2022年3月23日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

Hand-painted Italian ceramics, casual spring tops — 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.

WEAR THIS

Bejeweled Knits

The three pieces in the Demylee x Lizzie Fortunato Capsule Collection.Left: Catie Ladd; right: Jake Glorioso

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It started, as so many partnerships do these days, on Instagram. Last summer, Lizzie Fortunato, the jewelry designer and co-founder of the namesake accessories brand, posted a picture in which she was wearing a Demylee sweater styled with a "neck mess," as she refers to the tangle of statement necklaces she often sports. Upon spotting the tag, Demy Lee herself, the Korean-born, New York-based knitwear designer, sent a direct message suggesting they collaborate, and the founders — along with Fortunato's sister and business partner, Kathryn — were off to the spangled races. The resulting three-piece capsule collection includes a short-sleeved mustard-colored sweater with a rhinestone chain stitched along the crew neckline like a built-in necklace, and a Shaker stitch cotton cardigan offset with chunky, candy-colored resin buttons. The third item, a white cotton button-down with hammered gold studs, holds special meaning for Fortunato, as it was modeled on the Demylee shirt she was wearing when her husband proposed. Each of the tops is casual enough to be worn with jeans while also adding a little something extra to an outfit. But don't hold back, says Fortunato, from adding more sparkle still. From $225, demylee.com.

BUY THIS

Classic Italian Ceramics Made New Again

Left: a selection of hand-painted acquasantiere made in Vincenza, Italy, from around $73. Right: a hand-glazed Gigli bowl (named after a regional ruffle-edged pasta) on a stand, made in Chianti, from around $192.Lissie Waite

By Tilly Macalister-Smith

T Contributor

Natalie Sytner's love of Italian motifs can be traced back to the childhood trips she took to Tuscany and Sicily, during which she'd follow her parents around as they "made friends everywhere and found all sorts of gifts and amazing ceramics and objets," some of which would end up on the walls of their family home in London. In 2021, Sytner, a former fashion publicist, launched Bettina Ceramica, a line carrying a charming medley of Italian ceramics that she named for her Ligurian mother. Rather than simply stocking traditional pieces, though, Sytner partners with generations-old manufacturers to give their archival styles a contemporary spin, whether by updating the color scheme, scale or glaze — wavy-edged fruit bowls from Chianti and folk-inspired ceramic lamps from Puglia, for instance, come in a fresh, glossy white — and thus helps to maintain endangered traditions. The fourth-generation Venetian craftswoman Sytner commissioned to make a series of colorful, hand-painted acquasantiere, the wall-mounted fonts of holy water traditionally found at the entrance of churches, was stunned when international customers depleted the collection; the antiquated style hadn't sold at her shop in years. "It's brought this whole part of her business back to life," says Sytner. From around $53; bettinaceramica.com.

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READ THIS

Layered Interiors Designed by a Countess

"The winter garden is open to nature on all sides. This is where we all get together," says Countess Isabelle d'Ornano of this space in La Renaudière, her country estate in the Pays de la Loire region of France.Christina Vervitsioti-Missoffe

For maximalists who have been made to suffer through the last decade's myriad spare white walls and minimalist blond wood interiors comes a balm in book form: "What a Beautiful World!," out this week and co-authored by Christiane de Nicolaÿ-Mazery of Christie's France, is a detailed look at the interiors of Countess Isabelle d'Ornano, the co-founder of the French skin care line Sisley Paris. It was the countess who designed the company's spas across Europe, along with its Paris headquarters and her own homes in London and France's Pays de la Loire region (her Paris apartment, which also appears in these pages, is the exception — the countess decorated it with the French interior designer Henri Samuel nearly five decades ago). The featured rooms offer a unique and sumptuous blend of rich colors, dizzying patterns, carefully made craft pieces — d'Ornano has an affinity for baskets — and fine art. They feel even more specific to her thanks to ever-present family photos and the needlepoint pillows that she has been making all her life. "The atmosphere in the home is not created only by the beautiful things, it is created by the way you live," says d'Ornano, who suggests paying attention to the most commonly overlooked real estate in any room, the ceiling: In the apartment on the Quai d'Orsay, large snails by the sculptor Jean-François Fourtou climb toward and upon it, as if sliding home. $85, sisley-paris.com.

