ILLUSTRATED
Festive FĂŞte New holiday traditions All That Glitters
Gems for the gifting season
SEASONAL SPARKLE
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Couture Allure Bespoke masterpieces
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From our heritAGe collection The Heritage design inspiration is one of vintage charm and appeal. With intricate details of millegraining and engraving, this radiant collection is inspired by the past with a nod to the future.
215 Worth Avenue, PAlm BeAch. 561.659.6788 the GArdens mAll, PAlm BeAch GArdens. 561.775.3600
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From our PrivAte reserve collection Handcrafted in 18k white gold with a stunning row of baguette diamonds, this flexible bracelet is the epitome of distinction and elegance. Our artisans employed over 20-carats total weight of diamonds to create this magnificent piece.
215 Worth Avenue, PAlm BeAch. 561.659.6788 the GArdens mAll, PAlm BeAch GArdens. 561.775.3600
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WELCOME TO MY WORLD
In the lead role: John Travolta, movie legend and aviation aficionado. Guest star: the legendary North American X-15 that smashed all speed and altitude records and opened the gateway to space. Production: Breitling, the privileged partner of aviation thanks to its reliable, accurate and innovative instruments – such as the famous Chronomat, the ultimate chronograph. Welcome to a world of legends, feats and performance.
CHRONOMAT 44
ACCURACY TAKEN TO NEW DEPTHS
PATRAVI SCUBATEC Discover the world 500 meters below its surface. The Patravi ScubaTec diver’s watch offers a multi adjustable clasp and an automatic helium release valve to ensure ultimate comfort and worry free equalization of pressure. Created with the highest grade of stainless steel, its rugged ceramic bezel and blue illuminated hands and dial markers ensure perfect readability, even at the deepest depths. BOUND TO TRADITION – DRIVEN BY INNOVATION
Jupiter 561.747.4449 Palm Beach 561.833.0550 West Palm Beach 561.833.7755
Mechanical Competence Model Marine Chronometer M anufacture Ladies Manufacture movement Self-winding
U LY S S E - N A R D I N . C O M
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The Downsview cabinetry collection is custom crafted in North America and available exclusively through select kitchen design showrooms
To experience the Collections visit one of our flagship showrooms DOWNSVIEW of JUNO 12800 U.S. Highway 1 - Suite 100, Juno Beach, FL (561) 799-7700 www.downsviewofjuno.com DOWNSVIEW of DANIA 1855 Griffin Road - Suite B212, Dania Beach, FL (954) 927-1100 www.downsviewofdania.com DOWNSVIEW of BOSTON One Design Center Place - Suite 629, Boston, MA (857) 317-3320 www.downsviewofboston.com
DOWSVIEW KITCHENS 2635 Rena Road, Mississauga, Ontario
UnicaJ
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Telephone (905) 677-9354
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Contents
December 2015
features 78 / Family Bonds
Ernie and Liezl Els open up their home and their hearts in the name of autism advocacy by JenniFer Pfaff
86 / Masterpiece Theater Couture takes center stage in a one-of-a-kind setting Photography by Gabor Jurina
96 / A Tropical Tableau
Jacqueline and Albert Togut host an island Christmas party at their new Palm Beach home By Linda Marx
104 / Where the Art is
An insider’s guide to Art Basel Miami Beach by Susie Stanton Staikos
pa l m b e ac h i l lu st r at e d.c o m f o r t h e l at e st i n a l l t h i n g s luxu ry
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PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Galactic gems shine and soar this holiday season bY Mary Murray
Naeem Khan custom beaded gold gown; Jennifer Behr voilette with scattered crystals; Graff Diamonds diamond necklace. For buying information, see page 181.
GABOR JURINA
&
86
112 / Stellar Statements
Contents / December 2015
67
58
departments 24 / From the Publisher 26 / From the Editor 28 / Log On
New on palmbeachillustrated.com
30 / Party Pics
Pink is chic at Saks Fifth Avenue’s Key to the Cure
37 / Insider
62
Christmas tree lightings across the county, an artsy outing in Boynton Beach, a shopping guide to Worth Avenue, and more hot happenings around Palm Beach
53 / Style
A plethora of pearls and Roman-inspired looks
58 / Sparkle
Give your jewelry box the green light
60 / Shop Local
Find the perfect gift for everyone on your list
62 / Vanity
Ring in the New Year with a golden glow
67 / Escape
56
ASHLEY MEYER
Urban adventures and natural retreats beckon in Mexico By Paul Rubio
72 / Jet Set
Helmut Koller returns to Vienna
135
173 74 / High Road
The Bentley Bentayga wows with style, performance, and speed By howard walker
Robin Hill Photography
119 / Taste
Another tasty reason to celebrate December 25, insight from a Palm Beach Food and Wine Festival chef, plus bites from the local dining scene
128 / Pour
The perfect pours for holiday revelry By mark spivak
135 / Home
A modern statement in Boca Raton
136 / Elements
136
Make the most of movie night
138 / Parties
Four simple rules for the ultimate cocktail party
163 / Balance
Courtesy of First Impressions
119
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PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
ON THE COVER:
Photographer: GABOR JURINA model: Sophie Theobald, w360 Management, New York CLOTHING: Giambattista Valli Haute Couture silk dress and pants; Jimmy Choo fox fur pom-pom pumps JEWELRY: Graff Diamonds diamond ring HAIR: Takayoshi Tsukisawa, New York, takayoshitsukisawa.com Makeup: Julie Harris, Judy Inc., Toronto location: Baccarat Hotel & Residences New York For buying information, turn to page 181.
ASHLEY MEYER
The hidden health benefits of mistletoe, advice on aging gracefully, festive raw desserts, and more
168 / Wealth
How to purchase your dream home in another country
173 / Agenda
What to see and do this month
182 / Seen
Hot parties, beautiful people
192 / Last look
Shoe savant Sam Edelman’s favorite things
Gene Schiavone
Contents / December 2015
ROBERTO
COIN
THE APPASSIONATA COLLECTION
Exclusively at Saks A reintroduction of the classic collection celebrating 25 years of Roberto Coin at Saks.
saks.com
Palm Beach and Palm Beach Gardens
PALM BEACH 561.833.2551. PALM BEACH GARDENS 561.694.9009.
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Home is where Neighborhood Renaissance is. Good neighborhoods begin with good people, and they don’t get any better than the wonderful folks at Neighborhood Renaissance. We are humbled by their dedication to helping families become economically self-sufficient, and proud to support their efforts to provide affordable homeownership opportunities to first-time buyers.
Wells Fargo is proud to support Neighborhood Renaissance.
Š 2015 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. Member FDIC. ECG-1569502
CHANEL : GUCCI : RALPH LAUREN : LOUIS VUITTON TIFFANY
&
CO.
:
SALVATORE
FERRAGAMO
JIMMY CHOO : HAMILTON JEWELERS : HUGO BOSS KATE SPADE NEW YORK : LULULEMON ATHLETICA VINEYARD VINES : DAVID YURMAN : J.MCLAUGHLIN
S A K S
F I F T H
N O R D S T R O M
A V E N U E :
:
M A C Y ’ S
B L O O M I N G D A L E ’ S
THEGARDENSMALL.COM
the gardens maLL LUXURY RETAIL WITH NO EQUAL
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I L L U S T R A T E D Publisher Terry Duffy EDITORIAL Editor in Chief Daphne Nikolopoulos Deputy Editor Jennifer Pfaff Senior Editor Mary Murray Associate Editor Kerry Shorr Online Editor Stephen Brown Fashion Editor Katherine Lande Food & Wine Editor Mark Spivak Automotive Editor Howard Walker Travel Editor Paul Rubio Editorial Intern Emily Creighton DESIGN Creative Director Olga M. Gustine Art Directors Airielle Farley, Jenny Fernandez-Prieto, Ashley Meyer, Ana Rodriguez-Masó Digital Imaging Specialist Leonor Alvarez-Maza Contributing Writers Judy Martel, Linda Marx, Liza Grant Smith, Susie Stanton Staikos Contributing Photographers Gabor Jurina, Jerry Rabinowitz SOCIAL Photographers Janis Bucher, CAPEHART, Davidoff Studios, Corby Kaye’s Studio Palm Beach, LILA Photo, Paulette and Amy Martin ADVERTISING Director of Sales Kaleigh Grover, 561-472-1901, kgrover@palmbeachmedia.com Senior Account Manager Deidre Wade, 561-472-1902, dwade@palmbeachmedia.com National Account Manager Michelle Farina, 561-472-1906, mfarina@palmbeachmedia.com Account Managers Leslie Jacobs, 561-472-1922, ljacobs@palmbeachmedia.com, Dina Turner, 561-472-2201, dturner@palmbeachmedia.com MARKETING Marketing Manager Kristin Ulin PRODUCTION Production Manager Selene M. Ceballo Advertising Design Coordinator Jeffrey Rey OPERATIONS Process Integration Manager Sue Martel Circulation/Subscriptions Administrator Marjorie Leiva Distribution Manager Judy Heflin Office Manager M.B. Valdes IT Technician Alex Davila Accounts Receivable Specialist Lourdes Linares CUSTOM PUBLISHING Editor and Project Director, Custom Content Michelle Lee Ribeiro ILLUSTRATED EVENTS Managing Director Allison Wolfe Reckson Event Manager Mariana Lehkyi
In Memoriam Ronald J. Woods (1935-2013) Group Publisher Terry Duffy Chief Operating Officer Todd R. Schmidt Officers Terry Duffy, Karen M. Powell, Robert J. Primeau, Todd R. Schmidt Directors Karen M. Powell, Robert J. Primeau, Todd R. Schmidt Publishers of: Palm Beach Illustrated • Naples Illustrated • Palm Beach Charity Register • Naples Charity Register Coquina • Dine239 • Fifth Avenue South • The Jewel of Palm Beach: The Mar-a-Lago Club • Traditions: The Breakers • The International Polo Club Palm Beach Magazine ONE Life: ONE Sotheby’s International Realty • Salut!: Naples Winter Wine Festival
Published by Palm Beach Media Group, 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, Inc.
palmbeachillustrated.com 22
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©2015 CHANEL®, Inc.
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From the Publisher
Ron Woods, our late founder and publisher of Palm Beach Illustrated, was the keeper of this page until his passing in 2013. Ron enjoyed the holidays and kept a Christmas tree up year-round just because it made him smile. I appreciated that about him. Traditions have a personal touch. They are what we remake them. In my blended household, we enjoy Christmas and Hanukkah much to the delight of our college-aged daughters. As with many South Florida families, we have fused the history of two different groups to create new ways of celebrating the season. Florida is good for that—reinventing the past to fashion something new, merry, and bright. A classic seasonal must is the Festival of Trees at the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens in West Palm Beach. The event runs from December 4-16 and features artistic interpretations of family and cultural holiday traditions. Enjoy a walk through the gardens and delight in the sights, sounds, and tastes of this special winter wonderland. Make sure to check out the Nutcracker-themed tree, an homage to ballet sure to rival visions of sugarplums. Including music in the season not only brings back memories but also builds on the customs of holidays past. Nat King Cole Generation Hope provides music education to children with the greatest need and the fewest resources—in December and throughout the year. Palm Beach Illustrated is honored to partner with this worthy organization to brighten the lives of so many children in Palm Beach County. Latin Grammy Award winner Nestor Torres will entertain at the nonprofit’s annual President’s Society Dinner on December 2. The holidays also encourage reflection. We are so pleased at Palm Beach Media Group to have launched a new magazine in 2015. Coquina arrived in October, and I am thrilled with the response to this home and design publication. Illustrated Events was our second new venture this year. The division is poised to handle fêtes for occasions of all types and sizes. Looking back at the past 12 months, there certainly was plenty going on with new buildings, new retail, and new residents moving to our community. Reflecting on these developments focuses our PBI team on how best to cover these trends while holding onto what makes our publications unique. The Palm Beaches are always evolving, but fascinating people, fabulous fashion, and poolside holiday celebrations are a constant. Whether honoring old traditions or forging new ones this holiday season, thank you for welcoming Palm Beach Illustrated into your home. It is our joy to bring you the people, places, and details that make December in Palm Beach County so special. To this season and many more to come. It’s a tradition!
Terry Duffy tduffy@palmbeachmedia.com
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Lila Photo
Holiday Tradition
速ROBERTOCOIN
POIS MOI COLLECTION
The Gardens Mall 561.775.3999
From the Editor
I’ve said it before: The holiday season is my favorite time of the year— especially now that I watch it unfold through the eyes of precocious little ones. Take the negotiation with Santa Claus, for example. Last year, my son, 5 at the time, wrote Santa a letter that said: “Dear Santa: Surprise me. Love, Ian.” Now that he’s a big first-grader, he’s pulling out the stops and pledging all kinds of tribute to the jolly guy (“I’ll practice piano! I’ll eat my vegetables!”) in exchange for the extra-big Lego Star Wars set he wants. It’s absolutely heartwarming. I hope that love for the festive season is apparent in our pages as well. The December issue is typically full of glittering eye candy ranging from entertaining and food to jewelry and gifting. Feast your eyes upon “Stellar Statements,” on page 112, an out-of-this-world array of jewels we are coveting. If you want inspiration for your holiday soiree, turn to “A Tropical Tableau” on page 96. Jacqueline and Albert Togut invite us into their home for an alfresco dinner party with friends. Jacqueline’s collection of nutcrackers, her gorgeous silver-and-blue decorations, and a cozy fire speak of a traditional Christmas, but a coastal Mediterranean menu and a tropicalSouthern tablescape give the fête a sunny twist. Though it seems like disparate concepts, in Palm Beach—and in the hands of an expert hostess—it all works. For those planning their own parties at home, we have plenty of ideas. In “Sipping Pretty” (page 138), we ask culinary and mixology pros how to delight guests and get them involved in the festivities. Makeyour-own gin and tonic bar, anyone? Our food and wine editor, Mark Spivak, has some additional advice on festive batch cocktails that will keep guests happy and spirits bright. See “Crowd Pleasers” on page 128. Of course, December isn’t only about holiday affairs. For art collectors, the only can’t-miss event this month is Art Basel Miami Beach. Though the fair happens in Miami, it draws people from all over the country, including a sizeable contingent of Palm Beachers. In a piece that took months of research and compilation, we present a thoughtful guide to the sectors, galleries, artists, and peripheral events that make Art Basel one of the greatest fairs in the international art circuit. Turn to “Where the Art Is” (page 104) for all the details. May your holidays be full of joy, warmth, and abundance.
Daphne Nikolopoulos daphne@palmbeachillustrated.com
capehart
Celebrate!
Editor’s Picks: Nothing looks or feels like couture. My favorite from the fall couture collections featured in this issue is this bewitching black tulle beauty by Zuhair Murad. Quite the work of art. Page 86.
Gold is de rigueur for the holidays— even for your skin. Don’t miss our roundup of luxe products like La Prairie’s divine Pure Gold serum. Page 62. 26
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.
LOG ON NEW ON PALMbeachillustrated.com
The Runaround With the Eau Palm Beach Marathon and Run Fest set for December 4-6, we’ve put together a handy guide to running. Visit palmbeachillustrated.com/run for everything from gear and apps to advice on technique and insight into where to run.
HOT SPOT
When the weather gets frightful, sip on this adult version of hot chocolate with a peanut butter twist, courtesy of Waterstone Resort & Marina in Boca Raton. Ingredients (Serves one)
3 REASONS TO LOG ON NOW
recipe 1
The South Florida craft brew scene added another tap to its lineup when Copperpoint Brewing Co. opened in Boynton Beach. We spoke with founder and veteran brewer
Matt Cox about beer, the brewing community, and more at palmbeachillustrated.com/copperpoint.
Need help finding the perfect present? Head to palmbeach
1 cup milk
illustrated.com/holidaygiftguide
2 cracked vanilla beans soaked in vodka (substitute 1 tsp. vanilla extract for a non-alcoholic version)
2
for a look at this season’s musthave gifts and experiences.
1 tbsp. unsweetened cocoa powder
3
1 1/2 tbsp. sugar 1 tbsp. peanut butter (chunky or smooth) 4 mini Reese’s cups
The social season is in full swing, and our photographers are at all the best parties to capture every fabulous moment. See highlights from top events at
palmbeachillustrated.com/partypics.
Whipped cream and hot salted peanuts to garnish Caramel and chocolate sauces for additional garnish Place vanilla beans in a shallow pan and immerse in vodka. Let soak for two days. Remove beans and reserve 1 1/2 oz. of vodka. Whisk together milk, cocoa powder, vodka (or vanilla extract), and sugar in a small pot on the stove. Bring to a simmer and add peanut butter and two Reese’s cups, stirring well to eliminate clumps. Pour into a mug and serve with whipped cream and hot salted peanuts. To serve frozen, let mixture cool before blending with ice. Add toppings and finish with remaining Reese’s cups and caramel and chocolate sauces. 28
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
&
ways to stay connected /palmbeachillustrated
For more winter cocktail recipes, check out palmbeach
illustrated.
@pbillustrated @pbillustrated
com/winter cocktails.
/palmbeachillus
Newsletter Alert For a weekly injection of PBI, sign up for Insider—it’s delivered every Thursday and lists the top five events you should put on your calendar for the coming week, along with articles, blogs, party pics, and more to keep you up to date.
777 s. congress ave
delray beach
abchome.com
abc carpet & home
Party
pics Rocco Mangel, Tommy Morrison, Wayne Lacy
Mo Foster and sally sevareid
Howard Wander
hail the big wigs Sarah Scheffer, Adam Lipson, Alana Faintuch, Heather Lowenthal
CAPEHART
Who: susan g. komen south florida and saks fifth avenue palm beach What: key to the cure Where: saks fifth avenue, palm beach highlights: seven local men were selected by susan g. komen as this year’s “big wigs.” during key to the cure, the men donned pink wigs and dressed saks’ windows with poignant quotes about the battle against breast cancer.
Max Switzer, Chris Rhoades
Dayve Gabbard, Peter Schuette, Sue Samour
Lauren Criser, Kristy Pressly
Carlos Berrocal, Mo Foster, Michael Solomon, Marty List, Jeff Fowler, Rocco Mangel, Howard Wander
30 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Noel and Tim Johnson-Reynolds
Erin McGould, Jeff Fowler
G re a t J e w e l s H a v e a S t o r y Van Cleef & Arpels Colombian Emerald and Diamond Pendant Necklace, from the Betteridge Estate Collection
susie bowman, jennifer ross
Party pics
LILA PHOTO
united in the cause
Who: jupiter medical center foundation and saks fifth avenue palm beach gardens What: key to the cure Where: saks fifth avenue, palm beach gardens highlights: guests were treated to savory bites from palm beach-area restaurants, festive libations, and live entertainment while raising funds for breast cancer research and programs.
susie sandoval alexa rice, megan blomqvist, kimberly villa, stefanie daddono
ann borden, connie murphy, rene savel emily pantelides, sandy collier
frankino, john couris, connie ely michael desio, liv ves
william penenori, adam brown
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sherri lewman, ava lewman
lanell fagan, sonya hartley
saks models
EXTRAORDINARY LIFESTYLE SPECTACULAR VIEWS INCOMPARABLE LUXURY LIKE NOTHING ELSE IN PALM BEACH, NOW OR EVER. SPECTACULAR THREE TO FIVE BEDROOM HOMES FROM 3,700 TO 14,000 SQUARE FEET WITH A SUITE OF EXTRAORDINARY AMENITIES. STARTING AT $5,000,000. 561.503.4243 THEBRISTOLPALMBEACH.COM EXCLUSIVE SALES & MARKETING BY DOUGLAS ELLIMAN DEVELOPMENT MARKETING. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. THIS IS NOT INTENDED TO BE AN OFFER TO SELL, OR SOLICITATION TO BUY, CONDOMINIUM UNITS TO RESIDENTS OF ANY JURISDICTION WHERE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION CANNOT BE MADE OR ARE OTHERWISE PROHIBITED BY LAW, AND YOUR ELIGIBILITY FOR PURCHASE WILL DEPEND UPON YOUR STATE OF RESIDENCY. THIS OFFERING IS MADE ONLY BY THE PROSPECTUS FOR THE CONDOMINIUM AND NO STATEMENT SHOULD BE RELIED UPON IF NOT MADE IN THE PROSPECTUS. THE INFORMATION PROVIDED, INCLUDING PRICING, IS SOLELY FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES, AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. FOR NEW YORK RESIDENTS THE COMPLETE OFFERING TERMS ARE IN AN OFFERING PLAN AVAILABLE FROM THE SPONSOR FILE NO. CD15-0055. (*NOTE THAT SPONSOR AND SELLER ARE THE SAME.)
Party pics Who: boca raton regional hospital foundation and saks fifth avenue boca raton What: key to the cure Where: saks fifth avenue, boca raton highlights: supporters gathered for saks’ shopping event that raises funds for the fight against breast cancer. tim quinn, celebrity face designer for giorgio armani beauty, treated guests to glamorous makeovers.
LILA PHOTO
boca pink
mark larkin, terry duffy, heather shaw, tim quinn
mark larkin, nicole edeiken, judi larkin marisa bouskila, monal zipper, tabitha tindale
melissa baylek, nicole flier shopping for the cause
tim quinn in action
elyssa kupferberg, rhoda warren, pamela weinroth kimberly read, tabitha tindale
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PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
mary ann williamson, brian gustafson
The SporT of Palm Beach T h e Pe r f e c T g i f T
Surprise everyone on your gift list with a polo pony experience at the International Polo Club. For ticket options or brunch reservations, please visit:
InternationalPoloClub.com The best seats in the house start at $30.
Every Sunday – January 3-April 24, 2016 Brunch at 2 p.m. at The Pavilion Polo Match at 3 p.m. 3667 120th Avenue South | Wellington, Florida 33414 Photo by LILA PHOTO
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Insider Studios
City trees from left: Delray Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, and West Palm Beach.
Aaron Lurie, VMA
O
Christmas TREE
Courtesy of the City of West Palm Beach
Break out the tinsel, because the holiday season is here. Attend these city celebrations and visit palmbeachillustrated.com/christmastree for more holiday fun. December 1, Palm Beach: Worth Avenue comes alive with a Santa Claus–led parade at 6 p.m. and tree lighting at 6:29 p.m. (561-659-6909, worth-avenue.com) December 2, Palm Beach Gardens: The Tree Lighting Festival runs from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Burns Road Recreation Center and features crafts, live music, and a magical trip through Santa’s Village. (561-630-1100, pbgfl.com) December 2, Boca Raton: Boca Raton’s official tree is now on view at Mizner Park Amphitheater. On December 2, attend the Annual Holiday Street Parade in downtown Boca along Federal Highway. (561-393-7807, myboca.us) December 3, West Palm Beach: Sandi, the tree composed of 600 tons of sand, returns to West Palm with a special Holiday Tree Lighting during Clematis by Night. (561-822-2222, wpb.org) December 3, Delray Beach: Local children will entertain the masses at the Old School Square Outdoor Pavilion before Santa flies in on a helicopter at 7:15 p.m. to light the 100-foot Christmas tree. (561-279-1380, 100ftchristmastree.com) December 5, Port St. Lucie: Events from the city’s annual Festival of Lights celebration include a parade at 6 p.m. and the tree lighting in Village Square accompanied by a flurry of snowflakes. (772-878-2277, cityofpsl.com)
PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | december 2015
37
Insider
Get Glammed Alley Dudes, Beju LeJobart
Wild Walkabout For the ninth year in a row, Boynton Beach invites residents and visitors to take a stimulating stroll down its Avenue of the Arts. Presented by the Boynton Beach Art in Public Places program, the outdoor exhibit features large-scale sculptures and custom installations along East Ocean Avenue, between Seacrest Boulevard and South Federal Highway. In September, the avenue welcomed 11 new artworks, including kudzu leaves crocheted from recycled plastic bags, a rotating gate inspired by a sunflower, and a carbonsteel turtle. The year-round exhibit is on display 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and each piece is available for purchase, with proceeds benefiting Boynton Beach Art in Public Places. (561-742-6026, boyntonbeacharts.org)
Tortuga Jack, Joe Hernandez
38
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Seed, Steve Blackwood
We’ve all been there: You’re hours away from a haute holiday happening, and you need a hair and makeup squad, stat. This season, beGlammed is here to help. The on-demand beauty service app, available in Palm Beach and Boca Raton, will send glam teams to your home, office, hotel, or anywhere else to get you party-ready. (beglammed.com)
War Stories
Alley Dudes, Beju LeJobart
Parts of Tori Eversmann’s life were immortalized when her husband Matt’s role in the Battle of Mogadishu became the basis for the book and subsequent film Black Hawk Down. Now, the West Palm Beach resident is telling her experience and others like it as the main story in her debut novel, The Immortals (Seattle Book Company, $24.95). “I wanted my readers to have more than a glimpse but an opening of the kimono and see what it is like to be an army wife during the Iraq War,” she says. Using her journals as a jumping-off point, she crafted her semi-autobiographical main character, Calli Coleman, who must raise her daughter alone when her husband is recalled to active duty. By forging relationships with other military spouses, Coleman finds the strength she needs to not only withstand her husband’s lengthy deployment but also grow as an individual. “The war is a character in the novel, but I think the story really is about a woman coming into her own,” Eversmann says. (torieversmann.com)
&
Why did Eversmann choose to write a novel instead of a memoir? Find out at palmbeachillustrated. com/theimmortals
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Insider
President Kelly throws a pitch at a Cardinals spring training game at Roger Dean Stadium.
Florida Atlantic University President John Kelly may still be a fresh face on campus, but he’s no owlet. Since arriving in March 2014, he’s made connections with students, listened to his faculty, put new initiatives into place, and become entrenched in Owl athletics. “I may be a little different than other presidents in this, but I really like a hands-on approach,” Kelly says. “I want to know what’s going on. I don’t want to just be some mouthpiece for the university.” A born and bred South Carolinian, Kelly spent the majority of his career commuting from his home in Charleston to Clemson University, where he held many leadership positions during his 28year tenure. While there, he helped raise the university’s national standing, as seen in its advancement from seventy-eighth to twentieth in the U.S. News & World Report’s ranking of public universities. He plans to achieve similar success at FAU. In his first year as president, Kelly met with each department to assess its needs and goals. Those interactions resulted in “The Race to Excellence,” a 10-year strategic plan that sets FAU on course to become the country’s fastest-improving public research university. “I have no desire to grow the size of the university, but I have a strong desire to grow the quality of the university,” he says. Kelly’s race extends to the student body. For the 2015 class, he raised admission standards from 40 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
John and Carolyn Kelly with Owlsley at an FAU football game.
