RESIDE

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THE NEW TEXTILE ARTISTS / INSIDE MAISON SCHIAPARELLI COUNTRY CLUB LIVING / A PARIS PROMENADE

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That Bring You

Welcome TO SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

re·side

To be present, situated, occupy, the place you live

To live in Southern California is truly a unique experience that has long been sought out by many, for the incredible weather, gorgeous landscape, and extraordinary properties.

Paci c Sotheby’s International Realty has helped thousands of buyers realize their dream of owning their special piece of paradise in the San Diego and Orange County markets. By providing exceptional service, in-depth knowledge, and unmatched opportunities, we ensure our clients have the best experience from beginning to end. Our local experts are backed by a truly global network of the nest real estate

professionals in the world. Today, we nd ourselves in one of the most competitive housing markets in the country; and without a doubt, strong representation matters more now than ever before. As a leader in the market, we intimately understand the current real estate dynamics and deploy leading strategies to best service our discerning clients.

We invite you to enjoy this issue of Reside magazine and the inimitable mix of arts, culture, design, and lifestyle that is uniquely Sotheby’s International Realty. It is our hope that the content we’ve curated will serve as an inspiration for the art of living in the place you love.

To reside in Southern California is to love where you live.

Welcome
5228 Chelsea Street, La Jolla, CA Listed by Deborah Greenspan

Up front

06 Travel

Put Provence, Venice and Milan on the agenda to see new subterranean galleries for Etruscan art and an expansion for Europe’s top art destination

08 Luxury

Bauhaus rugs from Christopher Farr; ve black Ferraris at Villa Erba; an anticipated edition of Salone del Mobile

10 This season

An insight into the latest Sotheby’s collaborations, panels, previews and galas

12 Trends

How jewelers are turning their hand to beautiful objects for the home

13 Spirits

Chinese moutai has become the spirit of the moment

14 Architecture

Sensitivity rules for Ferguson & Shamamian and an exceptional renovation in Maine

Features

16 Leveling up

The cohort of women artists breathing new life into contemporary textile art

24 Acquired taste

East Coast tastemakers Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán discuss their manifesto for American elegance

28 Rooted in Africa

Ethiopian-American designer Jomo Tariku is mapping out a modern aesthetic outside the western canon

32 Ahead of the pack

How one couple amassed an astonishing collection of American art and design

36 Happy place

Take a tour of a corner of Paris that boasts a glittering cultural past and equally impressive present

46 Keeping it surreal

As artistic director of Schiaparelli, Daniel Roseberry is keeping the brand founder’s spirit alive, inspired by her collaborations with the stars of Surrealism

52 Thought and feeling

How eastern art and ideas have inspired a sumptuous approach to home decor for gallerist, collector and aesthete Axel Vervoordt and his wife, May

Contents
Photos: Paul Raeside; François Dischinger and Adrian Gaut; Mark Sampson

Reside magazine is published three times per year by Sotheby’s International Realty.

Sotheby’s International Realty

Publisher Kristin Rowe

Cultureshock

Editor Rachel Potts

Editorial Team

Alex McFadyen, Alexander Morrison, Deniz Nazim-Englund

Head of Creative Tess Savina

Art Director Alfonso Iacurci

Designer Ieva Misiukonytė

Production Editor Claire Sibbick

© Sotheby’s International Realty. 2023. Information here within is correct at the time of printing.

Living

58 Extraordinary properties

The gol ng lifestyle and clubhouse living are experiencing a renaissance

65 Gallery

An exclusive collection of extraordinary homes and the exceptional Global Real Estate Advisors who represent them.

2 Waves End, Newport Beach

5
Listed by John Cain
COUNTRY CLUB LIVING A PARIS PROMENADE Spring 2023
Photographed by Chris Snitko at Modern Take Clockwise from top left: The exterior of a house by architects Ferguson & Shamamian, from A House in Maine by Nina Campbell with Giles Kime, published by Rizzoli; The Steenberg Golf Estate, in Cape Town’s Constantia Valley; the New York dining room of Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzman from their book Patina Modern, published by Artisan Books

DESTINATIONS

Escape to the château

About a 30-minute drive from Aix-en-Provence in southern France is the 500-acre wine estate Château La Coste. The Irish businessman Paddy McKillen bought the land in 2002 to create an unmissable destination for wine, art, architecture and gastronomy. Sleek pavilions and galleries designed by Tadao Ando, Frank Gehry and Jean Nouvel complement the original 17th-century buildings, with works by major artists shown throughout the 28-suite luxury hotel Villa La Coste and its grounds.

McKillen is expanding this year, with a new hotel opening on the domaine—La

Ferme at La Coste will o er 76 rooms with a traditional aesthetic. There will be a restaurant and bar alongside a dairy and bakery, complementing the four existing epicurean options on site. The team produces excellent reds and whites in a region that is usually reputed for its rosé.

New artworks are also being installed, with a piece by Prune Nourry to be unveiled this month. Projects by artists and architects including James Turrell and Sou Fujimoto are in development for the future. In April, France’s rst solo show for Nabil Nahas opens in Renzo Piano’s sublime pavilion.

The Lebanese artist is known for his rich surfaces that combine Islamic decoration with organic forms—and occasionally materials including star sh.

These join more than 40 works by Louise Bourgeois, Sophie Calle, Jenny Holzer, Jean-Michel Othoniel, Tracey Emin and others, to view on the site’s art and architecture walk. Maps are available at the art center, the starting point for daily guided tours, but visitors are recommended to go without one.

Up front

Scarpa in the city

St Regis Hotels has added to its global portfolio with a stylish makeover of Venice’s old Europa hotel, located on the Grand Canal opposite the magni cent Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute. The focus is smartly cultural, with commissions by contemporary artists, a cocktail menu inspired by the likes of Helen Frankenthaler and Claude Monet (a guest in 1908) and a spectacular glass chandelier by Ai Weiwei, made in collaboration with Berengo Studio on Murano.

Most impressive is the homage paid to the Venetian architect Carlo Scarpa throughout. Scarpa died in 1978 but lives on in the buildings he designed and restored in Venice and the Veneto. Among the most sensual of Modernists, he celebrated layers of historical detail enhanced by marble, Venetian polished stone, concrete, wood, brass, mosaic and glass.

The redesign plays with his trademark clarity of line and form, and the hotel o ers visitors bespoke tours and visits to his Venetian interventions. Architects adore Scarpa, but most cultivated visitors to the city do not know his work. The St Regis Venice is trying to redress that balance. Phil Allison

Far left: Château La Coste’s Tadao Ando Art Centre.

Left: Inside the St Regis Venice.

Below: The subterranean galleries of the Luigi Rovati Foundation

Underground culture

How can a museum nd more exhibition space for a growing collection in a crowded city? One option is to dig down. Milan’s Luigi Rovati Foundation museum, housed in a grand 19th-century mansion on Corso Venezia, hired Mario Cucinella Architects to build subterranean galleries 14m (46ft) below street level to display its collection of Etruscan art. Three interconnected cave-like spaces, which opened at the end of 2022, add exhibition space for the Foundation’s collection of ancient

cinerary urns, vases, jewelry and bronzes. Above ground, more Etruscan sculptures are shown in dialogue with modern works by artists such as Alberto Giacometti, Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol and Giulio Paolini.

Giovanna Forlanelli, president of the Luigi Rovati Foundation, says: “Visitors expect to see an Etruscan museum, but that’s not the case. We o er unexpected juxtapositions.”

7 Reside — Spring 2023
Photos: © Tadao Ando Chateau La Coste/Andrew Pattman; Courtesy of The St. Regis Venice; Courtesy of Foundation Luigi Rovati and Mario Cucinella Architects/Duccio Malagamba.

LUXURY

A need for speed

In 1984, Ferrari launched the Testarossa, a 12-cylinder mid-engine supercar, which became a beloved model and was featured prominently in the popular TV series Miami Vice. On 20 May, a rare single-owner collection of ve black Ferrari Testarossas and 512s with black leather interiors will be featured in Sotheby’s marquee Villa Erba sale.

The biennial sale is returning to the stunning waterside of Lake Como, Italy after a three-year hiatus. It is being organized in collaboration with the vintage and classic car event Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este, which takes place annually in Cernobbio.

The collection is led by the 1996 Ferrari F512 M—the nal model of the Testarossa powered by a at-12 Testarossa engine, which can achieve 434 horsepower. Other featured Testarossas include a 1986 ‘Monospecchio’, a 1987 ‘Monodado’ and a 1989 model, as well as the much-rarer 1992 Ferrari 512 TR —a direct redesign of the classic silhouette that is 100lb lighter than its predecessor and is able to achieve speeds of up to 195mph.

Car specialist Stephen Knobloch says, “Black Ferraris are not only fewer in number, but it is also a color that gives Ferraris a highly purposeful look. For me, a black

Testarossa is the ultimate speci cation, and these ve cars present a rare opportunity.”

Other highlights include an innovative 4x4 twin-engine o -road Citroën 2CV Sahara. Elsewhere in Europe, the annual 24 Hours of Le Mans sports car endurance race is the most highly anticipated event of its kind. This year, it turns 100. To celebrate, RM Sotheby’s is hosting an auction on the track itself. Held in partnership with Le Mans and the Automobile Club de l’Ouest, it will feature 24 cars, including a 1984 Lancia LC2, which appeared in the race that year, and is estimated at €2.2–2.4 million. Deniz Nazim-Englund

Up front

Salone’s return lights up Milan

For serious collectors and creators, Salone del Mobile—the comprehensive showcase of new lifestyle products and ideas—is the year’s foremost event. The 2023 edition of the Milan fair, running from 18–23 April, includes the return of the lighting exhibition Euroluce after a four-year hiatus. For art enthusiasts who arrive in the city early, the modern and contemporary art fair MiArt

will run from 14–16 April and display artworks that straddle several genres and periods. Coinciding with both events, Sotheby’s Milan will present highlights from its Contemporary Auction from 15–19 April at Palazzo Serbelloni, located between the districts of Porta Venezia and Brera — the beating heart of Milanese design.

Bringing back Bauhaus

Sotheby’s is partnering with contemporary interiors brand Christopher Farr for the auction house’s global Classic Design sales, which kick o in March with an exhibition in the New York galleries. Continuing the legacy of the pioneering women textile artists of the Bauhaus, Christopher Farr has created a series of exclusive wallpapers, textiles and rugs translated from original artworks of Anni Albers—produced in association with the Albers Foundation—and rugs by her mentor Gunta Stölzl. Both are considered to be among the most in uential textile artists of the 20th century, despite Stölzl not receiving as much fame as her trainee. Christopher Farr co-founder Matthew Bourne says:

“She was the rst and only female Master at the Bauhaus—no mean feat in that era.” These designs will form the backdrop for the sale series’ global preview exhibitions and will be displayed in the Story Café in Sotheby’s London headquarters until mid-May.

Christopher Farr has a long history of working with artists and their estates— most recently collaborating with Sotheby’s and wildlife charity WWF UK and Artwise Curators on the exhibition Tomorrow’s Tigers, which featured specially commissioned art rugs designed by artists such as Ai Weiwei, Peter Doig and Rose Wylie. ML

Reside — Spring 2023
Clockwise from left: A 1992 Ferrari 512 TR; lighting exhibition Euroluce; an installation view of Anni Albers’ Child’s Check wallpaper in Grass Photos: Christopher Horwood; courtesy of Salone del Mobile/Diego Ravier.

THIS SEASON

Record-breaking results at the Hospices de Beaune

On 20 November, Sotheby’s held its annual Hospices de Beaune wine auction in the saleroom at the Halles de Beaune in Burgundy. The 162nd edition of the charity sale raised €31 million – more than twice its previous record and the highest total for a charity wine auction. The seven-hour sale was attended by about 700 people in person, online and on the phone. The proceeds were donated to the two organizations that were supported in 2022: Team Margot, which provides support to the families of children su ering with cancer, and World Vision, which aims to protect vulnerable children around the world.