SEE THIS

Poetic Photographs by Ming Smith

From left: Ming Smith's "New Year's Eve With Betty Carter at the Bottom Line (painted), 1978" (circa 2000) and "Setting the Stage, Harlem, New York (painted), 1976" (circa 2000).Courtesy of the artist and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London. © Ming Smith 2022

By Julia Bozzone

T Contributor

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"Spirit works through me," answers the photographer Ming Smith when asked how she's able to sense the precise moment at which to snap a picture of someone on the street — just as they walk into the light, say, and their expression changes ever so slightly — so that the resulting image feels candid yet definitive, and deeply intimate. Smith has been creating such images since even before the 1970s, when, bolstered by a debate about whether or not photography is art that she'd overheard while on a modeling assignment, she focused on shooting black-and-white pictures of everyday people in her neighborhood of Harlem. Soon after, she began to apply oil paint on top of certain prints in order to enhance their mood. Eight never-before-seen painted pictures appear in "A Dream Deferred," a show of Smith's work at Pippy Houldsworth Gallery in London. In one, an older woman sits pensively at a diner as if reflecting on time gone by, and melancholy blue streaks suggestive of clouds appear above her head. Also on view are vintage gelatin prints from Smith's "Invisible Man" (1988-91) series — its title a reference to Ralph Ellison's novel — for which she photographed her subjects at night, often without a flash and at slow shutter speeds. Yet even when blurred and shrouded in darkness, the figures are impossible to miss. And while the show's title comes from another work by a writer adept at illuminating Black American life, Smith herself has fulfilled a dream of her father, who wanted to be an artist. "A Dream Deferred" is up through April 30, houldsworth.co.uk.

COVET THIS

Heels for Everyone

Clockwise from left: Syro boots, $230, shopsyro.com; JiiJ shoes, $276, ji-ij.com; Sunni Sunni shoes, $600, sunnisunni.com; and Suzanne Rae shoes, $535, suzannerae.com.Courtesy of the brands

By Gage Daughdrill

"I don't try to make genderless footwear as much as I design without gender in mind," says Sunni Dixon, who launched his New York-based footwear line, Sunni Sunni, in 2019 after years of being told men's heeled shoes weren't commercially viable. "If it's hot, it's hot. And I will try and offer it in your size." Indeed, Sunni Sunni's styles, including square-toed mules with bold chain hardware and colorful heeled boots with python-print embossing, are available in a full range of men's and women's sizing. But Dixon isn't the only designer making heeled or embellished shoes to fit larger feet these days. Soon after her New York label, Suzanne Rae, launched footwear in 2017, the designer Suzanne Rae Pelaez began to offer size-inclusive velvet Mary Jane block heels, low-heeled pumps in Italian nylon mesh and open-toed sandals in rich suede. The Paris-based designer Ieva Juskaite created the unisex line JiiJ last year, after struggling to find shoes in her size and to her taste; she now makes futuristic boots and chunky silver heels in Frumat, a vegan leather made of apple skins. And then there's the Brooklyn-based line Syro, which was co-founded in 2016 by Shaobo Han and Henry Bae with the aim, the brand states, of "confronting the authority of heteronormative masculinity and carving out a space for celebrating femme joy." For evidence of that intention in practice, see the brand's curved heeled boots or its glossy, chrome-finished platforms with a 5.5-inch heel.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

The Place Where Anaïs Nin Kept Her Secrets

A view from the black-bottomed pool into the bedroom of Anaïs Nin's Los Angeles home, designed by Eric Lloyd Wright.Chris Mottalini

Hidden in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles, is the home of the midcentury French American eroticist and writer Anaïs Nin, who died at 73 in 1977. At the time that Nin moved in, she was married to the musician Rupert Pole, whose half brother was Eric Lloyd Wright (a grandson of Frank Lloyd Wright and the son of the landscape architect Lloyd Wright). Nin was in awe of the Wrights — those "giants of the West," she called them — and she and Pole asked Eric to build their house, which was completed in 1962. In Nin's study, the architect designed a bank of corner windows above her desk, so that she could stare out at the small back garden's pittosporum while she wrote. Read more at tmagazine.com and follow us on Instagram.