Jeffrey Tholl Photography
Wise Owl
Courtesy of Florida Atlantic University
Lab Work
a 3.0 GPA to a 3.3. For the 2016 class, the bar is set even higher at a 3.6. He also wants to better the university’s graduation rate and have more students leave on time. But he’s not asking them to go at it alone. He’s introduced mentorship and advising programs and also spends a great deal of time on campus. A self-described football fanatic, he cheers on his fellow Owls at sporting events, and he and his wife, Carolyn, enjoy hosting guests and representing the FAU family. Most importantly, he makes an effort to connect with students, whether it’s by handing out cookies to graduates, helping incoming freshmen move in, or simply tweeting as much as he can. “Every time I’m with a student, I usually learn something I didn’t know, so that’s exciting,” he says. Beyond his role as president, Kelly is also a father to two young girls, so he understands the importance of higher education as both a parent and an educator. To his daughters and his students, he has one message: Learning never ends. “I hope that’s what our students will do: They’ll develop a love of learning that never stops,” he says. (fau.edu)
Florida Atlantic University is also making strides in the arts thanks to Theatre Lab, a new professional resident company. Led by Lou Tyrrell—formerly of Florida Stage and Theatre at Arts Garage—Theatre Lab aims to develop new works and train student actors. Currently, the company is working out of the Parliament Hall residence in a 150seat “theater in the raw.” Eventually, it will find a more permanent space on campus; for now, Tyrrell enjoys being close to the students. “That’s been the most fun,” he says, “to see the benefit of the proximity and the natural collaborations and discussions and relationships that can come out of that proximity.” Theatre Lab has already introduced a number of programs such as Making Musicals, which presents new American musicals, and Play Slam, play readings featuring discussions with the creators involved. By fall 2016, Tyrrell hopes to fully produce a handful of these works. Theatre Lab also comprises the Playwrights’ Forum, a master-class program with top playwrights, and the Young Artists and Writers Project, which seeks to spark a love of storytelling in local schoolchildren. While Theatre Lab is a professional company, Tyrrell will cast FAU undergraduates as appropriate and include them in the behind-the-scenes activity. As a prominent participant in the South Florida theater scene, Tyrrell looks forward to watching Theatre Lab grow and fostering the next wave of theater lovers. “I’m at a point in my career where nothing excites me more than to start to pass the torch,” he says. (561-297-4784, fau.edu/theatre)
Playwrights’ Forum participating playwright Israel Horovitz with Lou Tyrrell.
Insider
Shop Talk From haute department stores to curated boutiques, Palm Beach shopping has it all. USA Today readers recently voted Palm Beach as the second best destination for shopaholics (just behind Santa Fe, New Mexico), so we asked three local trendsetters to pinpoint what makes island shopping so special. They share their tips and favorite stores to help you make the most out of holiday shopping. Jeff Fowler, senior event sales manager, The Breakers Palm Beach
What sets Palm Beach shopping apart First, it’s walkable. You can spend the day walking in and out of the beautiful vias and along Worth Avenue, and at the end of a nice day you can take a stroll along the ocean. Second, because the stores are mainly small boutiques, you really get personal service when you shop. Go-to home decor store I love to mix and match, so I love the home section of Calypso St. Barth and also MacKenzie-Childs. Favorite place for beauty must-haves John Barrett Salon is a one-stop shop for beauty. I go there for haircuts and everything from Tammy Fender facials to mani/pedis. It also has a nice retail component and delicious-smelling hair products. Best kids’ spot I love Lil Rapunzel’s for kids’ clothing and especially gifts. It always has the cutest clothes and hip, fun pieces for my daughters. The gift selection is very nice, from books to personalized trains to adorable socks. It’s my go-to anytime I need a baby gift. Top tip for Palm Beach shoppers Have a game plan with wiggle room. Always leave room for the unexpected, because you never know what’s going to catch your eye—especially in Palm Beach. 42
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
REYNALDO MARTIN
Heather Lowenthal, owner of Posh Parties, Palm Beach
Favorite hidden gem Babalu, with its fun, hip treasures and coolness in Via Mizner, off Worth Avenue Best place for menswear Neiman Marcus has the most fashionable menswear. There is nothing like a Tom Ford suit. Most “Palm Beach chic” store For vintage style mixed with Palm Beach cool, definitely Lilly Pulitzer at The Breakers Top spot for grooming I have a tie: Ivette Gil/Beauty Design because she keeps my eyebrows perfect, and Frank Cassi Beauty because Cassi is the best blond colorist in town. Go-to for holiday gifts Patrick Lézé on Sunrise Avenue. Sweets, especially Patrick’s macarons, are the way to anyone’s heart. The blueberry ones are my favorite because each macaron has one fresh blueberry placed in the center.
Kelly Murray, Palm Beach lifestyle blogger, oncherrylane.com Best way to begin a day of shopping Brunch at Surfside Diner, then starting out at the east end of Worth Avenue at Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. Go-to clothing store Island Company. I’m a beach girl at heart, and Island Company offers just that—I wear their linen dresses almost every day. Fun tip: They have a bar in the store.
Favorite baubles boutique Jennifer Miller Jewelry in Via Mizner Top tip for Palm Beach shoppers Give yourself plenty of time to explore the avenue and each via—and make time for a long lunch to soak in the surroundings. Best way to end a day of splurging With a glass of wine and pizza at Pizza Al Fresco in Via Mizner. I love sitting outside under the lights; it’s my Sunday night ritual.
FOR THE ULTIMATE LUXURY LIFESTYLE, THERE IS ONLY ONE ADDRESS.
Between Delray Beach and Boca Raton, you’ll find the most desirable waterfront condominium in South Florida. 3200 South Ocean is located directly on the Intracoastal in Highland Beach with private ocean access. A select few residents will enjoy a one-of-a-kind lifestyle with incomparable amenities that include a rooftop pool, fitness center, and membership opportunities at the exclusive Seagate Beach Club, Country Club, and new Yacht Club.
Call 561.349.6548, or visit 3200southocean.com. ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, REFERENCE SHOULD BE MADE TO THE CONTRACT AND THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. ALL DIMENSIONS, FEATURES AND SQUARE FOOTAGE ARE APPROXIMATE AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. RENDERINGS AND SITE PLAN ARE ARTIST’S CONCEPT. 11/14
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10/30/15 9:09 AM
A New Choice for a New Generation De George Pediatric Unit Opening February 2016
Introducing the De George Pediatric Unit at Jupiter Medical Center in
The De George Pediatric Unit will feature:
proud partnership with the Nicklaus Children’s Hospital (formerly
• 12 inpatient pediatric rooms
Miami Children’s Hospital) and the Lawrence J. and Florence A.
• Pediatric surgery suites
De George Charitable Trust.
• Pediatric therapy
From newborns and toddlers to adolescents up to age 18, the pediatric
• Children’s playroom
unit is a comprehensive, child-centered environment, featuring state-
• Bear’s Den for resting (named after Jack “The Golden Bear” Nicklaus)
of-the-art medical and therapeutic services. Patients will receive
Additional hospital services:
outstanding care using the clinical guidelines developed by Nicklaus
• Pediatric imaging services
Children’s Hospital, a leader in pediatric health for 65 years.
• Pediatric emergency services
Jupiter Medical Center and Nicklaus Children’s Hospital—together for our community. Learn more at jupitermed.com/pediatrics or call 561-510-6274. 1210 S. Old Dixie Hwy. l Jupiter, FL 33458
It takes the community
to secure
your mission
Strong nonprofits are vital to the health of our community. Foundation board chairman Bob Dunkin at Boys & Girls Clubs of Palm Beach County knows establishing an endowment fund with the Community Foundation helps the Club sustain its vision of inspiring and assisting all young people - forever. An endowment fund at the Community Foundation creates a permanent annual income stream for an organization’s budget and grows over time. Individual donors can give directly to the endowment fund today or through their will, helping secure the future of their favorite nonprofit. The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties has protected and grown charitable assets for more than 40 years. Let us help you secure the mission of your favorite cause.
It takes the Community Foundation Visit yourcommunityfoundation.org to learn more about the power of endowment. Photo: Bob Dunkin, US Trust Bank of America Private Wealth Management at Boys & Girls Clubs of Palm Beach County
PBJAD15_PBIllustrated_101415.indd 1
10/19/15 11:40 AM
Find Coquina m agazine at Home & Design locations including:
Ideal Cabinetry 1061 East Indiantown Road, Suite 500, Jupiter
Pioneer Linens 210 North Clematis Street, West Palm Beach
DEA Luxury Italian Linens 341 Worth Avenue, Palm Beach
Fran Murphy Interiors 12800 U.S. Highway One, Juno Beach
HIVE 424 Palm Street, West Palm Beach
Wellington Interior Design Center 9312 Forest Hill Boulevard, Wellington
Miller’s Fine Decorative Hardware 220 Center Street, Suite 3, Jupiter 501 South Olive Avenue, West Palm Beach
California Closets 302 South Federal Highway, Boca Raton 4763 PGA Boulevard, Palm Beach Gardens
Capitol Lighting 2458 PGA Boulevard, Palm Beach Gardens 2863 State Rd 7, Suite 400, Wellington
palmbeachmedia.com From the publisher of PALM BEACH Illustrated
DINE. Oceanside dining brings family and friends together.
UNWIND. Two words everyone loves to hear: Spa Day.
SHOP. Shopping is always a good idea.
GIFT GIVING HAS NEVER FELT SO NATURAL. Share extraordinary experiences at our oceanfront playground this holiday season.
561.582.2800 | 2800 South Ocean Boulevard | Palm Beach, Florida 33480 | www.fourseasons.com/palmbeach
BED • B ATH • TA BLE C US T OM LIN EN S • MON OGRA MMIN G
210 Clematis Street West Palm Beach, FL 561-655-8553 w w w. p i o n e e r l i n e n s . c o m
Family owned since 1912, Pioneer Linens offers the finest array of luxury linens & home accessories for your bedroom, bathroom, table & yacht.
Style The Pearl Trade by katherine lande
Diamonds may be a girl’s best friend but pearls are just as pleasurable. Roger Vivier’s couture Rendez-Vouz collection embraces the pearl in pieces like the Boite de Nuit Caviar white pearl clutch ($4,850), the Boite de Nuit Jaipur black satin clutch with pearl detail ($3,495), and the White Caviar Lasso sandal with pearls ($3,350). Turn the page for more pearl pieces and festive accessories.
PALM BEACH Illustrated.com | december 2015
53
Style
Pearly Petal Camellia brooch with pearls ($550), Chanel, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gadens
In orbit UltraDior metal earrings with palladium finish, light pink resin pearls, and light pink crystals ($560), Dior, dior.com
Golden Crown Velvet headband with resin and crystal brooches ($3,075), Dolce & Gabbana, Bal Harbour
precious ones The world is your oyster this holiday season with pretty pearl accessories
Pearl Parade Metal and pearl-stud bracelet ($175), Tory Burch, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Boca Raton
tes o u q style ”I favor pearls on Catch a Star Pearlescent box clutch ($1,695), Edie Parker, edie-parker.com
KELLY: te life.” GRACE and in my priva ONASSIS: screen KENNEDY te.” eline ppropria Jacqu rls are always a othing gives the “Pea ELAND: “N mind.” em in VRE DIANA of pearls. Keep th luxury
Chanel Haute Couture Fall 2015 Karl Lagerfeld takes couture to a new luxury level by embellishing 3D-printed fabric with precious jewelry.
Touch of Class Hangisi pearl pump in black satin ($965), Manolo Blahnik, New York 54
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Glass of Bubbly Pearlescent embellished clutch ($3,695), Judith Leiber, Saks Fifth Avenue, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens, Boca Raton
Buried Treasure Pearl pump ($875), Nicholas Kirkwood, Marissa Collections, Naples
Style
Lucky Charm Paisley Charmlet with white diamonds set in 18-karat rose gold ($1,100), Tamara Comolli, Palm Beach
WHAT TO WEAR:
Roman holIday Give your holiday look an unexpected twist with Roman Empire inspirations Starburst White Sapphire Constellation earrings set in 18-karat gold ($13,900), Irene Lummertz, Palm Beach
Go Around Ray Bypass pavé collar necklace ($268), Giles & Brother, Intermix, Palm Beach
Golden Gams Mirror specchio jeweled slide ($695), Giuseppe Zanotti, Match, The Breakers, Palm Beach
Valentino Haute Couture Fall 2015 Rome plays muse in Valentino’s couture collection, which features nods to historical Roman references and ancient symbols.
style notes
DAY TO bles by w NIGHT: Moder niz earing em bellished e evening ensem lo GILDED ng, ethereal flat sandals wit h pendant TOUCH: Ad gowns necklace o r n lo oks with s, wreath gold HOLID and delicate b inspired headpie ces, festive po AY RED: Deep racelets p to any scarlet a c neutral o r metallic cents add a color pale tte Toga Toes Mindy flat sandal in natural python with black suede tassels ($1,350), Jimmy Choo, Palm Beach, Palm Beach Gardens
56
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Gift Bag Red alligator skin handbag with crystal stones ($5,900), Giorgio’s of Palm Beach, Palm Beach
Cooler Column Ida geometric heel in bronze ($845), Charlotte Olympia, Bal Harbour
On the Prowl Paloma small black calf structured handbag with patent leopard sides ($1,900), Christian Louboutin, Miami
MEET
AT
COCO WHATEVER YOUR OCCASION, IT’S SPECIAL TO US. PLAN AN EVENT WITH US THIS HOLIDAY SEASON. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT THE GROUP SALES MANAGER AT 954-977-6700 EXT. 2795 OR COCOGROUPDINING@STOFGAMING.COM.
casinococo.com Must be at least 21 years old to play Slots and Table Games or to receive Player’s Club benefits. Must be 18 or older to play Bingo and Live Poker. See Player’s Club for complete details. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, please call 1.888.ADMIT.IT.
Sparkle
1
3 Green Light
Go forth and dazzle with the color of the season
6
by mary MURRAY
58
palm beach ILLUSTRATED
7
4 1. Christmas in Paris Paris Nouvelle Vague ring with malachite and fire opals set in 18-karat rose gold, $36,600. Cartier, Palm Beach (561-655-5913, cartier.us) 2. Bejeweled Beehive Birks Bee Chic malachite earrings set in 18-karat gold, $695. Mayors, Palm Beach Gardens (561775-3999, mayors.com) 3. Frost Bite Kara Ross Long Linear Hydra mixed gemstone and diamond drop earrings with malachite and blue topaz set in 18-karat gold, $2,295. (kararossny.com) 4. Deco Darling Bracelet with diamonds, chrysoprase, and black spinels set in platinum, $450,000. Tiffany & Co. locations (800-843-3269, tiffany.com) 5. pin it Brooch with white diamonds and a 144.27-carat emerald, price upon request. Graff Diamonds, Palm Beach (561355-9292, graffdiamonds.com) 6. shapes and sizes Stephen Webster Gold Struck Crystal Haze long earrings with emeralds, green tourmalines, white diamonds, and green agate quartz set in 18-karat gold, $19,500. Alchemist, Miami (305-531-4653, shopalchemist.com) 7. Great Garland Six-strand bead necklace in multicolored precious and semiprecious stones set in 18-karat gold, $19,500. Seaman Schepps, Palm Beach (561-802-4410, seamanschepps.com)
5
Vincent Wulveryck Š Cartier
2
LIVE LIFE IN
MOTION
Get your quality of life back. Get moving again. Dozens of area athletes attribute their ability to get back into the game to Dr. Charles S. Theofilos. His remarkable record of success in stem cell and spine and joint regeneration is based upon his unique, three-step approach to prepare the joint for stem cells before injection, increasing the cells ability to thrive. His specialty in artificial disc replacement has helped athletes of all types move naturally, avoiding the permanent restrictions of fusion. A board certified neurosurgeon who is a renowned thought leader in non-surgical treatment options for neck and back injuries, Dr. Theofilos is right here in South Florida – just a phone call away.
Charles S. Theofilos, M.D.
We Offer FREE MRI reviews. Mention FREEOFPAIN. 11621 Kew Gardens Ave., Ste 101 Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410 (phone): 561-630-3870 | (fax): 561-630-3680
thespinecenter.com | ď‚‚
681 S.W. Port St. Lucie Blvd. Port St. Lucie, FL 34953 (phone): 772-807-5566 | (fax): 772-807-7834
Shop Local
Wrap Stars Chic gifts and coveted experiences for everyone on Santa’s nice list
HAPPY days
Give a gift that will make her smile. Our Pick: Anya Hindmarch’s Smiley zip top pouch ($495) is a whimsical statement accessory for day or evening. Island Home, Palm Beach (561-832-6244, shopis landhome.com)
By Kerry Shorr
SCENTSATIONAL SCULPTURE Once utilitarian
vessels, modern perfume bottles are equal parts sculpture and conversation starter. Our Pick: Jean Claude Novaro’s whimsical perfume bottles (transparent and colored with gold leafing, $1,800, left; or luminescent, $1,100, right) make lovely keepsakes. Onessimo Fine Art Gallery, Palm Beach Gardens (561-355-8061, onessimofineart.com)
Top Toque
SPEED RACER
Appeal to his inner Mario Andretti with a nonpareil automotive experience. Our Pick: One- or two-day driving schools from Sports Car Driving Experience ($1,625 or $2,750, respectively) include a Corvette, helmet, and meals. Hit the track and learn racing essentials from industry professionals. Palm Beach International Raceway, Jupiter (800-453-5506, sportscardriving experience.com)
GAME ON Give this venerable board game a luxurious reboot. Our Pick: Aerin’s stylish backgammon set ($2,200) boasts inlaid burlwood and an embossed shagreen exterior. Warning: You may never play Monopoly again. Hive Home Gift & Garden, West Palm Beach (561-514-0322, hivepalmbeach.com)
Treat the home chef to a dining experience he or she is sure to savor: an interactive cooking class. Our Pick: Learn to prepare regional fare or perennial classics like pasta, pizza, and fresh fish from In the Kitchen’s chef and owner, Lenore Pinello. Classes ($80-$100 each) include a five-course dinner. In the Kitchen, Tequesta (561-7477117, inthekitchennow.com)
PILLOW TALK Add a sweet sentiment to the pillowscape of a discerning couch potato. Our Pick: A blend of Italian cashmere and soft down feathers, Rani Arabella’s Love pillow ($450) speaks from the heart. Gervis Design Studio, Boca Raton (561-613-6100, gervisdesign.com)
HOT WHEELS Gift your little thrill seeker the
coolest wheels on the block. Our Pick: Dexton Kids’ Mercedes-Benz 300SL convertible ($399.95) is equipped with LED headlights and forward and reverse gears, and drives at a blinding 1.56 miles per hour. Made for children aged 3-6. Bloomingdale’s, Boca Raton, Palm Beach Gardens (561-3942000, 561-625-2000, bloomingdales.com)
60 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
742 US HIGHWAY 1 NORTH PALM BEACH, FL 33408-4410 561-882-0066 chumneyads.com
Chumney and Associates
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Get to know Lincoln Black Label at Lincoln.com/BlackLabel.
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Vanity
GOLD
ASHLEY MEYER
STANDARD
Beyond its ornamental and intrinsic value, gold carries benefits for the skin. From treating inflammation and sun damage to preventing the depletion of collagen, gold is essential to a beauty regimen. Our picks: This Works Skin Deep Golden Elixir with 24-karat gold to age-proof skin ($83, beautyhabit.com); Chantecaille Nano Gold Energizing Eye Serum ($210, beautyhabit.com); Orlane Creme Royale cleansing cream with colloidal gold for face and eyes ($150, Neiman Marcus); Belmacz Glow 24-karat gold leaf lip gloss in Ruby ($29, beautyhabit.com); By Terry Gold Elixir GlacĂŠ facial cream with 24-karat gold ($255, barneys.com); and La Prairie Cellular Radiance Concentrate Pure Gold serum ($645, Saks Fifth Avenue).
62
PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
THE POWER OF PREVIEWS
West Palm Beach, Florida 3 bedrooms, 2 full and 1 half baths $1,295,000 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate Search RX-10174170 on ColdwellBankerHomes.com
®
Coldwell Banker Previews International® offers the world’s best luxury real estate marketing – the proof is in the numbers.
More Than $100 Million Daily Coldwell Banker ® sales associates handle an average of $106 million in luxury home sales every day*.
Highest-Priced U.S. Listings Previews® currently represents some of the most expensive properties in the nation, including Palazzo di Amore in Beverly Hills.
86,000 Agents Globally There are more than 86,000 Coldwell Banker sales associates in 3,000 offices spanning six continents.
80-Year Legacy of Success Previews has served the needs of luxury home buyers and sellers since 1933.
Market Your Home with a Global Luxury Leader.
ColdwellBankerHomes.com
Boca Beach 561.395.2233 | Boca Central 561.994.8886 Boca Downtown 561.391.9400 | Boca Resort 561.447.3229 Boynton Beach 561.736.2400 | Delray Beach 561.278.0300 Jupiter Beach 561.744.2500 | Palm Beach Gardens 561.622.5000 Port St. Lucie 772.344.7279 | Stuart 772.286.1300 Wellington 561.793.3400 | West Palm Beach Intracoastal 561.832.4663
*Sales volume based on closed and recorded buyer and/or seller transaction sides of homes sold for $1 million or more as reported by affiliates in the U.S. Coldwell Banker® franchise system for the calendar year 2014. USD$. Total volume calculated by multiplying the number of buyer and/or seller sides by sales price. Agent and office numbers for the Coldwell Banker Previews International program include all Coldwell Banker-branded offices in the Coldwell Banker franchise system as of December 2014. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International and the Previews logo are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 11360FL_10/15
“IF YOU ARE IN PAIN, DISCOVER THE PREMIER LASER CENTER OF
Excellence AND FIRST CLASS Service” - Dr. Joseph A. Costello
Board Certified Chiropractic Orthopedist, Published Author and Lecturer on Laser Medicine.
ALL TREATMENTS ARE PERFORMED PERSONALLY BY
Dr. Costello, NOT A TECHNICIAN.
Arthritis • BACK PAIN • Carpal Tunnel Syndrome • Degenerative Disc Disease • Fibromyalgia Golfers/Tennis Elbow • HAIR LOSS • Headache • Nerve Pain • NEUROPATHY • OSTEO ARTHRITIS OF KNEE PAD (Peripheral Artery Disease) • Plantar Fasciitis • Rotator Cuff Tear • Sciatica • SPINAL STENOSIS • Shingles TOE NAIL FUNGUS • TMJ • TORN MENISCUS
Changing Medicine in America, one patient at a time.
At Laser Medica you have nothing to lose but your Pain and Suffering
561.345.3219 www.LaserMedicaFlorida.com
THE NEW 170 RESIDENCES ADJACENT TO MIZNER PARK FUSE TECHNOLOGY, STYLE, LUXURY AND LOCATION.
PRECONSTRUCTION PRICING FROM $500K TO OVER $2 MILLION VISIT OUR ON-SITE SALES CENTER | FURNISHED MODELS 199 EAST BOCA RATON ROAD, BOCA RATON, FL 33432 MON - FRI: 10AM - 5PM | SAT - SUN: 11AM - 5PM
BROKERS WELCOME
561.396.2378 | TOWER155.COM This residential development TOWER 155 (“Project”) is being developed 155 Boca Raton Road, LLC ("Developer"), which has a limited right to use the trademarked names and logos of Compson. Any and all statements, disclosures and/or representations shall be deemed made by Developer and not by ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING THE REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER NJ, NY and OR, unless registered or exemptions are available, or in any other jurisdiction where prohibited by law, and your eligibility for purchase will depend upon your state of residency. 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.
Finally, a holiday gift that unwraps you. WITH SPECIAL INCENTIVES FROM THE FABULOUS, FORBES FIVE-STAR EAU SPA, A HOLIDAY GIFT CARD IS ONE GIFT GUARANTEED TO MAKE EVERYONE FEEL GOOD. AND BEST OF ALL, THERE’S A LITTLE SOMETHING IN IT FOR YOU, TOO.
RECEIVE AN EXTRA $1,150 WITH ANY $5,000 GIFT CARD. RECEIVE AN EXTRA $200 WITH ANY $1,000 GIFT CARD. RECEIVE AN EXTRA $50 WITH ANY $500 GIFT CARD. PURCHASE 25 $50 OR MORE INDIVIDUAL GIFT CARDS AND RECEIVE FIVE BONUS GIFT CARDS OF EQUAL VALUE TO THE LOWEST PRICED GIFT CARD PURCHASED.
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO PURCHASE YOUR HOLIDAY GIFT CARDS, CALL 561.540.4960 OR CONTACT CONCIERGE@EAUSPA.COM NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR DISCOUNTED SERVICE.
EAUSPA.COM
Escape
Magic
Mexico’s Hidden By paul rubio
Discover sophisticated cities and natural hideaways along Mexico’s road less traveled
encounter whale sharks (right) and stay close to nature at Las Nubes de Holbox (above).