Old Master paintings get a new scent

This winter, Lyn Harris, founder of Perfumer H, co-hosted an intimate collectors dinner for 35 guests at Sotheby’s London ahead of the Old Masters Evening Auction on 7 December. Harris partnered with Sotheby’s on a series of exclusive candles in containers by glassblower Michael Ruh, inspired by works from the Juan Manuel Grasset collection. The collection contained works by Old Master painters including Jan Brueghel the Elder and Jan Davidsz de Heem. Each candle –Bird and Lemon, Rose with Insects and

Smoke in Woods – was created in response to a painting. Smoke in Woods, for example, mimics a distant re in Abraham Govaerts’ A wooded river landscape with travellers and peasants on a path, men in a boat and a village beyond. During the dinner, Harris spoke on the inspirations behind her candles and her creative process.

10 Up front
Left: Presidents of the 162nd Hospices de Beaune auction, Flavie Flament and Benoit Magimel. Below: Lyn Harris presenting to guests at a Collector’s Dinner at Sotheby’s London

A royal visit to the Queen’s Green Canopy exhibition

In December, the Princess Royal visited The Queen’s Green Canopy Ancient Woodlands and Trees exhibition at Sotheby’s London. Her Royal Highness was there to view the magni cent artworks of the Ancient Canopy – consisting of a nationwide network of ancient trees and woodlands – dedicated to the late Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth to mark the Platinum Jubilee. Her Royal Highness met the exceptionally talented artists – nature

photographers Adrian Houston and Charles Sainsbury-Plaice and artist Mary Anne Aytoun-Ellis – who were involved in capturing the ancient trees and woodlands across the UK. Works from the public exhibition are now available to purchase through The Tree Art Gallery, with a donation from each sale going to support the Queen’s Green Canopy nationwide tree planting initiative. Visit thetreeartgallery.com

The Extraordinary Life of M aka Michael Chow

On 21 November, Sotheby’s Talks held a panel on “The Extraordinary Life of M aka Michael Chow” at the London o ces for its Modern British and Irish Art Week.

Frances Christie, deputy chairman of Sotheby’s UK, moderated the conversation with Jacob Twyford, senior director at Waddington Custot, in which M discussed making work in the late 1950s and 1960s, his early friendships with artists Peter Blake and Richard Lin and the abstract paintings that he creates today. The anonymous conceptual artist Pandemonia was among the high-pro le attendees at the event, which is available to stream at sothebys.com.

De ning the future of American art

A panel exploring the de nition of American art was held at Sotheby’s New York on 15 November.

Journalist Derek Blasberg moderated the discussion and panelists included Alice L Walton, founder of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and Art Bridges Foundation; Paul R. Provost, chief executive of Art Bridges Foundation; Linda C Harrison, director and chief executive of The Newark Museum of Art; Charles Stewart, Sotheby’s chief executive; and Hank Willis Thomas, artist and co-founder of For Freedoms.

The conversation emphasized the importance of questioning the boundaries of the category, and also explored new approaches to collecting and exhibiting artworks made in the US.

11 Reside — Spring 2023
Clockwise from above: Derek Blasburg, Alice Walton, Paul R Provost, Linda Harrison, Charles F Stewart and Hank Willis Thomas at the Expanding Access to American Art panel; The Princess Royal with landscape painter Mary Anne Aytoun Ellis; M aka Michael Chow speaking at the panel in Sotheby’s London

TRENDS

Jewelers branch out

From classic heritage labels to contemporary brands, designers turn to adorning houses as well as customers

Although di erent in scale, jewelry and homeware are both mainstay adornments that come to de ne us, and are often charged with sentimental value. As such, it is not surprising that jewelers will often try their hand at creating homeware.

Since its founding in 1847, Cartier has supplied stylish objects for the home, such as a practical inkstand and desk clock from 1908 in beautiful lilac enamel with diamond and sapphire details. To celebrate the successful moon landing mission in 1969, the rm produced a gold, lacquer and enamel replica of the “Eagle” module used by the Apollo 11 astronauts. Today, Cartier customers can nd dainty musical boxes or a panther-shaped piggy bank.

The Italian ne jewelry brand Buccellati has long presented re ned silverware—or, as creative director Andrea Buccellati says, “been involved in the Art de la Table world”. At Milan Design Week 2022, the brand unveiled a new collaboration with the historic Florentine porcelain manufacturer Ginori 1735, and the resulting collection “has been crucial to o er a complete range of tableware articles with a true Buccellati style,” says Buccellati. The range continues the Double Rouche decorative motif of repeated curves, which appears across the brand’s jewelry and silver table accessories.

Homeware also provides jewelers with a larger canvas for their craft. Brazilian designer Silvia Furmanovich—whose fresh aesthetic is created using the wood marquetry

technique across jewelry—has extended her range to homeware.

At PAD London in fall 2022, Furmanovich presented mirrors and jewelry boxes made using her signature technique, featuring evocative nocturnal skies and natural motifs. Furmanovich’s output also extends to stools and tables.

The Greek jeweler Lito has had a successful collaboration with US-based artisanal homeware brand L’Objet. The line includes vases, trays, bookends, and more, bearing Lito’s distinct evil eye motif. Jewel-bright porcelain plates feature resin and gold detailing, and a bronze magnifying glass is inlaid with resin “lashes”.

For Paris-born, London-based jewelry designer Anissa Kermiche, homeware has become a solid second pillar for her brand after intense online interest during lockdowns in the pandemic. Her wares are all infused with her tongue-in-cheek humor, from the Breast Friend vase, which takes the form of a female bust, to the Can Candlestick (pictured left), in the shape of two dancing legs.

For Kermiche, the transition was a no-brainer: “It is jewelry for the house.” ML

12 Up front
Left, from top: Can Candlesticks and Breast Friend vase, both by Anissa Kermiche; bronze magnifying glass from L’Objet’s collaboration with Lito; stool and jewelry box, both by Silvia Furmanovich

SPIRITS

Tasting tips

What should I look out for when buying moutai?

Seek expert advice for rarer bottles and buy from a reputable source, as counterfeit bottles are widespread. Check that the seal is clean and intact; because the bottle is opaque, weighing it is the best way to discover any loss through evaporation or leakage, especially with older bottles.

How should I serve it?

Toast of the town

As Chinese baijiu gains popularity in the west, the spirit is becoming a real contender against whisky and cognac at auction. Here’s the lowdown on moutai, its refined iteration

The world’s most popular spirit is not, as you might expect, whisky. Nor is it vodka, rum, tequila or gin. It is actually baijiu—made primarily from the cereal grain sorghum but also from rice, wheat, millet and maize—and it accounts for around 40% of the alcohol market in China. In 2021, it generated sales of $86.5 billion, more than every other spirit combined.

Just like the nest whiskies and cognacs, baijiu can command stratospheric prices at auction: a 24-bottle case of “Sun Flower”

Kweichow Moutai from 1974, for example, sold at Sotheby’s London in 2021 for £1 million.

There are several varieties within the baijiu market, based on style and origin. Some are very prestigious indeed, and none more so than moutai (also spelt maotai), which has to come from a designated area around the town of Maotai, Guizhou province,

southwest China. “If you think of baijiu as brandy, then moutai is like cognac [a re ned, barrel-aged brandy named after the region in which it is produced],” explains Paul Wong, Sotheby’s head of wine and spirits, China. “The brand we see in auction houses, Kweichow Moutai, is on the level of Hennessy XO or above.”

So, what does it taste like?

It has a avor pro le unlike anything that a drinker of western spirits will have previously encountered. Wong explains that moutai has notes of “mushrooms and umami-rich soy sauce” and it ts into the saucefragrance category of baijiu. (The strong-fragrance variety is more fruity and oral.)

He adds: “Typical notes on the palate might include aromas of pear drops or even nail polish remover and a long, earthy, pungent nish.” Bill Knott

Above: “Sun Flower”

Kweichow Moutai.

Below: Friends toasting with baijiu

Serve moutai at room temperature in small, tulipshaped glasses. Common baijiu is usually consumed in glazed cups lled to the brim—and often downed in one amid a raucous chorus of “gānbēi!” (“dry cup”). However, rare, high-priced moutai deserves a little more respect, so sni ng and sipping it is perfectly acceptable.

What food goes well with moutai?

Wong takes his lead from Guizhou’s local cuisine, “which is often salty, spicy and quite rustic, and goes very well with the local spirit,” he says. “Moutai is strong, so it can easily overwhelm delicate food, but it is becoming popular throughout Asia to partner spicy dishes, and it is even starting to crop up in cocktails.”

13 Reside — Spring 2023
Photos: Courtesy of Anissa Kermiche; Courtesy of L’Objet; Courtesy of Silvia Furmanovich; Anton Hazewinkel/Alamy Stock Photo.

ARCHITECTURE

Blending in

An estate in Maine has been given a new lease of life—in a truly traditional style—thanks to the sensitive efforts of architects

There could not be a more perfect spot for happy family vacations than this 350-acre estate in Maine, set in a deep cove overlooking two miles of ocean shoreline. Three generations relished sailing, swimming, and picnicking under their favorite tree, though the white clapboard house—built for the family in 1910, in the Greek Revival style—became somewhat dilapidated; there were no showers, and work needed doing. So the family’s fourth generation called in award-winning architects Ferguson & Shamamian to set the house to rights and preserve it for future generations.

The practice, founded in 1988, is known for its thoughtful, traditional approach to design, and for its sensitive response to regional architectural character. “We try not to put our ego or personal stamp on a project,” says partner Scott Sottile, who led the team. “We shy away from doing anything that feels discordant.”

The family wanted to be out of the house for just one summer, so work began with the farm buildings on the estate. Local inspections of old barns provided inspiration, and an existing ancient farm wall was taken apart. “We looked at how its stones had been laid and copied that for the farm buildings,” says Sottile. These, while looking suitably bucolic, house a tennis pavilion, a pool house with guest rooms and the Play House: a gym and bowling alley that converts into a nightclub.

As you enter the estate, you drive through an orchard and farmland, weaving through woods that lead to a stream with a stone bridge—its design was inspired by the bridges constructed as new byways through the Acadia National Park by John D Rockefeller Jr as a gift to the inhabitants of Maine.

14 Up front

“To get the DNA of the house, we salvaged all we could of the old building and stored the pieces in a warehouse so we could exactly replicate its details, including the clapboard exterior, the millwork on the pillared porch and the yellow cedar shingles on the roof—now nicely weathered, which are traditional to this part of Maine,” says Sottile. The old house was torn down, its footprint moved 12ft for a better view of the ocean and enlarged to 20,000 sq ft.

The “picnic tree” was, of course, carefully preserved, and distinguished landscape architect Deborah Nevins gave the estate an air of having developed slowly over time. Elegant interiors by British designer Nina Campbell are celebrated in a new book, A House in Maine Campbell reprises her role as the designer of London members’ club Annabel’s with the Play House, which, by night, is entered through a traditional British telephone box, painted purple—simply dial 007.

Ferguson & Shamamian undertakes the same intense research for projects in sunnier climates; in Florida, Texas or California, the initial inspiration might be a Tuscan villa or a Provencal Mas. “Our work is rooted in history. It is important

To the farm

to give everything the appropriate level of attention,” says Sottile. “So it feels like a piece of art.” Elfreda Pownall

Collaborations: Architecture, Interiors, Landscapes: Ferguson & Shamamian Architects by David Masello and A House in Maine by Nina Campbell (Rizzoli) are out now

Look out over the High Peaks of Maine from this gorgeous compound in the west of the state, set on 308 acres. Windledge Farm features a 4,500 sq ft main house designed by renowned architect Frank Robinson, in homage to Frank Lloyd Wright, and is a perfect retreat for those seeking serenity and privacy. Equine enthusiasts are served by a handsome stable, with state of the art facilities and second- oor living quarters with expansive views. Outdoors there are paddocks, large turnout pastures, acres of hay pasture and access to miles of trails.

