2022年6月15日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

Vibrant enamel pitchers, a luxury hotel in Australia — and more.

Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we share things we're eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday. And you can always reach us at tlist@nytimes.com.

VISIT THIS

A Luxury Hotel in Australia's Southern Highlands

A suite at Osborn House, featuring a headboard upholstered in Pierre Frey fabric and a lamp made from plaster by the Australian interior designer Lucy Montgomery.Alan Jensen

By Gisela Williams

T Contributing Editor

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When the London-based former Soho House design director Linda Boronkay first visited Osborn House, a 19th-century former guesthouse located in an Australian village halfway between Sydney and Canberra, she was instantly enchanted. Even in their overgrown state, she said, the gardens and surrounding forest held an atmosphere of Old World romance and discovery. "I intervened as little as possible," she said about the process of turning the property into an intimate boutique resort. Fifteen unique suites were created in the main house, and seven cabins were scattered in the surrounding woods. When it came to the interiors, which include a game room and plant-filled spa, the designer sourced from a mix of European fabrics and Australian artisans, including the local ceramist Bruce Pryor, who crafted some of the lighting, and the Byron Bay-based artist Jai Vasicek, whose paintings and murals of muse-like female figures are found throughout the space. The result is Cotswolds manor meets Oz. "I want people to forget that they are in a hotel," Boronkay says. And the food is unfussy but delicious, as the chef, Segundo Farrell, trained under the Argentine barbecue master Francis Mallmann and typically cooks elements of a dish, like charred cabbage with grapefruit, over an open fire. Rooms from about $463, osbornhouse.com.au.

BUY THIS

Cheerful Pitchers for a Summer Table

The Danish artist Jens Quistgaard's Kobenstyle enamel pitchers for Dansk have been reissued in their original colors.Mark Weinberg/Dansk

Dansk — the Scandinavian-inflected American design brand founded in 1954 by Martha and Ted Nierenberg, a pair of New Yorkers who were besotted with Copenhagen — is perhaps best known for its colorful enamel Kobenstyle casseroles, their lids doubling as trivets, and some remarkable collaborators: the fashion photographer Bert Stern shot ads; Andy Warhol made marketing materials. Then there's the Danish artist Jens Quistgaard, who helped Dansk create thousands of popular midcentury products, many of which have become heirloom collectibles over the last 70 years. Now, some of the most memorable ones are being resurrected by the culinary website Food52, which, after acquiring Dansk last year, began researching the best pieces to reproduce from the archives and commissioning contemporary collaborators, including the designers Ilse Crawford and John Derian. First up, the brand is reissuing a large version of Quistgaard's Kobenstyle enamel water pitcher (available this week in its original red, teal, yellow and white shades) with a retro hourglass shape and braided rattan handle. "The beauty of Dansk designs is that they're so timeless," says Amanda Hesser, the founder and C.E.O. of Food52. "Today, it feels like there's a lot of stuff coming at us, but these are things that can stay with people for a long time." $95, food52.com.

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WEAR THIS

Grecian Sandals Millenniums in the Making

Ancient Greek's Victory of Samothrace sandal (left), inspired by the sculpture of the same name at the Louvre (right).Left: courtesy of the brand. Right: © Musée du Louvre, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais/Michel Urtado/Tony Querrec/Benoît Touchard/Art Resource, NY 