Holbox
A
long yet narrow sliver of mangrove and beach off the northern tip of Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, Holbox (pronounced hole-bosh) has managed to evade the lexicon of travel know-it-alls and tourist hordes. Its unspoiled state, however, is no secret to its primary residents: wild flamin-
gos, whale sharks, and a single boho-chic fishing village, home to about 2,000 locals. Translated as “Black Hole” in Mayan, Holbox lives true to its name as a vortex of simplicity where globalization disappears. There are no roads, no cars, and minimal technology here, so palmbeachillustrated.com | DECEMBER 2015
67
Escape
Remède Spa at the St. Regis Mexico City
Meditate on the beach before retreating to your suite at the Casa Sandra (above and left) or enjoy breakfast alfresco at Las Nubes de Holbox (right).
living in the moment comes naturally. Days rarely stray from lounging under a thatchedroof beach cabana or ambling along the island’s contiguous lagoon. If visiting between May and September, the height of whale shark season, then an experiential snorkeling encounter with the world’s largest extant fish is a must. Development exists solely across Holbox’s westernmost section. There, the hotels span the entire 1-mile width of the island and sandy roads lead from a Main Square to lanes of small shops and Caribbean-style wood shacks housing tour operators and no-shoes-required restaurants. Holbox’s unpaved highway ends at its easternmost structure, the boutique hotel
Las Nubes de Holbox (lasnubesdeholbox. com), where the upstairs master suites grant the best ocean views and superlative flamingo encounters. Slightly closer to “town,” the 12room Casa Sandra (casasandra.com) champions a delightful barefoot sophistication without tarnishing the old-school Mexican bucolic charm. Its exterior showcases iconic Mexican architecture, with whitewashed walls and a thatched-palapa roof, but its interiors, clad in hand-embroidered pillows and tapestries, imbue this paradisiacal boutique hotel with a familiar tinge of luxury.
Mexico City
Mexico’s capital bursts with the passion, colors, and flavors of the country’s 31 diverse states, offering a welcome urban retreat from the typical beachside circuit. While there’s no shortage of places to flash your pesos in the world’s eighth richest city, the wealth of free historic and cultural spectacles are the true highlights. Chapultepec, Mexico City’s Central Park equivalent, is peppered with worldrenowned museums such as the Museo Nacional de Antropología (mna.inah.gob.mx), home to the Aztec calendar stone Piedra del Sol and the fairy tale–like Castillo de Chapultepec. Teotihuacán, one of the largest pyramidal structures built in the pre-Columbian Americas, is just a short drive from the city center and is an impressive, lesser-known site that easily rivals Mexico’s more famous ruins. Mexico City is a mosaic of neighborhoods, or colonias. On Saturdays, the San Angel neighborhood hosts a sophisticated arts and crafts market focusing on the dearly departed; skeletons replace the living in portraits, Helipad view from the St. Regis Mexico City
At Las Nubes de Holbox, you’re never far from the ocean.
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Explore Teotihuacán (above) and view decorative trajineras along the canals of Xochimilco (left).
figurines, and sculptures to show adoration for the afterlife. Flowery, oversize Mexican gondolas, known as trajineras, float young lovers and festive groups along the canals of Xochimilco. The boutiques, galleries, bistros, and cafés of chic districts like La Condesa, La Roma, and Polanco buzz with the country’s growing bourgeoisie. Come nightfall, check out the city’s highdesign eateries. For an evening of sophisticated dining, sample haute Spanish cuisine at Tezka (tezka.com.mx) in the Zona Rosa neighborhood or head to Polanco’s La Tecla (latecla.com.mx) for pursuits in creative modern Mexican gastronomy. Later, retreat to your posh digs at the skyscraping St. Regis Mexico City (starwoodhotels.com), designed by Cesar Pelli of Malaysia’s Petronas Towers fame.
Get lost in San Miguel de Allende’s colorful side streets. From top: pumpkin risotto at moxi; Paroquia de San Miguel Archangel.
San Miguel de Allende
The rogue city that helped launch the Mexican War of Independence is now making history as the country’s most glamorous destination. San Miguel de Allende, an eighteenthcentury colonial town in the heart of Mexico’s central highlands, sparkles with UNESCO World Heritage grandeur, captured in its colorful streets, stunning gardens, neoclassical monuments, neo-gothic churches, and ba-
roque-style homes. Influenced by the region’s architectural customs, the Rosewood San Miguel de Allende (rosewoodhotels.com/en/sanmiguelde allende) was built like a traditional Mexican hacienda, with expansive rooms that surround either a central courtyard or aromatic fields of lavender. Arched domes lead from one building to the next, each corridor lined with art and ending at a different modern marvel. Pick a direction and discover a cabanalined infinity pool, or a wine cellar dedicated to artist Frida Kahlo and constructed from Arched corridors at the Rosewood
From left: olive cake with cream cheese and passionfruit sauce at Tezka; Chapultepec in Mexico City.
palmbeachillustrated.com | DECEMBER 2015
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Escape
Sample tequilas at the Rosewood’s 1826 Tequila Bar (left) or visit one of the city’s many colonial churches (right).
local river rock, or the Luna Rooftop Tapas Bar, which serves eclectic bites alongside an extraordinary view of Mexico’s oldest town. In San Miguel de Allende, no map is required. Meandering with no concern for the destination provides ample opportunity to snap photos of the red, rust, and yellow kaleidoscope of buildings, browse petite museums, and discover esoteric galleries and boutiques tucked into alleyways. At some point, however, be sure to find your way to Moxi (moxi.com.mx), helmed by Mexico’s current “it” chef, Enrique Olvera. Feast on Olvera’s play on traditional Mexican dishes, like eggplant mole and pumpkin risotto with squash
blossoms. Afterward, stop by the Casa Dragones (casadragones.com) showroom for a tequila tasting. A visit here is by invitation only but can be arranged by your concierge at the Rosewood. A tour of this seventeenth-century estate comes with gourmet food paired with tequila, and not just any tequila—Dragones’ 100-percent blue agave Joven tequila is consumed only in its purest form. Like a great work of art, each bottle is hand engraved, signed, numbered, and dated. « Luna Rooftop Tapas Bar at the Rosewood
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PROMOTION AND EVENTS • D EcEMbER 2015
Ann norton Sculpture GArdenS
2051 S. Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach 561-832-5328 | ansg.org
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Krystal Zaskey Photography
The Ninth Annual Festival of Trees, “The Joy of Holiday Traditions, celebrating Family Heritage,” is the premier holiday event of the Palm beaches. The 1.7 acres of the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens will transform into a winter wonderland featuring more than 25 professionally decorated trees. The festivities commence with the annual Gala Evening in the Gardens on December 4 featuring music, dance, theatrical performances, and amazing food, followed by community Days and an evening of mini-merriment, special performances, music, and surprises at the children’s Gala on December 13. Opening Gala tickets are $250 for nonmembers, $200 for members, and children’s Gala tickets are $40.
Jupiter’s renowned breast surgeon is now seeing and treating patients at Good Samaritan Medical Center
Dr. Rimmer has expanded his practice to West Palm Beach and is joining the MultiModality Clinic at Good Samaritan Medical Center’s NAPBC accredited Breast Program. In conjunction with the Oncology team, the MMC will offer our patients a “one-stop” opportunity with all the necessary medical specialists conveniently located under one roof at the same appointment time.
(561)748-1242 210 Jupiter Lakes Blvd. Bldg. 5000 Suite 202 • Jupiter, FL 33458 1309 North Flagler Drive Suite 1027 • West Palm Beach, FL 33401 JohnRimmerMD.com
Jet Set Helmut Koller
Danke, Vienna
Renowned for his Technicolor interpretations of lop-eared rabbits, spotted jaguars, plains zebras, and other wildlife, Austrian artist Helmut Koller began his career with Gabriele Schacherl
the Vienna State Opera, photographing world-class performers like Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo. In 1981, he immigrated to the United States and shot fashion photography before pursuing his dream to paint. He has lived in Palm Beach for 33 years but still travels to Vienna annually to visit friends and gain artistic inspiration in the city that has his heart.
VIBE: Cozy, historic, and hip
FOR SHOPAHOLICS: The Naschmarkt sells everything from expensive antiques to curious kitsch. (naschmarkt-vienna.com)
Naschmarkt
FASHION ESSENTIALS FOR DAY: Denim jeans, a dress shirt, and a dark blue tailored jacket
Konrad Limbeck
FASHION ESSENTIALS FOR NIGHT: Daytime attire works for night, but a suit and tie is required for the opera. BEST WAY TO START THE DAY: Getting inspired by the Viennese sculptures, monuments, and museum posters as I walk the 3,428 steps to the Café Korb for breakfast (cafekorb.at)
GUILTY PLEASURE: The cakes at Demel, Vienna’s most creative pastry shop (demel.at)
Konrad Limbeck
HOMETOWN GOODS TO SAMPLE AND STOCKPILE: Sacher torte and Mozartkugel, a chocolate marzipan confection named after Mozart FAVORITE SHOPS: The Original Salzburger Trachtenoutlet for a dirndl and a pair of lederhosen (originalsalzburger.at)
inside café korb The Vienna State Opera
SIGNATURE TIPPLE: The Hugo, made with elderflower syrup, Prosecco or sparkling wine, sparkling mineral water, lemon, and mint leaves. The taste reminds me of a Viennese waltz.
demel
LOCAL DISHES TO DREAM ABOUT: The Plachutta Wollzeile prepares the best tafelspitz (boiled beef in broth) and Plachutta’s Gasthaus zur Oper makes perfect wiener schnitzel. (plachutta.at/en/tafelspitz; plachutta-oper.at)
SACHER TORTE
SOUNDTRACK: Mozart BEST TIME TO GO: Late spring or early fall 72
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MUST-DO EXPERIENCE NOT IN THE GUIDEBOOKS: The Zentralfriedhof is one of the largest cemeteries in the world and where many great musical composers, including Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, and Strauss, are buried.
Russian Punch cake from DEmel
Plachutta
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What is Koller’s favorite seat in town? find out at palmbeachillustrated.com/ vienna
Where you’re going is up to you. Our job is to help you get there. The things that are important to you are what really matter. That’s why we’ll take the time to understand life priorities like your family, your work, your hopes and dreams. Then we can help you get ready for the future with a financial strategy that’s just for you. The Pingleton Group Daryn Pingleton, CIMA® Senior Vice President – Wealth Management Wealth Management Advisor Portfolio Manager
Merrill Lynch 101 North Clematis Street Suite 200 West Palm Beach, FL 33401
561.514.4817
fa.ml.com/pingleton_group
Life’s better when we’re connected® Merrill Lynch Wealth Management makes available products and services offered by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, a registered broker-dealer and Member SIPC, and other subsidiaries of Bank of America Corporation. Investment products: Are Not FDIC Insured Are Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value The Bull Symbol, Life’s better when we’re connected and Merrill Lynch are trademarks of Bank of America Corporation. Investment Management Consultants Association (IMCA®) is the owner of the certification marks CIMA® and Certified Investment Management Analyst®. Use of CIMA® and Certified Investment Management Analyst® signifies that the user has successfully completed IMCA’s initial and ongoing credentialing requirements for investment management consultants. © 2015 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved. ARFSWM8R | AD-10-15-0508 | 470948PM-0315 | 10/2015
High Road
luxury IN THE ROUGH Bentley unveils its new Bentayga, the world’s fastest, most luxurious, and most expensive SUV By Howard Walker Checking the options boxes when purchasing a new car always delivers a frisson of excitement. Do you stick with the stock 18-inch rims or spend the extra couple of grand for the 20s? Do you go with the $800 stereo or upgrade to the $1,500 model with more bells, watts, and whistles? Of course, I want it all. Slightly more consideration might be required when filling in the lengthy extras list for your new $229,100 Bentley Bentayga, the world’s fastest and most expensive SUV, heading to showrooms this spring. You’ll love the platinum Breitling dashboard-mounted clock, but you could upgrade to the optional Breitling Mulliner Tourbillon ticker for a jaw-dropping $234,000. Naturally, it’s a horological marvel. The tourbillon mechanism is what the watch industry quite rightly calls a “complication,” meaning it improves the precision of a watch by counteracting gravity-induced disturbances. In short, it makes it as accurate as a $10 digital Timex. 74
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This clock, however, is aesthetically superior—to say the least. Its case is handcrafted from solid 18-karat white or rose gold. You can also choose between an ebony or white mother-of-pearl face, both adorned with eight chunky diamonds. The party trick of this ticking pièce de résistance is how it winds. In the same way the mechanical watch on your wrist requires movement to keep it accurate, the Bentley clock has a self-winding mechanism that spins the entire clock three times every 15 minutes to keep it on time to a fault. That $234,000 price tag only covers the clock. Given the myriad other accoutrements, you’ll probably want to hire armed guards to protect your investment when the Bentley is parked. As for the Bentayga itself, you’re looking at a mechanical masterpiece equal to anything Breitling creates. Powered by a 600-horse-
power, twin-turbo, 12-cylinder engine, this 5,300-pound penthouse on wheels almost defies physics when it races to 60 mph from rest in four seconds or hits its top speed of 187 mph. Because SUVs are designed to play in the mud, the Bentayga’s complex 4x4 system has settings to tackle everything from mud, snow, grass, sand, and even that pesky, crunchy gravel on driveways leading up to Downton Abbey– style English country mansions.
Worry lines gone in an instant!
You’ve got character… Keep it, just tweak it!
1500 N. Dixie Highway, Suite 304 n West Palm Beach, Fl 33401 n Tel. 561-833-4022 www.DrDanielKapp.com
SEEKING CONSIGNMENTS FOR UPCOMING AUCTIONS
High Road
POWER FILE
A pair of platinum, emerald and diamond earclips sold for $21,250; an emerald and diamond ring, Harry Winston, sold for $149,000
LESLIE HINDMAN AUCTIONEERS Office 125 Worth Avenue Palm Beach, 33480
Saleroom 1608 South Dixie Hwy West Palm Beach, 33401
lesliehindman.com
561.833.8053
C H I C AG O | D E N V E R | M I LWAU K E E | N A P L E S | PA L M B E AC H | ST. LO U I S
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It can also wade through water PRICE: From $229,100 ENGINE: 20 inches deep, clear rocks that 6.0-liter twin-turbo V-12 POWER: are more than 9 inches high, and 600-hp TORQUE: 664 pound-feet TRANSMISSION: 8-speed automatic 0-60: tow a 7,700-pound trailer with4 seconds TOP SPEED: 187 mph LENGTH/ out breaking a sweat, perfect for WIDTH: 202.4/78.7 inches WEIGHT: when your show-jumper needs 5,340 pounds WHY WE LOVE IT: transporting to Wellington. Because no carmaker has ever built See it in the metal and it looks an SUV this expensive, this fast, somewhat like Bentley’s Continenand this luxurious. tal GT on steroids. It’s a handsome beast, though a bit predictable in its shape. Thankfully, it’s a million times easier on the eyes than the regrettable EXP 9F concept Bentley showed the world in 2012. Ultimately, it lacks the elegance, class, and distinctive style of, say, a long-wheelbase Range Rover Autobiography. The Bentayga awes when you open the door. This is Bentley at its bespoke, handcrafted finest: exquisite veneers, quilted leathers, and shimmery stainless-steel fixtures and fittings. The 22-way adjusting front seats deliver unparalleled comfort, while the individual rear pews (a bench is optional) power 18 different ways. Want tunes? The 18-speaker 1,950-watt Naim audio system will happily oblige. This being Bentley, just ask and it shall be delivered. The company’s Mulliner bespoke division will install a custom hamper set for alfresco picnics, crafted by royal furniture maker David Linley (grandson of King George VI) and complete with a Champagne chiller as well as custom china and crystal flutes. Speaking of the British Royal Family, Her Majesty will receive the very first Bentayga off the production line; it will join her Bentley State Limousine in the royal lockup. As for the Bentayga name, the jury is still out. According to Bentley, it comes from Roque Bentayga, the 4,642-foot mountain peak on Spain’s Canary Islands. At least it’s better than the Bentley Canary. «
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follow howard walker’s the wheel world blog on palmbeach illustrated.com
Bonds Family
By Jennifer Pfaff Photography By Jerry Rabinowitz
Following eight years of advocacy, Ernie and Liezl Els celebrate a major achievement in their quest to help those on the autism spectrum
E
rnie Els sits on the back steps of the lanai at his Jupiter home, his 13-year-old son, Ben, situated in between his long legs. To his right, his wife, Liezl, and 16-year-old daughter, Samantha, try to get Ben to smile for a picture. “Cheeeese,” they sing encouragingly. Eventually, it works. “Cheeeeeese,” Ben chimes in, drawing out the word with a smile. The exclamation causes Ernie to crack one himself. In this moment, Ernie isn’t the South African golfer the world knows him to be. A former World No. 1, the 6-foot-3 athlete has captured 70 career victories since turning professional in 1989, includ-
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ing two U.S. Opens, two World Golf Championships, and 13 PGA Tours. The World Golf Hall of Fame member also holds the record for the most consecutive weeks—758—inside the top 10 of the Official World Golf Ranking. Right now, however, he’s just Dad. Loving, protective, relaxed, content. The camera clicks, and the scene is documented. The family then moves to a nearby couch for another photo, and the gentle coaxing to convince Ben to smile begins again.
It’s a common interaction for the Els family—and many others: Ben has autism spectrum disorder, a neurodevelopmental condition that affects one in 68 children. Found in an estimated 2 million Americans, the disability can cause a variety of handicaps, like difficulties handling social interactions and communicating, repetitive behaviors, sensitivity to processing senses, and impaired motor coordination. Intellectual abilities range from disabled to superior, with many individuals excelling in skills such as music and math, and the condition is unique to each person, revealing any combina
tion of characteristics. There is no cure, but therapies can help targeted areas. Ben’s case is severe. He doesn’t say much or maintain eye contact. Playing golf with his famous father is out of the question; he prefers being chased on the course, and Ernie happily obliges. “His communication skill is not that great, but he’s the world’s most unbelievable kid,” Ernie says of Ben. “He loves smiling. He loves to just laugh. He loves seeing happy faces, and he wants to make you laugh. He’s just got a great demeanor. He’s the softest kid.” palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
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When the Els family decided to move to South Florida, Ernie went house hunting for the family and found a gorgeous home in The Bear’s Club. They have lived there since 2008. 80 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Ben is the reason the Elses live in South Florida—the family moved from England so he could receive treatments here—and, naturally, he’s also the reason Ernie and Liezl have become autism advocates. As they’ve settled in Jupiter over the past seven years, they’ve opened their home as the setting for dozens of fundraisers for what has become their life’s biggest calling: a campaign to create the world’s most innovative autism school and research facility, a dream that became reality in August when the first phase of their Els Center of Excellence opened in Jupiter. But before they were parents, advocates, and philanthropists, Ernie and Liezl were early-20-somethings who met in 1992 at a pizzeria in Liezl’s hometown of Stellenbosch, South Africa. Ernie was in town for a golf tournament and, upon meeting Liezl, “immediately wanted her to come up to Johannesburg for the next tournament,” he says. She did, and six years later they married in a vineyard in Cape Town and moved to London, a convenient home base for Ernie as he traveled the globe for his career. Samantha and Ben were both born in England, yet their early developments were noticeably different. “Just a couple of months after Ben’s birth, we could see he wasn’t quite reacting the same as Samantha,” Ernie recalls. “We thought he was just a bit slow. But when he turned 1, he wasn’t even trying to crawl yet.” “He was like a blob,” Liezl adds. “He just sat around.” That was a wake-up call. Liezl took Ben to different doctors and specialists, and he received various therapies, including speech and occupational, but nobody could pinpoint what was going on. It wasn’t until Ernie and Liezl began reading about autism that things began to click. “You knew before you knew,” Liezl says. “You didn’t want to bring it out and say it, but you kind of knew what was coming.”
They got their answer in Augusta, Georgia. The week Ernie was competing in the 2007 Masters Tournament, they took Ben to a specialist who was recommended by pediatrician Dr. Charles Howell II, the father of fellow golfer and Augusta native Charles Howell III. After undergoing two tests, Ben was officially diagnosed with autism. “To hear it from [Dr. Howell] was probably a little more comforting, because it was coming from a friend and in our best interest,” Ernie says. “We needed to clear the air, so to speak. And I think we were fine with it. By then, we knew: He was different.” In some ways, the diagnosis was good news: Ben’s treatments could now be more streamlined, and Ernie and Liezl had an answer when people asked if something was wrong with their son. Still, it was hard to face, especially when Ernie—the golf star who also plays tennis and soccer with Samantha—had to accept he couldn’t play sports with Ben.
The once-private Elses have grown accustomed to sharing their Jupiter home—and their story—to raise awareness and funds for autism. Palm Beachers, Ernie says, have embraced the family and the cause. “They’ve really welcomed us into the community,” he says. “As foreigners living here, it’s just been a treat.” palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
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Liezl believes hosting the tea party at her home has a stronger impact on guests. “They feel much more involved because you give them this glimpse into your life by bringing them into the house,” she says.
“You could say I felt a bit sorry for myself,” he chuckles softly. “I was going through a little bit of a traumatic stage—maybe you could call it that. Liezl was quite strong; she kept doing her thing. As a couple, we had to get together and walk in the same direction.” They did with the help of friends Pam Minelli and Dick Busto, who introduced them to the Renaissance Learning Center, a charter school in West Palm Beach where their son, Andrew, who has autism, was a 82
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student. After further research, Ernie and Liezl agreed it was the best place for then 6-year-old Ben and moved the family to Jupiter in 2008. As they settled into their new home in The Bear’s Club, Ernie and Liezl felt compelled to do something big for the autism community. In 2009, they formed the Els for Autism Foundation, a nonprofit with an ambitious goal conceived by Liezl: to expand Ben’s school into a proper educational and research center focused solely on autism, with an Internet platform so ideas and education could easily be shared. “The idea was to grow this and to not just have it as a school but also as a facility that can reach the world so that you can create and accumulate best practices from around the world and spread it to people in all corners,” Liezl says. “By the Internet, you can do miracles—so that people don’t have to move in order to have access to proper education for their children.” The project would come at a cost of $30 million. Ernie and Liezl contributed $6 million themselves; the rest would come from fundraisers. They just needed a plan. Liezl immediately caught on to the Palm Beach social season and decided to organize an event to stand out among the black-tie galas. Her idea was to open up her home for an English tea party, with just one requirement: Every guest had to dress the part.
Hair: Isaac Mann, Giorgio Armani Beauty Makeup: Tim Quinn, National Director of Creative Artistry, Giorgio Armani Beauty
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
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Each year, more than 200 women gather around the Els pool for Liezl’s Tea Party. “I think that’s more intimate,” Liezl says about organizing the party at the house. “You feel much more welcome when you go to somebody’s home. You feel a bit more special.”
“There was more moaning and questions and phone calls about that than anything else,” she laughs. On a beautiful day in March 2009, more than 200 women in traditional British hats socialized in the Elses’ backyard at the first annual Liezl’s Tea Party. The South African hostess quickly learned Americans prefer iced tea over its hot counterpart, and so the event has evolved into more of a Champagne party. Each year, the luncheon takes on a different country as its theme—this year’s, to be held March 10, is Spain—while raising about $150,000 for Els for Autism. Tickets for the event now sell out in two weeks, despite the dress code. “It’s now something that people look forward to, even though they still moan as much as they did the first year,” Liezl laughs. Ernie has used his status as a golf phenom to raise money and awareness for the foundation on the course. Since 2009, he’s led the E4A ProAm, a charity golf tournament in which Ernie and other PGA Tour pros team with groups of three amateurs. The annual event raises more than 84 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
$700,000 in a single day. He also orchestrated the Els for Autism Golf Challenge, a season-long series of amateur regional golf events held throughout the United States and Canada, culminating in a grand finale in Las Vegas. Established in 2011, the event has generated $12 million since its inception. All of this—years of charity golf tournaments, tea parties, and other fundraisers big and small—led to an unforgettable day for Ernie and Liezl this summer when the Els Center of Excellence welcomed 115 students August 17 for its first school year. Now in its first phase, the center consists of a Lower School for students aged 3-14, a 300-seat auditorium where professionals can network via lectures and video conferencing, and two playgrounds. The unique needs of autistic students influenced every design decision. The school uses LED lighting to prevent sensory overload. Noise levels are kept low thanks to acoustic lining within the walls. Classrooms have cameras and observational rooms so parents and experts
Giving Back
can watch the students via oneway mirrors, a feature that also allows researchers to investigate and examine teaching methods. “These kids have so many different mannerisms and so many different ways their minds work,” Liezl says. “They might all fall under the autism umbrella, but they’re so individual that it is important to be intuitive when you teach them and find the right ways for each individual child. That was something we advocated for and implemented in the school.” There’s more to come: Next is an Upper School for students aged 14-22, which Liezl hopes to have open within a year. Eventually, the 26-acre campus will also house a cafeteria, a sensory garden, a medical and professional services building, and athletic facilities, including a gymnasium and a swimming pool. More fundraising is needed; the center receives about $21,000 in government funding per child, but Liezl estimates it takes $50,000 to $65,000 to properly instruct a student with autism. Altogether, 300 students will attend the public charter school for free—and, the Elses hope, more beyond Palm Beach County. Their ultimate dream is for the center to be a template for similar schools around the world. For now, Ernie and Liezl are still taking it all in.
“To have it there, to be able to see our own son in there, to see the happiness, to hear the happy stories … ” Liezl drifts off with a smile. “Of course there are challenges. Every day is a challenge, but it’s moving in the right direction, and everything is improving by leaps and bounds.” Ernie continues to bring his passion for golf to the autism community. He’s building a par-3 course at the Center of Excellence so the school can use golf as a lifeskills development tool. He also implemented a curriculum for PGA of America pros, as part of their training, to learn how to instruct individuals with autism, and he launched a program of golf clinics around the country for children and young adults on the spectrum. These efforts and others caught the attention of PGA Tour officials, and in September the association named Ernie the recipient of the 2015 Payne Stewart Award, an annual recognition that honors a professional player who exemplifies character, charity, and sportsmanship. While there is no doubt Ernie will always be known for his legacy in the world of golf, he feels he will also be remembered for his autism advocacy, a surprising twist in his life. “I would never have thought I’d be sitting in the U.S. as a South African with an autistic son, a great daughter, doing the things we’re doing,” he says. “It’s amazing how life can change. “I cannot imagine my life being different or having [my son] different,” he adds. “It’s just the way I see and love Ben. That’s the way I want him.” «
On December 11, Palm Beach will host a holiday shopping event benefitting Els for Autism. Throughout the day, participating Worth Avenue retailers—including Alex and Ani, MacKenzie-Childs, J.McLaughlin, and Golfino—will donate 10 to 15 percent of proceeds to the foundation. Light bites and refreshments will also be served at select boutiques.