Freeman Twp, Maine $5,800,000 sothebysrealty.com/id/LD2WS9

Legacy Properties Sotheby’s International Realty

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Photos: Courtesy of Ferguson & Shamamian. Clockwise from far left: The façade of the estate; the garden fountain; the living area of 402 Baker Hill Road

LEVELING UP

A new generation of women is putting textile art back on the map. Design writer Emma Crichton-Miller investigates the genre’s resurgence

Mary Little, Anderson (from The Double Series), 2022

When the powerful traveled in pomp between the windswept castles and drafty churches of medieval and Renaissance Europe, tapestries were the preeminent visual art form. Weavers in Flanders and France produced portable masterpieces from the cartoons of leading artists, including Raphael and Peter Paul Rubens. When Henry VIII’s collection of more than 2,450 tapestries was valued for sale during the English Civil War, many were priced at thousands of pounds, well beyond the value of any other item in the inventory.

Since then, textiles have slipped down the hierarchy of art forms. As houses have become warmer, paintings and sculpture have generally taken center stage as decorative and cultural objects. Textiles became synonymous with carpets, curtains and clothing. However, the past century has seen a resurgence of interest among artists in textiles as a creative medium, largely led by women.

When German Bauhaus student Anni Albers was diverted to weaving from glasswork and painting, she transformed the potential and reputation of thread. She fled Nazi Germany in 1933, traveling with her artist husband Josef to the USA, and was honored in 1949 with a show at MoMA (Museum of Modern Art) in New York—the first solo exhibition for a textile artist. As she wrote in her 1971 book On Designing, “Besides surface qualities, such as rough and smooth, dull and shiny, hard and soft, textile also includes color, and, as the dominating element, texture, which is the result of the construction of weaves. Like any craft, it may end in producing useful objects, or it may rise to the level of art.” Her compelling explorations of the limits of the medium take their place in the history of 20th-century abstract art.

Albers became a key figure in the evolving American Fiber art movement, which included pioneering figures such as Claire Zeisler, who produced towering sculptures from knotted and braided threads, and the influential Lenore Tawney, whose free-form installations subverted the typical weaving grid to create fluid patterns. The movement peaked in the 1980s, but an Albers retrospective at London’s Tate Modern in 2018 was just one sign of revived interest in her legacy.

In Europe, meanwhile, Polish sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz, barred from exhibiting her paintings by the Communist leadership for failing to conform to the Socialist Realist style, was offered a place to work in the studio of weaver Maria Laszkiewicz. She went on to develop groundbreaking 3D works called Abakans, made from coarse sisal, a plant fiber used to make rope and carpets. Initially confusing to critics and collectors, these powerful sculptures, with their enveloping dimensions and visceral textures, have come to be appreciated as fine art. In a 2010 interview, Abakanowicz said: “The Abakans irritated people. They came at the wrong time. In fabric, it was the French tapestry; in art, Pop art and Conceptual art; and here was a huge, magical thing.” In 2016, Abakan Rouge III, 1971, sold for nearly €75,000 at an auction in Poland, while a major Abakanowicz retrospective is taking place at Tate Modern until May 21.

LIKE ANY CRAFT, TEXTILE MAY END IN PRODUCING USEFUL OBJECTS, OR IT MAY RISE TO THE LEVEL OF ART
Photos: Mary Little Studio; The Estate of Magdalena Abakanowicz and Marlborough Gallery; Courtesy of Bea Bonafini/Bosse & Baum; Cecilia Charlton;
Leveling up
Artiq; © Fundacja Marty Magdaleny Abakanowicz Kosmowskiej i Jana Kosmowskiego, Warsaw; Courtesy of the artist and Spazio Nobile/spazionobile.com Bea Bona ni, Slick Submissions, 2018, installed at the Palazzo Monti in Brescia, Italy. Left: Magdalena Abakanowicz Cecilia Charlton, Somerset [passage of time, sunset], 2021

Contemporaries of Abakanowicz are also finding new fame. Olga de Amaral, who lives and works in Bogotá, produces shimmering gold textiles, partly inspired by the pre-Columbian examples that also influenced Albers, as well as mixed-media hanging works and floor sculptures combining wool and horse hair, linen, gesso, and acrylic paint. She was the focus of the recent touring exhibition Olga de Amaral: To Weave a Rock , which began at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston before moving to Michigan’s Cranbrook Art Museum in 2021. Through their intensity, her works re ect the focus and time required to create them. She has said: “As I build these surfaces, I create spaces of meditation, contemplation and reflection… Tapestry, fibers, strands, units, cords, all are transparent layers with their own meanings, revealing and hiding each other to make one presence, one tone that speaks about the texture of time.”

Sheila Hicks, meanwhile, studied under Josef Albers at Yale and, aged 84, she delighted audiences at the 2017 Venice Biennale with her mountain of multicolored balls of yarn in the former Arsenale. She says: “Textile is a universal language. In all cultures of the world, textile is a crucial and essential component.” As she points out, the expressive power of the medium is embedded in our language; both text and textile trace their etymology to the Latin word “texere”—to weave.

Behind these pioneers there is a new generation of artists drawn to textile for its potential to communicate. Jacqueline Surdell, who trained as a painter, works with heavy cotton rope and brightly colored yachting cord to create wall sculptures. Building them is physically demanding: she uses her body as a weaving shuttle, carrying kilos of industrial weft in and out of the warp. While her works honor the history of industrial labor in her home city of Chicago, they also explore social constructs. Surdell says she is influenced by “iconic feminist artists who were using textile to question gender binaries and things like that”. These include Harmony Hammond, co-founder of New York’s first women’s cooperative art gallery in New York, and the Indian artist Mrinalini Mukherjee, whose biomorphic forms in hemp and jute often evoke unconventional sexualities.

New York-based Sagarika Sundaram similarly tackles cultural shifts and new identities. Using raw natural fiber and dyes, she engages with the past and present of felted textiles in Central Asian nomadic culture. Her handmade forms often mirror those found in nature, from blood vessels to rivers. She began her career at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad, western India, where design was embedded in social awareness. Today, Sundaram combines commercial work—on rugs, for instance—with her fine art practice (on show in Narrative Threads: Fiber Art Today at Houston’s Moody Center for the Arts until May 13). The difference is that “art opens up questions, it opens up a conversation. It’s almost a probe, a gesture that creates a space for something around it,” she says.

In London, the Royal College of Art (RCA) has emerged as an important center for experimentation with textiles. Like Sundaram, Northern Irish artist

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Mary Little trained in design—specifically furniture. After a move to California, she now works with cut-and-stitched, unbleached cotton canvas to craft evocative pleated and curved hangings. Their pockets of light echo the hills of her native island. Also in London, American Cecilia Charlton enrolled on the RCA’s painting MA in 2018, though it was in embroidery and weaving that she found the most fertile outlet for her interests. Charlton’s layered pieces call on the history of formal abstraction, folk pattern, math, and the cosmos.

Italian artist Bea Bonafini enrolled on the same course in 2014—“to react to the painting world”—and was encouraged to be interdisciplinary. “I had performance, food, and textiles. I had machines from the fashion department. I was getting into ceramics, I was painting on leather. I was making sculptures out of salty bread dough and staining them. I was trying to figure out how to manipulate materials in different ways and not narrow myself down,” she says. Most recently, she has been working with commercially produced domestic carpets, creating densely allusive images using an inlay technique. She is fascinated by the transformation of her material, “because it goes from being something with a horizontal surface to a vertical surface, from something that could be domestic to something of the fine arts—elevating it to this other realm”. 0

Emma Crichton-Miller writes about art, craft and design

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Clockwise from top left: Cecilia Charlton in her studio; Jacqueline Surdell, Melancholy of Always: Sunset in the Rockies (after Albert Bierstadt) (detail), 2020; Magdalena Abakanowicz, Brown Textile 21 (Tkanina 21 brązowa), 1963

ACQUIRED TASTE

Don’t be scared of using black” is one tip in Patina Modern , a new book by Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán that sets out nine principles for designing “warm, timeless interiors”. Their instructions are clear, attainable and sometimes a little offbeat: “Take a bird’s-eye view of the room,” is another. The couple talk readers through their own taste, and the covetable interiors of their houses in Brooklyn and Long Island, though neither trained as interior designers, and they describe themselves as auto-didacts. Guzmán, an editor, has long worked with America’s chief lifestyle experts Martha Stewart and Oprah Winfrey, and Mitchell is also from a publishing background. (“Our first love is storytelling: magazines and content,” he says.) Their skill lies in mixing their refined lifestyle with chatty, upbeat and forthright advice. Do the couple ever break their own rules? “All the time,” says Mitchell. “But I would liken them to the rules of grammar. You can break ’em if you know ’em. And the thing that separates people who are a little at sea with interior design, and people who knowingly veer, is taste.”

In Patina Modern , they set out to make anyone—even those who might feel at sea—think they can achieve such nebulous ambitions as “taste” and “style”, with a few simple rules.

Guzmán grew up in LA in an artistic family and a house full of antiques. She describes waking at dawn to be first at the flea market and taking out a subscription to Architectural Digest at the age of eight. Mitchell, who says he is a “modernist by instinct” grew up “in the most conventional of American homes”. “Then we arrived at something in our intersection,” says Guzmán.

“‘Good taste’ has been democratized with social media,” she adds. To counter blandness, they advise us to expand our design knowledge and hone our eyes by pursuing curiosities, accumulating what Mitchell calls “rabbit-holes of discovery”.

What are their current obsessions?

“Sixties lighting that I would describe as ‘soviet bureaucracy’”, says Mitchell. “Nineteenthcentury geometric rugs,” says Guzmán.

But in Mitchell and Guzmán’s world, every object is given space to breathe. The one trend they avoid is maximalism: the piled-on clutter and pattern-upon-pattern so fashionable in

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Left: With neutrals reinforced in the couple’s New York dining room, black accents in Arne Jacobsen chairs and a David Weeks chandelier punctuate the space. Right: Earth tones feature throughout
How one stylish couple created a recipe book for successful interiors. It involves embracing the wine spills
Photos: Excerpted from Patina Modern by Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzman (Artisan Books), © 2022, photographs by François Dischingerand Adrian Gaut Clockwise from right: In the Bridgehampton kitchen, a minimalist Gaggenau cooktop and sink t into the island and fridges hide behind panels; Chris Mitchell and Pilar Guzmán; A shallow, hanging oak credenza saves space below mirrors by Uno & Östen Kristiansson; Patinated leather on an Arne Jacobsen Swan chair in the New York living room, where a framed boro textile fragment counters the ornate pier mirror

recent years. “A lot of Americans have taken cues from the UK, and the layering in ancestral homes,” says Guzmán. “It’s a harder thing to manufacture in the US in a meaningful way, and our eyes have gotten a little tired of it. I think it has run its course, especially in the American adaptation.”

“There’s a terrific quote by [US architecture critic] Paul Goldberger,” says Mitchell. “He says the problem with humor in architecture is that the joke gets old but the building remains. And that’s true in interior design. Exuberant florals are super fun. But you might get tired. Our approach is to have fun, absolutely. But do it with accessories. Change is easier.”

“Or in a smaller room, like a powder room,” Guzmán suggests.

The book’s title refers to the couple’s guiding principle to mix old and new: sharp, sculptural ceiling lights with art deco brass side-lamps, say, or custom leather banquettes with curvilinear, Victorian woodwork. It is not an entirely original trick, but they had to learn it themselves, the result of years of trial and error over several renovation projects.

They also advise learning to live with patina—the scars and the imperfections that showcase the history of a home: scuffs on furniture legs, spilled-wine splotches on leather upholstery, the torn edges of a framed vintage poster. They even suggest buying broken or damaged antiques and collectibles, to be restored if necessary.

Guzmán and Mitchell’s book is an admirable attempt to transcend the fleeting trends and advice of the digital age with a set of solid, consistent principles. It is, I suggest, a design book that follows a cookery book format. “That was our inspiration!” says Mitchell.

“Imagine if cookbooks showed only perfect photographs of food without recipes,” he says. “Many interior books are like that: they give you rooms and houses but don’t give you the formula to get there. We insist on utility.” 0 Helen Barrett writes about architecture, design and the arts

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“ OUR EYES HAVE GOTTEN A LITTLE TIRED OF MAXIMALISM. I THINK IT HAS RUN ITS COURSE ”

Africa ROOTED IN

Industrial designer Jomo Tariku is rewriting the rulebook for African design in the western context. Vaishnavi Nayel Talawadekar finds out more

Growing up in Ethiopia in the 1970s, Jomo Tariku was always surrounded by beautiful things. His father—a US-educated colonel in the Ethiopian army, designated the first military attaché to Kenya—collected glassware, furniture, rugs, and objets d’art, acquired on his travels in Africa and beyond.