By Megan O'Sullivan

T Contributor

For their 10th-anniversary capsule collection, Ancient Greek Sandals' co-founders, Christina Martini and Nikolas Minoglou, turned to their most reliable source of inspiration: ancient Greek statues. With help from the Paris-based art historian Xenija Ventikou, a friend of theirs, they zeroed in on 10 specific works — from the "Winged Victory of Samothrace," from the Hellenistic era, which can be seen at the Louvre, to the Bell-Shaped Female Figurine from the late Geometric period, part of Boston's Museum of Fine Arts's permanent collection — to create 10 special-edition shoe designs. "This is the idea we felt most emotional about," says Martini. "And there's a parallelism — Greek art can be found in museums everywhere, and our sandals have been worn by women all around the world." One design is modeled after the Altes Museum's Berlin Kore — a free-standing statue from the Archaic period of a female figure wearing a pleated mantle — and has interlocking and subtly striped embroidered straps. Another, which nods to the Louvre's Loutrophoros Sphinx, a painted red clay vase that dates to the Seventh century B.C., features a string of reddish ceramic beads made by the ceramist Elpida Kourtzi. But while these works have a universal appeal, the brand, as usual, worked with a team of local artisans to bring the collection to life. "We could go elsewhere to manufacture our sandals for cheaper," Minoglou says, "but we think it's important to stay close to our roots." From $365, ancient-greek-sandals.com.

EAT THIS

Vegetarian Food in a Friendly Marseille Setting

Left: at La Famille Marseille, in the French city, a corner of the restaurant displays several vintage lamps from the owner's collection. Right: pizza with zucchini flowers, fior di latte mozzarella and slivers of preserved lemons.Corinne Malet

By Gisela Williams

T Contributing Editor

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Born in Marseille, France, the jewelry designer turned restaurateur Stéphanie Giribone raised her two children, along with her French Algerian husband, Mohamed Zefifene, in Marrakesh for over a decade. It was there, in 2016, that she created La Famille, a glamorously bohemian vegetarian cafe in a lush garden surrounded by whitewashed walls hidden within the medina's maze. When she and her family returned to her native city during the pandemic, she brought the concept along, and this past spring debuted La Famille Marseille in a ground-floor apartment, located in the Quartier des Antiquaires, with an open kitchen and a small courtyard with a fig tree. The interiors are decorated with vintage furniture, potted plants and shelves of lamps with macramé shades. Like the original cafe, it's open for lunch (and serves dinner two Saturday evenings a month), offering a daily changing menu of three or four vegetarian dishes. In Morocco the recipes are inspired by France, but at the Marseille location, they are typically Mediterranean with a Moroccan twist — pasta served with truffle, dried figs, grilled artichoke and za'atar, or pizza with zucchini flowers and slivers of preserved lemons — a bit like the city itself. A cookbook (in French and English) will be out in July and available for purchase at the restaurant. 36 rue Edmond Rostand, Marseille, 011-33-49-15-82-611, instagram.com/la_famille_marseille.

COVET THIS

Posh Pet Accessories From Celine

Clockwise from top: Celine by Hedi Slimane collar, $690, dog bowl, $1,950, leash, $365, bag, $2,250, and leash, $365; celine.com.Courtesy of the brand

It only took a year and a half of life with his new golden doodle, Elvis, before Celine's creative director, Hedi Slimane, launched a selection of pet accessories. An expansion of the French luxury house's Maison line of home and travel items, the collection includes collars and leashes in refined calfskin and canvas, either in tan or black, and with the option of metallic studs. Additionally, there are single or double food and water bowls wrapped in the house's Triomphe print, as well as a rubber toy in the same signature shape. Pet parents can cart these accessories for their fuzzy one in travel bags stamped with "Dog" or "Cat." The honey-colored pup modeling the pieces in Celine's ads? None other than Elvis himself. From $175, celine.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

Dining Alfresco

A candle-lit dinner in Fiona Corsini di San Giuliano's villa courtyard, with the Florentine countryside beyond the wall.Photograph by Simon Watson. Produced by Marella Caracciolo Chia

Warm weather means long, meandering meals enjoyed in the open air. For a series of dreamy outdoor dining spaces, from the Lrnce designer Lee Lenert's terrace in Morocco — appointed with string lights and a table of her own design — to the limestone courtyard of the Guadalajara, Mexico-based architect Hugo Gonzalez's late 1980s-era home, Casa Padilla, follow us on Instagram.

Correction: Last week's newsletter misstated the brand names for two watch companies; they are Wittnauer and Heuer, not Wittnauer Geneve and Jack Heuer.

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2022年6月10日 星期五

The Daily: China Is Taking Notes

The lessons China is learning from Ukraine.