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
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Behold the ultimate luxury:
a one-of-a-kind couture creation designed to dazzle and endure Shot by Palm Beach Illustrated on location at Baccarat Hotel & Residences New York Jewelry provided by Graff Diamonds, New York, Palm Beach
Zuhair Murad Haute Couture black tulle kaftan dress
Masterpiece Theater For buying information, turn to page 181. Fashion Editor: Katherine Lande
photography by GABOR JURINA
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Giambattista Valli Haute Couture silk dress and pants; Jimmy Choo fox fur pom-pom pumps. Opposite page: Naeem Khan custom beaded longsleeved gown For buying information, turn to page 181.
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PALMBEACHillustrated.com PALMBEACHillustrated.com || NOVEMBER December 2015
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Valentino Haute Couture double silk mosaic encrusted dress; Jimmy Choo crystal clutch. For buying information, turn to page 181. 90 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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Chanel Haute Couture black 3D jacket and skirt, black top; Jimmy Choo crystal clutch. Opposite page: Jennifer Behr voilette with scattered crystals For buying information, turn to page 181. 92
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PALMBEACHillustrated.com | December 2015
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Marchesa custom embellished strapless gown For buying information, turn to page 181. Model: Sophie Theobald, w360 Management, New York Makeup: Julie Harris, Judy Inc., Toronto Hair: Takayoshi Tsukisawa, New York, takayoshitsukisawa.com Fashion Assistant: Dfernando, Atomic Assistants Agency, New York/Miami PBI extends a special thanks to the staff and management of Baccarat Hotel & Residences New York for their generous hospitality.
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A Tropical Tableau
Jacqueline and Albert Togut host a Palm Beach holiday dinner with European accents By linda marx Photography by jerry rabinowitz
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Albert and Jacqueline (inset) are ready to welcome guests. Jacqueline’s interior design skills are evident in the decor, from the front door to the Christmas tree to the alfresco table.
Kevin Sprague
J
acqueline and Albert Togut could spend the holidays opening presents while overlooking Central Park in their apartment at New York City’s historic San Remo building. Or they could opt for a picturesque scene in front of a fire in their Greek Revival farmhouse in the Berkshires. Or perhaps an island-style Christmas at their new Palm Beach home. Decisions, decisions. This year, sunshine trumped all. The Toguts love their Palm Beach sanctuary because it recalls places they’ve visited along the Mediterranean coast. It has a large, open living room and an abundance of coved ceilings, bleached woods, and French doors that open to a lush lawn and pool, creating a relaxed indooroutdoor atmosphere. The home is perfectly suited for a Christmas celebration with friends. “We like the Palm Beach house so much because it reminds us of the South of France and Capri, places we love,” says Jacqueline, a former Ford model turned interior designer. “I love this time of year and like to cook and entertain in Palm Beach. I am reinventing my approach to Christmas with a tropical bent.” Even Albert, a restructuring lawyer who spends most of his time with clients at his New York office, is smitten with the idea of a South Florida holiday tableau. “I have been visiting Palm Beach for more than 50 years, and we
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have a wide circle of friends here,” he says. “The best thing about holiday entertaining is that we get our friends together and all have a great time. Our new home is perfect for us, and we want to share it.” In addition to a love of Palm Beach, Jacqueline and Albert also embrace French and Italian cuisine and culture. They decided to imbue their tropical surrounds with these lifestyle passions for a festive dinner party. Jacqueline set the scene with a 12-foot-high Christmas tree dressed in turquoise, silver, and white ornaments. She adorned the fireplace with eclectic nutcrackers culled from international destinations such as France, Germany, Hungary, Switzerland, and Austria. “I love nutcrackers and collect them in all sizes and varieties,” she says. “I studied ballet— it’s all so romantic. The nutcrackers make me smile.” 100 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Jacqueline’s collection of nutcrackers graces the mantle in the living room (top). The kitchen banquette doubles as a buffet table (above). Jacqueline and friend (and celebrity hairdresser) John Barrett mingle in the back garden.
Clockwise from below: hors d’oeuvres, including French goat cheese and paté and smoked salmon on cucumber slices; the main course, yellowtail acqua pazza; a decidedly tropical table setting with subtle holiday references.
Jacqueline greeted each guest with her special Christmas cocktail of Veuve Clicquot Champagne with a splash of pomegranate juice and fresh mint. Guests raised their glasses in a toast in front of the fireplace, and the clink of crystal set the tone for the evening. “Jacqueline is so much fun as a hostess,” Caroline Koons Forrest of MP Design & Architecture Inc.—which helped design the Toguts’ home— remarked at the event. “The house is beautiful, comfortable, and suits her family.” Food always plays a key role in the Toguts’ soirees. They take care to incorporate whatever is in season and use as many fresh ingredients as possible. Having dined all over the world, they enjoy sharing their favorite dishes and wines from their travels. Albert, in particular, delights in selecting the wine. He is an avid collector with a penchant for French vintages from the Loire Valley, Alsace, Bordeaux, and Burgundy. “Once the food is set, the wine choices are mine,” Albert says. “I am in no way a slave to convention; I like to offer unusual wine pairings.” After cocktails, Jacqueline led guests outdoors where the trees dripped with large bejeweled trinkets, strung by Jacqueline’s design assistant, Hayley Sheldon. Red orchids, white ginger, and magnolia leaves sat atop side tables scattered throughout the area. The dinner table overlooked the pool and was appointed with specialty orchids mixed with fern and magnolia leaves as well as Raynaud porcelain by Limoges, silver flatware by Reed & Barton, and Cristallerie Royale de Portieux antique crystal stemware from Maison Bleu. Jacqueline got the conversation started as everyone sat down and prepared for an Italian meal catered by Marcello Fiorentino of La Sirena in West Palm Beach. “At the start of a meal like this—which is similar to what Al and I experience on the French or Italian Riviera—I like to get people talking about uncomfortable subjects,” she says. “I prefer not-sosafe conversation, like exchanging ideas on world issues and hearing other people’s views. People warn, ‘Never talk religion or politics.’ I say: Talk about both.” Albert adds: “I strongly prefer dinner parties over cocktail parties because we have time for intimacy and real conversation. It is much more substantive and, I find, more satisfying.” Fiorentino’s menu was as exciting and textured as the discussion. To
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Right: The pasta course, ravioli stuffed with ricotta and topped with a tomato-basil sauce. Below: buffalo mozzarella with tomatoes and basil; mingling by the fire.
“I am reinventing my approach to Christmas with a tropical bent,” Jacqueline says. accompany the meal, he and Albert chose a 2002 Clos des Mouches white wine made by Joseph Drouhin Vineyards in Beaune, Burgundy. The appetizers consisted of fresh buffalo milk mozzarella imported from Campania and served with vine-ripened tomatoes, fresh basil, and extra virgin olive oil followed by insalata di mare composed of scallops, shrimp, calamari, sliced onions, and parsley in a lemon, garlic, and olive oil dressing. Next, the group dined on ravioli caprese, filled with ricotta and other cheeses under a tomato-basil sauce, and yellowtail acqua pazza, a fresh Key West snapper poached in tomato, onion, garlic, parsley, capers, white wine, and olive oil. In keeping with Mediterranean holiday traditions, dessert was a bûche de Noël, a classic French log cake iced with chocolate buttercream and decorated with meringue mushrooms. The rich confection was paired with 102 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
a 1989 Château Coutet from Barsac in the southern part of France’s Bordeaux region. The meal came to a close with coffee, served in charming Christofle demitasse cups. Guests lingered by the poolside and left under the spell of the season, all thanks to the Toguts’ warm hospitality. Sculptor and furniture designer Jane Manus says, “Albert is quiet and reserved; Jacqueline is bubbly, elegant, and stylish. But they are both warm and friendly and work together perfectly. As party hosts, they greatly complement each other.” “Jacqueline’s taste in entertaining is impeccable,” adds hair stylist and salon owner John Barrett. “I love the great wines and little surprises that accompany us as we leave. She flew in La Maison du Chocolat truffles from Paris. Creative touches like this make dining with this interesting couple and their friends a pure delight.” The evening turned out to be a perfect representation of Jacqueline and Albert’s worldly tastes and relaxed approach to entertaining. By combining the best of European culture with Palm Beach’s tropical charm, the couple curated a Christmas scene to remember. «
The b没che de No毛l is a classic French holiday dessert. Sponge cake is rolled and iced with chocolate buttercream and decorated with kitschy woodland creatures.
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Courtesy of MCH Messe Schweiz (Basel) AG
Where the Art Is This month, the art universe will collide with the Magic City. The result: an art fair no collector can afford to miss. PBI guides you through the divine madness of Art Basel. By Susie Stanton Staikos The contemporary art world shines a spotlight on Miami Beach this month when Art Basel returns for its fourteenth year. From December 2-6, thousands of visitors will enter the Miami Beach Convention Center to view works from 267 galleries representing 32 countries. “Fairs have changed the way collectors look at and consume art,” says Glenn Scott-Wright, director of London’s Victoria Miro Gallery, 2014 Art Basel attendees view a work from Galleria Continua
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a regular at Art Basel. “Now the whole of the contemporary art scene can be viewed in one go at premium art fairs and the many satellite shows they have spawned, bringing all of the art world together to network, share, and exchange notes.”
With so much to take in, the multifaceted show breaks down its offerings into nine areas known as sectors
A visitor strolls by a piece on display by New York’s Edward Tyler Nahem Fine Art at last year’s Art Basel Miami Beach
In addition to exhibiting 29 galleries new to the show this year, the esteemed fair welcomes Noah Horowitz, who in July was appointed Art Basel’s first director Americas, overseeing the Miami Beach edition. The former executive director of New
galleries
Courtesy of Galerie Barbara Thumm, Berlin
Courtesy of MCH Messe Schweiz (Basel) AG
Art Basel Sectors
York’s Armory Show, Horowitz admires Art Basel’s focus on and dedication to quality as well as the high-level audience it attracts. “Art Basel is willing to think differently about how art fairs function in today’s global context and to continually evolve the fair,” Horowitz says, pointing out last year’s introduction of Survey, a sector dedicated to historical projects by respected artists who have been overlooked by the market.
LET THE FESTIVITIES BEGIN It all begins with two invitation-only opening days: a private viewing Dec. 2 and the Vernissage party preview on Dec. 3. The doors open to the general public at 3 p.m. on Dec. 3 and at noon on subsequent days.
There are many ways to enjoy this important show, but even the most seasoned fairgoer can find navigating Art Basel Miami Beach challenging. Make the most of your visit with PBI’s
Courtesy of MCH Messe Schweiz (Basel) AG
guide for what to see and do at Art Basel.
Untitled (BAH), Teresa Burga
Art Basel will showcase more than 200 galleries from near and far. Among the first-time exhibitors to check out are Brussels’ Vedovi Gallery, known for its secondary market of post-war and contemporary European and American art, and Mazzoleni Art, based in London and Turin, which will display works from prominent twentieth-century international artists. Also look for wider programs from regulars Andrew Edlin Gallery of New York, Kerlin Gallery of Dublin, and Mendes Wood DM of São Paulo. “Our booths are known for their beauty and being visually appealing,” says Sarah Gavlak, owner of Palm Beachbased Gavlak Gallery, which represents young and mid-career artists, particularly those whose work is more accessible. “I am not afraid of ‘pretty’ and ‘pleasure’ in art. In fact, I prefer it.”
Raise Up, Hank Willis Thomas, on display last year from Goodman Gallery
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Kabinett
Revolo, Luciano Figueiredo
Nova
Vicente de Mello
Among the Galleries participants, 27 are selected for the Kabinett sector to present curated exhibitions within a designated space of their booths. These mini shows can highlight historical pieces, a group of artists under one theme, or an up-and-coming artist. Four Kabinetts worth catching: works by Michael CraigMartin—known for conceptual installations and colorful, contemporary paintings—from London’s Alan Cristea Gallery; the Parisian Galerie 1900-2000’s display of Appropriation works by Richard Pettibone, father of fashion designer Claire Pettibone; a collection of pieces by Dr. Lakra, a tattooist who creates art using found objects, from Mexico City’s Kurimanzutto; and pieces by Joseph Kosuth, known for conceptual displays and neon signs, on view by Italy’s Lia Rumma. Coffee cup, Michael Craig-Martin
View special publications of prints and editioned works by top artists in the Editions sector. The 12 exhibitors include Crown Point Press in San Francisco and New York’s Pace, Two Palms, and Carolina Nitsch.
Magazines
Courtesy of white space beijing
Wisdom Teeth, He Xiangyu
Positions
Visitors can browse dozens of art publications from around the globe on display in the Magazines sector. More than likely, respective editors and publishers will be present, too.
public Ron Eshel, Courtesy of Public Art Fund, NY
Editions
Courtesy of Alan Cristea Gallery
The latest artworks to hit the industry are on view in the Nova sector: The 34 galleries here display pieces created within the last three years, and no more than three artists are exhibited in each Nova showcase. Don’t miss São Paulo’s Galeria Leme, where Aki Sasamoto, Luciano Figueiredo, and Sandra Gamarra will convert the booth into a fictitious museum that challenges the artist’s position within the art world.
The Positions sector brings to light new talent by allowing 16 emerging artists to display one major project. Discover the works of creators like Dan Bayles, a Los Angeles artist who paints semi-abstract landscapes; He Ziangyu, of Berlin and Beijing, who explores social concerns through his work; and Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz, a Berlin-based duo whose film examines historical moments.
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Nicholas Baume
For the fifth year, Art Basel has partnered with the Bass Museum of Art to organize an exhibition in nearby Collins Park. Curated by Nicholas Baume of the Public Art Fund, Public will showcase more than 20 large-scale sculptures and installations from international artists. Select works from the show will be on display through February.
Courtesy of Beijing Art Now Gallery
Courtesy of Art Basel
READING MATERIAL Upon entering the convention center, grab two important publications: the fair’s show guide, which displays a floor plan of the exhibition area, and The Art Newspaper, which prints a special edition each day covering the goings-on surrounding the fair, behind-thescenes deals, pronouncements, predictions, highlights, sales data, and more.
David Gryn
Film
Curated in partnership with David Gryn, director of London’s Artprojx, art of the film kind will be shown in the convention center as well as at SoundScape Park, projected onto the 7,000-square-foot wall of the New World Center. Plus, catch a feature-length film selected by New York-based film curator Marian Masone.
Gianni Colombo’s blueprint for an installation at the 1968 Venice Biennale
Horse Fights, Wang Jinsong
Courtesy of Cristin Tierney Gallery
Three Transitions, Peter Campus
talk
art
Having debuted last year, Survey presents 14 historical projects across a variety of art themes. This year, visitors can view exhibitions of top artists like the late American watercolorist Charles Burchfield, on display by New York’s DC Moore Gallery; Peter Campus, a seminal American artist in the canons of new media and video art, from New York’s Cristin Tierney Gallery; Gianni Colombo, the late Italian artist known for his kinetic art, at London’s Robilant + Voena booth; Dorothy Iannone, known for her autobiographical erotic-themed works, from Berlin’s Peres Projects; and Wang Jinsong, who trained as an ink artist and has become one of China’s leading photographers of social commentary, from the Beijing Art Now Gallery.
Courtesy of Robilant + Voena
Survey
Art isn’t something to just look at; it’s also something to talk about. Art Basel offers two programs for visitors to hear from professionals across the industry. A series of Conversations takes place daily, allowing artists, curators, critics, and collectors to offer guidance on their respective fields. In a more informal setting, Salon consists of short presentations in the form of talks and performances from Art Insiders.
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Artists to Watch
ABMB has become a hub for showcasing the work of emerging artists. Here, a few notables, some of whom will be showing at the fair—and in the United States—for the first time.
Gallery: SIM Galeria, Brazil Where: Positions Key work: Le Carnaval des Animaux (installation), above and left Why: Pocztaruk presents 18 aquariums, each consisting of two glass globes connected at the neck. On each aquarium, one globe contains a male betta fish, and the other a female. The tension created by separation creates a drawing in space brought about by the ensuing fish ballet. Pocztaruk proposes that when an animal and an object are dislocated from their original contexts and a “drawing” is created, the design introduces an artistic proposition.
Courtesy of sim galeria
Romy Pocztaruk
Fritzia Irízar
Courtesy of arredondo\arozarena
Courtesy of Noga Gallery of Contemporary Art
Gallery: Arredondo\Arozarena, Mexico City Where: Positions Key work: Untitled (The disappearance of the symbol), below Why: Irízar uses the Phrygian cap, a significant image from Mexico’s history, to discuss the creation and disappearance of political symbols in the collective imagination. The unraveling, and ultimate absence, of the object sets the debate on democracy and the political engine in motion behind the images and symbols that circulate through the repetition of history.
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Keren Cytter Gallery: Noga Gallery of Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv Where: Nova Key Work: Siren (film), above and above left Why: In Siren, Cytter shows her method of narrating absurd stories mostly centered on the conflict between the genders, but this time zeroes in on the proliferation of poor images and their interpretation. By abstracting scenes and repeating them in different qualities and versions, Cytter proves images can have myriad meanings.
Andrew Brischler Gallery: Gavlak, Palm Beach, Los Angeles Where: Galleries Key work: Dreams (colored pencil, acrylic, graphite, and oil stick on panel), right Why: Brischler’s use of color, abstract forms, and symbolic words is indicative of his critical position on American pop culture and conservative politics, particularly as they relate to sexual orientation. Dreams is representative of his tendency to mar
©
Andrew Brischler; Courtesy of Gavlak
likeable images with smears, text, scribbles, and other disruptions.
Courtesy of hunt kastner
Jaromír Novotny´
Gallery: hunt kastner, Prague Where: Positions Key work: Solo installation of new painting and mixed media ´ abstract paintings and works on paper Why: Novotny’s concentrate on the emotion arising from a work’s formal structure and the process of execution. In his newest work, the artist has been experimenting with sheer-fabric canvas, focusing on the mystery of the barely visible.
Courtesy of the artist and Simone Subal Gallery, New York
B. Ingrid Olson
Hard and Sheer Organ, B. Ingrid Olson
Gallery: Simone Subal Gallery, New York Where: Positions Key work: Multimedia presentations in photography and sculpture of cement relief, steel, and ceramic Why: Olson’s work challenges conventional perception by shifting the focus between the center and the periphery. Her photographs, often centered on contorted images of her body, demonstrate a similar focal complication. The sculptures also allude to perceptional problems by presenting various perspectives that blur the continuum of vision.
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“Fairs are great idea incubators and provide a critical overview of the market,” says New York art consultant Wendy Cromwell. She considers Art Basel Miami Beach one of the premier contemporary art fairs in the world, second only to the original Art Basel in Switzerland. This year, Cromwell will be looking for a few key trends—and suggests collectors do the same. Latin American art tops her list, given a recent saturation of Cuban art on the market. Innovative uses of nontraditional materials are rising in popularity, she says, so search for ceramics by Brie Ruais and Thea Djordjadze (at Sprüth Magers) as well as hybrid works that blur the line between painting and sculpture by such artists as Justin Adian (at Skarstedt Gallery). Artists and styles of yesteryear also are experiencing resurgences and will be in high demand at Art Basel, Cromwell predicts. Once-prominent movements are reverberating within contemporary works: The legacy of Pop Art is apparent in Mark Flood’s paintings, Sam Moyer’s abstract multimedia projects evoke the tenants of Minimalism, and Virginia Overton explores the boundaries of Earth Art. Finally, Cromwell urges Art Basel visitors to search for works by artists best known for pieces they created 30 years ago. “Artists of the ’80s whose careers are being reinvigorated due to superb new work—such
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courtesy of Stuart Shave/Modern Art, London
Two Gather (Two Pushes Merged), Brie Ruais
On December 3, the Society of the Four Arts will host an Art Basel trip led by art historian and contemporary art adviser Lacy Davisson Doyle. At this year’s festival, she expects to see a return to figuration (recognizable forms and subjects) and an explosion of creativity in ceramics. Doyle suggests dividing Art Basel into manageable bites, both in time and art. “Pace yourself. Frequent breaks at the cafes sprinkled throughout the fair help ease art overload,” she says. “Art Basel is divided into sectors such as Nova, where one, two, or three artists present work from the last three years (a great way to see up-and-coming artists’ works), and Positions, where a single artist presents one major project. You can select a focus that interests you and take in the fair through that lens.”
Left: A Thea Djordjadze installation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Below: Bacchanal, Mark Flood.
the Thea Djordjadze installation image, courtesy of the artist, kaufmann repetto Milan/New York and Sprüth Magers
Peter Harris Studios, Boston
Courtesy of Halsey McKay and Nicole Klagsbrun
In addition to artists and industry professionals, collectors also flock to Art Basel to gauge the current market milieu and discover new talent.
Courtesy of Skarstedt, New York
Collector’s Corner
more to see
Untitled, Sam Moyer
Bonnie Clearwater, director and chief curator at the NSU Art Museum in Fort Lauderdale, embraces the opportunity that Art Basel gives to “extend the art scene north.” Museums are the end point of the chain of an artist’s work through the evaluation process, she explains, taking a scholarly approach considering movements and regional influences.
as David Salle, Julian Schnabel, Barbara Kruger, and George Condo—should be on the collector’s list,” she says. When it comes to novice collectors, Cromwell suggests they look for work that speaks to them—and then evaluate why. “A new collector should ask questions about what they see on the stand and look at additional work,” she says, adding to “ask about price, compare and contrast things they like, and form their own opinions about what they love.” Above all, collectors should learn from dealers but not feel pressured to buy until they’ve done their due diligence. “Follow up with the things that really stay with you, and keep an open mind,” she says.
movement. (305-6737530, bassmuseum.org) The Patricia and Phillip Frost Art Museum at Florida International University prides itself on education but wows with a permanent collection that ranges from Pre-Columbian pieces to works by today’s most preeminent Caribbean and Latin American artists. Its annual exhibition roster is also varied. Art Basel visitors can escape to the Frost to glimpse wonders from the New York Botanical Garden, walls of color by muralist Hans Hofmann, and romantic maps of water landscapes. (305348-2890, frost.fiu.edu) Doug Young
art miami
SOUND ADVICE “Use the fair as an opportunity to meet new people and see everything,” SAYS Rita Krauss, a veteran New York art dealer now based in Palm Beach. “Go back a second time, and go early.” Krauss believes new collectors need a three-year learning curve to ease into the process, but they should be mindful of their price range and buy only pieces they love. “Buy with your eyes and your heart,” she says.
Miami Museums
While in Miami for Art Basel, consider visiting these museums for special exhibitions coinciding with the fair: The Pérez Art Museum Miami’s 200,000-square-foot facility offers sweeping views of Biscayne Bay and houses international contemporary art. This month, PAMM will display a number of shows, including “Nari Ward: Sun Splashed,” a mid-career retrospective of the Jamaican artist, and “Project Gallery: Sheela Gowda,” featuring a sitespecific installation. (305375-3000, pamm.org) The Bass Museum of Art is closed for renovations but will host bassx, a series of solo exhibitions, at the Miami Beach Regional Library. During Art Basel, bassx will present Swiss performing artist Sylvie Fleury and her exploration of the intersection of visual art, sound, and Works by Hans Hofmann used with permission of the Renate, Hans and Maria Hofmann Trust
courtesy of Rachel Uffner Gallery and artist
Jonathan Adian installation featuring (left to right) Fortune Teller, Orange Crush, and Side Piece
Sun Splashed, Listri Sulla soglia, Nari Ward Courtesy of the artist and Galleria Continua
Palm Beachers have the opportunity to attend Art Basel alongside curatorial leaders from the Norton Museum of Art. Both Cheryl Brutvan, the director of curatorial affairs and curator of contemporary art, and Tim Wride, the curator of photography, will lead groups of Norton Museum members on fair excursions. For those looking to return to Palm Beach with new pieces, Brutvan suggests checking out as many galleries as possible. “Go to new galleries rather than the ones you see regularly and take advantage of the whole sweep of art,” she says. Wride seconds that notion, adding: “All of the private collections are open, and they’re wonderful places to see a huge range of work.”
As part of its international draw, Art Basel has generated a number of related concurrent fairs taking place in the Miami area. The most prominent of these is Art Miami, a contemporary show now in its twenty-sixth year. Drawing more than 80,000 visitors, this year’s fair will take place December 1-6 at the Wynwood Art District. The show also has two sister fairs, both of which display the work of up-andcoming and established artists: CONTEXT, also held in Wynwood, and Aqua Art Miami, taking place at Miami Beach’s Aqua Hotel. (305-517-7977, artmiamifair.com)
Mural Fragment (Chimbote), Hans Hofmann
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STELLAR
STATEMENTS Jewelry that will take you beyond the outer limits By Mary Murray
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Triple Wrap pearl earrings in 18-karat gold, Seaman Schepps, Worth Avenue; Mediterranean Garden collection brooch with a cushion-cut yellow sapphire, yellow beryls, spessartites, and diamonds set in 18-karat pink gold, Piaget, Miami; Mikimoto World of Creativity ring with a white South Sea cultured pearl and diamonds set in 18-karat gold, Mayors locations.
Š piaget 2015
Opposite page: Exquisite diamond bracelet with white and fancy yellow diamonds set in 18-karat gold, Provident Jewelry, Jupiter; Temple St. Clair Eight Ring Tolomeo pendant with mixed sapphires and diamonds set in 18-karat gold, Hamilton Jewelers, Palm Beach Gardens.
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Vincent Wulveryck Š Cartier
Paris Nouvelle Vague earrings with blue sapphires, chalcedonies, lapis-lazuli, turquoises, moonstones, aquamarines, and diamonds set in 18-karat rose gold and Paris Nouvelle Vague ring with blue sapphires, chalcedonies, lapis-lazuli, turquoises, moonstones, aquamarines, and diamonds set in 18-karat rose gold, Cartier, Palm Beach; Melody of Color ring with a cabochon-cut amethyst, turquoises, and amethysts set in pink gold, de Grisogono, Bal Harbour; Pasquale Bruni Glamour ring with turquoise and pavĂŠ diamonds set in white gold, Mayors, Palm Beach Gardens; Tampa ring with star sapphire, diamonds, and sapphires set in 18-karat white gold, Van Cleef & Arpels, Palm Beach. Opposite page: Jean Schlumberger Starburst earrings with diamonds set in platinum, Jean Schlumberger Stars and Moons necklace with diamonds set in platinum, and Jean Schlumberger Stars ring with an oval blue tourmaline and diamonds set in 18-karat gold and platinum, Tiffany & Co. locations; Private Reserve Platinum Heritage purple sapphire ring with diamonds set in platinum, Hamilton Jewelers, Palm Beach Gardens.