“I believe that left a lasting impression on me and what I do now for a living,” says the industrial designer, who was born in Nairobi and is now based in Virginia. At the behest of his father (who wanted to keep his two sons out of trouble), Tariku did a summer apprenticeship with a local furniture builder in Addis Ababa before moving to the US in 1987 to pursue a degree in industrial design at the University of Kansas. While he was completing his thesis on contemporary African furniture, he began developing his own design practice. But it took 30 years for the world to take notice.

“In 1992, I knew I had the daunting task of trying to change an industry that mostly celebrated the western ideals of design, or defined works from Africa as those meeting only stereotypical definitions: animal prints, leopard skins, masks,” Tariku says. At the time, he adds, African design was treated as a novelty, “like that one mask or stool you could put in the corner as a signature piece”, rather than a concept to apply across a full interior. Today, the output of his company, Jomo Furniture, borrows not from westernized tropes, but his cultural heritage—often East Africa, specifically. The MeQuamya chair evokes a T-shaped prayer staff used in Ethiopian Orthodox church ceremonies, while the Boraatii stool reimagines the wooden headrest often found in the Oromia region, used to preserve intricate hairstyles (boraati in Oromiffaa means “tomorrow-you”). The shape of the Nyala chair is an homage to the East African mountain antelope, and the Mukecha stool is inspired by a mortar and pestle.

Though contemporary in its aesthetic, Tariku’s visual cues often reflect the traditions of anonymous artisans from Africa, who make homeware for their communities. “They are my unsung heroes,” he says. “They dissociate with the western sense of branding, so I can’t attach a name to their creations.” In contrast, naming his pieces after things that inspire him is a way for him to encourage future owners to learn more about the story behind the designs, beyond his own interpretation. The Ashanti stool, for example, is named after the ancient Ashanti Kingdom of Ghana. “Maybe they will gain knowledge I did not communicate or simply don’t know,” says Tariku.

When a furniture-making enterprise that Tariku started in 2005 did not take off, he segued temporarily into a full-time job as a data scientist at the World Bank, all the while sketching and modeling in his spare time. His watershed moment came when a dozen of his Watatu stools were ordered for the set of Black Panther: Wakanda Forev er, Marvel Studios’ 2022 superhero sequel set in a fictional sub-Saharan country. Marvel

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Left: Jomo Tariku’s Nyala chair in the online exhibition Provenanced, curated by New York design brand TRNK in 2020; Above: The Qwanta Totem Chair

clearly found Tariku’s pieces a fitting addition to the afrofuturist aesthetic developed by production designer Hannah Beachler, the first African-American woman to win an Oscar in her category. The studio later included the black Nyala chair and Mukecha stool.

The movie catapulted him into the limelight but, even then, Tariku was troubled. For years he’d suspected that his slow rise to success was due to being a person of color. In 2019, he decided to test this theory by calculating the number of Black designers being licensed and branded by the 150-plus most prominent furniture companies in the US. Of the 4,417 collections he considered, only 14 were by Black designers—less than 1%. In late 2018, he co-founded the Black Artists and Designers Guild, a nonprofit organization devoted to advancing a community of Black makers in creative industries, as a reaction to the lack of minority-led design in the west. This enterprise led his work to gain wider currency, and left him confident enough to work on Jomo Furniture full-time.

Tariku’s focus now is on designing functional, artistic seating and, though artisanal heritage is key, his work has a sleek modernity. He uses computer modeling to finesse concepts, a practice underscored in Craft In The Laboratory at the Mint Museum, North Carolina, in which he appears. “3D modeling helps get the first prototype right,” says the designer, who is represented by Wexler Gallery. His work is also on show as part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s display Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room , co-curated by Beachler. The exhibit is a fictional room owned by an imagined African-American resident of Seneca Village, a predominantly Black neighborhood that was razed in 1857 to create Central Park. It represents how the room may have looked in the 19th century, how it might look now, and in a time yet to come.

Tariku’s own future looks bright—his work appears in the permanent collections of LACMA, the Denver Art Museum and the Baltimore Museum of Art, with the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture to follow this year. He is currently on the hunt for a space to create larger pieces, such as tables and bookcases, after his high-end seating collections were exhibited by Wexler Gallery at Design Miami in December 2022. Every piece sold out. “The attention is well-deserved, and Jomo is definitely a designer to watch,” says the gallery’s owner, Lewis Wexler, adding: “He is tireless in his pursuit of creating an equal playing field for designers of color.”

Recent attention has led Tariku to wonder whether his designs might be a passing preoccupation. But more museums are dedicating funds to incorporate Black art and, by extension, Black design into their permanent collections. Tariku is certain that this will improve representation of Black designers and under-served communities on the global stage, as well as encouraging young designers to consider it as a viable career. “If my fears are not realized, I see a day where the western design canon will embrace us as part of the conversation.”

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Vaishnavi Nayel Talawadekar is a journalist based in New Delhi
JOMO IS TIRELESS IN HIS PURSUIT OF CREATING AN EQUAL PLAYING FIELD FOR DESIGNERS OF COLOR ”
Photos: Jomo Tariku; Julia Lehman Photography; Courtesy of Wexler Gallery. Clockwise from far left: the Meedo Chair; the Mukecha Stool, which appeared in Marvel’s Black Panther: Wakanda Forever in 2022; the Nyala Chair, which also featured in the movie William Merritt Chase, In the Studio, 1892, displayed above the Wolfs’ mantelpiece. Below right: Erving and Joyce Wolf

AHEAD of the PACK

The Wolf Family Collection, coming to auction this spring, celebrates American creativity and one couple’s extraordinary eye for detail

Erving and Joyce Wolf lived the American Dream to the fullest. He was a young man from Cheyenne, Wyoming, and she was a girl from Brooklyn, New York, when they met in Denver, the summer of 1951. Seventeen days later—after she proposed—they were married. Over the next 66 years, they assembled a collection that celebrates American design and craftsmanship from the 18th to the 20th century. When Sotheby’s offers The Wolf Family Collection: The Spirit of America this April, it will be the most important auction of its kind to date.

Spanning painting, sculpture and decorative arts, this is a sale filled with “legendary treasures”, says Jodi Pollack, Sotheby’s senior vice president and co-worldwide head, 20th century design, and is estimated to realize in excess of $50 million. It ranges from the greatest examples of colonial furniture and bronzes by Paul Manship, to art nouveau silver by the Gorham Manufacturing Company, paintings by Winslow Homer and jewelry by Van Cleef & Arpels.

Brief as their courtship was, the Wolfs’ partnership was enduring. After a quick trip to Brooklyn for their wedding, they returned the following day to Cheyenne, where their three children were born. Erving—who had served as an officer in the Navy while stationed in Guam during the Second World War, then earned a law degree from Northwestern University—set his sights on the oil and gas industry. His discoveries (including Wyoming’s 200-million-barrel Hilight Oil Field and its four-trillion cubic-foot Madden Gas Field) became the stuff of legend.

Meanwhile, Joyce put her boots on. She was instrumental in building and overseeing the couple’s vast cattle ranch in Ridgway, Colorado, where the family continued to spend summers after they relocated to New York City.

As they began their life together in the American West, the couple’s collecting journey began close to home. They acquired rugs, pottery and jewelry from trading posts in the Four Corners region, the rugged meeting point between Colorado, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico, and home to Navajo, Ute, Hopi and Zuni tribal nations. Propelled by curiosity, the Wolfs later broadened their scope to include every aspect of American art and design. With their three children often in tow, the family became fixtures in Sotheby’s salerooms. Nearly every weekend, they could be found scouring New York’s 26th Street Flea Market for hidden gems.

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“My parents both had incredible collecting genes. When they saw something of beauty, they respected it and often purchased it,” their son Mathew explains. “They didn’t have to look to other countries, because they saw the exquisite things that Americans produced. Their collection encompasses the history and talent of America.”

The Wolf Family Collection will be offered in a series of landmark single-owner live and online sales at Sotheby’s New York. These start with an evening sale on 19 April, The Spirit of America , showcasing a selection of the Collection’s masterworks in fine art, sculpture, furniture, Chinese export porcelain, silver and 20th-century design.

The paintings acquired by the Wolfs are exceptional. There are quintessential works by the preeminent portraitists of federal America, Gilbert Stuart and John Singleton Copley; majestic landscapes by Hudson River School artists Worthington Whittredge and Sanford Robinson Gifford; Impressionistic pictures by artists who drew on European influences, such as Winslow Homer and John La Farge; and protean examples of American Modernism by Charles Demuth and Maurice B Prendergast. The centerpiece of this treasure trove is In the Studio, executed in 1892 by Impressionist William Merritt Chase. It depicts the artist’s wife in his summer studio on Long Island. Showing a sumptuous tapestry and items of silver and bronze, the richly decorated space that he depicts highlights the artist’s success by this point in his career.

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From left: Greene and Greene, lantern from the Robert R Blacker House, Pasadena, California in the Wolfs’ library; Chinese exports “Tiger and Fox Hunt” punch bowl, circa 1775, and a pair of “Landscape” urns and covers, circa 1780, on a Chippendale Serpentine chest of drawers, circa 1790, on display in the Wolfs’ home

Erving and Joyce Wolf also gathered furniture by the finest makers of their time, including the Gibbs Family Chippendale Block-and-Shell Carved Mahogany Kneehole Bureau Table, circa 1770. Expertly carved in Newport, Rhode Island, it is one of the very best examples of its form. Descended through five generations of the Gibbs family, the piece has only ever been offered at auction once before, when it was last sold at Sotheby’s 40 years ago.

In the earliest years of the American art and design market, the Wolfs had the vision and foresight to acquire some of the most defining and historically important works ever created by artist Louis Comfort Tiffany, plus architects Frank Lloyd Wright and Greene and Greene, who were heavily influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement. Among the showstoppers here is a monumental hanging lantern, crafted with iridized and opalescent glass, mahogany, ebony, abalone, copper, fruitwood and silver inlays, designed by Greene and Greene for their masterpiece, the Robert R. Blacker House in Pasadena, circa 1908. It took pride of place in the house and is one of the most complex pieces of lighting the company ever created. Its mahogany frame recalls the Japanese-inspired architecture of the rest of the building, while the iridized glass shade features delicately rendered images of vines and birds in flight against a sunset.

Spanning more than 1,000 lots, this deeply personal collection articulates a unique narrative of American history. It’s a real love story, too. 0

James Reginato is a writer and editor based in New York

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“ THEY SAW THE EXQUISITE THINGS THAT AMERICANS PRODUCED. THEIR COLLECTION ENCOMPASSES THE HISTORY AND TALENT OF THE COUNTRY

HAPPY place

Get to know the Parisian neighborhood

Saint-Germaindes-Prés, and the artists, gallerists, and boutiques that already call it home, with local resident and art writer Sarah Belmont

Moved suddenly today ” wrote the artist Eugène Delacroix in his diary on December 28, 1857. He had grown tired of commuting from Paris’s 9th to its 6th arrondissement while decorating the chapel of the Saint-Sulpice church. “My accommodation is indeed charming. I felt some melancholy after dinner, finding myself transplanted Woke up the following day with the most gracious sun rising above the houses opposite my window. The view over my little garden and the smiling aspect of my studio convey a feeling of pleasure.”

His new home was in the Place de Furstemberg—a peaceful, unassuming square in the neighborhood of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. After a glittering career at the vanguard of French Romanticism—he had “a sun in his head and thunderstorms in his heart” according to one obituary—he died here, holding his maid’s hand, in 1863. Delacroix heavily influenced the Modernists and, thanks to campaigning by Maurice Denis, Paul Signac and Édouard Vuillard, among others, in the 1920s, his apartment and studio became a museum, which holds over 1,000 of Delacroix’s works and overlooks a quiet garden.

This central spot, a 10-minute walk to the Louvre across the Seine, hints at a bucolic past. Before becoming the glamorous cultural center of the Left Bank, astride the 6th and 7th arrondissements, Saint-Germain-des-Prés was a small medieval town. It was named after the bishop who co-founded the church of Saint Vincent, now known as the church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés.