Welcome to the weekend. In a recent episode, we asked, "Is the U.S. changing its stance on Taiwan?" As you heard, it's a question that snowballs, quickly, into bigger questions about China's ambitions, American strength and the shifting balance of global power.

They're themes we've covered for years on The Daily. So, in this newsletter, we wanted to bring those threads together to help you make sense of this moment. First, we created a China playlist to help you learn more. And, below, we have China experts weigh in on some of these questions, too.

The big idea: The lessons China is learning from Ukraine

The Daily strives to reveal a new idea in every episode. Below, we go deeper into one of those from our show on America's shifting foreign policy.

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President Biden said last month that he would use the U.S. military to defend Taiwan if China attacked the island.Doug Mills/The New York Times

While the war in Ukraine "will have no winner," China may come out ahead.

The invasion is a real-life war game, one that defense ministries in both Western and Eastern Hemispheres have been playing for years — testing what happens when a rising superpower goes on the military offensive.

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Now, China gets to take notes as Russia stumbles into uncertain geopolitical terrain, provoking global hostility. "It's the most strategic-thinking country in the world," Martin Jacques, the author of "When China Rules the World," said. "The Chinese are very serious students. They're paying close attention."

So what lessons is China learning from the invasion of Ukraine? Here are two, according to the experts we spoke with:

Lesson one: The developing world's silence is China's strength

Between Brexit and Trumpism, relations have been strained between some Western states for years. But after Russia invaded Ukraine, the band got back together — uniting to impose sanctions on the former and arm the latter.

Soon after, the consensus emerged that the war was one of the best things to happen to liberalism in recent memory, enough to "get us out of our funk about the declining state of global democracy," Francis Fukuyama said.

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But as Western democracies united behind Ukraine, much of the world remained silent — afraid to upset Russia or its allies. In a vote at the United Nations General Assembly on whether to suspend Russia from the Human Rights Council, 58 countries, including India, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico, Egypt and many across Africa and Asia, abstained.

Other countries have been forced to go further, pandering to President Vladimir V. Putin in an effort to maintain relationships vital to their state security. For example, with many of the world's poorest countries facing alarming levels of hunger and starvation, the leader of the African Union met with Putin to ask him to lift Russia's blockade on urgently needed cereals and fertilizer from Ukraine.

"China is immensely involved, engaged and invested in these developing countries," economically and in terms of prospective influence, Jacques said. Seeing their silence, he added, will affirm that in the long run, Western states may not carry the power they once did in the developing world.

To many observers, the influence of China in developing nations today illuminates the extent of America's declining influence. Even as Washington tries to step up its game, it is still far behind, mistaking speeches for impact and interest for influence in a world where just 13 percent of the population lives in a liberal democracy.

"This moment affirms China's strategy," Jacques said. "And they're willing to play the long game."

Lesson two: Sanctions can hurt

The United States, the European Union and their allies have placed extensive sanctions on Russia as part of a multipronged strategy to constrain its behavior. Many Western countries are taking action to halt their energy trade with Russia and to cut the country off from vast parts of the global financial system.

Western governments have also banned transactions with Russia's central bank and sovereign wealth fund, forcing Russia to enact strict restrictions on capital flows to prop up the value of its currency. Finally, some countries have also frozen the assets of Russian officials and oligarchs, banned exports of advanced technology to Russia and cut some Russian banks off from SWIFT, essentially barring them from international transactions.

Western nations willingness to impose sanctions on Russia, even at their own economic peril, will make China think twice before seeking to similarly expand their own territory, according to experts.

Taiwan is banking on Chinese caution toward the prospect of sanctions keeping the island safe. Joseph Wu, Taiwan's foreign minister, said his country hoped the world would enact sanctions against China if Beijing invaded the island, just as it has done against Russia for its war on Ukraine.

"Trade and economic development still absolutely comes first for China," Jacques said. "Putin started a war which is going to do a lot of harm to the Russian economy. But the Chinese are not like that at all. They think differently."

"The cost to them is just too great," he added. "And the benefits are not large enough to make it worthwhile."