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Sapphire and diamond cuff and cabochon sapphire ring, Graff Diamonds, Palm Beach; Estate Betteridge Collection sapphire and diamond cluster ear clips, Betteridge, Palm Beach. Opposite page: De Beers Aria High Jewellery necklace with diamonds set in white gold with aventurine inlays, debeers.com; Chanel Fine Jewelry Fil de Comète earrings with diamonds set in 18-karat white gold and GÊode earrings with diamonds set in 18-karat white gold, select Chanel boutiques.
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Cake
Taste
SHAKE
ASHLEY MEYER
Move over, Santa Claus. There’s a delicious reason to be cheerful on December 25: It’s National Pumpkin Pie Day. Desiree and Daniel Tobin, owners of the West Palm Beach eatery Relish, have transformed the seasonal Thanksgiving treat into a tricked-out shake. Crafted from vanilla ice cream, graham crackers, and chunks of pumpkin pie and topped with whipped cream, sugar and spices, and a praline ganache pumpkin bite, it’s the perfect blend of naughty and nice. (561-629-5377, relishburger.com) —Kerry Shorr
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Taste
Left and below: Dishes from the 2014 festival; inset: Robert Irvine.
Jason Nuttle
Lunch Box: JUPITER Known for its scenic beaches and championship golf courses, Jupiter is also gaining ground for its stellar dining scene. Stop by any one of these five local lunch spots and you just might end up dining beside a resident golf legend like Jack Nicklaus or Tiger Woods. —K.S.
Calaveras Cantina
Chef Show
Put those diets on hold: The ninth annual Palm Beach Food and Wine Festival returns December 10-13, and the lineup of talent is more impressive than ever. This year, chefs Daniel Boulud, Christina Tosi, Johnny Iuzzini, and other New York luminaries will team up with local favorites, including Clay Conley, Lindsay Autry, and Aaron Black, for a new round of not-to-be-missed epicurean events, such as the grand tasting and cooking competition, a New York vs. Palm Beach street food smackdown, and a pair of children’s cooking classes taught by chefs Jonathon Sawyer and Robert Irvine. Prior to the festival, PBI caught up with Irvine to discuss his take on today’s culinary landscape. (561-389-1222, pbfoodwinefest.com) —Mark Spivak
Favorite food trend: I am excited about the growing interest and awareness in the source and nutritional value of what we consume. This is very positive, and I hope it sticks. Toughest challenge: The dinner I prepared for the entire staff at the Quebec Ice Hotel in subfreezing temperatures during Dinner: Impossible [his Food Network show]. It was the closest to actually being impossible that I can recall. Most satisfying professional moment: I do a lot of work in support of our military personnel and their families, and every moment I have to commit to those folks is beyond satisfying. Loves to cook for: My wife, Gail, and my girls. I’d rather cook a family meal for us to sit down and enjoy together than for anyone in the world. Would like to eat a meal by: Either Michel Richard or Roberto Donna. They’re both culinary geniuses, and everything they prepare is done to perfection. Go-to kitchen staple: I’m a big fan of grape-seed oil and use it in virtually all my cooking. It has omega-3 fatty acids, a higher smoke point, and no flavor, so it works well as a universal ingredient.
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Favorite cookbook or reference work: My book, Fit Fuel: A Chef’s Guide to Eating Well and Living Your Best Life. The entire guide is based on the lifestyle I live now; it has kept me healthy and strong. Connection between physical fitness and food: For me, the two live in harmony. I travel with a blender and I get in a complete workout in my hotel room or opt for the stairs, when available. We all can find ways to replace ease and convenience with a welcome challenge if we are motivated to do so. The festival gives South Florida foodies the chance to mingle with acclaimed chefs.
Painted skeletons and Day of the Dead decor brighten the walls of this bustling Mexican eatery. Brisket burritos, flaky duck confit–stuffed empanadas, and house-made guacamole complement the expansive cocktail menu. Our Pick: Carnitas (pork) enchiladas smothered in Chihuahua cheese and a Smoked Old Fashioned for sips. (561-320-9661, calaverascantinas.com)
Dive Bar Golfers and boaters frequent this popular Riverwalk spot for its raw bar bites and Sushi Mike’s handcrafted rolls. Dine on the outdoor patio overlooking the marina or inside, where the staff is friendly and never pushy. Our Pick: A Maine lobster roll and a spicy Bloody Mary. (561-747-4767, divebarrestaurant.com)
Hampton Forks Kitchen & Table Outside, Hampton Forks is strip-mall nondescript, but the throngs of locals pushing through the glass door signal something special. Caterer Chris Marshall specializes in gourmet-to-go cuisine, and the customizable sandwich and salad lunch boxes make perfect picnic fare. Our Pick: The ham and annatto roast pork Cuban sandwich topped with Gruyere cheese and Dijon mustard. (631-276-1197, hamptonforks.com)
Ocean Bleu This Tequesta seafood eatery is famous for its panseared jumbo lump crab cakes, which, at lunchtime, are served on a brioche bun with caper remoulade and hand-cut fries. Our Pick: The crab cake sandwich, naturally, and the Kai Kai salad made with fresh offerings from the Indiantown farm for which the dish is named. (561-406-2552, oceanbleugrill.com)
Tabica Grill This health-conscious restaurant turns out unfussy, comfort classics with an emphasis on hearty sandwiches and wraps. During season, reservations are a must. Our Pick: A Delmonico steak sandwich on a crusty hoagie with lettuce, tomato, and onion and a side of horseradish cream sauce. (561-7470108, tabicagrill.net)
Family STYLE
Grato’s menu highlights rustic Italian cuisine using fresh, handmade ingredients.
When chefs decide to show their appreciation toward a community, it frequently produces some delicious results. This month, chef Clay Conley of Buccan and Imoto, along with partners Sam Slattery and Piper Quinn, opens Grato (meaning “grateful” in Italian and other languages) at 1901 S. Dixie Highway in West Palm Beach. The restaurant seats 150 diners in a casual, rustic atmosphere, and the menu complements the space—think brickoven pizza, rotisserie meats, sausage and peppers, and lots of fresh pastas made on-site (bucatini carbonara, orecchiette with rabbit sausage and broccoli rabe, and penne with braised lamb, to name a few). The food is dispensed from an open kitchen, and Conley is even working on his first children’s menu. “We wanted a place that was reasonably priced and approachable and also fun and exciting—an atmosphere where entire families would feel comfortable,” says Conley. While the menu may be filled with regional Italian specialties, the atmosphere bears traces of the elegant and familiar Buccan style: large open windows, natural woods, and Carrara marble form the backdrop for gracious Old World service. To complete the look, local artisan potter Ronald Shaw handcrafted the custom tableware. Grato is open for dinner and will eventually expand with lunch and Sunday brunch. (561-404-1334, gratowpb.com) —M.S.
Andy Ryan
wA selective guide to Palm Beach-area restaurants AMERICAN
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: $ $$ $$$
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Dinner entree under $10 Most entrees $10-$25 Most entrees $25 or more Featured in The PBI Awards
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 advertisment, nor do they serve as a restaurant review. For more information, email editorial@palmbeachmedia.com
11 Maple Street The daily menu fuses organic produce, fresh seafood, and free-range game into inventive fare. 3224 N.E. Maple Ave., Jensen Beach (772334-7714, elevenmaple.com) $$$ 32 East Chef Nick Morfogen’s menu changes daily, providing the most creative new American cuisine in southern Palm Beach County. 32 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-276-7868, 32east.com) $$$ AB&G Located at the Four Seasons Resort, the casual beachfront restaurant serves gourmet street food inspired by global seaside locations. Kick-start the weekend here with the Friday Night Lobster Bake. 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach (561-5822800, fourseasons.com) $$ THE ALCHEMIST GASTROPUB AND BAR Using a speakeasy concept, The Alchemist focuses on creative cocktails and worldly, sharable, upscale comfort food, including deviled eggs with bacon and caviar as well as burger varieties. 223 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (561-355-0691, thealchemistgastropub.com) $$ ANGLE The Eau Palm Beach Resort and Spa’s signature restaurant features a blend of Florida and Mediterranean cuisine, carefully conceived and beautifully executed. 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan (561-540-4924, anglerestaurant.com) $$$ BELLE & MAXWELL’S This charming eatery on Antique Row—part tearoom, part café—serves bistro
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dishes in comfortable surroundings. 3700 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (561-832-4449, belleand maxwells.net) $ BOGART’S BAR AND GRILLE Enjoy a fine-dining experience within Cinemark Palace 20 before walking right in to your movie just before it starts. 3200 Airport Road, Boca Raton (561-544-3044, bogartsofboca.com) $$ BUCCAN Chef Clay Conley offers a wide-ranging menu of small plates that changes with the seasons. 350 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561-833-3450, buccanpalmbeach.com) $$ CAFÉ CHARDONNAY Chef-owner Frank Eucalitto has augmented the menu with influences from Latin America and Asia. 4533 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-627-2662, cafechardonnay.com) $$$ CITY CELLAR WINE BAR AND GRILL A fixture of the CityPlace dining scene, City Cellar offers hearthbaked pizza, dry-aged steaks, fresh pasta, and seafood. 700 S. Rosemary Ave., West Palm Beach (561-3660071, citycellarwpb.com) $$ COOLINARY CAFE Chef-owner Tim Lipman uses surprising ingredients to turn out fresh, creative cuisine like rabbit tacos. 4650 Donald Ross Road, Suite 110, Palm Beach Gardens (561-249-6760, coolinarycafe.com) $$ FARMER’S TABLE Committed to clean eating, this farm-to-table establishment sources ingredients such as sustainable salmon and cage-free eggs to produce butter-free dishes like kale hummus. 1901 N. Military Trail, Boca Raton (561-417-5836, farmerstableboca.com) $$
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palmbeachillustrated.com | DECEMBER 2015
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Taste HENRY’S A throwback to a less-complicated era, Henry’s serves American comfort food to a packed house. Offerings include split pea soup, meat loaf, and even chicken potpie. 16850 Jog Road, Delray Beach (561-638-1949, henrysofbocaraton.com) $$ KITCHEN Matthew Byrne, Tiger Woods’ former personal chef, opened this intimate eatery to serve sophisticated but not intimidating fare, like chicken schnitzel and gourmet burgers. 319 Belvedere Road #2, West Palm Beach (561-249-2281, kitchenpb.com) $$$ MAX’S HARVEST Support the local farming economy while enjoying full-flavored Florida wines at Dennis Max’s farm-to-fork eatery. 169 N.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (561-381-9970, maxsharvest.com) $$ PARK TAVERN Everything from the bread to the condiments is handmade using locally sourced ingredients, making for an eclectic menu in a spirited setting. 32 S.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (561-265-5093, parktaverndelray.com) $$ PELICAN CAFE This charming restaurant offers a New England ambiance, wines from around the world, and melt-in-your-mouth homemade doughnuts. 612 U.S. Hwy. 1, Lake Park (561-842-7272, thepelicancafe.com) $$$ RACKS DOWNTOWN EATERY + TAVERN Located in Mizner Park, Racks serves inventive fare like grassfed burgers, wood-fired pizza, sushi, and oysters from
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the raw bar. 402 Plaza Real, Boca Raton (561-3951662, racksboca.com) $$ SURFSIDE DINER This casual breakfast and lunch eatery serves classic comfort food like blueberry pancakes and turkey sliders in a quintessential (and rare) diner space. 314 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561-659-7495) $ TEMPLE ORANGE Chef Armando Galeas serves refreshing Florida cuisine infused with Mediterranean flavors and ingredients. 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, in the Eau Palm Beach Resort and Spa (561540-4923, templeorangerestaurant.com) $$ THE TIDES Chef Leanne Kelleher’s “Treasure Coast cuisine” highlights Florida dishes enhanced by flavors from Latin America, the Caribbean, and the Deep South. 3103 Cardinal Drive, Vero Beach (772-2343966, tidesofvero.com) $$$ TRUE Baltimore native Frank Hawkins turns out the best crab cakes south of Charm City, along with a remarkable cream of crab soup and a beef brisket sandwich that is a thing of beauty. 147 S.E. 1st Ave., Boca Raton (561-417-5100, truebocaraton.com) $$ TRYST The sister restaurant of 32 East is a cross between a wine bar and a gastropub, featuring one of the most innovative beverage programs in the area. 4 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-921-0201, trystdelray.com) $$
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VERDEA RESTAURANT AND WINE BAR In the Embassy Suites hotel, Verdea achieves its flavor through the agriculture value of locally farmed meat and produce. 4350 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-691-3130) $$$
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ASIAN
AAH LOI Chef Charlie Soo’s Jupiter restaurant (whose name means “delicious” in Thai) is an extension of his powerful, creative Thai cuisine. 3755 Military Trail, Suite B14, Jupiter (561-748-5201) $$ BUDDHA SKY BAR This Asian-style bar interprets Chinese and Japanese cuisines in a three-part menu, featuring a sushi bar, full kitchen, and Binchotan grill. 217 E. Atlantic Ave. #3, Delray Beach (561-450-7557, buddhaskybardelraybeach.com) $$ ECHO The Asian restaurant of The Breakers offers dishes from the cuisines of China, Japan, Thailand, and Vietnam, thoughtfully conceived and brilliantly executed. 230A Sunrise Ave., Palm Beach (561-8024222, echopalmbeach.com) $$$ IMOTO Influenced by his experience in Tokyo, James Beard-nominated chef Clay Conley presents small Asian bites and a sushi menu that tempts all senses. 350 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561-8335522, imotopalmbeach.com) $$
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TIT U HOSPITALITY
From our table to yours, Happy Holidays from Titou Hospitality! w We invite you to discover our portfolio of eateries w
OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY | 3:00-9:00PM
OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY
PISTACHEWPB.COM
PBCATCH.COM
HOLIDAY ORDERS NOW AVAILABLE
HOLIDAY ORDERS NOW AVAILABLE
PATRICKLEZE.COM
PANETERIE.COM
3 course prix fixe menu $59 per person Make reservations for New Years Eve!
B没che de No毛l, Holiday Cookies, Chocolates, Pastries, Cakes & More!
Make reservations for Christmas & New Years Eve!
Special Holiday Cookies, Macarons, Cakes, Pastires & More!
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Taste
JOY NOODLES AND ASIAN CUISINE Order the fresh ramen at this vegetarian-friendly hidden gem. 2200 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (561-655-5212, joynoodles.net) $$ NITROGEN BAR, GRILL, AND SUSHI This new Jupiter outpost features a speakeasy-style bar, impeccable rolls, and innovative hot dishes. 6779 W. Indiantown Road #18, Jupiter (561-972-2944, nitrogen.com) $$ PALM SUGAR For authentic Asian dishes, Palm Sugar brings favorites, specialties, and street food from the kitchens of Asia. 340 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (561-820-9206, palmsugarwpb.com) $$ SUSHI SIMON Freshly caught fish from around the world and a playfully creative flair make this seemingly obscure oasis a must-visit for any sushi lover. 1614 S. Federal Hwy., Boynton Beach (561-731-1819) $$ UNCLE TAI’S Uncle Tai’s serves sizeable portions of classic oriental plates committed to a ratio of 70-percent meat, 30-percent vegetable. 5250 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton (561-368-8806, uncletais.com) $$
JOSEF’S TABLE Chef Anthony Rodriguez specializes in savory duck, lobster, and even vegan preparations. 5030 Champion Blvd., Boca Raton (561-353-2700, josefstable.com) $$$ RHYTHM CAFÉ Located on Antique Row, this West Palm Beach staple offers internationally inspired comfort food and an impressive beer and wine inventory. 3800A S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (561-833-3406, rhythmcafe.cc) $$
Spicy Gingerbread
ITALIAN
FRENCH-AMERICAN
BRULÉ BISTRO A French-American gastropub, this Pineapple Grove outpost draws regulars for its creative cocktails and cuisine like ginger chicken meatballs. 200 N.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (561-274-2046, brulebistro.com) $$
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Gyorgy Papp
FRENCH
CAFÉ BOULUD Steps from Worth Avenue, this sophisticated 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 (561-655-6060, cafeboulud.com) $$ KATHY’S GAZEBO CAFÉ With an Old World feel, Kathy’s specializes in French Continental dishes and wine pairings for the meal. 4199 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (561-395-6033, kathysgazebo.com) $$ LE RENDEZ-VOUS This trendy resto serves unexpected French fare with a twist, like specialty burgers and steak tartare. 221 Datura St. #105, West Palm Beach (561-7661095, trendyparisianrestaurant.com) $$ PARIS IN TOWN, LE BISTRO Enjoy Champagne at the outside bar or savor classic dishes like French onion soup or a croque monsieur. 11701 Lake Victoria Gardens Ave., Palm Beach Gardens (561-622-1616, parisintownbistro.com) $
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CAFÉ L’EUROPE With influences from all over Latin America and Europe, Cafe L’Europe invites guests to enjoy the impressive wine list, exquisite desserts, and warm hospitality. 331 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561655-4020, cafeleurope.com) $$$
The only thing better than eating gingerbread during the holidays is consuming it in liquid form. The Spicy Gingerbread cocktail at 50 Ocean in Delray Beach will satisfy those cravings with a blend of vanilla vodka, Frangelico, butterscotch schnapps, and ginger beer. “It’s a simple, festive drink,” says beverage manager Millie Wilkinson. “The ingredients are well-balanced and you can taste the vanilla and ginger.” One of the inspirations behind the drink is the growing popularity of ginger beer. “We wanted to do something that went beyond the standard Moscow Mule or Dark ’n Stormy,” she says. “It’s light and refreshing but you can make it even lighter by adding more ginger beer.” (561-278-3364, 50ocean.com)
ECLECTIC
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Cocktail Corner
Spicy Gingerbread 1 ¼ oz. Svedka vanilla vodka ¼ oz. Frangelico ¼ oz. butterscotch schnapps 2-3 oz. ginger beer to taste Add ingredients to a shaker with ice. Shake well and pour into an Old Fashioned glass. Top with ginger beer and garnish with a cinnamon stick. —M.S.
ARTURO’S RISTORANTE Built as a replica of a Tuscan villa, Arturo’s presents authentic flavors of Italy in every dish and wine glass. 6750 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (561-997-7373, arturosrestaurant.com) $$$ BICE Fine dining at its best. Homemade pastas, excellent service, and Tiramisu will make you feel like Italy isn’t so far away. 313 Worth Ave., Palm Beach (561-835-1600, palmbeach.bicegroup.com) $$$ BUONASERA RISTORANTE Classic and perfectly executed Northern Italian dishes in an intimate setting. The stellar wine list accompanies the deft and elegant cooking of chef Leonardo Cuomo. 2145 S. U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter (561-744-0543, buonaserajupiter.com) $$$ CAFE SAPORI This café’s menu offers classics from every region of Italy. Dishes run the gamut from delicate to earthy, and the kitchen never strikes a false note. 205 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach (561-805-7313, cafesapori.com) $$ CASA D’ANGELO Angelo Elia’s Boca Raton outpost succeeds in every possible way. Chef Rickie Piper places an emphasis on market-fresh ingredients, backed by faultless execution. 171 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton (561-996-1234, casa-d-angelo.com) $$$ D’ANGELO TRATTORIA Chef Angelo Elia returns to Rome every year in search of new culinary brilliance, presenting his findings to lucky diners in South Florida. 9 S.E. 7th Ave., Delray Beach (561-330-1237) $$ JOSEPHINE’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT Family owned and operated, Josephine’s creates Italian cuisines in a casual atmosphere. The dessert menu is the star of the show. 5751 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (561-9880668, josephinesofboca.com) $$$ JOVÉ KITCHEN AND BAR The newest restaurant at the Four Seasons Resort is a creative take on Italian cuisine. Fresh pastas are the highlights of the menu; cocktails are equally intriguing. 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach (561-533-3750, joverestaurant.com) $$$ PARADISO RISTORANTE Chef Angelo Romano serves traditional Italian fare along with some surprises, all of it outstanding. A true hidden gem. 625 Lucerne Ave., Lake Worth (561-547-2500, paradisolakeworth.com) $$$ RENATO’S Renato’s serves first-rate Italian and continental fare in a European setting. Dine on the patio in good weather, and experience one of the most romantic settings Palm Beach has to offer. 87 Via Mizner, Palm Beach (561655-9752, renatospalmbeach.com) $$$ RENZO’S OF BOCA For more than 20 years, Renzo’s has been serving wholesome Italian cuisine with quality ingredients. 5999 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton (561-9943495, renzosofbocaitalianrestaurant.com) $$
Renato’ s PA L M
B E ACH
A Pa l m Be ach Dining e x per ience
87 Via Mizner • Worth Avenue • 561.655.9745 renatospalmbeach.com
Renato's Full Pg D.indd 1
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LATIN-AMERICAN CABANA EL RAY Cabana offers an array of South American dishes with endless flavor. We recommend socializing at the bar with one of the flavored mojitos, made with real sugar cane. 105 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-274-9090, cabanarestaurant.com) $$
MEDITERRANEAN APEIRO KITCHEN AND BAR The cuisines of Morocco, Italy, Greece, and Portugal are highlighted by a woodburning oven, a 40-foot illuminated bar, and a vibrant late-night scene. 14917 Lyons Road, Suite 100, Delray Beach (561-501-4443, apeirorestaurants.com) $$$ LEILA RESTAURANT In addition to its many Mediterranean dishes, Leila also offers entertainment in the form of hookah and belly dancing. 120 S. Dixie Hwy., West Palm Beach (561-659-7373, leilawpb.com) $$
MEXICAN CABO FLATS An always-crowded Mexican party day and night, plus a festive weekend brunch. 14851 Lyons Road, Suite 122, Delray Beach (561-499-0378); 1352 S. U.S. Hwy. 1, Jupiter (561-320-9644); 1725 S.E. Federal Hwy., Stuart (772-288-2441, caboflats.com) $$ EL CAMINO This Atlantic Avenue staple specializes in Mexican soul food, like brisket quesadillas and carne asado tacos. 15 N.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (561-865-5350, elcaminodelray.com) $$
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MAX's social house
RISTORANTE CLARETTA Classic cuisine is beautifully prepared by this northern Italian transplant. The wine list is striking and original, and the welcome couldn’t be warmer. 1315 S.W. Martin Hwy., Palm City (772-219-9940, ristoranteclaretta.com) $$ TESTA’S Operating since 1921, Testa’s is Palm Beach’s oldest restaurant, serving hefty portions of reliable Southern Italian favorites. 221 Royal Poinciana Way, Palm Beach (561-832-0992, testasrestaurants.com) $$ TRAMONTI ITALIAN RISTORANTE A taste of New York: Tramonti is the Delray Beach version of Angelo’s of Mulberry St., which has been serving Neapolitan cuisine since 1902. 119 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-272-1944, tramontidelray.com) $$$ TREVINI RISTORANTE In the courtyard of the Bradley Park Hotel, Trevini serves Northern and Southern Italian dishes with taste and refinement. 290 Sunset Ave., Palm Beach (561-833-3883, treviniristorante.com) $$$ VIC AND ANGELO’S Offering both light and savory Italian dishes as well as an impressive wine selection, Vic and Angelo’s is an ideal choice for upscale-casual dining. 4520 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561630-9899); 290 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561630-9899, vicandangelos.com) $$$
MAX's social house
Taste
Bar Raiser
Bragging rights are a big deal among South Florida’s competitive bartending brethren, so it wasn’t any surprise when the Delray Beach–based Max Group created Bar Brawls, a libationary riff on its popular Chef vs. Chef summer series. In this 11-week, single elimination contest, the area’s leading cocktail savants are given 30 minutes to shake up at least two bespoke cocktails using such mystery ingredients as ice cream, fresh vegetables, or chocolate truffles. On December 9, head over to Max’s Social House for the final showdown when the remaining two contenders fight it out for the mix master title and grand prize: an all-expenses paid trip to Tales of the Cocktail 2016, the world’s premier cocktail festival held in New Orleans. Tickets cost $10 and include a complimentary drink; monies raised benefit the Richard David Kann Melanoma Foundation. (561-501-4332, sohodelray.com) —K.S.