This was later the district where 17th-century enlightenment thinkers and future revolutionaries gathered. After the Second World War, intellectuals and creatives took over, and jazz began drifting from basements on rue de Rennes. From the writer Marguerite Duras to philosophers Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, singers Léo Ferré and Juliette Gréco, directors JeanLuc Godard and François Truffaut, the sculptor Alberto Giacometti, they were

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Left: Eugène Delacroix’s former apartment, now a museum dedicated to his work. Below: Detail of mural by Delacroix in Saint-Sulpice church. Below right: La Palette, one of Picasso’s favorite bistros

all to be spotted drinking and/or smoking on the terrace of Café de Flore. Luxury boutiques began surfacing in the 1970s. Families who have been here for generations call themselves germanopratins —they are the historical inhabitants of Saint-Germain-des-Prés.

The area naturally still draws newcomers. “I decided to open here in 2004, because the neighborhood is filled with niches in various fields, such as gastronomy, fashion, crafts… Saint-Germain-des-Prés is a cradle for the arts,” says the artist and chocolatier Jean-Charles Rochoux, to be found at 16 rue d’Assas, and who casts ambitious confections as a sculptor might use bronze. “It was the obvious choice. The proximity of the Académie des beaux-arts and the galleries all around are a source of inspiration for me.”

Before you explore delectables by Rochoux and others, the ideal way to begin a tour of these streets is after a good night’s sleep at Pavillon Faubourg Saint-Germain. The boutique hotel spans three 17th-century buildings on rue du Pré aux Clercs. (When this area was still a meadow, it was a popular dueling spot.) A winter garden—with its green walls and sculpted chimney—provides another oasis in the city center. Renovated in 2021 by the Chevalier group, the hotel pays homage to Irish author James Joyce, who stayed in the 1950s to finish his Modernist masterpiece Ulysses, with a suite taking his name and the restaurant named Les Parisiens as a nod to Joyce’s Dubliners. TS Eliot was also a visitor. And what better way to get ready to explore than with a quick dive into the spa’s indoor pool?

Once refreshed, take a left, a right, and another left onto rue de Luynes. Here, behind a navy-blue-framed window display, is a fashion must. Boutique owner Julie de Libran was born in France and grew up in California before studying fashion in Milan and Paris, where she started her career working for Gianfranco Ferré at Dior, then for Gianni Versace and at Prada, Louis Vuitton, and Sonia Rykiel. In 2019, the designer launched her own label and, more recently, this atelier, where she fits customers. Each dress is made and sold in limited quantities, ensuring their quality, rarity, and sustainability. “All my friends and favorite spots are in Saint-Germain, where I live and enjoy biking around. It is like a village to me”, she says.

While its cafe culture is historic, Paris’s coffee culture is not. Ten years ago it was hard to find a good cup of joe but, somehow, bitter hot water served by grumpy waiters has turned into refined brews and lattes to go. Located

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Top: Singer Juliette Gréco in the 1950s, with the Saint-Sulpice spire behind her. Above: The Pavillon Faubourg Saint-Germain hotel; and its James Joyce Suite (left)
“ SAINT-GERMAINDES-PRÉS IS A CRADLE FOR THE ARTS ”

immediately to your left after leaving de Libran’s boutique, Noir is famous for rotating and roasting a short selection of beans. The Saint-Germain venue was the second branch to open from this young brand, which was founded in January 2021. The interiors are by Batiik Studio, a Paris-based firm created by Rebecca Benichou in 2014. The earthenware crockery is custom-designed by Atelier Maen. Their bestselling cookies, with a pinch of fleur de sel, are to die for.

If time allows, walk along boulevard Raspail—or through its food market—up to Square Boucicaut, named for a founder of renowned department store Le Bon Marché, which overlooks the square. The store’s name translates to “good deal”—deceptive, considering it is one Paris’s chicest stores, and has its own art collection. While the main building of Le Bon Marché features fashion and interiors, an art deco extension—La Grande Épicerie de Paris—is dedicated to global gastronomy. On that topic, neighborhood newcomer Hando is a few minutes’ walk away, and the Japanese restaurant is as beautiful visually as its handrolls are to consume. The interior is inspired by renowned minimalist architects Tadao Andö and George Nakashima, and its chef Lee Cheng insists seaweed is sourced from a particular village in Japan’s Chugoku region.

Tradition still reigns, however, and most cafes in the area serve bread from Poilâne. The bakery was established in 1932 and, three generations later, is an institution known for its sourdough-based recipe and its Punitions (“punishments”) shortbreads. The line outside suggests they are nothing of the sort. Lionel Poilâne, the son of founder Pierre, believes in “retro-innovation”—making the best of tradition and modernity. In 1993, Lionel was named chevalier de l’ordre national du mérite (Knight of the National Order of Merit) for services to the economy. Apollonia Poilâne, a Harvard graduate, now keeps the love for her grandfather’s loaves alive.

Nearby is Place Saint-Sulpice, the beating heart of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. It is home to one of the oldest Saint Laurent boutiques (there is a fragrance named after the square). Café de la Mairie is a meeting place for those in the movie industry, and Delacroix’s murals still stun in their ambition and dynamism in the church of SaintSulpice—the second-largest in Paris.

Returning full circle, art-gallery-filled rue Jacob is just off Place de Fustemberg. This leads to Ladurée and its mouth-watering macarons at the corner of rue Bonaparte, and, in the direction of the Seine, Éditions Diane de Selliers. This publishing house issues illustrated literary masterpieces, such as Dante’s Divine Comedy featuring 92 exquisite drawings by Botticelli based on the poem, which were lost until the 17th century, or Baudelaire’s iconoclastic poetry collection The Flowers of Evil paired with paintings by symbolists such as Munch and Moreau, whom he inspired.

ALL MY FRIENDS AND FAVORITE SPOTS ARE IN SAINT-GERMAIN, WHERE I LIVE AND ENJOY BIKING AROUND. IT IS LIKE A VILLAGE TO ME
Happy place
Photos: Musée du Louvre/Nicolas Guiraud; Hemis/Alamy Stock Photo; Ian Pilbeam/Alamy Stock Photo; ©Jerome Galland; Robert DOISNEAU via Getty Images; Courtesy of Kaj Lehmer; Courtesy of Pierre Musselec; Buly 1803; Alex Crétey Systermans; © Alexandra de Cossette Courtesy of Galerie Kreo Storefront of Noir Coffee Shop & Torréfacteur on rue de Luynes. Left: Fashion designer and boutique owner Julie de Libran at home Officine Universelle Buly 1803, founded as an apothecary at the start of the 19th century, is now a luxury beauty store

Just along the river is the glorious Académie des beaux-arts, which remains a prestigious art school. Would star alumni such as Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres or Jacques-Louis David have visited the nearby O cine Universelle Buly 1803? Founded as an apothecary at the beginning of the 19th century, it retains its wood-paneled interior and o ers intriguing products, such as La Victoire de Samothrace soap—made with tuberose, magnolia, jasmine and myrrh—and dried peony petals for the bath. Gifting options even include a calligraphy service.

In the parallel rue de Seine opposite square Gabriel-Pierné—a park named after a 20th-century French musician—lies Galerie Jacques Lacoste. This gallery specializes in decorative arts, with a strong focus on French pieces from the 1930s and 1950s—in particular designer Jean Royère, who injected a shapely sense of fun into Modernist interiors. Meanwhile Galerie Kreo, on the nearby rue Dauphine, represents 21st century decor. Founders Clémence and Didier Krzentowski worked in the sports industry before showcasing limited-edition works by figures from Virgil Abloh to Hella Jongerius. The couple is also known for their expertise in 20th-century French and Italian lighting. Karl Lagerfeld was a long-time client, and both dealers were made Officers dans l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres

Look out for La Palette, a listed historical monument on the rue de Seine. The legendary bistro was a favorite of Cézanne and Picasso, and it is still a place to spot writers typing away, or artists engrossed in conversation. The entrepreneur Thierry Bourdoncle bought the premises in 2009. “This place is unique, and has always reflected to me the soul of the Parisian lifestyle,” he says.

Another fan of the area is gallerist Kamel Mennour, who now has three locations in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés area. Representing Daniel Buren, Alicja Kwade, Ugo Rondinone, Camille Henrot, Lee Ufan and Anish Kapoor, among others, the star dealer has just convinced Sylvie Patry, former deputy director for collections and curatorial affairs at Musée d’Orsay, to join his team as artistic director.

“This is where I live and work, when I don’t travel the world,” says Mennour. “Though imbued in culture, Saint-Germain was still a sleeping beauty when I first opened the gallery, at 60 rue Mazarine, and the idea then was to put it back on the map. Now I am glad to say that contemporary art, including my curatorial work, has contributed to its revival”.

Heading back towards the river and bearing left, you’ll find the Musée d’Orsay, home to the world’s greatest collection of Impressionist art. Or, bearing right, Île de la Cité is home to Place Dauphine, one of Paris’s quaintest squares. It may feel like a village, but city living doesn’t get much better than this. 0

Sarah Belmont is a Paris-based writer

THIS PLACE IS UNIQUE, AND HAS ALWAYS REFLECTED TO ME THE SOUL OF PARISIAN LIFESTYLE
Happy place

Above: Gallerist Kamel Mennour, who has three locations in the Saint-Germaindes-Prés area. Below: The living room of this triplex apartment opens out onto a private garden and terrace. Left: Galerie Kreo, where founders Clémence and Didier Krzentowski champion 21st-century decor

A city idyll

Direct access to the historic Monceau Park, painted by both Gustave Caillebotte and Claude Monet, is one perk of this luxurious triplex apartment in Paris’s 8th arrondissement. The elegant four-bedroom home forms part of a building dating to 1905 and provides 5,984 sq ft of living space, with an impressive living room opening onto a magnificent garden and terrace. It also features a rotunda dining room decorated by the acclaimed firm Jansen, known internationally for its grandeur and style and which included British royals among its clients in the 20th century. There is also garage parking and three cellars. Just around the corner is the charming Musée Nissim de Camondo, a Belle Epoque mansion featuring 18th-century French furniture and decorative arts.

Paris, France 17.500.000 € sothebysrealty.com/id/29GMQ7

Propriétés Parisiennes Sotheby’s International Realty

45

KEEPING IT surreal

Schiaparelli’s artistic director Daniel Roseberry on how he is breathing new life into the house’s Surrealist legacy

46
Daniel Roseberry at Maison Schiaparelli, overlooking the Place Vendôme

Daniel Roseberry, the artistic director of Schiaparelli, has long been fascinated by Elsa Schiaparelli’s collaborations with the leading lights of Surrealism. After establishing her venerable fashion house in the 1930s, Schiaparelli became one of the first couturiers to collaborate with artists, working with Salvador Dalí and Man Ray, among others.

“I’m always so nostalgic for that period,” Roseberry says. “I think of those collaborations as ones that were happening between people who were creating culture around them, and who found themselves in real relationships. I often wonder if they had any idea that their work would be romanticized and fetishized for generations after. Even if it was transactional in some way, those creative partnerships feel so deeply natural compared to most of what we observe today.”

Texas-born Roseberry has been reinterpreting Schiaparelli’s historic vision through his dramatic collections since taking the reins of the house in 2019. This March, the Surrealism and Its Legacy sale at Sotheby’s Paris brings together works by artists associated with the movement, including René Magritte, Francis Picabia, Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst, and works from those influenced by it—such as Lucio Fontana and Alexander Calder. The sale reflects a period of renewed interest in Surrealism, with recent auctions and international exhibitions including last year’s Venice Biennale adopting it as a central theme. For Roseberry, the enduring appeal of the Surrealists is obvious. “Generations and times shift and change, but the urges of the subconscious feel timeless and truly inescapable. They were able to tap into this and exploit it,” he says.

