palm Beach. “Art of the BraveHeARTS,” Nov. 10 to Dec. 5; “Sam Perry Retrospective,” to Nov. 19; “COVID Memorial Quilt Exhibition, presenting sponsor Jupiter Medical Center,” to Dec. 6. (armoryart.org) Back Room Gallery, Arts Warehouse, Lake Worth Beach. “What Goes Up,” to Nov. 13. (artswarehouse.org) Boca Raton Museum of Art. “Machu Picchu and the Golden Empires of Peru,” to March 6. (boca museum.org) Cultural Council for Palm Beach County, Lake Worth Beach. “Valerie Collins Stanescu: The Spirit of Peru,” to Nov. 6; “Mastering the Medium,” Nov. 12 to Jan. 1; “Todd Lim: Negative Capability in Times of COVID-19,” to Nov. 27; “Gathering,” to Jan. 15. (palmbeachculture.com)
Delray Beach Public Library. “Americans and the Holocaust,” to Nov. 17. (delraylibrary.org) Elliott Museum, Stuart. “Exquisite Miniatures,” to Dec. 12. (hsmc-fl.com)
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SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER AND AQUARIUM PRESENTS
12.4.21 Join us for a highly interactive evening of “shocking” entertainment, captivating cuisine, and exhilarating craft cocktails. Experience “electrifying” and immersive presentations highlighting the South Florida Science Center’s stunning and transformative future.
Honorary Chairmen
Wendy Bingham Cox and Howard Cox Kathleen and Lew Crampton Frances and Jeffrey Fisher Helene and Matt Lorentzen Christine and Bob Stiller
Host Committee
Shani and Britton Core, Co-Chairmen Carolyn and Ed Sasso, Co-Chairmen
High voltage entertainment from ArcAttack and Dutch FashionTech Designer Anouk Wipprecht.
Jodi and Allen Gast Taylor and Josh Guittap Allison Ridder Johnstone LeeAnne and Joe LaBanz William A. Meyer Karly and Heath Randolph Lesley and Rick Stone
SFScienceCenter.org/Gala Event begins at 6:30pm at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium | 4801 Dreher Trail North, West Palm Beach FL 33405 Seating will be limited. Sponsorship opportunities available. Contact Marcy Hoffman at mhoffman@sfsciencecenter.org.
William A. Meyer
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AGENDA Mike Marino (far left) and Neil Zirconia (left) take the stage at the Mizner Park Cultural Center November 12 and 14. Christian Finnegan (right) heads to the Mizner Park Amphitheater November 26.
Esther B. O’Keeffe Gallery, The Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach. “A Beautiful Mess: Weavers
Holden Luntz Gallery, Palm Beach. “Facing Forward: Photographing Diversity,” to Nov. 6. (holdenluntz.com)
& Knotters of the Vanguard” and “An Eye on Michelangelo and Bernini: Photographs by Aurelio Amendola,” both Nov. 13 to Jan. 30. (fourarts.org)
Lighthouse ArtCenter Gallery & School of Art,
Findlay Galleries, Palm Beach. “Hugo Grenville,” Nov. 27 to Jan. 27; “Chuang Che: The Chinese Abstractionist,” to Dec. 2; and “Charles Neal, En France,” to Dec. 30. (findlay galleries.com) Historical Society of Palm Beach County, West Palm Beach. “The Storm of ’28,” to Dec. 31. (pbchistory.org)
Tequesta. “Roberta B. Marks: Anthology” and “Holiday Faculty Exhibition,” both Nov. 9 to Dec. 11. (lighthousearts.org)
MAC Art Gallery, Delray Beach. “The Messengers,” Nov. 1 to Dec. 1. (macfineart.com)
Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach. “Painting Enlightenment: Experiencing Wisdom and Compassion through Art and Science,” to March 27. (morikami.org)
Join us for our Grand Reopening Season! Single tickets on sale November 1 st
AT THE BENJAMIN SCHOOL
AT ROGER DEAN CHEVROLET STADIUM
JAN 11 - 30, 2022
MALTZ Without Walls
FEB 8 - 20, 2022
AT THE MALTZ JUPITER THEATRE
FEB 19 - MAR 9, 2022
Sing
MALTZ Without Walls
AT THE MALTZ JUPITER THEATRE
MAR 22 - APR 10, 2022
(561) 575-2223 | jupitertheatre.org 182 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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5th Annual
MATTHEW MURPHY
The Ar t of Pre- and Post-War Automobiles
From above: The beloved musical Come From Away will make a stop at the Kravis Center November 16-21; The Limeliters will lend their talents to “A Trifecta of Folk Greats” at the Kravis Center November 10.