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RAW
CHRISTOPHER’S KITCHEN Chef Christopher Slawson can turn even the heartiest meat eater into a raw-food fanatic with his creative presentations of organic dishes. 4783 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-318-6191, christopherskitchenfl.com) $$
SEAFOOD 3800 OCEAN The restaurant at the Palm Beach Marriott Singer Island Beach Resort serves dishes from a “collective kitchen” of diverse chefs. 3800 N. Ocean Drive, Riviera Beach (561-340-1795, marriott.com) $$$ CAPTAIN CHARLIE’S REEF GRILL This unassuming restaurant packs a punch with a large selection of Cajun-inspired entrees. 12846 U.S. Hwy. 1, Juno Beach (561-624-9924) $$ CHARLEY’S CRAB For a romantic night on the town, come here for exquisite seafood and lovely oceanfront views. 456 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach (561659-1500, muer.com) $$$ CITY OYSTER AND SUSHI BAR With a full sushi bar, fresh oysters, and a bakery, City Oyster offers a plethora of options for all tastes. 213 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-272-0220, cityoysterdelray.com) $$$ COD AND CAPERS SEAFOOD MARKET AND RESTAURANT A daily market and restaurant in one, Cod and Capers offers fresh fish to bring home or will take care of dinner for you. 1201 U.S. 1, North Palm Beach (561-622-0963, codandcapers.com) $$ LONG BOARDS Rodney Mayo’s laid-back seafood restaurant channels a Californian vibe complete with
a bar that mimics a surfboard and always-playing surfing films. 519 Clematis St., West Palm Beach (561833-4660, sub-culture.org) $$ PB CATCH This contemporary seafood restaurant is the brainchild of Pistache’s Reid Boren and Thierry Beaud, who were craving fresh fish caught locally. 251 Sunrise Ave., Palm Beach (561-655-5558, pbcatch.com) $$ RACKS FISH HOUSE + OYSTER BAR Enjoy steam kettles, prohibition-style cocktails, and a Grand Centralinspired oyster bar in a New England setting. 5 S.E. 2nd Ave., Delray Beach (561-450-6718, racksdelray.com) $$$ SPOTO’S OYSTER BAR Along with a plethora of satisfying seafood dishes, come here to enjoy a cocktail made with a specialty infused simple syrup. 4560 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-776-9448); 131 S.W. Flagler Ave., Stuart (772-220-7772, spotosoysterbar.com) $$$ THE STATION HOUSE While the clam chowder, Ipswich steamers, and fish dishes are noteworthy, the specialty is perfectly prepared Maine lobster. 233 W. Lantana Road, Lantana (561-801-5000) $$ WATERWAY CAFÉ Come in the evening for a seat at the floating bar to watch the sun set on the Intracoastal Waterway. 2300 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-694-1700, waterwaycafe.com) $$
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SMALL PLATES
HMF The Breakers’ glamorous cocktail lounge is a fashionable mix of modern and classic—both in atmosphere and cuisine. Asian influences are scattered across the delectable menu, including a full sushi bar. 1 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561-2900104, hmfpalmbeach.com) $$
TOO BIZAARE WINE BAR This eclectic restaurant offers an array of tapas options, with a heavy focus on sushi. 107 Dockside Circle, Jupiter (561-203-2510, toobizaare.com) $$
“Let’s make waves...”
STEAK HOUSE ABE & LOUIE’S In addition to outstanding beef, the menu features classic New England seafood dishes. A comprehensive wine list rounds out the experience. 2200 W. Glades Road, Boca Raton (561-447-0024, abeandlouies.com) $$$ BUTCHER BLOCK GRILL At this all-natural steak house, try the Butcher Burger or the goat cheese cheesecake, a twist on dessert. 7000 W. Camino Real, Boca Raton (561-409-3035, butcherblockgrill.com) $$$ THE CAPITAL GRILLE This successful chain offers classic steak house fare, complemented by a remarkably well-trained staff. An impressive wine list completes the picture. 11365 Legacy Ave., Palm Beach Gardens (561630-4994); 6000 W. Glades Road, Boca Raton (561368-1077, thecapitalgrille.com) $$$ CHOPS LOBSTER BAR The extensive menu, featuring a collection of steak and seafood options, is complemented by an equally interesting wine list. 101 Plaza Real S., Boca Raton (561-395-2675, buckheadrestaurants.com) $$$ CUT 432 This modern steak house has a hip, high-energy environment. Executive chef Anthony Pizzo is a believer in “innovation without over-complication,” and his food is paired with an excellent wine list. 432 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-272-9898, cut432.com) $$$ THE FLAGLER STEAKHOUSE Operated by The Breakers, this elegant steak house offers hand-selected cuts of American beef in a country club setting. 1 S. County Road, Palm Beach (561-659-8488, flaglersteak housepalmbeach.com) $$$ IRONWOOD GRILLE As the culinary centerpiece of the PGA Resort, this restaurant is best described as a steak house with flair. Inventive dishes and unusual twists highlight the menu, and a solid wine list is also available. 400 Avenue of the Champions, Palm Beach Gardens (561-627-4852, pgaresort.com) $$ NEW YORK PRIME This steak house has it all: first-rate raw materials, flawlessly executed dishes, and tables spaced far enough apart for private conversations. 2350 N.W. Executive Center Drive, Boca Raton (561998-3881, newyorkprime.com) $$$ THE RIVER HOUSE The River House has been serving steak and seafood specialties on the Intracoastal since 1984. 2373 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-6941188, riverhouserestaurant.com) $$ SALT 7 Steak is the top dish on the menu 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 (561-274-7258, salt7.com) $$$ III FORKS This remarkable destination executes each detail to perfection, doing an equally fine job with both USDA Prime beef and fresh seafood. The elegant bar and lounge create a trendy atmosphere for this modern evolution of the classic steak house. 4645 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens (561-630-3660, 3forks.com) $$$
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Palm Beach’s Premier Blow Dry Bar
www.theairbar.com
4550 DONALD ROSS ROAD • PALM BEACH GARDENS, FL • 561-6AIRBAR
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By Howard walker Palm Beach Illustrated’s Automotive Editor
Visit “Blogs” on
Infinite Luxury Lifestyle. palmbeachillustrated.com | DECEMBER 2015
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Pour
Cienis moluptatur, voluptio. Uciis dolorpo ribus. Rum consent velibustrum aborem fuga.
By Mark SPivak
Crowd
Pleasers
Mix up these drinks to get out from behind the bar and into the revelry
128 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Part of the joy of the holiday season is entertaining groups of family or friends, but those get-togethers can also be challenging—particularly for the amateur bartender. Each of your guests is likely to have his or her own drink preferences, and making cocktails individually for 15 or 20 people could take up the bulk of your evening. Here are some tips from the experts on how to navigate your way through holiday entertaining. Develop a seasonal strategy. “Dark spirits really come into play when the weather cools off,” says David Bouchard, principal bartender for The Cooper in Palm Beach Gardens. “Think in terms of bourbon, rye, and aged rums. Most people lean toward savory modifiers: vanilla and maple syrup; spices such as cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, and ginger; winter citrus, such as Meyer lemon and blood and bitter oranges.” Use materials at hand. One of Bouchard’s most successful creations came about by accident while working at a restaurant in Connecticut. “We had some Knob Creek Maple Rye left over from a bourbon and cigar dinner,” he recalls. “I took an ounce of that with half an ounce of maple syrup and three-quarters of an ounce of lemon juice, layered the ingredients into a highball glass, and topped it with three ounces of Stella Artois Cidre and a dash of Angostura bitters. It’s a warm and comfortable drink that brings back childhood holiday memories.”
Still making history.
Social drinking and eating at The Breakers | 561 422 4498 | hmfpalmbeach.com
BH 41903 PB Illustrated_4C FP_ HMF.indd 2
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culinary creativity•superior service•private dinners•corporate functions•themed parties•gala events
culinary creativity•superior service•private dinners•corporate functions•themed parties•gala events
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561• 835• 0066 www.christafaroswpb.com 130 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
This eggnog libation, garnished with a festive Christmas biscuit, puts a haute spin on Washington’s recipe.
Think punch. There’s a good reason why punch has been popular since the seventeenth century, when employees of the British East India Company brought it back to England from India. The libation is easy to prepare, allows guests to help themselves, and guarantees a stressfree evening for the host. Making punch—traditionally a blend of alcohol, sugar, lemon, water, and spices—is far from rocket science. When in doubt, fall back on the old rule: “One of sour, two of sweet, three of strong, and four of weak.” Charles Steadman, managing partner of Jack’s Grumpy Grouper in Lantana, has a go-to rum punch that stands out as a holiday favorite. “Sugar-based spirits are incredibly versatile,” he says, “and rum can pair very well with a range of winter flavors.” He recommends lining the rim of a punch bowl with clove-flavored sugar, then pouring in a whole bottle of dark or amber rum such as Brugal Añejo or Mount Gay Eclipse. He then adds fresh-pressed lime juice for the sour base, pineapple and orange juice for a touch of sweetness, coconut water to round out the taste, and grenadine for color. Top it off with a festive garnish such as mint springs, cranberries, or orange peel studded with cloves. Eggnog adaptation. Eggnog is one of the few parts of the Christmas ritual designed for adults. It migrated here from England and has been with us since the Colonial era. Every year, I dust off what was supposedly George Washington’s recipe: Mix one quart each of cream and milk, one cup of sugar, one pint of brandy, a half pint of rye whiskey, and a quarter-pint each of dark rum and Sherry. Separate one dozen eggs, and add sugar to the beaten yolks. Add the liquor mixture while beating slowly, and then add the milk and cream. Beat the egg whites until stiff, and fold them in. Store in the refrigerator for seven days, and don’t plan on driving anywhere after you try it. «
Living at the top
Artist Conception
ocean Sunrises. intracoastal Sunsets. private beach access, resort pool deck, fitness center, convenient concierge services. Fresh, contemporary condominium residences with 2,700 to 6,000 square feet of ultra-luxury appointments. now under construction for 2017 move-in. prices from $1.6 million. Call or text 561-277-3036 Kevin Spina associates/ Keyes Company www.vistaBlueSingerisland.com
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Publisher of Palm Beach Illustrated • Naples Illustrated • Palm Beach Charity Register • Naples Charity Register Coquina • Dine239 • Fifth Avenue South • Traditions: The Breakers • The Jewel of Palm Beach: The Mar-a-Lago Club The International Polo Club Palm Beach Magazine • ONE Life: ONE Sotheby’s International Realty • Salut!: Naples Winter Wine Festival
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Home
In and Out KZ Architecture struck a balance between indoor and outdoor living for
this modern estate in Boca Raton. A gable roof tops the home’s main interior space, while four shed roofs form pavilions that add intrigue to the Robin Hill Photography
architecture and create generous overhangs for the outdoor areas. The roof structure is complemented by natural coral keystone walls and wood ceilings and decks. Along with the minimalist exterior, an open interior plan and glass walls allow for an organic transition to the landscape and nearby golf course. Miami (305-865-9911, kzarchitecture.com)
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
135
Elements
Screen Play
Courtesy of First Impressions Theme Theatres
Make your home theater red-carpet ready with these captivating accents By Liza Grant Smith Off the Wall These acoustic panels from 3-D Squared come in many designs, such as the pictured Gold Revealed ($35 per square foot), and can be sized to fit your personal screening room. 3-D Squared, Boca Raton (561843-4966, 3dsquared.com)
Blanket Policy Perfect for hiding behind during pulsepounding thrillers, the double-knitted Matouk Aracadia throw ($198), with its striking Greek key motif, is a security blanket for a more sophisticated set. Pioneer Linens, West Palm Beach (561-655-8553, pioneerlinens.com)
Disc Jockey With the Kaleidescape Disk Server ($4,995), the nightmare of DVD and Blu-ray organization becomes obsolete. It stores as many as 320 discs and supports automated access and playback to any movie player in the Encore collection, Kaleidescape’s new line of award-winning hometheater equipment. Boca Theater and Automation, Boca Raton (561-999-9024, bocatheater.com)
Reserved Seating Recline in luxury with the Octane Impulse ($4,700 for two-seat row), which can be customized in a variety of leathers and NuSuede and outfitted with heated massage, swivel tray tables, and a blue LED baserail, among other amazing accouterments. InteriorMark, Fort Lauderdale (888602-7328, interior mark.com)
Keep it Poppin’ A movie is only as good as the snacks consumed while watching it, so guarantee optimum enjoyment with this Antique Deluxe 60 Special popcorn popper by Gold Medal Products ($839 for popper, $450 for cart). Home Theater Lifestyles, Port St. Lucie (561-222-4461, hometheaterlifestyles.com) 136 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Animal Instincts For this South Florida luxury home theater, First Impressions Theme Theatres founder Jeff Smith was tasked with designing around a sample of animal-print carpeting. “The client wanted something fun and informal with a sophisticated theme that harkened back to the glamorous, old-style, traditional movie houses,” Smith says. “While the theater was originally builder planned as one large open space, we carved out an 8-foot-by-10-foot vestibule in the entryway [for] our signature CineBar as a precursor to what lies beyond. The archway swag in gold-toned French velvet drapery provides a teaser into the Moroccan-inspired theater, where tawny animal print tones and rich, textural fabrics imbue a comfortable yet sumptuous appeal.” North Miami (305-891-6121, cineloungers.com)
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Parties
Sipping Pretty Does your cocktail affair have the makings of a blockbuster soiree or is it destined to be just another stop on the seasonal party circuit? These four tips will up your party game and have guests lingering even after the credits have rolled. By Liza Grant Smith
Play with your food
Forgo online invites and standard envelope scrawl for a modern twist on a timeless tradition. Work with a talented calligrapher, such as Palm Beach County professional Erica Dunhill, to pair dynamic colored envelopes with eye-catching addresses in fun fonts. Guests will be wowed from the moment they open their mailbox. (ericadunhill.com)
Involve your guests Allow your guests to mix lively libations with a buildyour-own gin and tonic bar. Master mixologist Adam Seger of Boca Raton hotspot Tanzy (tanzy restaurant.com) says the key to this classic cocktail is in the selection of its components. When it comes to the drink’s core ingredients, he suggests:
CAPEHART
Make a great first impression
Surprise guests with unexpected bites that conjure up feelings of culinary nostalgia and comfort-food bliss. West Palm Beach Caterer Christafaro’s prepares a menu peppered with delightful reinterpretations of classics like the crispy Reuben strudel (pictured) and mini chicken potpies with a sweet potato biscuit topper. (561-835-0066, christafaroswpb.com)
Glassware: Use tall, slender glasses to keep drinks fizzy. We’re partial to Michael Wainwright's Truro gold highballs ($50), hand-decorated in 24-karat gold and platinum. T is for Table, Palm Beach Gardens (561-7999733, tisfortable.com) Garnish: Offer savory embellishments— sprigs of rosemary, slices of cucumber, a pitcher of pomegranate juice, for example—so guests can add a final pop to their cocktails.
Get personal
Breathe life into your shindig with personalized accents that reflect your style, favorite colors, or personality. These lively yet upscale They Drink Like Fish hand-embroidered linen cocktail napkins ($400 for set of eight) by Julia B. can be customized with your name in the shape of water dwellers. Mary Mahoney, Palm Beach (561-655-8288, marymahoney.com) 138 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Tonic: Indulge in the Champagne of tonic waters with East Imperial tonic water. Gin: Try a new American-style gin (more citrus and less piney juniper) like St. George Terroir Gin.
Ice: Make sure the ice is hard, fresh, dry, and not glazed over to the point where it will make your drinks watery. Limes: “You need heavy, dark green limes, free of blemishes, as you will [add] their juice and skin into your tonics,” Seger says. Cut them off-center to avoid using the center pith.
open house
Historic Haven OVERVIEW Designed by Addison Mizner in 1928, this magnificent landmarked residence was totally restored in 2013 and juxtaposes Old World beauty with state-of-the-art technology. ADDRESS Estate section, Palm Beach YEAR BUILT 1928; restored in 2013 ARCHITECT Addison Mizner; restoration by Jeff Smith, Smith Architectural Group, Palm Beach
BUILDER H.R. Corwin with Addison Mizner ASKING PRICE $42.9 million SETTING This home is located directly across from the Atlantic Ocean in Palm Beach’s estate section, where many of the town’s earliest and largest homes were built. SIZE 11,735 square feet of living area BEDROOMS/BATHS Eight bedrooms, nine baths, three half-baths Special Promotional Feature
INTERIOR HIGHLIGHTS Vaulted stone entry hall; coffered and stenciled ceilings; six fireplaces; full-impact glass; chef’s kitchen; home theater; library; granite/stone countertops. EXTERIOR HIGHLIGHTS Elegant front entrance designed around a small courtyard; detailed wrought-iron elements at entry; loggia with fireplace; pool; fountains; balconies. FOR MORE INFORMATION Cristina Condon, Sotheby’s International Realty, Palm Beach (561-301-2211, cristinacondon.com)
This historic estate is a testament to Addison Mizner’s talent and aesthetic.
Special Promotional Feature
Rob Thomson Founds Waterfront Way Foundation
For a Better Way . . .
Waterfront Properties’ Team - Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure by Gregory T. DuBose
“There must be a better way.” We’ve all said it. The pressing question is what have we done to make a better way for the under resourced, the sick and the most vulnerable members of our community? Waterfront Properties and Club Communities’ Managing Partner Rob Thomson asked himself this very question. His own honest answer surprised him: “Not enough.” Thomson recently founded Waterfront Way Foundation to do more. Waterfront Way Foundation brings Thomson’s personal and corporate – Waterfront Properties and Club Communities’ and Waterfront Yacht Brokerage’s philanthropic and charitable efforts under one umbrella.
“The foundation gives me a team of great people to help do the heavy lifting. These same people will play a major role in identifying the causes and individuals we support. I’m as excited about this as any career milestone in a long time.” - Rob Thomson Thomson has long held a philosophy of good corporate citizenry. At its height, his Charities for Children Foundation was purchasing, soliciting and personally delivering over 30,000 toys during the holiday season. As a waterman, fishing tournaments have always held a place in
his charitable efforts. A board member, host partner and long-time supporter of Mike Schmidt’s Winner’s Circle Charities Invitational, he remains a force in the fishing tournament’s growth over the years. Waterfront Properties has been a Founders’ Club member of the Bluewater Babes Fish for a Cure since the event’s founding in 2009. The companies’ agents and their families are long-time participants in the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure events in Palm Beach and Martin Counties.
Waterfront Way Foundation is the first step in a sustainable philanthropic strategy.
Promotion PB Illustrated Advertorial - Foundation.indd 2
10/21/15 3:13 PM
Mike Viola , Rob Thomson and Scott Henley Winner’s Circle Board Members
Winner’s Circle Charities Event
“If all people say after I’m gone
is, ‘he was a part of building a great business,’ then I’ve left no legacy at all.” - Rob Thomson Thomson says, “I’m doing this now, while I’m young enough to devote real energy to driving it. This foundation ensures the Waterfront Family of Companies and my family continue to be part of the good happening in our community for decades and, hopefully, generations to come.” Waterfront Properties’ Charity Ride Team
Through Waterfront Way Foundation, Thomson will continue to support the causes he has supported for years. The Foundation will also host at least two original events next year. “I’ve become passionate about clay shooting. One of the events we’ll host is the inaugural 2016 Waterfront Way Charity Clay Shoot Invitational. Knowing my fellow shooters, I have no doubt we’ll raise a significant amount of money in an event that participants will really enjoy.” Waterfront Way Foundation gives Thomson a means to effectively support the charitable works of his nearly 100-strong team of agents. “Some of these folks have been with me for years.
Their work has brought them the type of success that they can and do play a significant role in our local charities.” He continued, “For our newer agents, their contributions often come down to sweat equity positions in the charities they support. Whatever they do, the Foundation makes it much more efficient to support them.”
commented, ‘It’s the Waterfront Way.’” Waterfront Way Foundation’s core purpose is to help increasingly more people in our community experience and enjoy life in a better way.
Starting his foundation was the logical next step for Rob Thomson’s philanthropic efforts. The name is its own interesting, albeit short, story. “We were talking about how much we enjoy the work we do for charity. Someone Promotion
Rob Thomson 561.346.1881 waterfront-properties.com
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Jupiter: 561.932.1832 I Palm Beach Gardens: 561.694.0058 I Stuart: 772.337.8250 I CoastalSIR.com *Each office is independently owned and operated.
WE. Elevating the ARE. Real Estate Experience. Artfully uniting extraordinary homes with extraordinary lives throughout The Palm Beaches & Treasure Coast .
Wellington Offered at $2,750,000 Madison Collum I 561.309.2924
Jupiter Hills Village Offered at $1,595,000 Brian Coffey I 561.379.8805
Loxahatchee Club Offered at $2,800000 Jeanne Coudert I 561.386.4646
Jupiter Yacht Club Offered at $1,095,000 Francine Tice I 561.222.6685
Trump National Jupiter Offered at $2,550,000 Denise Long I 561.315.4643
Jupiter Land Offered at $1,250,000 Michael Galleher I 772.285.6637
Hutchinson Island Offered at $2,500,000 Betsy Munson I 561.801.0017 Isabel Stephenson I 561.301.9811
Boca Raton Offered at $4,999,999 Richard Hutton I 561.236.2066
Hutchinson Island Land Offered at $899,000 Michael Galleher I 772.285.6637
Palm Beach Gardens: 561.694.0058
I
Jupiter: 561.932.1832
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Stuart: 772.337.8250
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© MMX Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. If your property is presently listed with another brokerage, please consider this advertisement a source of information and not a solicitation. All information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Each office is Independently Owned and Operated.
THE BEAR’S CLUB | Premier Homesites
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With an extremely desirable location adjacent to the clubhouse at The Bear’s Club, these two estate homesites offer sweeping views of the 9th fairway and green with the unique advantage of being just steps away from the clubhouse and golf shop. The custom homes on these homesites will draw their architectural inspiration from The Bear’s Club Clubhouse which evokes visions of a Tuscan Manor house and it’s attendant outbuildings highlighted by rich stonework with hand slurried mortar, wrought iron gates and multi- layered barrel tile roofing. Pricing Upon Request.
306 Villa Drive | $1,900,000
PENDING | The Last Seven Villas
SOLD | 151 W. Bear’s Club Drive
SOLD | 115 W. Bear’s Club Drive
SOLD | 170 Bear’s Club Drive
SOLD | 210 Bear’s Club Drive
thebearsclubSIR.com
Mark Griffin, Broker
The Bear’s Club Sotheby’s International Realty 103 Bear’s Club Drive Jupiter, Florida 33477 o 561.514.6948 | c 772.418.1312 Each office is independently owned and operated.
Grand Prix Village: Br and new constr uction 20-stall barn with 4 wash stalls, 2 tack rooms, a laundry room, and a feed room on 4 acres. The owners’ lounge has a fireplace, kitchen with great room for entertaining and a wonderful view of the 220’ x 120’ competition ring. Offered at $11,900,000
Paddock Park: Totally r enovated far m on one of the few 3 acr e lots. Beautiful courtyard pool home with 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, 3 car garage and 6 stall barn was remodeled with no detail spared. Open kitchen boasts top of the line appliances, unique marble counters, and Rohl fixtures. Offered at $1,950,000
Equestrian Club: This per fectly situated 3 bedr oom, 3 bathr oom home boasts a formal living and dining area, as well as a family room off the kitchen and a sophisticated wood paneled office/den. Tastefully decorated with marble floors to complement the natural sunlight that fills this home. Offered at $2,495,000
Palm Beach • Seabreeze: Completely r enovated with 3 bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms in the main house, 1 bedroom 1 bathroom cabana and backyard with pool. Located within walking distance to all of the shopping, restaurants, and beaches Palm Beach has to offer. Offered at $3,985,000
Saddle Trail: Newly constr ucted 30 stall equestr ian facility with 5-bedroom, 3.5 bath pool home on 6.2 acres in Saddle Trail. This superbly designed professional farm is complete with a new Olympic all weather sub-irrigated ring, grass jump field and 6 horse Kraft covered walker. Offered at $7,250,000
Grand Prix Farms at Equestrian Club: Excellent equestr ian facility on paved road in gated community. Very close to WEF and Global Dressage. 14 stall barn with over sized sand arena for jumpers and a dressage mirror. Property includes office, tack, feed, laundry, and storage rooms. Offered at $3,900,000
Carol A. Sollak, P.A. • Phone +1 561-818-9476 • Fax +1 561-791-2221 www.carolsollak.evusa.com • Wellington & Palm Beach, Florida • Carol.Sollak@evusa.com
©2015 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. Carr Sollak Realty, LLC licensee of Engel & Voelkers Florida Residential, LLC. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Engel & Völkers and its independent License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principles of the Fair Housing Act.
The Art of Living
ABINGTON PRESERVE - 3640 ±ACRE RANCH | $21,858,000 | Web: 0076559 Wally Turner | 561.301.2060
RED CROSS DESIGNER SHOW HOUSE | $2,495,000 | Web: 0076319 Wally Turner | 561.301.2060
SOPHISTICATED IN-TOWN TURNKEY | $1,995,000 | Web: 007632 Fern Fodiman | 917.400.5624
BEAUTIFULLY RENOVATED TURNKEY |$1,995,000 | Web: 0076631 Fern Fodiman | 917.400.5624
BREATHTAKING VIEWS | $1,695,000 | Web: 0076743 Fern Fodiman | 917.400.5624
ENVOY CONDOMINIUM LANDS OF THE PRESIDENT | $375,000 | Web: 0076648 Joe DeFina | 561.313.6781
PALM BEACH BROKERAGE 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Suite 337 | Palm Beach, FL 33480 sothebyshomes.com/palmbeach | 561 659 3555 Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
Visit onlywithus.com to discover the benefits available through us alone.
The Country Club & Luxury Home Specialists
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$1,249,000 Chriss & jim Harrison 561.531.3565
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109 Schooner Lane Michael & Andrew Leibowitz
$6,500,000 Furnished
FRENCHMAN’S CREEK 13773 Rivoli Drive Michael & Andrew Leibowitz
$1,250,000
4867 PGA Blvd Palm Beach Gardens • 561.627.5100
ANDREW LEIBOWITZ 561.262.0722
MICHAEL LEIBOWITZ 561.262.0721
andrew@leibowitzrealty.com
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Elevating Real Estate
EVERY DAY, EVERY HOUR, EVERY CLIENT. There’s going above and beyond, and then there’s Jack. As a second generation real estate agent in the Palm Beaches, he has a lifetime of luxury home building exposure. When you need references to the finest experts in the industry, Jack will connect you to the right people. Now, that’s real estate elevated.
Call today for more information or a private showing at 561.373.2198 S P E C I A L I Z I N G I N WAT E R F R O N T H O M E S A L E S O V E R $1. 5 M I L L I O N
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JackElkins.com
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Elevate your real estate search. Do it the Jack Elkins way.
561.373.2198 | Jack@JackElkins.com 101 North County Road, Palm Beach, FL 33480 JACK ELKINS & BUNNY HIATT
All information deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. Not intended to solicit a property already listed. Equal housing opportunity.
Real Estate. Elevated.
C o st i kyan A century of preserving your fine rugs and tapestries
MAINTAINING TRADITIONS SINCE 1886 AREA RUG CLEANING | AREA RUG REPAIR | ON-SITE CLEANING | FIBER PROTECTION OF ALL FABRICS CUSTOM RUG PADDING | UPHOLSTERY AND FURNITURE CLEANING INSTALLATION OF NEW CARPETING | RECEIVE, INSPECT, DELIVER AND SPREAD CUTTING, SERGING AND BINDING | BLOCKING, MEASURING, TEMPLATES AND STORAGE
(561) 734-2888 www.costikyanfl.com
Clarke W. Costikyan
4th Generation | Costikyan Family Since 1886 the Costikyan family has been hand cleaning valuable Persian, Oriental, and European rugs, carpets and fine tapestries throughout the United States. We are one of the only families continuing these time honored cleaning methods in the same manner that was employed some 130 years ago when the cleaning and restoration of valuable fabrics was considered an art.