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2022年3月18日 星期五

The Daily: The Fight for the Future

And the war on Russian energy.

Welcome to the weekend. This week, Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, which U.S. officials called "war crimes," dominated the news. But we also covered the effects of another, more subtle invasion: the takeover of cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo by investors intent on winning the race to our electric future. Below, we explain how the two are linked.

Then, we share some listening recommendations for your weekend from Sabrina Tavernise, our new, official second host of the show. You can shout a warm welcome to Sabrina here.

The big idea: The fight for the future

The Daily strives to reveal a new idea in every episode. Below, we go deeper on one of those from our show this week.

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A resident living near the Kisanfu mine in Mayeba, Democratic Republic of Congo, showed off rocks he found there that contain cobalt.

The war in Ukraine — the optics, the actors, the lies used for justification — feels like a flashback. With his invasion, President Vladimir V. Putin is trying to resurrect the past, a time when land grabs were brazen, the concept of empire wasn't canceled and military might determined superpower status.

That's a worldview global leaders have united to reject. But now the question remains: What do they stand for, really?

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The rush to repudiate Russia has accelerated a reckoning with collective values and commitments. Specifically, Western governments are now re-evaluating their reliance on Russian oil and gas — and asking what they can do to expedite the green transition to divest in Russian energy. Below, we explain just how much has changed and examine why maintaining these stated commitments to a green energy transition will prove challenging.

What has changed?

To trace the period before and after Russia's invasion in the worlds of geopolitics, business, culture and sports, is to see how Putin's attack made the inconceivable suddenly inevitable.

Diplomatically, socially and economically, Russia became a pariah. Previously polarized parliaments and strained alliances were revived. Governments issued stringent sanctions, strangling Russia and causing the ruble to crash and the country's stock market to close.

Overnight, oil giants like BP, Shell and Exxon walked away from significant investments in Russia, one of the largest producers of fossil fuels in the world. Technology companies like Apple halted sales in the country and Google pulled Russian media off its networks. Sports bodies like FIFA and the International Olympic Committee barred Russians from competing.

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But this didn't stop Putin. The war is dragging on, with civilian casualties mounting and a refugee crisis straining Europe. Now, world leaders are asking how to sustain pressure on Putin — and discovering the answer will require continued divestment in Russian energy sources.

Dependence on Russian oil and gas

Russia is highly dependent on its energy trade, with fossil fuels accounting for almost half of its exports and 28 percent of its federal budget in 2020.

After the invasion of Ukraine, Western countries moved quickly to cut off these exports. As punishment for waging war, President Biden announced the United States would cut off Russian oil imports.

But unlike the United States, the European Union has not banned imports of Russian oil and gas. According to our colleagues at The Debatable, Europe relies on Russia for about one-third of its oil and 40 percent of its natural gas. (The United States, by contrast, gets none of its natural gas and only about 3 percent of the oil it consumes from Russia.)

Germany is especially dependent on Russian fossil fuels; it is Europe's largest energy consumer and Russia's most important customer. That dependence deepened after the Fukushima nuclear meltdown, in 2011, when Chancellor Angela Merkel committed to closing all of Germany's nuclear plants. Russia now supplies more than half of Germany's gas, half of its coal and about a third of its oil, according to Bloomberg.

But now, world leaders like Prime Minister Sanna Marin of Finland say that the West is "financing Russia's war" by buying the country's gas and oil.

"The world is paying Russia $700 million a day for oil and $400 million for natural gas," Oleg Ustenko, an economic adviser to the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, told The New Yorker this month. "You are paying all this money to a murderous leader who is still killing people in my country."

The green transition

World leaders know maintaining sanctions will require a long-term ban on Russian energy sources. How to do this seems clear: Transitioning quickly to renewable energy sources would reduce reliance on Russian oil and gas. Problem solved? Not really.