Honoring Gold Star Families of Palm Beach County and Veterans Saturday, November 13, 2021 Community Exhibition, 10 am-4 pm The Grand Tour Parade of Cars, 4: 15 pm
Mtn Space Gallery, Lake Worth Beach. “Eden,” to Nov. 28. (mtnspace.com) Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach. “Chaim Gross: Bodies in Motion” and “Dynamic, Squalid, Splendid: Themes of the City,” both to Nov. 7; “When? A Brief History of the Relationship between Time and Photography,” to Nov. 12; “Saul Steinberg: A Writer Who Draws,” Nov. 19 to March 6; “Frida and Me,” to Dec. 5; “The Other Half of the Sky: Twentieth Century Chinese Women Painters,” to Jan. 23; “Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Mexican Modernism from the Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection” to Feb. 6. (norton.org) Onessimo Fine Art, Palm Beach Gardens. “Magic From Metal: The Works of Karim Ghidinelli and Alex Kveton,” Nov. 1-30. (onessimofineart.com) Palm Beach Photographic Centre, West Palm Beach. “Members’ Show,” to Nov. 30. (workshop.org)
Rosenbaum Contemporary, Boca Raton. “Hidden Figures,” Nov. 2 to Dec. 11. (rosenbaumcontemporary.com)
South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, West Palm Beach. “Dinosaur Revolution,” to Nov. 28. (sfsciencecenter.org)
Vero Beach Museum of Art. “Hanneke Beaumont: Drawn to Life,” to Dec. 5; “American Perspectives: Stories from the American Folk Art Collection” and “Martin Puryear: Printmaker,” both to Jan. 2. (vbmuseum.org)
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Advance purchase of entry timed tickets required - www.ansg.org
HISTORIC HOME, ARTIST STUDIO, EXHIBITION GALLERIES AND RARE PALM AND CYCAD GARDENS OF ANN WEAVER NORTON PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | NOVEMBER 2021
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DREAM WEDDINGS | BESPOKE EVENTS | WORLD CLASS DESIGN 561.686.7757 | WWW.SPECIALEVENTRESOURCE.COM | BY APPOINTMENT
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SUNDAY, DECE BER 5TH, 2021
THE PELICAN CLUB, JUPITER FL Event Chairs
Lindsey Roehl & Jessica McGillicuddy The holiday season is about to get even sweeter as we spread holiday cheer during the seventh annual Sugar Plum Dreams Holiday Brunch. This festive, family-friendly soiree is inspired by the classic “Nutcracker” ballet and will feature performances by Florida School for Dance Education and the Pops Orchestra of the Palm Beaches. Plus, a special appearance by Santa!