VILLA BY THE SEA AT
sailfish point Hutchinson Island, Florida
One of a Kind Properties
MIZNER OCEANFRONT | Original Addison Mizner completely restored by Jeff Smith of Smith Architectural Group | $42,900,000 | Web: 0076748
SIGNIFICANT CONTEMPORARY | $13,950,000 | Web: 0076613
A dynamic and dedicated force in the Real Estate industry, Cristina Condon has achieved success by hard work and an optimistic attitude. Cris has participated in over a billion dollars in Palm Beach real estate transactions in the past ten years. PALM BEACH BROKERAGE 340 Royal Poinciana Way, Suite 337 | Palm Beach, FL 33480 sothebyshomes.com/palmbeach | 561 659 3555
BREATHTAKING VIEWS - ONE WATERMARK | $4,475,000 | Web: 0076479
CRISTINA CONDON 561 301 2211
cristina.condon@sothebyshomes.com cristinacondon.com
Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
InspIred by your lIfe
be inspired at www.SoFloHomeDesign.com
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Your frontyard should be as fun as your backyard. BACK VIEW
FRONT VIEW
$19,950,000
MANALAPAN 1920 S Ocean Blvd., Manalapan 33462 MAIN QUARTERS: BEDROOMS: 7 WATER FRONTAGE: 150
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FULL BATHS: 7
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PARTIAL BATH: 1
GUEST QUARTERS: BEDROOMS: 2
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4-CAR GARAGE
FULL BATHS: 1
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TOTAL SQ. FT.: 13,216
PARTIAL BATH: 1
Now your yacht will feel as home as you do. Nestled in the heart of Manalapan, this ravishing estate offers plenty of direct Intracoastal and oceanfront footage. Perfect for the beach or boating South Florida Lifestyles! Constructed in 2005, this estate’s recent major renovations have merged the 21st Century aesthetics with the property’s previous old world charm. This “Modern Mediterranean Island Transitional” home consists of the main house with 7 Bedrooms and 7.5 Bathrooms. It also has a separate 2/1 guest house and cabana bath, plus a private dock and immaculate sunsets that extend beautifully across the Intracoastal Waterway: The perfect backdrop for your yacht. This is Gold Coast Living at its finest. Call today for more information or a private showing at 561.373.2198. Jack Elkins: Real Estate Elevated. www.JackElkins.com PALM BEACH | MANALAPAN | POINT MANALAPAN | HYPOLUXO ISLAND | GULF STREAM | DELRAY BEACH | JUPITER
561.373.2198
| Jack@JackElkins.com
Fite Shavell & Associates - 101 North County Road, Palm Beach, FL 33480 JACK ELKINS & BUNNY HIATT All Material is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. Not intended to solicit property already listed. Equal Housing opportunity.
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#
1
in Total
Sales Listings
544
for Palm Beach County
719
Illustrated Properties
459 Coldwell Banker
312 Keyes
247 Corcoran Group
#1 in Total Sales Listings
Current Inventory in Units as of September 30, 2015 All reports published October 2015 based on data available at the end of September 2015. All reports presented are based on data supplied by the Realtor Association of The Palm Beaches, Jupiter, Tequesta, Hobe Sound Association of Realtors, St. Lucie Association of Realtors and RMLS (direct members). Neither the Association nor its MLS guarantees or is anyway responsible for its accuracy. Data Maintained by the Association or its MLS may not reflect all real estate activities. Reports pulled from Trendgraphix, Inc.
for Palm Beach County Current Inventory in Units as of September 30, 2015
More Sellers Trust Lang Realty than any other real estate company in Palm Beach County
LangRealty.com Boca Raton 561.998.0100
Boca West 561.989.2110
Delray Beach 561.455.3300
Boynton Beach 561.853.2300
Manalapan 561.853.1100
West Palm Beach 561.340.1200
Palm Beach Gardens 561.209.7900
Jupiter 561.623.1238
Port St. Lucie 772.467.1299
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Mystique of Palm Beach
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The Palm Beaches only luxury 5 Star Dog & Cat Hotel. We offer Luxury Boarding with Flat Screen TV’s, Day Care, Training, Grooming, Limo Pick Up and a Posh Boutique. All employees are certified in Pet CPR and First Aid.
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current PROMOTION AND EVENTS • Dec ember 2 015
Provident Jewelry Provident Jewelry is proud to present “The Dream Factory,” a luxury lounge with a walk-in humidor, full bar, on-site watchmaker, and some of the world’s most extraordinary timepieces and jewels. This 1,300-square-foot space seeks to evoke Old World sophistication with modern amenities at the Jupiter location. The exclusive space is fully covered in leather walls, dark woods, onyx counter tops, and beautifully detailed accents and is certainly a stunning addition to the 3,000-square-foot showroom.
Bunulu
828 W. Indiantown Road, Jupiter 561-747-4449 | providentjewelry.com
Bunulu You don’t have far to go to enjoy the great outdoors now that Bunulu has opened at The Gardens Mall. Showcasing well-known brands such as Patagonia and prAna, Bunulu offers an innovative shopping environment catered specifically to the sporty coastal lifestyle. It’s the perfect place to stock up on active apparel, footwear, and accessories sought by people who love to be outdoors.
Corby Kaye’s Studio Palm Beach
The Gardens Mall 3101 PGA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens 561-622-2115 | thegardensmall.com
Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts Grammy Award-winning solo artist Patti LaBelle, fondly referred to as the “Godmother of Soul,” will take the stage for a spectacular performance when the Kravis Center holds its annual gala February 3. The elegant evening includes a pre-performance reception and a dinner-dance following the show.
Capehart
701 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach 561-651-4320 | kravis.org/gala
Event chairwomen Lori Gendelman and Dorothy Kohl
The 2016 Policemen’s Ball Monika and John Preston, chairs of the Tenth Annual Policemen’s Ball, scheduled for January 16 at The Mar-a-Lago Club, invite guests to a black-tie dinner dance to benefit the Palm Beach Police Department. The 2016 Palm Tree Award recipients, Kathryn and Leo Vecellio, and honorary event chairs, Mary and Mark Freitas, will be recognized. 561-820-8118 | pbpf.us
John and Monika Preston
Balance Pucker
Up
No Christmas celebration is complete without mistletoe. A semiparasitic plant that grows on a variety of trees, mistletoe is known as a symbol of fertility and vitality. Its history can be traced back to both Norse mythology and the Celtic Druids. By the eighteenth century, it was a common fixture in Christmas decor, with English servants helping to establish its kissing connotation. Mistletoe, however, is more than merry— it is also prized for its health benefits. Ancient Greeks and Romans used mistletoe extract to cure a number of ailments and as a balm for ulcers and poisons. Today, researchers are examining it as a possible alternative therapy for cancer. As noted by the National Cancer Institute, laboratory studies suggest mistletoe may support the immune system by increasing the number and activity of white blood cells. Animal studies also indicate it may decrease the harsh effects of treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation. Mistletoe derivative drugs are used in many European countries, although the Food and Drug Administration has yet to approve mistletoe extract as a cancer treatment in the United States. (cancer.gov)
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
163
Perfect Serve
Balance Jewelry designer Marco Bicego has created the ultimate stocking stuffer for the tennis fanatic in your life. This racket brooch ($9,920) from Bicego’s Pezzi Unici collection features pavé diamonds and is hand coiled in 18-karat gold. It may not improve your backhand, but it’s sure to turn any outfit into a grand slam. Special order, Neiman Marcus locations (888-8884757, neimanmarcus.com)
(App for thAT!) The shift toward cooler weather means a vigorous return to South Florida fairways. Golfshot allows users to swing for a perfect game by tracking shots and clubs used, generating statistics, and allowing for easy scoring. Book a tee time on the app, and then use the GPS feature to determine the best plan of attack for each hole. (golfshot.com)
Toy Store
Channel your inner child with these fitness tools that are fun and effective. The Jump Rope Boxers know incorporating jump rope into a workout routine allows them to float like a butterfly and sting like a bee. There are two types of fitness jump ropes: speed and weighted. While both can improve agility and endurance, speed ropes are lightweight and therefore better for coordination and conditioning, while weighted ropes are good for burning tons of calories and increasing strength. Nike’s Weighted Rope 2.0 ($20) has weights in both the rope and handles, and its Speed Rope 2.0 ($15) is adjustable and perfect for endless reps. Sports Authority locations (800-360-8721, sportsauthority.com)
The Hula Hoop According to the Mayo Clinic, hula hooping provides similar aerobic benefits as dancing, with the average female adult burning around 165 calories for every half an hour of hooping. While a small, light hoop requires more energy to keep going, a weighted hoop is a great toning tool. Empower’s Cardio Core and More fitness package ($39.99) comes with a customizable weighted hoop, a 45-minute DVD, and a fitness guide to help you get in the groove. Kohl’s locations (855-564-5705, kohls.com) The Trampoline Few kids’ toys are as fun and physical as the trampoline. Mini trampolines, or rebounders, are common fitness fixtures, offering a solid aerobic exercise that strengthens legs, targets the core, and bolsters better balance and coordination. The Mini Trampoline Workout System ($59.99) from Gaiam includes a small trampoline—ideal for at-home workouts—and a workout video led by personal trainer Jonathan Roche. (877-989-6321, gaiam.com) 164 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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The holiday season is a time to indulge, even for those on a raw-food diet. While raw desserts boast some benefits over traditional desserts (they don’t contain refined sugar and tend to be lower on the glycemic index), they are still a calorie splurge. “Raw desserts still have to be viewed as dessert,” cautions Randie Dalia, owner of RD Raw Foodie in Palm Beach Gardens. “Many of them are still high-calorie, but they’re made with the whole food. In general, if you’re going to eat a regular slice of cake, you would eat the same portion of a raw dessert.” In addition to many raw savory items—like cashew cheese, corn tortillas, and kelp-noodle pesto—Dalia also specializes in raw desserts. Her chocolate-chip cookies can be ordered in bulk and make a great raw treat for Santa and his helpers, but her go-to dessert for holiday parties is a raw vegan caramel slice (left). “The host or hostess can make a large quantity in one preparation in a 13-by-9-inch pan—and it has a wow factor,” she says. (561-308-5030, rdrawfoodie.com)
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Visit palmbeachillustrated.com/rawdessert for the raw vegan caramel slice recipe
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Shatter the
Better with Age Palm Beach Gardens resident Valerie Ramsey has lived many lives in her 76 years. In her 20s and 30s, she was a stay-at-home mom raising six kids. In her 50s, she jumped into a career in public relations and marketing at the Pebble Beach Resorts in California. And in her 60s, she began modeling. Through it all, Ramsey has looked forward to what’s next, and now, with two published books, she’s encouraging others to do the same. “The key to aging gracefully is being excited about life, about having something to look forward to, about feeling that you are contributing in some way—or in several ways,” Ramsey says. Her latest tome, Creating What’s Next: Gracefully (PathBinder Publishing, $22.95), explores factors that affect aging (including nutrition, fitness, sleep, stress, and sexuality) and shares her reflections on the questions many people ask as they approach the latter parts of their lives. Below, she reveals five tips for aging gracefully. (valerieramsey.com)
1
Have a curious mind and be inquisitive. Aging gracefully has as much to do with spirit and intellect as it does with physicality.
2
Eat a diet rich in fresh fruits, vegetables, and anti-inflammatory omega-3 fats, which can
be found in such foods as salmon, flaxseed, and walnuts.
3
Follow a plan to maintain healthy skin. Exfoliate two to three times a week to slough off dead skin cells and keep your complexion glowing.
Stigma
&
What are Ramsey’s 10 rules to healthy living? Find out at palmbeachillustrated. com/aginggracefully
4
Start meditating and eliminate negative thought patterns to reduce stress.
5
Keep on moving forward with life. Find your “What’s next?” and do whatever it takes to pursue it.
The Hanley Center Foundation is a West Palm Beach–based organization dedicated to helping those struggling with addiction. On December 1, the foundation will join forces with the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, and the Ryan Licht Sang Bipolar Foundation to host its annual Drug Abuse Summit. Titled “Society’s Stigma: Addiction and Mental Illness,” the event will include panels that address drug abuse and mental health concerns permeating Palm Beach County. The summit will be held at the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience in Jupiter and is free, but reservations are required. (561-379-6511, hanleycenterfoundation. org/summit)
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9/22/15 3:33 PM palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015 167
Wealth
Investing Overseas Looking to buy a second home in a foreign land? Arm yourself with more than just a colorful brochure. By Judy Martel
W
hether they long for the hills of Tuscany or the beaches of Panama, many American investors who dream of buying a second home abroad wonder if the combination of a strong U.S. dollar, a volatile stock market, and weak foreign economies are sounding the wake-up call to buy. Kathleen Peddicord, author of How to Retire Overseas: Everything You Need to Know to Live Well (for Less) Abroad (Plume), believes investors are looking at a window of opportunity. “I’d say it’s the best time in our lifetimes to be buying property in many very appealing places,” says Peddicord, who founded of the website Live and Invest Overseas (liveandinvestoverseas.com), and has called three foreign countries home during her 17 years abroad. But investing in foreign real estate is not without its hassles and costs. Be sure to understand not only the vagaries of a different culture but also the political and economic situation and all fees and taxes associated with buying and living abroad. Otherwise, homeowners could end up with a serious case of cross-cultural buyer’s remorse.
168 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
The Allure of Investing Abroad Peddicord believes buying property abroad offers investors not only a tangible asset they can use and enjoy but also portfolio diversification—a valuable advantage in today’s wobbly economic market. “There are lots of problems and uncertainties in the world,” she says. “How can you protect yourself against any of it? The only way is to be diversified so that you’re not at the mercy of any one country, any one economy, any one currency, or any one political administration.” The return on investment for foreign property has been positive this past year, Peddicord adds, especially for rental properties, which are plentiful in many areas. Buy right, she says, and homeowners can expect a net return in the range of 5 percent to 8 percent before taxes—and even more in areas where real estate is appreciating.
A House for the Ages While foreign currency rates can work for or against property owners at any time, Peddicord says, they won’t hurt in the long run if buyers avoid regions with chronically unstable or volatile economies, such as Argentina.
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Wealth In relatively stable regions, she suggests buyers target high-end areas and homes with character. “Something historic and charming will hold its value when cookie-cutter inventory doesn’t,” she says. For a long-term return on investment, buyers should also stick to markets that don’t cater specifically to foreigners seeking investment rental property, she adds. Spain’s coast, for example, has seen a real estate boom and bust dependent on tourism. “Buying into a location that is 100 percent supported by foreign demand means you could have a hard time selling if that foreign demand disappears,” she points out.
The Cost of Paradise U.S. buyers venturing into the overseas real-estate market discover not only the language and the culture are foreign; fees and expenses are different, too. One of the biggest surprises for U.S. buyers is the transfer tax, which ranges from 1 percent to 10 percent of the purchase price, Peddicord says. Most countries charge the tax, and typically the buyer pays it. “On the plus side,” Peddicord adds, “property taxes in most countries are less than you might expect and usually less than you’re used to, wherever you’re living in the States. Some countries have no property tax, including Croatia.” In some regions, such as Latin America, nonresident foreigners generally cannot obtain a mortgage. While it is possible in Europe, Peddicord says,
terms of the mortgage will not be the same as with a U.S. loan. For instance, 30-year mortgages don’t exist outside the United States. In addition, bureaucratic red tape could add costs or delays to plans for buying or renovating, so buyers should use their own attorney to help with the purchase process, Peddicord advises, rather than one hired by the seller or developer.
Follow Your Passion While using their brain to invest in an overseas home is a smart financial move, buyers shouldn’t ignore their heart, especially if they plan to live there, Peddicord says. “I recommend that people not make a move to run away or to escape from something but to embrace new opportunities,” she says. “The idea of launching a new life in a new country … of starting over someplace sunny and exotic with white-sand beaches or Old World culture—that’s sexy.”
Alicia Donelan
current
PROMOTION AND EVENTS • D ECEMBER 2015
Estelle Parsons in My Old Lady, 2014
Paris ceramics
Palm Beach Dramaworks
Paris Ceramics opened in 1995 on Seaview Avenue and, after 20 years, has relocated to South County Road to showcase more of its collections, increase visibility, and expand parking. It is known for antique flooring but also provides newly quarried materials, antique and newly carved custom fireplaces, mosaics, wood flooring, and ceramics.
Palm Beach Dramaworks, West Palm Beach’s only professional not-for-profit theater, is committed to enhancing the quality of life through the transformative power of live theater. Presenting its brand of “theater to think about,” it has distinguished itself with vibrant productions of classic, contemporary, and overlooked plays that inspire, engage, challenge, and entertain audiences.
230-B S. County Road, Palm Beach 561-835-8875 | parisceramicsusa.com
201 Clematis St., West Palm Beach 561-514-4042 | palmbeachdramaworks.org
170 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s
I n t h T g i u s c N a ny A The Mar-A-Lago Club, Palm Beach Saturday, January 30, 2016 • 6:30 pm
Richard & Trish Rendina
Bill & Brooke McKernan
Gala Chairmen
Host Committee Chairmen
Grand Benefactor
For more information, please contact Melissa Mulvihill at 561.623.4553 or Melissa.Mulvihill@lls.org
“Soup tureen with cover,” Gale & Hayden, New York, maker; Gregg Hayden & Co, Charleston, retailer, circa 1849. Silver. Courtesy of the Rivers Collection, Charleston, SC; photo by Jack Alterman.
AN EYE FOR OPULENCE
CHARLESTON THROUGH THE LENS OF THE RIVERS COLLECTION
Explore the rich history of Charleston through more than 100 objects that tell the story of the city’s golden era — from colonial to antebellum periods. See exceptional fine and decorative arts from the Rivers Collection and key loans from the Gibbes Museum of Art, Historic Charleston Foundation and select objects from Drayton Hall and The Charleston Museum.
On display Nov. 21, 2015 through Jan. 10, 2016
www.fourarts.org
| 2 FOUR ARTS PLAZA | PALM BEACH, FL
Esther B. O’Keeffe Gallery is open. Mon. - Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Admission $5; no charge for Four Arts members and children 14 and younger
FOUR ARTS. FOR EVERYONE.
Gene Schiavone
y Daniel Azoula
Gene Schiavone
Agenda Holiday
Gene Schiavone
CLASSIC
A nutcracker doll, dancing snowflakes, mischievous mice, and a Christmas tree that grows like Jack’s beanstalk. The Miami City Ballet brings to life George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker from December 27-29 at the Kravis Center in West Palm Beach. After winning an epic battle against the dastardly Rat King, Marie and her nutcracker prince set off on an adventure to the Land of Sweets, where they’re treated to majestic balletic sequences set to Tchaikovsky’s iconic score. Tickets start at $25. (561-832-7469, kravis.org) —Kerry Shorr
palmbeachillustrated.com | December 2015
173
Agenda
3
Up and Down Manhattan, Martí Bofarull
December/2015
Attend the Palm Beach Jewelry, antiques, and design show from december 3-7. (561-822-5440, pbfallshow.com)
GOINGS ON 1 Christmas Tree Lighting, Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, free. (561-6596909, worth-avenue.com)
Society’s Stigma: Addiction and Mental Illness Drug Abuse Summit, Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, Jupiter, free (561-379-6511, hanleycenterfoundation.org/summit)
Tree Lighting event, benefiting Adopt-A-Family of the Palm Beaches
Meghan Candler
Inc., The Sailfish Club, Palm Beach, $350. (561-253-1261, adoptafamilypbc.org)
The Meghan candler gallery presents “Perfect Gifts” to december 31. (772-234-8811, meghancandler gallery.com)
“With a Wink and a Nod” Gallery Talk, Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, free with museum admission. (561-655-2833, flaglermuseum.us) 2 Annual Holiday Bazaar, benefiting New Hope Charities, The Beach Club, Palm Beach, $175. (561-366-5093, newhopecharities.org)
31
174 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Blue in Vase, Eileen Corse
Annual Holiday Street Parade, downtown Boca Raton, free. (561-3937700, myboca.us)
Canasta de Luz (Basket of Light), Flor Garduño
2 PICKS
19 the Holden Luntz Gallery hosts “The Compassionate Eye” to december 19. (561-805-9550, holden luntz.com)
Leadership Gifts Event, benefiting the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County, St. Andrews Country Club, Boca Raton, $150. (561-852-3342, jewishboca.org)
President’s Society Dinner, benefiting Nat King Cole Generation Hope Inc., Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, tickets start at $1,000. (561-213-8209, natkingcolegenhope.org)
Tree Lighting Festival, Burns Road Recreation Center, Palm Beach Gardens, free. (561-630-1100, pbgfl.com) 3 Delray Beach Tree Lighting, Old School Square Outdoor Pavilion, Delray Beach, free. (561-279-1380, 100ftchristmastree.com)
Holiday Tree Lighting at Clematis by Night, West Palm Beach Waterfront, West Palm Beach, free. (561-822-2222, wpb.org)
Palm Beach Jewelry, Antiques, Design, Palm Beach County Convention Center, West Palm Beach, to Dec. 7, $20. (561-822-5440, pbfallshow.com)
4 Annual Lumen Christi Gala, benefiting Catholic Education in the Diocese of Palm Beach, The Breakers, Palm Beach, $400. (561775-9520, diocesepb.org)
Eau Palm Beach Marathon and Run Fest, downtown West Palm Beach, to Dec. 6, registration prices vary, free to watch. (palm beachesmarathon.com)
Gala Evening in the Gardens, Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, $200-$250. (561-832-5328, ansg.org)
The Tony Awardwinning play The History Boys debuts at Palm Beach Dramaworks on December 4 and continues through January 3. written by Alan Bennett, this witty tale follows eight British students and the three teachers who use contrasting methods to prepare them for their university entrance exams. (561-514-4042, palmbeachdrama works.org)
On December 18, Palm Beach resident and author Kelly Klein signs copies of her new photography tome, Photographs by Kelly Klein (Rizzoli, $115), at the Palm Beach Book Store. The author will talk about inspiration, family, and life behind the lens. (561-659-6700, thepalmbeach bookstore.com)
Paul Barris and Jana Petrova (center); Irina Bubnovskaya (right).
Twist AND SHOUT
Once the pastime for medieval royalty, ballroom dancing has gotten its two-step back in a big way thanks to competitive dance-offs and reality television shows. Beginning December 10, some of the biggest names from Dancing with the Stars and So You Think You Can Dance present Ballroom with a Twist-mas at The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton. Watch as dancers Tristan MacManus, Chelsie Hightower, Lacey Schwimmer, Gleb Savchenko, Elena Samodanova, and Jonathan Roberts waltz, samba, and jive to holiday favorites and the musical hits performed by American Idol’s top finalists. Tickets start at $85. (561-995-2333, thewick.org) —K.S.