Elsa Schiaparelli was born into a family of intellectuals and aristocrats in 1890 in Rome, and her encounter with the Surrealists was utterly fortuitous. Sailing on an ocean liner in 1916 to North America with her husband, she met Gabrièle Buffet-Picabia, first wife of the Dada artist Francis Picabia. Buffet-Picabia introduced her to New York’s avant-garde art scene via Soci été Anonyme, an arts organization founded in the city by the painter and collector Katherine Dreier, Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray. Returning to Paris in 1922, Schiaparelli made her foray into fashion, encouraged by a new acquaintance: preeminent designer Paul Poiret. Her first success was the now-renowned trompe-l’œil bow jumper, a design hand-knitted by Armenian women in Paris. Schiaparelli then went on to set up business in a garret on Rue de la Paix and, in 1935, moved to a boutique in the prestigious Place Vendôme. Her connections with artists became central to the brand’s success.

It is her work with Dalí that stands out most.

“From my point of view, it is the most striking and influential [collaboration] in the history of the house of Schiaparelli,” says Marie-Sophie Carron de La Carrière, head curator of the fashion and

49 Reside — Spring 2023
Photos: Christophe Coënon; Matthieu Salavaing;
©
Archives Snark; ullstein bild/ullstein bild via Getty Images; courtesy of Schiaparelli; courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Arts. Left: Marcel Vertès, Schiaparelli, 21 Place Vendôme, 1953, on display in the salon of Maison Schiaparelli Below: Elsa Schiaparelli with Salvador Dalí, 1949

textile collections after 1800 at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, which hosted the exhibition Shocking! Les mondes surréalistes d’Elsa Schiaparelli (July 2022–January 2023). Among other pieces, Schiaparelli and Dalí worked together on the Shoe Hat, 1937–38, absurdly fashioned from an upside-down black shoe, and the Lobster dress, 1937, for which Dalí designed a crustacean to appear on a white organdy dress, which was interpreted into a fabric print by silk designer Sache.

After returning to Paris from the US after the Second World War, Schiaparelli commissioned the Catalan artist to design the crystal bottle for her new fragrance, Le Roy Soleil, in homage to the “Sun King”, Louis XIV. The resulting bottle comprised a golden sun painted with swallows above a gold and blue sea.

Other memorable creations include two pairs of spiral spectacles that Man Ray made for Schiaparelli in 1936. Jean Cocteau, the Surrealism polymath, brought his passion for optical illusion and metamorphosis to Schiaparelli’s collections in 1937 and 1938. Designs include a linen evening jacket featuring a woman in profile, her hair rendered in gold thread, shimmering down the right arm with two hands encircling the waist. On a silk jersey coat, Cocteau designed two facing profiles to form the shape of a vase, filled with a bouquet of pink taffeta flowers. Surrealist artist Leonor Fini designed the bottle for Schiaparelli’s fragrance Shocking, inspired by the hourglass torso of Hollywood film star Mae West, one of Schiaparelli’s clients. Artist Meret Oppenheim traded Schiaparelli a design for a piece of jewelry: a brass bracelet covered in animal fur that Schiaparelli included in her Fall/ Winter 1936 collection.

Schiaparelli held these collaborations close to her heart. “Working with artists like Bébé Bérard, Jean Cocteau, Salvador Dalí, Vertès, Van Dongen; and with photographers like HoyningenHuene, Horst, Cecil Beaton and Man Ray gave one a sense of exhilaration,” she wrote in her autobiography, Shocking Life. “One felt supported and understood beyond the crude and boring

Clockwise from right: Schiaparelli’s Shoe Hat, 1937–38; a nod to Jean Cocteau’s evening dress for Fall 2021 Couture; Salvador Dalí, Dream of Venus, 1939; Schiaparelli coat designed in collaboration with Cocteau
Keeping it surreal
“ HER WORK WITH DALÌ IS THE MOST STRIKING AND INFLUENTIAL

reality of merely making a dress to sell.” They helped her to become one of the most important designers of the 20th century, rivaling contemporaries such as Coco Chanel.

Today, the Surrealists’ influence is carried forward by Roseberry through his own designs for the house, which closed in 1954 and was relaunched in 2012 by Diego Della Valle, the founder of Italian luxury group Tod’s. Roseberry had not worked in a couture atelier before, joining from upmarket fashion brand Thom Browne, but his eye for tailoring and experimentation has made him a perfect fit, and he has resurrected iconic Schiaparelli motifs in bold new ways. Pink silk roses, a nod to Cocteau’s evening dress, cover the billowing arms of a black mini dress from his Fall 2021 Couture collection. For Spring 2022 Couture, he presented a “cage” dress exquisitely crafted from gold leaf and vintage gemstones, which resembles more of a giant brooch than a garment.

To keep the founder’s intentions alive in a new century, Roseberry has “learned to stay loose”. “When you look at Elsa’s process, it feels free and unburdened, and spontaneous,” he says. “It’s like the shower principle: that the best ideas come to you when you’re not thinking about them, or when you’re in the shower. I think her work has this free-wheeling intelligence that feels so ahead of its time. It wasn’t just about beauty, or of the ‘line’ of a dress. It was about a concept, an idea, a notion of reality. She would take this notion and bend it to her will.”

Roseberry’s love of Surrealism extends to his own art collection, too. He has “just bought a small painting by the Belgian surrealist Marcel Delmotte”, who drew from a range of sources, including the Italian Mannerists to contemporaries such as Giorgio de Chirico for his dreamlike works. “French Surrealism in the 1950s has something I love. I am repeatedly drawn to French and Italian art from the 1920s and the 1930s, such as Gaston Lachaise [known for his exaggerated bronze nudes], and I’d love to one day own an important piece of American art from the 1950s or 1960s, like a giant Helen Frankenthaler.” Like Schiaparelli, Roseberry is eager to collaborate with artists of his time: “I love Katie Stout”—the artist and furniture designer who pushes the boundaries of functionality, and often references organic matter and female figures. “The photographer Nadia Lee Cohen, and my friends—the sculptor F Taylor Colantonio, and the writer and playwright Jeremy O Harris [his Slave Play made waves on Broadway in 2021],” he adds. “I would love to make a short film with Janicza Bravo [her work includes the movies Lemon and Zola]. Tilda Swinton would make an amazing Elsa Schiaparelli one day in a film, and I’d love to be involved in that.”

In the meantime, Roseberry’s eyes are firmly focused on his work with Schiaparelli and, just like the house’s imaginative founder, “creating things that people might remember, and that might last more than a moment”. 0

Anna Sansom is a writer and editor based in Paris

51

THOUGHT and FEELING

Axel Vervoordt is a man with many hats: art and antiques dealer, interior designer, initiator of groundbreaking exhibitions and an impresario of musical, artistic and architectural experiences. Central to all this activity is his long marriage to his wife, May. Their evolving interests have been the guiding thread in their esteemed family business. Whether in their private home, the 12th-century Kasteel van ‘s-Gravenwezel, outside Antwerp, or in their impressive business headquarters, Kanaal—a restored late-19th-century distillery and malting complex on the nearby Albert Canal—their shared aesthetic and philosophical values are expressed in every atmospheric interior and the juxtaposition of carefully selected artworks. It is appropriate, therefore, that as Axel and May celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary this spring, they have created a book about their collecting. What has interested them above all on this journey has been a dialogue between traditions—the exchange between east and west—which is reflected throughout their home and in their exhibition-making. It is also expressed in this new book, which celebrates artworks from contrasting traditions to emphasize continuities of thought and feeling. For Axel, his touchstones include works by Kazuo Shiraga and the numinous Fontana sculpture Concetto Spaziale, Natura, 1959–60. May has a favorite painting— Urbino, 1978, by Belgian artist Jef Verheyen, known for his exploration of light, color and geometry. She also loves the Japanese Head of a Lohan, or Buddhist monk on the edge of enlightenment, in their library: “Every time I see them, I learn something new.”

This interest in Asian art can be traced to their friendship with Dr Jos Macken, a neurologist who was a great friend of Verheyen and a passionate collector of eastern art. Through Macken, Axel became interested in eastern philosophy, especially the Japanese concept of wabi-sabi: the wisdom of imperfection. Axel explains that his mother instilled in him a feeling for “the beauty of simplicity—she liked very humble things”.

Axel and May had visited Japan before they married and, from their late twenties, traveled through Thailand, China and Japan, developing a passionate understanding of Zen philosophy, ceramics, sculpture and calligraphy. Furthermore, Axel eagerly discovered the East Asian idea of the “void”—a potent emptiness; a latent creative energy beyond human comprehension.

Through Verheyen, the couple discovered the broad network of European artists connected to the Zero movement in Germany, including the Argentine-Italian Lucio Fontana and the German Günther Uecker, who were exploring similar

Reside — Spring 2023
Axel and May Vervoordt are marking 50 years of collecting together, guided by traditions from both the east and west
Left: Axel and May Vervoordt in their home near Antwerp; Below: A collection of gurines in the library The “Oriental Salon” at Kasteel van ‘s-Gravenwezel, with a 17th-century Japanese folding screen by Tan’yu Kano (left) and Fusta i Marró Forodat by Antoni Tàpies, 1972 (right)

THE THINGS WE LOVED AND BOUGHT, THEY HAD A SENSE OF SILENCE. THEY WERE NEVER AGGRESSIVE ”

ideas. Axel remarks: “After the terrible destruction of the Second World War, the idea of starting again from nothing was very appealing.”

These ideas were all percolating in the Vervoordts from the beginning of their relationship. They met when they were very young. May reports that Axel, then aged 21, “was a young antiques dealer,” while her interests, as a student of graphic design aged 18 or 19, “were more contemporary.” One of Axel’s early purchases—an oil painting by René Magritte of his famous motif, La Mémoire, 1948—suggests that he was always looking for a sense of “timelessness, the universal”. In addition, what was evident in their shared preferences was that, “the things we loved and bought, they had a sense of silence. They were never aggressive,” says May.

Axel Vervoordt seized upon dealing as a means of exploring his own interests in art. What he bought was always something that he and May loved: “I had to feel it in my breast,” he says.

In 2005, Axel discovered the Gutai artists in Japan. Alongside Fontana, Shiraga in particular is an essential reference for them both. May comments: “You feel strength in this art, but with that, a meditative feeling. You see the movement in a Shiraga painting, but recognize the stillness that came before.”

Both agree that they will never stop collecting. May refers to one of her favorite works, a six-fold Japanese screen from the 17th century, decorated with round stepping stones, black and white, with the motto: “By this way, bring you luck.” Collecting has become a series of steps, May explains. “There is an evolution. You continue to look and to buy.” 0

57 Reside — Spring 2023
Left: The loft in the outer buildings of the castle. An Artempo disc by Axel Vervoordt hangs above painted works by Gutai artist Sadaharu Horio. Signal by Takis, 1958, is on the table. Above: Kazuo Shiraga, Suiju, 1985 Photos: © Mari Luz Vidal for Openhouse; © Laziz Hamani; courtesy of Axel and May Vervoordt.

EXTRAORDINARY PROPERTIES

For golf enthusiasts, living the links lifestyle rivals getting a hole-in-one

“Some want to be on the fairway with their morning co ee and watch the golf carts go by,” says Jason Becker, chief executive of Golf Life Navigators, a site matching people with golf memberships and homes. Others crave a garage with room for a golf cart “to take the grandkids to the pool”.

Many also delight in the amenity-laden communal living and security country club enclaves provide. In Palm Springs, Scottsdale, Naples, Palm Beach and Hilton Head, most private clubs are gated and guarded.

Golf homes are also designed for entertaining. At Desert Mountain, a double-gated golf and active lifestyle community in Arizona, a newly remodeled house has a round Great Room with picture windows overlooking the 15th hole of the Geronimo, one of seven golf courses. “It’s a ri on contemporary Pueblo-style,” says Daniel Wolski of Russ Lyon Sotheby’s International Realty. A roof deck with a re pit is “set up for mountain and golf course views with sunsets and city lights on the wide horizon”.

In the backyard, there’s a putting green, saltwater pool and spa. The outdoor kitchen has a smoker and an Evo griddle for alfresco cooking—when there’s time to dine at home amid the whirl of communal activities.

“Golf is the common theme, but socialization comes with the lifestyle,” Becker says. “You see your neighbors for dinner and play golf with them.” Desert Mountain has seven clubhouses, each with at least one restaurant. Activities include book, shing and hunting clubs and “Yappy hour” at the dog park. Twenty miles of private hiking trails are at Desert Mountain’s northern end.