Visit www.quantumhouse.org/events for more information Exclusive Magazine Sponsor: Palm Beach Illustrated
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ON THE EDGE BUYING INFORMATION
STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP
PAGES 102 AND 103 Silver metallic sleek nageur swimsuit ($390), Marie France Van Damme, mariefrancevan damme.com; black mini skirt with embellished crystal hem ($2,395), Versace, Town Center at Boca Raton, versace.com; RV Bouquet slingback pumps with silver leather flower strass buckle ($1,995), Roger Vivier, rogervivier.com; Callie silver metal mesh shoulder bag with metal mesh strap ($3,295), Jimmy Choo, The Royal Poinciana Plaza, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, jimmychoo.com. PAGE 104 Bronze metallic sleek nageur swimsuit ($390), Marie France Van Damme, mariefrancevan damme.com; paste-multicolor all-over strass embroidered GG canvas single-breasted coat with dark blue contrast leather piping and details ($15,000), necklace with beads made in metal with gold finish and black crystals ($2,300), necklace with Gucci script in metal with pal-
ladium finish ($890), Gucci, Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, Town Center at Boca Raton, gucci.com. PAGE 105 AND TABLE OF CONTENTS Tulle bodysuit ($1,145), crystal and jersey bodysuit (price upon request), Dolce & Gabbana, dolcegabbana.com PAGE 106 Puff-sleeve sequin gown in melon ($4,990), Carolina Herrera, carolinaherrera.com; Rupi 100 heels in black gel patent leather with bracelet anklet ($975), Jimmy Choo, The Royal Poinciana Plaza, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, jimmychoo.com. PAGE 107 Fall/Winter 2021 cashmere cardigan ($6,000), iridescent wool jacquard pants ($6,800), Fantasy wool tweed jacket ($9,300), metal chain belt ($1,575), silver metallic handbag ($7,100), Chanel, Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, chanel.com; Viv’
Rangers silver sandals with embellished strass buckle ($1,995), Roger Vivier, rogervivier.com. PAGE 108 Floor-length gown with embellished belt ($10,625), Versace, Town Center at Boca Raton, versace.com; RV Bouquet slingback pumps with silver leather flower strass buckle ($1,995), Roger Vivier, rogervivier.com. PAGE 109 Padded lurex apron dress ($7,550), two-in-one jacket ($5,750), Louis Vuitton, Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, Town Center at Boca Raton, louisvuitton.com PAGES 110 AND 111 Black stretch-jersey twist dress with palette hand-embroidery ($3,290), Michael Kors Collection, michaelkors.com; Rupi 100 heels in black gel patent leather with bracelet anklet ($975), Jimmy Choo, The Royal Poinciana Plaza, Palm Beach, The Gardens Mall, Palm Beach Gardens, jimmychoo.com.
Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation, PS form 3526-R. 1. Publication Title:
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ILLUSTRATED. 2. Publication number: 2489 ISSN: 10475575. 3. Filing Date: 10/04/2021 4. Issue Frequency: Monthly except August. 5. Number of issues published annually: 11. 6. Annual Subscription Price: $54.45. 7. Complete mailing address of known office of Publication: 1000 N. Dixie Hwy., Ste. C, West Palm Beach, FL 334013349, Palm Beach County. 8. Complete Mailing Address of Headquarters or General Business Office of the publisher: (same as above) 9. Full names and complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Senior Editor: Publisher: Terry Duffy, Editor: Daphne Nikolopoulos, Managing Editor: Mary Murray, all at: 1000 N. Dixie Hwy., Ste. C., West Palm Beach, FL 33401. 10. Owner: Palm Beach Media Group North LLC., 1000 N. Dixie Hwy., Ste C, West Palm Beach, FL 33401. 11. Known bondholders, Mortgagees, and Other Security Holders Owning or Holding 1% or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or Other Securities: (None). 12. Tax Status: (Does not apply). 13. Publication Title: PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED. 14. Issue date for Circulation Data Below: October 2021. 15. Extent and Nature of Circulation: Average number of copies each issue during preceding 12 months; Actual number of copies of single issue published nearest to filing date October 2021 issue: 15a. Total number of copies (net press run) Average: 29500. Actual: 30000. 15b1. Paid/Requested Outside-County Mail Subscriptions: Average: 5247. Actual: 5236. 15b2. Paid/Requested In-County Mail Subscriptions: Average: 14373. Actual: 14515. 15b3. Sales through dealers and carriers, street venders, counter sales, and other non-USPS paid distribution: Average: 267. Actual: 150. 15c. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation (sum of 15b (1)(2)(3)(4): Average: 19887. Actual: 19901. 15d1. Non-Requested Outside-County: Average: 326. Actual: 0. 15d 2. Nonrequested Distribution by Mail (samples, complimentary and any other free)(In-County): Average: 0. Actual: 0. 15d 4. Nonrequested distribution outside the mail (carriers or other means): Average: 2736. Actual: 3728. 15e. Total Nonrequested Distribution (sum of 15d2 and 15d4): Average: 5462. Actual: 5308. 15f. Total distribution (sum of 15c and 15e): Average: 28411. Actual: 28937. 15g. Copies not distributed: Average: 1089. Actual: 1063. 15h. Total (sum of 15f and 15g): Average: 29500. Actual: 30000. 15i. Percent paid and/or requested Circulation (15c divided by 15f times 100): Average: 70.00%. Actual: 68.77%. 17. Signature: Judy Heflin, Distribution Manager, Palm Beach Media Group.