Historical Society of Palm Beach County Walking Tour, Richard and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum, West Palm Beach, $5. (561-832-4164, historicalsocietypbc.org)
Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens Holiday Kick Off, Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa, Manalapan, $125. (561495-0233, morikami.org/holidaykickoff)
MorseLife Dinner Dance, The Mar-a-Lago Club, Palm Beach, $750. (561-242-4661, morselife.org)
5 Festival of Lights, Civic Center, Port St. Lucie, free. (772878-2277, cityofpsl.com)
Festival of Trees Community Days, Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, to Dec. 12, also Dec. 14-16, $7-$20. (561-832-5328, ansg.org)
Holiday Boat Parade, Harbourside Place, Jupiter, free. (561935-9533, harboursideplace.com)
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
175
Agenda Inaugural Tower Shoot and Luncheon, benefit-
8 Annual Prayer Breakfast, benefiting YMCA of
ing the Boys & Girls Clubs of Palm Beach County, Pine Creek Sporting Club, Okeechobee, contact for ticket prices. (561-683-3287, bgcpbc.org)
the Palm Beaches, The Breakers, Palm Beach, $125. (561-968-9622, ymcapalmbeaches.org)
Lady in Red Gala, benefiting Leaders in Furthering Education (LIFE), The Mar-a-Lago Club, Palm Beach, $700. (561-582-8083, life-edu.org)
6 Christmas Tree Lighting, Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, free with museum admission. (561-655-2833, flagler museum.us)
Once Upon a Time JFS Gala, benefiting Ruth & Nor-
Grandma’s Place Luncheon, The Beach Club, Palm
Palm Beach Food and Wine Festival, various lo-
Beach, $150. (561-408-3060, grandmasplacepb.org)
cations, to Dec. 13, contact for ticket prices. (561-3891222, pbfoodwinefest.com)
Hanukkah Festival, CityPlace, West Palm Beach, free. (561-366-1000, cityplace.com)
Palm Beach, $65-$75. (561-472-3330, palmbeachculture.com)
Hospice Signature Golf Classic, benefiting Hospice of Palm Beach County Foundation and Hospice by the Sea Foundation, Medalist Golf Club, Hobe Sound, $1,700. (561-494-6884, hpbcf.org)
176 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
man Rales Jewish Family Services, St. Andrews Country Club, Boca Raton, $500. (561-852-5013, ralesjfs.org)
12 Boca Cõl-léct, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, also Dec. 13, free. (561-392-2500, bocamuseum.org)
Mary Rubloff YWCA Harmony House Gala, The Breakers, Palm Beach, $500. (561-640-0050, ywcapbc.org)
7 Culture and Cocktails: Fashion Forward with Alex and Ani’s Carolyn Rafaelian, The Colony Hotel,
with museum admission. (561-832-5196, norton.org)
Dramalogue: Paul Gemignani, Palm Beach Dramaworks, West Palm Beach, $20. (561-514-4042, palm beachdramaworks.org)
Music in the Museum, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, $10-$12. (561-392-2500, bocamuseum.org)
Exhibition Lecture with Debbie Fleming Caffrey, Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, free
9 Archival Evening, benefiting the Historical Society of Palm Beach County, Club Colette, Palm Beach, $650, by invitation only. (561-832-4164, historicalsocietypbc.org) 10 Christmas Ball, benefiting Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League, The Sailfish Club, Palm Beach, $600. (561472-8845, peggyadams.org)
Exotic Car Show, Harbourside Place, Jupiter, also Dec. 13, 20, and 27, free. (561-935-9533, harboursideplace.com) Holiday Snow Ball, benefiting The Salvation Army of Palm Beach County, The Mar-a-Lago Club, Palm Beach, $500. (561-201-3868, salvationarmypalmbeachcounty.org) Menorah Lighting, CityPlace, West Palm Beach, free. (561-366-1000, cityplace.com)
catch Billy Elliot the musical at the Maltz Jupiter Theatre beginning December 1. (561-5752223, jupitertheatre.org)
Golf with the Big Dogs, benefiting Big Dog Ranch Rescue, Trump International Golf Club, West Palm Beach, by invitation only. (561-2150351, bdrr.org)
13 Festival of Trees Children’s Gala, Ann Nor-
Surfing Santa water sport lessons, Eau
ton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, $40. (561832-5328, ansg.org)
Palm Beach Resort & Spa, Manalapan, also Dec. 18 and 21, $30. (561-540-4833, eaupalmbeach.com)
Hanukkah Menorah Lighting, Harbourside Place, Jupiter, free. (561-935-9533, harboursideplace.com)
15 Annual Holiday Gala Dinner Dance, ben-
Winter Wonderland Family Fun Fest, CityPlace, West Palm Beach, free. (561-366-1000, cityplace.com)
efiting The International Society of Palm Beach, The Beach Club, Palm Beach, $500. (561-832-4200)
Alicia Donelan
Toy and Train Show, benefiting the Derrick Dean Wagner Memorial Foundation, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church and School, Palm Beach Gardens, also Dec. 13, $7-$12. (561-373-9603, derrickwagnerfoundation.com)
1
Art Salon: Mark Walnock, Muriel Kaplan, and Stephen Fute, Armory Art Center, West Palm
Palm Beach Chic panel discussion, Society of the
14 Caritas Dei Bishop’s Gala Cocktail Reception, benefiting Catholic Charities, Wally Findlay
Beach, free. (561-832-1776, armoryart.org)
Four Arts, Palm Beach, free. (561-655-7226, fourarts.org)
Galleries International, Palm Beach, by invitation only. (561-655-2090, wallyfindlay.com)
Whitehall and the Gilded Age Taste for French Furniture lecture, Flagler Museum, Palm Beach,
18 Jingle Jog, benefiting Furry Friends, Harbourside Place, Jupiter, $20. (561-935-9533, harboursideplace.com)
$10-$20. (561-655-2833, flaglermuseum.us)
Cocktails for Compass, benefiting Compass Community Center, Club Colette, Palm Beach, $500. (561-533-9699, compassglcc.com)
17 Boca Talk: Avi Hoffman and Shari Unger Klages, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, $12.
Kelly Klein book signing Photographs by Kelly Klein, Palm Beach Book Store, Palm Beach, free. (561659-6700, thepalmbeachbookstore.com)
(561-392-2500, bocamuseum.org)
TAKE HOME A NUDE & OTHER IMPORTANT ART
Fine Art Auction
Thursday, January 7, 2016 | 7:00 pm Start the New Year with an exciting evening, silent art auction, and cocktail party. Enjoy a light bite dinner and auction of works in 2D and 3D by noted artists and collectors of fine art, photography, sculpture, glass, and choice crafts. Take Home a Nude benefits the Armory’s children and other community programs.
For tickets call 561.832.1776 or armoryart.org
To donate a piece or for information contact Marcy Hoffman at marcy.hoffman@armoryart.org or call (561) 685-8154
1700 Parker Ave. West Palm Beach, FL 33401
palmbeachillustrated.com | december 2015
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Agenda 19 Annual Boat Parade, runs between C-15 Canal and Hillsboro Bridge, Boca Raton, free. (561-367-7073, myboca.us)
20 Sunday on the Waterfront: Aloha Islanders Tropical Holiday Spectacular, West Palm Beach Waterfront, West Palm Beach, free. (561-822-1515, wpb.org)
22 Boca Raton Bowl, FAU Stadium, Boca Raton, tickets start at $27. (305-341-4721, espnevents.com/ boca-raton-bowl)
26 Beach Bash, benefiting The American Red Cross, The Beach Club, Palm Beach, tickets start at $250. (561650-9133, redcross.org/fl/palm-beach) 31 New Year’s Celebration at CityPlace, CityPlace, West Palm Beach, free. (561-366-1000, cityplace.com) New Year’s Eve Spectacular, Lake Worth Playhouse, Lake Worth, $40. (561-586-6410, lakeworthplayhouse.org)
PERFORMANCES 1 Billy Elliot the Musical, Maltz Jupiter Theatre, Jupiter, to Dec. 20, tickets start at $55. (561-575-2223, jupitertheatre.org) Hello, Dolly!, The Wick Theatre, Boca Raton, to Dec. 6, $65-$70. (561-995-2333, thewick.org)
I Hate Hamlet, Lake Worth Playhouse, Lake Worth, to Dec. 6, $23-$38. (561-586-6410, lakeworthplayhouse.org)
2 Rioult Dance NY, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, also Dec. 3, $34. (561-832-7469, kravis.org) 3 Damon Wayans, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, to Dec. 6, $35. (561-833-1812, palmbeachimprov.com) Hi-Hat Hattie: A Musical Salute to Hattie McDaniel, Delray Beach Playhouse, Delray Beach, to Dec. 13, $30. (561-272-1281, delraybeachplayhouse.com)
The Jersey Girls, Eissey Campus Theatre, Palm Beach Gardens, $22.50. (561-640-9735, jerseygirlradio.com)
Nicolas King, The Colony Hotel, Palm Beach, to Dec. 5, contact for ticket prices. (561-655-5430, thecolony palmbeach.com)
Brian’s Song In the 1960s, musician and songwriter Brian Wilson cofounded The Beach Boys and went on to write most of the band’s greatest songs, including “I Get Around” and “Fun, Fun, Fun.” After personal recoveries from drug and alcohol abuse and mental illness, in 1988 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 2007 he was honored with the Kennedy Center Honor, the highest American performing arts accolade. The legendary singer—who will perform at the Sunrise Theatre for the Performing Arts in Fort Pierce on December 6 with fellow former Beach Boy Al Jardine—caught up with PBI about his latest projects and passions. (772-461-4775, sunrisetheatre.com) —K.S. What fans can expect from his Fort Pierce show: We’re going to do some Beach Boys classics and some things off my new album. I hope they like us. His greatest professional achievement: Writing “God Only Knows” Where he heads for inspiration: My piano Favorite Beach Boy memory: Recording “Good Vibrations” His latest project: I’m currently working on a new song. No lyrics yet. How he spends his time off stage: At a park doing exercise. I like to walk. His greatest indulgence: Eating veggie burgers His advice for rising musicians: Don’t write half a song, write a whole song. What he hopes audiences gain from seeing his 2014 biopic, Love & Mercy: It was important that people could see my life and how it really was. I hope they can identify if they’re going through something rough. How he’s helping those living with mental illness: I’m working with the folks at Give an Hour. Know the five signs and learn more at giveanhour.org. Three words that sum him up: Very nice person The best part of being Brian Wilson: My singing. Hahaha … of all things.
Vic DiBitetto, Crest Theatre, Delray Beach Center for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach, $45-$65. (561-2437922, delraycenterforthearts.org) 6 Brian Wilson, Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce, $79-$89. (772-461-4775, sunrise theatre.com)
Palm Beach Symphony presents “Homage to Pablo Casals,” Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $45. (561655-7226, palmbeachsymphony.org)
The Symphonia Boca Raton presents “Connoisseur Concert 1,” Saint Andrew’s School, Boca Raton, $45$75. (561-376-3848, thesymphonia.org)
Women of Note presents “The Beauty of the Holidays,” Eissey Campus Theatre, Palm Beach Gardens, $20. (561-207-5900, eisseycampustheatre.org)
8 Blue Man Group, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, to Dec. 13, $32-$76. (561-832-7469, kravis.org) 9 Live at Lynn Christmas, Lynn University, Boca Raton, $35-$55. (561-2379000, events.lynn.edu)
Howie Mandel, Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce, $49-
Live in Central Park: Revisited The Songs of Andrea Bocelli, Kravis Center,
$59. (772-461-4775, sunrisetheatre.com)
West Palm Beach, $39. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
atre at Sugar Sand Park, Boca Raton, to Dec. 13, $30. (561- 347-3948, willowtheatre.org)
Johnny Rodgers, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach,
10 Aaron Comess Trio, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $35-$45. (561-450-6357, artsgarage.org)
The History Boys, Palm Beach Dramaworks, West Palm Beach, to Jan. 3, $64. (561-514-4042, palmbeach dramaworks.org)
Stanley Jordan and Vitali Imereli, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, also Dec. 5, $25-$45. (561-450-6357, arts garage.org)
4 4Ever ’50s featuring The 4 Guys, Willow The-
178 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
also Dec. 5, $35. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
Aaron Weinstein and Bucky Pizzarelli, The Colony Hotel, Palm Beach, to Dec. 12, contact for ticket prices. (561-655-5430, thecolonypalmbeach.com)
Ballroom with a Twist-mas, The Wick Theatre, Boca Raton, to Dec. 27, $85-$95. (561995-2333, thewick.org)
Bryan Callen, Palm Beach Improv, West Palm Beach, $20. (561-833-1812, palmbeach improv.com)
Sarge “Kiss My Mezuzah” Holiday Show, Crest Theatre, Delray Beach Center for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach, also Dec. 11, $44. (561-243-7922, delraycenterforthearts.org)
Enter to win tickets to Ballroom with a Twist-mas at palm beachillustrated. com/contests Enter to win tickets to The History Boys at palmbeach illustrated.com/ contests
11 Saint Lucie Ballet presents The Nutcracker, Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce, also Dec. 12, $25-$35. (772-461-4775, sunrisetheatre.com)
The Snow Queen, Riverside Theatre, Vero Beach, to Dec. 13, $6-$12. (772-231-6990, riversidetheatre.com)
The Choral Society of the Palm Beaches presents “A Holiday Concert,” Florida Atlantic University,
16 Ann Hampton Callaway and Trio, Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, $40-$45. (561-655-7226, fourarts.org)
Jupiter, also Dec. 13, $10-$20. (561-6269997, choralsocietypalmbeaches.org)
Arts Garage Radio Theatre presents Miracle on 34th Street, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, also Dec. 17, $20-$30. (561-571-8510, artsgarage.org)
Florida Wind Symphony Jazz Orchestra presents “An Ellington Nutcracker,” Florida Atlantic University Theatre, Boca Raton, $20. (800-564-9539, fauevents.com)
13 Annual Gingerbread Concert, Boca Raton Resort & Club, Boca Raton, $35. (561-2379000, lynn.edu/events)
Indian River Pops Orchestra presents “Holidays with the Pops,” Eissey Campus Theatre, Palm Beach
Palm Beach, to Dec. 20, $30. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
The Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach presents Anderson and Roe, The Mar-a-Lago Club, Palm Beach, by invitation only. (561-379-6773, cmspb.org)
A Christmas Carol, Crest Theatre, Delray Beach Center for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach, $45. (561-243-7922, delraycenterforthearts.org)
Gardens, $25. (561-207-5900, eisseycampustheatre.org)
The Four Freshmen, The Colony Hotel, Palm
Vanessa Collier, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $25-
Beach, to Dec. 19, contact for ticket prices. (561-6555430, thecolonypalmbeach.com)
Symphonic Band of the Palm Beaches presents presents “Sousa’s Holiday Party,” Eissey
$45. (561-450-6357, artsgarage.org)
Campus Theatre, Palm Beach Gardens, $18. (561-2075900, eisseycampustheatre.org)
14 Neil Sedaka, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach,
12 Opera on the Waterfront, Meyer Amphithe-
15 3 Men and a Baby…Grand!, Kravis Center,
ater, West Palm Beach, free. (561-833-7888, pbopera.org)
West Palm Beach, $29. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
Cannoli, Latkes, and Guilt, Kravis Center, West
Itzhak Perlman, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $39-$120. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
$25-$100. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
17 The Midtown Men, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $25-$100. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
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Agenda 18 Atlantic City Boys, Crest Theatre, Delray Beach Center for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach, to Dec. 20, $45. (561-243-7922, delraycenterforthearts.org)
through the Lens of the Rivers Collection,” to Jan. 10. (561655-7226, fourarts.org)
Flagler Museum, Palm Beach. “With a Wink and a Nod: Cartoonists of the Gilded Age,” to Jan. 3. (561655-2833, flaglermuseum.us)
Celtic Woman, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $29-$150. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
Dr. Lonnie Smith, Arts Garage, Delray Beach, $25$50. (561-450-76357, artsgarage.org)
Historical Society of Palm Beach County, West Palm Beach. “Chasing Dreams: Baseball and Becoming American,” Dec. 15 to March 24; “By Land and Sea: Florida in the Civil War,” to July 2. (561-832-4164, historicalsocietypbc.org)
19 A Well-Strung Christmas, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $39-$75. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
16
22 Broadway on Ice, Kravis Center, West Palm Palm Beach Gardens Concert Band, Maltz Jupiter Theatre, Jupiter, $15. (561-575-2223, jupitertheatre.org)
23 The State Ballet Theatre of Russia presents The Nutcracker, Sunrise Theatre, Fort Pierce,
Steven Caras
Beach, also Dec. 23, $30-$100. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
The Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach presents piano duo Anderson and Roe on December 16. (561-379-6773, cmspb.org)
$45-$55. (772-461-4775, sunrisetheatre.com)
GALLERIES
26 Brad Ross, Crest Theatre, Delray Beach Center
Armory Art Center, West Palm Beach. “Discovering
for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach, $40. (561-243-7922, delraycenterforthearts.org)
27 Miami City Ballet presents George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, to Dec. 29, $25-$89. (561-8327469, kravis.org)
30 Matisyahu, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $25-$75. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
31 The Best of Forbidden Broadway, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach,
Our New World” and “Faceted: Aspects of Contemporary Jewelry,” both to Dec. 5; “Ceramic Mind Field: Contemporary Clay and Ceramics” and Enter to win “Palm Beach Collects: Clay and Ceramics,” tickets to Broadboth Dec. 12 to Jan. 2; “Jane Ehrlich Paintings,” way on Ice at Dec. 12 to Jan. 9. (561-832-1776, armoryart.org) Palmbeach illustrated.com/ contests
Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca
Raton. “Boca Raton Museum Artists’ Guild Sixty-Fifth Anniversary Exhibition,” to Dec. 13; “Izhar Patkin: You Tell Us What to Do,” “Memories of the Shtetl,” “The Neighbor Next Door,” “Rosie Won the War,” and “Veil of Memory, Prologue: The Last Supper,” all to Jan. 10; “Dames: Portraits by Norman Sunshine,” to Feb. 14. (561-392-2500, bocamuseum.org)
Enter to win tickets to The Nutcracker at palmbeach illustrated.com/ contests
to Jan. 2, $39. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
Capital Steps, Maltz Jupiter Theatre, Jupiter, tickets start at $60. (561-575-2223, jupitertheatre.org)
Indian River Pops Orchestra presents “New Year’s Eve Gala,” Eissey Campus Theatre, Palm Beach
sionate Eye: Women Behind the Lens,” to Dec. 19. (561805-9550, holdenluntz.com)
Meghan Candler Gallery, Vero Beach. “Perfect Gifts,” to Dec. 31. (772-234-8811, meghancandler gallery.com)
Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach. “Jimmy Tsutomu Mirikitani” and “Wendy Maruyama: Executive Order 9066,” both to Jan. 31. (561495-0233, morikami.org)
Mounts Botanical Garden, West Palm Beach. “Nature Connects,” to Feb. 14. (561-233-1757, mounts.org)
Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach. “Going Places: Transportation Designs from the Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf Collection,” to Jan 3; “This Place: Israel Through Photographer’s Lens” and “The Summer of ’68: Photographing the Black Panthers,” both to Jan. 17; “Tiny: Streetwise Revisited—Photographs by Mary Ellen Mark,” Dec. 10 to March 20; “Vincent van Gogh: The Poplars at Saint-Rémy” and “Edgar Degas: Portrait of Mlle. Hortense Valpinçon,” both to April 17. (561-832-5196, norton.org)
South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, Cornell Museum, Delray Beach Center for the Arts at Old School Square, Delray Beach. “Exxpectations,” to Jan. 3. (561-243-7922, delraycenterforthearts.org)
West Palm Beach. “Dinosaurs Around the World,” to April 16. (561-832-1988, sfsciencecenter.org)
Spady Cultural Heritage Museum, Delray Beach.
Gardens, $35. (561-207-5900, eisseycampustheatre.org)
Cultural Council of Palm Beach County, Lake
The Lennon Sisters, The Wick Theatre, Boca Raton, to Jan. 2, $85-$225. (561-995-2333, thewick.org)
Worth. “Solo Exhibitions: Mimie Langlois and Jean Goddeau,” to Dec. 12; “Solo Exhibition: Bernice Harwood,” Dec. 19 to Jan. 16; “Nature Preserved,” to Jan. 2. (561-471-2901, palmbeachculture.com)
The Producers, Kravis Center, West Palm Beach, $35-$125. (561-832-7469, kravis.org)
Elliott Museum, Stuart. “Illuminating the Deep: Ex-
Tommy Tune, The Colony Hotel, Palm Beach, to Jan.
plore. Learn. Act.,” to Dec .13; “Jim Hutchinson Retrospective,” Dec. 19 to Jan. 31. (772-225-1961, elliottmuseumfl.org)
5, contact for ticket prices. (561-655-5430, thecolony palmbeach.com)
Esther B. O’Keeffe Gallery, Society of the Four
“African American Neighborhoods of Old Delray,” to Dec. 31. (561-279-8883, spadymuseum.com)
Vero Beach Museum of Art, Vero Beach. “The Art of the Brick” and “Shadows of History: Photographs of the Civil War,” both to Jan. 3; “Folk Art form the Morris Museum of Art,” to Jan. 17. (772-231-0707, verobeachmuseum.org)
Wally Findlay Galleries International, Palm Arts, Palm Beach. “An Eye for Opulence: Charleston
180 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Holden Luntz Gallery, Palm Beach. “The Compas-
Beach. “Les Couleurs de la Lumière: Paris and Provence,” to Dec. 30. (561-655-2090, wallyfindlay.com)
Masterpiece Theater
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palmbeachillustrated.com | DECEMBER 2015
181
Seen Timolin Cole, Norman and adria Thomas, Casey Cole, Nir Shinuk
Yvel Reception Who: yvel and Palm Beach Illustrated What: Cocktail Reception honoring Nat King Cole Generation Hope Inc. Where: Private residence, Boca Raton
Laurie and Ron Berke
Jan Savarick, Robert Primeau, Shanna St. John Lisa and Chris Campanelli
lila photo
Nene Piltoff, Kim Grillier, Toni Valentino
Joe Barilla, Betty Armstrong, Joey Roberto Rachel and Brian Clouse
Dian and Terry Delehanty
Lauren and Terry Duffy
182 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
PalmBeachIllustrated-DEC-2015-CDH_Layout 1 10/27/15 5:23 PM Page 1
Seen
Terri Henderson, Susan Shelley, Jean Oberg
Mike Callahan, Bill Massonie, Marinda Ranineri, Ron Saunders
arthur’s jam
Ryan Williams, Britany Szafron, Victoria Winslette, Joen Tillman
Bob Goldfarb, R.J. Hunt, Jim springer, Gary Goodall
Who: Cystic Fibrosis Foundation What: Arthur’s Jam goes Miami Vice/80’s Where: International Polo Club Palm Beach, Wellington
John and Ashley Schutz, Allison and Trey Fogg Kim McGinnia, Carl Flemming, Lalia Morgan, Thomas Tally
Judy Myers, Cosmo DiSchino
184 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Davidoff Studios
Mike and Dee Wade, Kate Connor, Dustin Whissenhunt
THE ART OF PHILANTHROPY HONORING
Frances G. Scaife G R A N D C O R P O R AT E C H A I R M E N
Nicole and Cressman Bronson A RC H I VA L E V E N I N G C H A I R M E N
Alan and Kathy Bleznak
Mary and Mark Freitas
Martin and Audrey Gruss
Ross W. W. Meltzer and Victor Figueredo
FOURTEENTH ANNUAL ARCHIVAL EVENING for the Historical Society of Palm Beach County Wednesday, December 9, 2015 - 7:00 PM Club Colette, Palm Beach MAJOR SPONSORS
Julie and Michael W. Connors | Evening Champagne Sponsor Mary and Mark Freitas | Evening Entertainment Sponsor Richard and Pat Johnson Family | Evening Dinner Sponsor
PNC Bank | Grand Corporate Benefactor Nievera Williams Design | Evening Exhibition Sponsor Palm Beach Illustrated | Official Magazine Sponsor for 2015-2016
William H. Pitt Foundation Wally Findlay Galleries | Cocktail Reception Sponsor (as of October 28, 2015)
Tickets $650 per person, by invitation. For information, please contact Holly Finch at 561.832.4164 x106 | hfinch@historicalsocietypbc.org
Jeffrey and Mimi Vaughan
Tamra Fitzgerald, Peter Gloggner, Michelle Noga
Paul and Patti Walczak
Ed and Carolyn Sasso
Tracey Benson Photography
Seen
Highballs & Hibiscus
Liv Vesely, Rebecca Seelig, John Couris
Who: Jupiter Medical Center Foundation What: Highballs & Hibiscus Where: Frenchman’s Creek Country Club, Palm beach gardens
Jack and Ali Nicklaus Jr, Tonya and Lachlan Cheatham
Bonnie Weaver, Ginny McCreery, Marissa Murphy, Janet Reynols
Shelly Albright, Angela Vecellio
Camille Murphy Kubicek, Penny Murphy
Lisa Bagocius, Laura Russell
Molly Randall, Parisa Hamzetash
Who: pioneer linens What: Junior League of The Palm Beaches’ Seventyfifth Anniversary Diamond Jubilee Gala season kickoff Where: pioneer linens, west palm beach
186 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
CAPEHART
afternoon tea
Seen Trish and Rich Rendina
2
Marianna and Rob Steele
1
1
2 Jonathan Duerr, Kristy and Eric Inge, Jessica and Nick Mastroianni III
2
Bob Dobens Photography/JACEK PHOTO/A. Spencer Schwartz Photography
out & About
Maureen Conte, David Townsend
3
1. Who: Saks Fifth Avenue Palm Beach Gardens and The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society What: The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Annual Black Tie Gala kickoff Where: Saks Fifth Avenue, Palm Beach Gardens 2. who: Cultural Council of Palm Beach County What: “Made in Delray” exhibition opening Where: Cultural Council of Palm Beach County, Lake Worth 3. who: The Triangle Club What: Lions of Recovery Inaugural Fundraiser Where: Palm Beach Zoo, West Palm Beach
Lisa Peterfreund, Michael and Janice Barry
2
Lavinia Baker, Joe Considine, Elizabeth Matthews Kirk Jamgotchian, Lee Wagner, Denver Smith
3
3 Lorrie B. Turner, Monique Ogilvie, Susan Romaine, Robin Woodard ©2015 Palm Beach Media Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Palm Beach Illustrated [ISSN 1047-5575] [USPS #2489] is published monthly except July by Palm Beach Media Group, Inc., 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, Inc., 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. 63, No. 11, December 2015.
Will Buckley, Bridget Healy, John McGreevy
188 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
Palm Beach Illustrated magazine and Palm Beach Media Group retain exclusive rights to all editorial and photographic materials used, which cannot be reproduced in any manner without our written consent.
BLOWTOX PBI Qtr Ad Blown Away Feb.pdf
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GYROTONIC
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LUXURY EVENT CURATORS SPECIAL EVENT PLANNING AND PRODUCTION For information, contact Allison Wolfe Reckson, Managing Director 561.472.1927 | areckson@illustratedevents.net A Palm Beach Media Group Production
{Last LOOK}
Sam Edelman Sam Edelman is no stranger to footwear. After cofounding Kenneth Cole and launching Esprit’s shoe division, he established Sam & Libby, a line beloved for its ballerina flats. In 2001, while recuperating from a horseback-riding accident that left one of his legs badly broken, he hatched an extraordinary idea: Design luxury shoes for a moderate price. He found himself back in the sartorial saddle when he unveiled his eponymous shoe collection in 2004. Today, the Sam Edelman brand has grown to include apparel and handbags and will arrive at The Gardens Mall in early February. When not designing, Sam and his wife, Libby, train show-jumping horses at their Wellington estate and farm. FASHION ESSENTIALS Colorful socks and Tod’s driving moccasins SIGNATURE TIPPLE Ketel with a twist STRESS RELIEVER Taking my horses on trail rides FAVORITE MUSICIAN Van Morrison CURRENTLY READING The Woman I Wanted To Be by Diane von Furstenberg BEST BITE IN PALM BEACH Pizza Al Fresco on Worth Avenue for lunch; also, the ribs at Palm Beach Grill are to die for. FAVORITE ITEM FROM HIS COLLECTION The Gigi is a favorite because it’s classic, timeless, and all women can wear it. PERSONAL PASSIONS Horses and hunting for vintage furniture and art during my travels GREAT ESCAPES Saint-Tropez and Nantucket CURRENTLY WATCHING Game of Thrones
pizza al fresco
Saint-Tropez
1stdibs
neoclassical spoonback chair
192 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED
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KETEL ONE MARTINI
What vacation is on Edelman’s bucket list? Find out at palmbeachillustrated. com/samedelman
tod’s moccasin
Palm Beach 150 Worth Avenue Unit 113A 470 440 3193 Explore the Akris Boutique at www.akris.ch
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©2015 Cartier
www.cartier.us
CLÉ DE CARTIER New Collection