While Jacques thinks the economic risks will likely keep China from invading Taiwan in the short term, he said that reunification was most likely inevitable as China grows in strength, invoking a line from the former Chinese leader Mao Zedong, who once told President Richard Nixon, "We can wait, maybe even a hundred years."

From The Daily team: A conversation with an Afghan general

Brig. Gen. Khoshal Sadat was Afghanistan's top police official. "We're not cowards," he said of the nation's security forces.Kiana Hayeri for The New York Times

We recently sat down with senior Daily producer Rachel Quester to talk about one of her favorite episodes of the show that she's had a hand in making. Rachel's pick is "A Conversation with an Afghan General," one of a number of episodes we made last year amid the American withdrawal from — and the fall of — Afghanistan.

Here's what she had to say about making the episode.

Why is this episode among your favorites?

When Afghanistan fell, the team really kicked into gear and felt like not only telling listeners what was going on but doing that through voices on the ground and those who were actually experiencing it. We did that by telling stories about people like R., an outspoken critic of the Taliban who was trying to flee and interpreters and their military equivalents.

How did the episode come about?

I was really curious about this thing we were hearing over and over again — and President Biden even came out and gave a speech saying as much — that, basically, the Afghan army just laid down their arms, that they weren't fighting. That kind of left me with a question: Would someone in the Afghan army agree with that assessment? With a lot of blame being put on their shoulders, what's their perspective of what happened? Does that feel like a fair critique? So that was a voice I really wanted to hear from.

How did you end up finding that voice?

Producer Lynsea Garrison and I had started to poke around to see what voices we could find, and eventually we came up with a list. One name on that list was General Khoshal Sadat — he had been featured in a story from 2019 because he was this up-and-coming, star, young general in the Afghan army.

We reached out to him and ended up having a phone call where I was getting his story for basically an hour. At that time, our focus was so on what had happened in the immediate sense, but it became very clear from his perspective that it was a way more complicated picture than to say that the Afghan army laid down their arms. Later, I asked him if he would do an on-the-record, formal interview for the show, and he said yes.

Can you talk a bit about producing that interview? What was it like watching that conversation happen?

The interview itself kind of took a turn. It was an unexpected conversation in the best way possible. Rather than focusing on the present, the general ended up talking us through his entire experience. He grew up under the Taliban, and his military career mapped onto and told the story of the 20-year war effort in Afghanistan. I think we struck gold, basically. It was kind of unexpected and completely riveting.

How did you deal with that unexpected turn during the taping?

All of us in the taping — Michael Barbaro, the producers and editors — were on the same page about going with him, that eventually we'll get to questions about the present, but he wants to take us on a journey, so let's just follow that journey with him. We ended up talking to him for three and a half hours.

Are there any moments that stick out to you from the process?

I think at the end of the episode, I remember this in the taping — he had this total moment of grappling, which I love. When Michael mentions that General Sadat left the war effort, he has a very human reaction, and you feel like he didn't have a choice, which leads to the most surprising part of the episode: when he says that we need to give the Taliban a chance.

He said that he's a very violent person and has killed and been in hand-to-hand combat with more of the Taliban than anybody he knows, and yet he says that we have to give them a chance because what else are we going to do? In my mind, that was a fighter realizing there wasn't a fight anymore, and that's a really hard conclusion for somebody who has based their entire life on that to have to come to. We didn't expect him to go there, and he did. It was provocative, and it was complicated, but it was him personally coming to a conclusion, which was surprising and unexpected.

On The Daily this week

Monday: What the winning legal strategy in the defamation case between the actors and former spouses Johnny Depp and Amber Heard means for #MeToo.

Tuesday: Polls show that the majority of American voters support gun safety measures. Their votes follow a different pattern.

Wednesday: A psychiatrist discusses mental health and mass shootings.

Thursday: How the Proud Boys went from an informal drinking club for men into a right-wing group now charged with sedition.

Friday: The bigger story behind the ousting of San Francisco's progressive district attorney.

That's it for the Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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