Golf community developers worldwide incorporate familyfocused amenities, Becker says. Golf homes in Jamaica enjoy lush greenery, beach clubs, and other top Caribbean resort amenities. In Chile, a private estate home has its own nine-hole course. A golf condominium includes an equestrian club. The all-inclusive Eagle Canyon Golf and Lifestyle Estate in Johannesburg has entry-level to multi-million dollar residences, 13 parks, shing dams, a car wash and dry cleaning services.

Opening this year near Palm Beach, Panther National is upping the ante. Its custom homes include garages with a golf cart space, electric car chargers and private pools. Besides the golf course, a training facility features the latest ball-tracing technology, an indoor simulator and a putting room. A family wellness center has a spa with rejuvenation and beauty services and a yoga studio.

After all, golf is more than a sport. It’s a lifestyle.

58 Living

Scottsdale, Arizona

A contemporary interpretation of Pueblo-style architecture, this home has been transformed to make the most of today’s indoor/outdoor lifestyle. The elevated location straddles a hill on the 15th hole of Geronimo, o ering sunset views with mountain silhouettes in the backdrop. The home itself uses water, metal, glass,

stone and wood to create an elegant, serene ambiance. The metal courtyard gates open to porcelain tiles, desert vegetation, a babbling brook feature and an outdoor replace. Step inside the massive circular Pueblo great room, with a linear replace and picture windows, and admire the views through the sliding glass doors.

Reside — Spring 2023
$7,600,000 Property ID: 64WPL4 russlyon.com Russ Lyon Sotheby’s International Realty Dan Wolski 480.266.7557

Wellington, Florida

Nestled on Blue Cypress Lane in the coveted subdivision of Palm Beach Polo Golf and Country Club, this four-bed, 4.5-bathroom property features some of the best lake and golf course views in the Polo Club. The residence sits a wedge shot away from the famous island-green par-three 11th hole on the Cypress Course.

Windrush Villa, Tryall Club, Hanover, Jamaica

With high-end nishes including hardwood oors, enjoy the summer kitchen, spacious patio and sleek pool.

$4,699,999

Property ID: 8T3VK9 sothebysrealty.com

Equestrian Sotheby’s International Realty

Adam Blauweiss 561.846.1935

Oak Blu s, Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts

This recently updated modern retreat is situated at the end of Tylers Creek Road just past the putting green. The private estate overlooks Farm Neck Golf Course, and the living room’s oor-to-ceiling windows give impressive views of Sengekontacket Pond. The rst- oor primary bedroom

leads seamlessly out to the hot tub and outdoor shower. Farm Neck Golf Course is known for its beauty, and has a reputation for being one of the premier gol ng experiences in the Northeast.

$9,750,000

Property ID: JYPPX4 wallacemv.com

Wallace & Co. Sotheby’s International Realty

Thomas C. Wallace 508.627.2777

Fall in love with Jamaica at Windrush Villa. Situated in the exclusive Tryall Club, the villa sits on the historic golf course, o ering enthusiasts a chance to engage with the sport. Sitting across ve acres, this stunning villa has six ocean-view bedrooms over three buildings. With a private

wine cellar, 1,300 sq ft pool and overlooking the Caribbean Sea, enjoy lush landscapes and ethereal ocean views.

$3,500,000

Property ID: Y6DWXR sothebysrealty.com.jm

Jamaica Sotheby’s International Realty

Keody Thompson 876.417.9819

Hurricane, Utah

Located on the 11th hole of the Copper Rock Golf Course and set among the iconic sandstone desert landscape of Southern Utah, this new custom home features three bedrooms, three bathrooms and comes fully furnished. This community allows for nightly rentals, making this move-in ready property a perfect primary

home or vacation rental. Copper Rock Golf Course is located in Southern Utah’s Hurricane Valley, and o ers an adventurous 6,901-yard course.

$1,375,000

Property ID: NGTJ8X summitsothebysrealty.com

Summit Sotheby’s International Realty

Jim Lyman 714.794.8311

60 Living

Kapalua, Maui, Hawaii

Perched 100ft above sea level, this secluded ocean view residence and guest house are situated next to the Plantation Golf Course in the exclusive Kapalua Resort. An architectural stunning masterpiece designed to maximize Paci c Ocean views and Maui sunlight, the home incorporates a traditional oor plan with modern living in uences. It includes an in nity-edge pool and champagne spa fronting a private panoramic ocean view. An avid golfer’s dream, the estate sits across the street from the rst hole and includes a more than four-acre undeveloped lot paralleling the sea from the 12th fairway on Kapalua’s Plantation Golf Course.

$24,900,000

Property ID: 9R4FZY islandsothebysrealty.com

Island Sotheby’s International Realty Scott Carroll 808.495.6236

Naples, Florida

The open oor plan of this 6,000 sq ft masterpiece exudes Old Florida charm. Located along the widest canal in Aqualane Shores, the residence has hardwood oors and shiplap siding, and is enhanced by mesmerizing water views. The main living areas include a two-story great room, a gourmet kitchen with two islands, and a spacious family room, which opens to the covered, screened porch with outdoor kitchen, replace and pizza oven. The private master wing has separate dressing spaces, as well as a study that can serve as a guest suite. Outside, there is an in nity-edge pool and putting green, and a boat slip with 34,000lb lift, o ering direct access to the canal. The 500+ bottle wine room, wet bar, safe room and 12-car garage make this truly a one-of-a-kind wonder.

$17,495,000 Property ID: 5JPHNJ sothebysrealty.com

Premier Sotheby's International Realty Bill Frantz +1 330.329.0077

61 Reside — Spring 2023

Queensland, Australia

This golfer’s dream is located in one of the most desirable suburbs in the Sunshine Coast, surrounded by a championship golf course and just minutes away from beaches and ne dining. There's even a putting and chipping green to hone in your skills before hitting the course. Positioned perfectly on the seventh fairway, this four-bedroom, two-bathroom home is great for entertaining, with plenty of space for wining and dining.

Price Upon Request

Property ID: PR5ZQW sothebysrealty.com

Queensland Sotheby’s International Realty

Richard Bowen +61 401 734 586

Roodepoort, South Africa

With one of the best positions in Eagle Canyon, this property has sweeping views over the course. The impressive entrance has a koi pond, bridge and tropical gardens—adds an ethereal element. On the entrance level, the formal lounge and guest suite has its own cloakroom. The open-plan living area includes a delightful kitchen with breakfast bar. When you return from a day of golf, savor the wine cellar, games room, jacuzzi and bar, with doors that open to a spacious patio.

R11,700,000 sothebysrealty.co.za

Lew Ge en Sotheby’s International Realty

Debby Woodward +2782 889 7903

Cape Town, South Africa

This peaceful sanctuary incorporates four en-suite bedrooms, a farmhouse kitchen and undercover patio. Nestled behind established trees for complete privacy, there are still glorious views across the fairway and access to the 18-hole course. The Steenberg Golf Estate is in the heart of Cape Town’s Constantia Valley vineyards, and adjoins the Steenberg winery, hotel and spa. Owners receive an exclusive golf club membership.

$1,240,000

Property ID: CCCVK5 sothebysrealty.com

Lew Ge en Sotheby's International Realty

Steve Thomas +2784 471-4722 / Dave Burger +2783 458-3333

62 Living

Cornelius, North Carolina

Nestled on the Peninsula Golf Course next to Lake Norman, this remarkable brick estate has a stately exterior with timeless details. The curved staircase sits in the two-story foyer, which is open to the dining and living rooms to create comfortable luxury. The great room, with dual verandas, o ers breathtaking views of the golf course for year-round enjoyment. Escape to the owners’ private wing on the main level, with an executive o ce, morning wet bar, opulent bedroom and bathroom and a sunroom with private deck and hot tub. The Peninsula Club and Yacht Club o er memberships creating resort-style living with plenty of amenities, including a golf course, club house, pool, tness center, playground and tennis court.

$3,650,000

Property ID: W2FCFC sothebysrealty.com

Premier Sotheby’s International Realty Ben Bowen +1 704.572.6070

Golf Lomas, La Dehesa, Chile

Unique design and architecture are just two features of this house in the exclusive Club Lomas condominium in La Dehesa. Designed on three levels, the property’s entrance hall has large windows giving panoramic views of the golf courses and the Andes Mountains. With natural wooden oors and stone walls giving a special warmth to the interiors, the living and dining rooms connect to a large terrace, which functions as a second living area. The beautiful garden, pool and barbecue area add to the reasons this is a modern and welcoming place to live.

US$2,318,128

Property ID: WJFGWD chilesir.com

Chile Sotheby’s International Realty Alejandra Borrás +56 9 9251 3455

63 Reside — Spring 2023
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Eric’s eye for marketing, along with his ability to find high net worth buyers with his local and global advertising sets him apart from his competition. Once in front of potential buyers, Eric excels at selling San Diego’s most unique and expensive real estate. Eric prides himself in a “whatever it takes” attitude towards advertising properties and is constantly pushing the limits to reach the buyers.

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM LA COSTA DEL MAR RANCHO SANTA FESOLANA BEACH 2034 Arenal Road117 6th Street15608 Via De Santa Fe521 S Rios Avenue
ERIC IANTORNO Associate Broker eric@ericiantorno.com 858.334.3577 | ericiantorno.com DRE #01256501 OFFERED AT $11,950,000OFFERED AT $14,900,000OFFERED AT $6,950,000OFFERED AT $12,500,000 68

Setting a Higher Standard

Sandra Copeland is a sought-after Luxury Power Broker in San Diego’s North County Coastal real estate market. She has closed over 2000 transactions in her 40+ years in real estate and the breadth and depth of her knowledge is unrivaled.

Never one to rest on her laurels, Sandra’s business is consistently evolving to stay ahead of the curve in an ever-changing industry. She is an innovative problem solver and master negotiator who is obsessed with educating her clientele with the invaluable knowledge needed to make wise multimillion-dollar decisions.

Considering a move to San Diego?

Let’s chat!

sandra.copeland@pacificsir.com

760.716.6110 | SandyCanSellIt.com

DRE #00679984

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM CARLSBAD Ocean Front Duplex OFFERED AT $4,500,000 CARLSBAD SOLD AT $3,225,000 Gated Ocean View Home CARLSBAD COMING SOON AT $2,848,800 Gated 1-Level Estate Home
69

Unrivaled Client Satisfaction

Upon arriving to attend SDSU I knew San Diego was home. With my Accounting degree in hand, I set out to make a difference in the world of business. First in public accounting and then in the Fortune 500 corporate world where I honed my skills in finance, mergers and acquisitions, contracts and negotiations. At a certain point I realized I wanted to offer my skills and commitment at a more personal level. I jumped off the cliff and soared, landing firmly in residential real estate. After all, it’s mergers and acquisitions for people!

For more than 14 years I have had the honor of walking with my clients as they have navigated change in their lives that called for a transition in real estate. What I love most about my work is getting to know the story, the dreams and the purpose that go along with each home purchase or sale and then contributing to its fulfillment.

Call on me for exceptional representation and service.

Real Estate Professional

LaurieManley@Real-SAVVY.com

619.972.9071 | Real-SAVVY.com

DRE #01849622

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM OCEANFRONT WALKING DISTRICT VILLAGES OF FAIRBANKS - STRATFORD Del Mar SOLD FOR $18,000,000 SOLD FOR $4,150,000 SOLD FOR $3,200,000 Cardiff by the Sea Rancho Santa Fe
LAURIE MANLEY
70

4,170

Where sophistication meets exceptional service

With an MBA in marketing and a proven record of success selling some of the most luxurious properties around, Julie Feld ranks in the top 1.0% of 22,000 agents in San Diego County and the top 1.49% of 1.6M agents nationwide by sale volume. She prides herself on local knowledge, global reach, and highly personalized concierge-style service. Most important, she puts clients’ needs first.