Beyond political opposition and partisan gridlock, the transition to renewable energy sources has been slow in some places for a few reasons. First, changing habits is challenging and getting rid of fuel-burning appliances, like gas-powered cars and stoves, is expensive. And second, sourcing the materials for renewable technologies, and producing them at scale, often requires creating new infrastructure.

The transition is "going to be much slower and much more expensive than people realize," said David Howell, the former British secretary of energy.

As we highlighted today in the show, the green transition also has a dark side. The materials necessary for the shift (like cobalt, used in batteries) are caught in an international cycle of exploitation, greed and gamesmanship — with superpowers vying for economic control of minerals in African countries. It's a fight that extends back to the Cold War, and now has expanded to include China as a key influence peddler.

Mining these resources is time-consuming, extractive and often violent — the opposite of an easy solution to skyrocketing gas prices at American pumps. Now, many climate activists are concerned that more fossil fuels, not renewable energy, could end up filling the void of Russian oil and gas exports.

As energy prices soar, some fossil fuel executives have seized on the crisis as a business opportunity. But ramping up domestic production would take time — and could set the world up for more oil and gas shocks in the future. Not to mention a dangerously overheated planet.

LISTEN TO OUR SHOWS

To learn more about Putin's endgame — and the global energy transition.

Article Image

Jose Bumba, left, pulled a 220-pound bag of cobalt from a 26-foot-deep hole in the makeshift Kasulo mine. Working conditions on such sites can be extremely dangerous. Photo: Ashley Gilbertson for The New York Times

The Global Race to Mine the Metal of the Future

The quest for cobalt, which is essential for electric-car batteries, has fueled a cycle of exploitation, greed and gamesmanship.

By Michael Barbaro, Michael Simon Johnson, Eric Krupke, Kaitlin Roberts, Patricia Willens, Marc Georges, Paige Cowett, Chris Wood and Marion Lozano

Article Image

Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

Four Paths Forward in Ukraine

How might the war in Ukraine unfold in the coming weeks or, potentially, months?

By Michael Barbaro, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Michael Simon Johnson, Stella Tan, Patricia Willens, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell, Elisheba Ittoop and Chris Wood

From The Daily team: Sabrina Tavernise's favorite Daily episodes

A high school in Sheberghan, Afghanistan, in May. Despite claims, the Taliban are likely to severely restrict education for girls and women.Kiana Hayeri for The New York Times

Over the last few months, you may have heard Sabrina Tavernise, a Times reporter, stepping in as host on a number of Daily episodes. She has helmed episodes exploring the impact of the Texas abortion law, the assassination of Haiti's president and, more recently, has reported heart-rending dispatches from the war in Ukraine.

Earlier this month, Sabrina was named as the second host of The Daily. To mark her official entry into the Daily family, here is a selection of three of her favorite episodes of the show.

"The Decision of My Life": This is the story of N, an 18-year-old girl from Kabul, Afghanistan. N's life was transformed last year after the fall of the Afghan government and her family tried to marry her off to a member of the Taliban. The episode is the first of two parts; listen to our follow-up conversation with N here.

The School Board Wars: School boards have emerged as a new battleground in American politics. In our two-part episode, we visited a school board meeting in Bucks County, Pa., where the fissures in American society are evident (you can listen to the second episode here).

The Great American Resignation: Last year, we spoke to workers and managers about why it had become so hard to get staff back through the doors as lockdowns came to an end. "I had never seen it like this before in my career," one owner of a gourmet burger restaurant in Texas told us.

On The Daily this week

Monday: As the conflict in Ukraine intensifies, a look at how the Russian government has taken steps to shield its people from information about the war.

Tuesday: We spoke to Lynsey Addario, a photojournalist, about the image she took that captured the new reality of the fighting in Ukraine.

Wednesday: A look back on the lessons learned about inflation in the 1970s and how it informs today's policy.

Thursday: David E. Sanger walked us through four possibilities for what comes next in Russia's war on Ukraine.

Friday: How the global competition to dominate the business of clean energy is playing out in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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

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