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ai1633637453145_AE Ad.pdf
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10/7/21
4:10 PM
Nineteenth Annual Gala
Archival Evening
Thursday, December 2, 2021 Sailfish Club of Florida, Palm Beach
C
M
Y
CM
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CMY
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Archival Evening Chairs Lee Ann and Jeffrey Alderton Ann-Britt and Christian Angle Abigail and Hampton Beebe For tickets and information, call 561-832-4164 ext. 100 Full Page.indd 1
10/7/21 4:24 PM
SEEN
MICK KEEHAN, GARY WALLEY
PALM BEACH MAGAZINE ™
GOLF FOR GOOD
DAN CASTRO, JEFF PRESTON
WHO: Police & Fire Foundation WHAT: Annual Golf Classic WHERE: Trump International Golf Club, West Palm Beach
MICHAEL BELISLE, JOHN PRESTON
JOHN SCARPA, PETER GERHARD STEVE SMITH, JAMIE CRICK DANIELLE MOORE, MICHELE KESSLER
STEVE DANNHAUSER, JOE RUSSO
KARIN LUTER, TOM QUICK
JIM ENGEL, KEVIN BARNETT
ZACK SMITH PHOTOGRAPHY
ED SABOL, JAY BOODHESHWAR
188 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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9/30/21 4:24 PM
Shawn David, Director of Provident Fine Art
“Sleeping Nude” Milton Avery Signed and dated 1959 Size 22” x 28”
SELL YOUR FINE ART Provident Fine Art purchases the following: • • • • • • • • • •
French Impressionism Post Impressionism Old Master Barbizon American Impressionism Hudson River School Modernism Post-War Abstract Expressionism Contemporary
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Palm Beach, FL 561.249.7929 125 Worth Ave, Palm Beach, FL
Naples, FL 239.259.7777 By Appointment Only
Shawn is a 4th generation art dealer that brings decades of experience to our Worth Avenue gallery. He takes pride in helping clients whether they are building their collection or divesting of pieces they no longer desire. The gallery always has exquisite works for those with diverse and discerning tastes. Pieces include 19th & 20th century French and American Impressionism, Post Impressionism, Modernism and Contemporary works, always vetted for quality and condition. Shawn embodies Provident Fine Arts’ passion for exemplary customer service and placing beautiful art into our customers lives. Call or visit the gallery and allow Shawn to help you with all your fine art needs.