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM RANCHO SANTA FE RANCHO SANTA FE MASTERPIECE IN THE SKY | DOWNTOWN SAN DIEGO 15815 Bella Siena 16627 Los Morros 100 Harbor Drive 3803 SOLD AT $9,250,000 | REPRESENTED BUYER SOLD FOR $9,500,000
AT $5,695,000
OFFERED
Encompassing the entire 38th floor of the iconic Harbor Club, this trophy property offers mesmerizing 360-degree views of the ocean, bay, and city, square feet of luxurious living space designed by Ken Ronchetti, 3+ bedrooms, 5 baths and five garage spaces!
JULIE
RE@juliefeld.com 619.417.3638 | JulieFeld.com DRE#01804785 Call Julie today, for all your real estate needs. 71
Global

Strategy. Perseverance. Results.

Real Estate, Architecture, MBA & SDAR Silver Award Winner –A graduate of the University of Southern California (USC) with a bachelor’s degree in Architecture, Martha previously practiced architecture before transitioning to real estate. She also was enrolled in the MBA program at Pepperdine University in Malibu before moving to San Diego. As architecture and real estate go hand in hand, Martha has unique experiences that allow her to provide a client experience that is unmatched in the industry.

She received the Silver Level Award for Recognition of Excellence in 2021 from the Greater San Diego Association of REALTORS. (San Diego is one of the metro areas with the highest rates of bidding wars in real estate transactions in 2021.) In short, Martha is local, trusted, professional, honest, and has your best interest at heart. Aside from English, Martha speaks, reads and can write in Mandarin and Taiwanese.

MARTHA

Realtor® | Architectural Consultant

MarthaFalch@gmail.com

858.210.8416

DRE #01908393

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
CHEN-FALCH
LA JOLLA RANCHO PENASQUIOTSRANCHO SANTA FECARMEL VALLEY 3177 Morning Way12613 La Tortola5293 Vista Del Dios 4989 Beauchamp Court 3177MORNINGWAY.COM OFFERED AT $1,090,000SOLD FOR $1,635,000 12613LATORTOLA.COM SOLD FOR $2,395,000SOLD FOR $2,650,000 72

Luxury Representation Redefined.

With a combined 38 years in the real estate industry and decades of positive client experiences, Clinton and Candace are a trusted resource in real estate sales. The core of their success comes from a fundamental belief that luxury is a level of service, not a price point.

Their philosophy is simple: clients come first. They believe if you are not left with an amazing experience, they have not done their job. From Coronado to Carlsbad, Clinton and Candace are a dynamic duo, eager to serve you and your needs.

CLINTON SELFRIDGE

Global Real Estate Advisor

clinton@clintonselfridge.com

619.519.0964

DRE #01417348

CANDACE BARRY

Global Real Estate Advisor

candacebarry817@gmail.com

858.952.4060

DRE #02025117

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
LA JOLLA ELFIN FOREST BANKERS HILL 348 Vista De La Playa SOLD FOR $6,050,000 SOLD FOR $4,000,000 SOLD FOR $3,725,000 20877 Wild Willow Hollow Road 2855 5th Avenue #1302 73

Rare Landmark Urban Estate

Designed c. 1912 by Master Architect, William Sterling Hebbard, this elegant sun-filled home is a Legacy property like no other! The exceptionally private walled/gated, lushly landscaped, half-acre grounds feature a Pool, Spa, Outdoor Kitchen and numerous Terraces for entertaining on a grand or more intimate scale. Private Elevator, 5 Fireplaces, Owned Solar, and significant Property Tax Savings via the Mills Act!

5 Bedroom | 5.5 Bathroom | 7,595 Square Feet

ArchitectureInSanDiego.com

OFFERED AT $6,995,000

ELIZABETH COURTIÉR

Historic & Architectural Specialist

elizabeth@architectureinsandiego.com

619.813.6686 | architectureinsandiego.com

DRE #01198840

4S RANCH

SAN DIEGO

9853 Falcon Bluff

Located in the highly sought after neighborhood of 4S Ranch. This turnkey home is situated on a premium corner lot of a cul de sac street, walking distance to award winning Poway Unified schools, and conveniences. This updated traditional style home features an upgraded kitchen with top of the line appliances, a primary suite with lounging area and spa-like bathroom, a main floor in-law ensuite bedroom, office, and several additional secondary bedrooms for a total of 6 beds + optional and 4.5 baths. More features include an outdoor kitchen, covered patio, artificial turf in the backyard, a 12 kilowatt fully paid solar system with dual top of the line Tesla backup batteries, updated recess lighting throughout, remodeled laundry room, whole house fan, all new irrigation systems in both the front and backyard fully automated wifi/ bluetooth system via Hydrawise you can control via your mobile phone.

SEAN CADDELL

Global Real Estate Advisor

OceanRanches@gmail.com

858.472.1074 | SeanCaddell.com

DRE #01192842

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
SAN DIEGO
74

Exceptional, Defined.

The leading team in San Diego, Brizolis Janzen and Associates, is a powerhouse of knowledge, expertise, and dedication. Named “Top 100 in the Nation” by Real Trends, as published in the Wall Street Journal, and “Top 100 Worldwide” for Sotheby’s International Realty, Brizolis Janzen and Associates continue to remain at the forefront in navigating today’s dynamic real estate markets and unique economic trends.

The associates’ local, national and international real estate affiliations afford them a depth of knowledge and breath of information that is unmatched in the industry, allowing them to provide their clients the ultimate and unrivaled “Bespoke Representation.”

ann@brizolisjanzen.com

858.756.4328

DRE# 00751535

Partner

jennifer@brizolisjanzen.com

858.756.4328

DRE# 01429095

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM 7 BED | 8 FULL BATH | 2 HALF BATH | 11,301 SF | 4.01 ACRES5 BED | 5 FULL BATH | 3 HALF BATH | 9,875 SF | 1.97 ACRES OFFERED AT $10,985,000 OFFERED AT $7,998,000
JENNIFER J. JANZEN K. ANN BRIZOLIS Founding Partner
HAVEN ON EARTH | THE COVENANT YOUR ULTIMATE LUXURY RETREAT | THE BRIDGES 4434 Los Pinos, Rancho Santa Fe 6212 Strada Fragante, Rancho Santa Fe 75

Miles of Opportunity

As a Southern Californian native, my passion for real estate was sparked in 2000 when a successful agent recognized my dynamic personality and entrepreneurial spirit as the perfect fit for this industry. Since then, I have built a reputation for excellence through my extensive experience, knowledge, ruthless negotiating, and unwavering commitment to exceptional service. As a loyal advocate for my clients, I make myself available to guide them every step of the way, ensuring their satisfaction with the process and outcome.

With comprehensive expertise in all aspects of the real estate industry, I have received numerous awards and accolades for my outstanding sales and customer service skills. In fact, I was honored as one of San Diego’s Top Real Estate Agents by the San Diego Business Journal. I approach my work with unparalleled energy, utilizing my education in marketing and public relations to creatively market my listings, and my savvy negotiation skills to help countless families successfully achieve their real estate goals.

megan.luce@pacificsir.com

858.864.8370

DRE #01299167

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
DEL MAR POINT LOMA DOWNTOWN SAN
12446 Del Vino Court2687 Chatsworth Blvd200 Harbor Dr #26019735 Claiborne Square SOLD FOR $5,200,000OFFERED AT $2,100,000OFFERED AT $1,572,000SOLD FOR $1,850,000 76
DIEGOLA JOLLA

Expertise Meets Connectivity: The Ultimate Advantage

“Bringing people together and cultivating relationships is at the heart of who we are.”

Gwyn and Lisa’s most treasured skill is making solid connections. From finding the perfect community and property match for relocating Buyers to introducing Sellers to trusted peers in another city or country for assistance in their ongoing homeownership journey, their TEAMadvantage has extensive experience and resources.

Covering the Ranch to the Coast in North County San Diego, Gwyn and Lisa have enjoyed Real Estate matchmaking for buyers, sellers, investors and developers. Founded in the 1990’s their TEAMadvantage, has the breadth and depth to assist a variety of clients in conquering their unique real estate goals.

Consistent. Reliable. Connective.

LISA STENNES

Global Real Eatate Advisor

lisa@lisastennes.com

619.933.9909

DRE #01144460

Global Real Eatate Advisor

gwyn@gwynrice.com

858.774.7423

DRE #00889370

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
77

THE BRIDGES

RANCHO SANTA FE

18519 Calle La Serra

Indulge in the ultimate paradise with this stunning one-level custom home on the 6th fairway of The Bridges in Rancho Santa Fe. The captivating stone entry arch will transfix you with its Old English elegance, while the 20-foot wood beamed ceilings create a warm and inviting atmosphere. The open concept seamlessly blends indoor and outdoor living, offering the perfect oasis to relax and watch the sunset with a cool beverage, or to cozy up by the fire and outdoor loggia heater. The dramatic kitchen boasts top-of-the-line appliances. Wine enthusiasts will appreciate the built-in storage and Sub-Zero wine refrigerator in the formal dining room. Enjoy the comfort and convenience of a smart home, with energy-efficient thermostats, a whole house filtration system, and upgraded surround sound. This dream home also features a paid-for solar system, a Generac air-cooled generator, and a charger for your car and golf cart. Upgrade your lifestyle with the ultimate in comfort and style.

SCOTT VOAK

Associate Broker

scott@voakhomes.com

858.688.0189 | VoakHomes.com

DRE #01153157

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
78

Generations of Knowledge

It takes one to know one. This holds true when providing optimal and personalized service to clients in luxury real estate. The Greenspan Group is made up of generations of knowledge and resources, and together they provide their clients with personalized and unmatched service. Combined, the Greenspan Group has a plethora of networks from all aspects of life. With over 30 years of experience in both residential and commercial real estate and connections in the armed forces, healthcare, local communities, and internationally, we offer exceptional value to clients in today’s global environment.

Whether you are a first time home buyer, moving from the Bay Area tech hub to San Diego, or thinking of buying property down the street or around the world, the Greenspan Group is armed with expertise to ensure you receive exceptional personalized service and achieve success no matter where you are or where you want to be.

deborah@greenspangroup.com

619.972.5060

DRE #01733274

Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 PACIFIC SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | PACIFICSOTHEBYSREALTY.COM
La
SOLD FOR $8,700,000 SOLD FOR $6,995,000 OFFERED AT $27,500,000 79
La Jolla Rancho Santa Fe
Jolla
80 Local Expertise, Global Reach DISCOVER HOMES WHEREVER YOU ARE AND WHEREVER YOU WANT TO BE Connect with Us 81 COUNTRIES & TERRITORIES 1,000 OFFICES WORLDWIDE 26,000+ GLOBAL REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484 pacificsothebysrealty.com discover@pacificsir.com
Luxury
Service YOUR COMPREHENSIVE SETTLEMENT CLOSING SOLUTION We believe you should experience White Glove service at every stage of selling a home; we are your answer. 2727 Camino del Rio South, Suite 235 San Diego, California 92108 619.483.3100 INNOVATIVETITLECO.COM INNOVATIVE TITLE COMPANY 591 Camino de la Reina, Suite 103, San Diego, California 92108 GREAT PACIFIC ESCROW 619.326.9696 GREATPACIFICESCROW.COM Licensed by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation under License 963-2659 Licensed by the California Department of Insurance Elevate your experience.
Begins With

DYNAMIC WOMAN

Christina Thomas grew up in the world of construction, making real estate a natural career path. “I’ve always been into architecture and design,” she says. With nearly 20 years in the industry, she specializes in niche markets across Southern California with her Thomas Team at Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty. She leads with grit, hustle, and determination, gauging her success by her relationships with her loyal clientele and referral business.

From first-time home buyers to high-net-worth individuals with multi-billion dollar portfolios, Thomas prides herself on delivering extraordinary services across all price points. With a background as a licensed mortgage loan officer, she’s experienced with sales, management, and finance in both residential and commercial real estate. Her studied, optimistic approach to the market gives her a buoyant perspective when it comes to real estate trends. When it comes to advice for prospective clients, she says, “The first offer is usually the best-even if it’s an hour after going live on the market.

christina.thomas@pacificsir.com

818.414.2246

BONSALL SOUTH PASADENA CALL FOR PRICING SOLD FOR $2,989,000 7082 Eagle Mountain Road 1750 Hanscom Drive
Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. DRE #01767484

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