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JOSE GONZALEZ, JORDANA L. JARJURA, CRAIG MENIN CRAIG MENIN, ANDY MASI
THE RAY TEAM
OUT & ABOUT
1
THE RAY/HILTON
1
2
1. WHO: Menin and Hilton WHAT: Ribbon-cutting ceremony WHERE: The Ray Hotel, Delray Beach 2. WHO: Adopt-AFamily WHAT: Better Ball Golf Tournament WHERE: Banyan Cay Resort & Golf Club, West Palm Beach
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FRANK BRESNAN, MATT CONSTANTINE, SEAN BRESNAN ALEX HISSOM, ROBERT HISSOM THERESE VIRSERIUS, JORDANA L. JARJURA, JIHEE YOUN JEFF PRESTON, MATT CONSTANTINE JEFF SMITH, MACK PERRY, GRIER PRESSLY, J. CATER RANDOLPH
HAMPTON BEEBE, JEFF PRESTON, ROBERT HISSOM, ALEX HISSOM
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TRACEY BENSON
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©2021 Palm Beach Media Group North LLC. All rights reserved. Palm Beach Illustrated [ISSN 1047-5575] [USPS #2489] is published monthly except August by Palm Beach Media Group North LLC, P.O. Box 3344, Palm Beach, FL 33480. Known office of the publication 1000 N. Dixie Hwy., Suite C, West Palm Beach, FL 33401. Periodical postage paid at West Palm Beach, FL, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Palm Beach Illustrated c/o Palm Beach Media Group North LLC, P.O. Box 3344, Palm Beach, FL 33480. Subscription price: $54.45 per year. Outside U.S. add $35 per year for postage and handling. Send subscription orders to: Subscription Department, Palm Beach Illustrated, P.O. Box 3344, Palm Beach, FL, 33480, or e-mail circulation@ palmbeachmedia.com, or fax (561) 659-1736. Vol. 69, No. 10, November 2021.
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LAST WORD In celebration of 50 years, you’ve created a gold capsule collection. What were your inspirations behind this collection? I’m constantly curious, which drives my inspirations; it’s something I don’t control. [This collection is] based on archive shoes that have meant so much to me personally, along with lots of other divine things. All very exciting! Five decades of work into one extraordinary collection. My favorite is the Rayuela, an exaggerated boot with bells—how chic! The bells are inspired by a charm bracelet worn by my dear mother throughout my childhood.
This year you’re celebrating an impressive fiftieth anniversary. How did you get your start designing shoes? It’s been 50 years of learning— learning the craft to make the most beautiful things I can. To be honest, I didn’t really choose it, it happened to me. It all began when I met Diana Vreeland; I was kindly introduced to her by a dear friend. She was the most breathtaking woman. She gave me the advice I needed to focus on shoes, and so I did. Describe a defining moment from your career. When I first started out in the ’70s, I designed the most extraordinary rubber shoes for Ossie Clark’s runway show, but I forgot to include steel nails. Those poor models struggled to walk up and down the runway! I thought it was all a catastrophe at the time, but surprisingly it turned out to be a success—a happy accident and the best thing that could have occurred. It was deemed a new way of walking! What’s the vision behind your new online virtual experience, “A New Way of Walking”? It’s meant to be a fun experience for guests and will be accessible to all—something that would never be feasible in the physical world. It’s the first time we have shown the archives to the world, so it’s incredibly exciting and slightly daunting. Every room has a theme, with memories and moments that tell the story of the company from the very beginning, 50 years ago.
REAL TALK WITH...
Manolo Blahnik The iconic shoe designer reflects upon 50 years of fabulous footwear
What’s a shoe trend you would never embrace? I hate to see someone who is very elegant dressed in sneakers. All those designer sneakers that are around now are monstrosities that you end up paying a fortune for. If you weren’t designing shoes, what would be your dream job? I would work in the world of film and set design. Every day I watch one or two movies, it’s like an
BY KATHERINE LANDE Looks from Manolo Blahnik’s fiftieth anniversary gold capsule collection
addiction. They have been a major source of creativity for my designs over the years. What Manolo Blahnik shoe should every Palm Beach woman own? I have a particular weakness for mules. I’ve always adored them, the ease with which women can slide them on and off is so effortless and chic. The Lurum is a timeless shoe that the Palm Beach woman would want to wear over and over again.
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VENETIAN PRINCESS & PRINCESS FLOWER COLLECTIONS
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