2022年8月24日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

A Minorcan villa, hand care essentials — 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.

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A Minorcan Villa Surrounded by Forest

The pool terrace and outdoor lounge at Finca Bellavista, with views of the surrounding forests and farmlands. Marta Pérez

By Chris Schalkx

T Contributor

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While Ibiza and Mallorca both offer farmhouse-turned-villa rentals in all shapes and sizes, comparable options on the less visited and easternmost Balearic island of Minorca are not as plentiful. That makes Finca Bellavista, a five-bedroom homestead on the island's southwest side, about a 20-minute drive from the medieval town of Ciutadella, a welcome addition. Opened by the French hotelier Arnaud Zannier, it's the latest property from Zannier Private Estates, his family's collection of bookable residences that includes a 10-bedroom chateau near Saint-Tropez and a vineyard in northern Portugal. This new spot feels similarly rooted in its rural setting — braided baskets, unpolished wooden furnishing and locally sourced antiques warm up the meticulously renovated farmhouse's lime-washed interiors, and over 120 private acres of plains, forest and farmland lie between its front porch and the sea. "I visited several properties around the island and fell in love with this one," Zannier says. "The building embodies typical Minorcan traditions — the large chiminea, the flat roof terrace and the iconic white coating — and it's so remote." But while it may have rustic appeal, it is not without an outdoor pool and a private chef. Guests will also want to avail themselves of a secluded pathway on the grounds that snakes to one of Minorca's most pristine coves, Playa de Son Saura, and connects to the Camí de Cavalls, a walking route that encircles the whole of the island and passes right in front the estate. Price upon request, zannierhotels.com.

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A Collaboration Spanning Furniture and Eyewear

Left: Temo eyewear in Alkakaw Acetate with Tobacco Lens. Right: Michael Bargo for Port Tanger Handmade Stool.Bibi Borthwick

By Gage Daughdrill

After meeting through a mutual friend in London, Michael Bargo, the New York interior designer and furniture dealer who's long used his apartment as an ever-evolving showroom, and Bilal Fellah, the co-founder of Port Tanger, the eyewear label inspired by vintage pairs and the vibrancy of the Moroccan city for which it's named, decided to link up for the latest iteration of the brand's ongoing Visited By series. The collaboration consists of one stool and one pair of glasses in six colorways. Bargo looked to 20th-century design and cafe society when coming up with the latter's round acetate frames with contrasting fluorescent lenses (they look a bit like ones Aristotle Onassis used to wear), but borrowed the name for them, Temo, from his pet Chihuahua. The stool, handmade from Moroccan walnut wood and woven cow leather, is also meant to evoke glamorous gatherings of yesteryear while being quite practical. "You have this easy piece of furniture that functions in many different ways," says Bargo. "It can be an extra dining chair, coffee table or seat." The stool is also versatile in that it's as easy to picture in a New York hot spot as in a Tangier hideaway. "I love Tangier," says Bargo. "It has a sort of speakeasy culture, with most things happening behind closed doors. It makes it difficult to fully experience the city if you don't have a local guiding you. But then you discover all of these beautiful little secrets." Temo eyewear, $290; stool, $675, porttanger.com.

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Luxurious Hand Care Essentials

From left: Homecourt Hand Cream in Cipres Mint, $45, homecourt.co; Flamingo Estate Garden Essentials Hand Soap, $44, flamingoestate.com; Sidia The Hand Exfoliant, $38, sidiathebrand.com.Courtesy of the brands

A 2020 Gallup poll revealed that the average adult washes their hands five or more times a day — so why not make the most of it? Relishing the process is possible thanks to a trio of brands concocting formulas using elevated ingredients and sophisticated fragrances. Sidia, the newest venture from Erin Kleinberg of the branding agency Métier Creative, launched its citrusy Hand Exfoliant and Hand Serum this month in hopes of encouraging customers to take small moments for themselves throughout the day. The exfoliant is satisfyingly gritty, and the fast-absorbing serum guarantees that there's no slipperiness after application. Homecourt, the actor Courteney Cox's line, took special care with its Hand Wash and Hand Cream, which come in four fragrances: steeped rose, neroli leaf, cipres mint and Cece, a spicy, smoky blend that is the founder's signature. Both include ingredients like wild hibiscus extract, soothing microalgae oil and argan oil that nourish skin with every use. Finally, Flamingo Estate, the California-based brand that partners with growers and naturalists, offers products that are as close to farm-to-sink as you can get. Its Garden Essentials line includes a Castile Hand Soap, with oils like babassu, rose hip seed, and olive to support a healthy skin barrier, and a Body Lotion, with jojoba and avocado oils along with oat and micro algae to make the skin more resilient. And the eucalyptus, lavender, rosemary and sage scent calls to mind the lush gardens of its namesake estate, making a practical routine feel like a brief escape.

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A Photography Exhibit That Captures a 'Moment of Freedom'

Left: Sisters Gisela Getty and Jutta Winkelmann with Dennis Hopper in Paris. Right: The twins in Kassel, Germany, 1966.Courtesy of Gisela Getty

By Zoe Ruffner

T Contributor

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In 1972, Gisela Getty and her twin sister, Jutta Winkelmann, landed in Rome with one purpose: to reinvent themselves. There, the free-spirited, Kassel, Germany-born twins, who had already begun to make a splash with their participation in the West Germany student protests of 1968, became poster children for the era's unbridled bohemianism as they discovered LSD and a colorful circle that included Bernardo Bertolucci, Roberto Rossellini, Mario Schifano and J. Paul Getty III, whom Gisela would go on to marry. "We had this sense that it was a very important time, so we started to take our camera with us everywhere," Gisela recalls. Some of the resulting images — as well as photographs of the identical dark-haired siblings with the likes of Leonard Cohen, Dennis Hopper and Timothy Leary from the years that followed — make up "Summer of Love," an exhibition opening at Indi Herbst Galerie in Starnberg, Germany, next week. Perhaps the most poignant of the roughly 30 included pictures is a Robert Freeman snapshot of the sisters sauntering bare-breasted down a country road in Italy days before Gisela's then fiancé was kidnapped and held for ransom by the 'Ndrangheta crime syndicate. (Upon his release, the couple fled to California.) "After that, the world started to change, and the window of looking into paradise slowly closed," she says. But to her, the show takes us back to just before — "that whole moment of freedom in which we changed the paradigm to something more tender, more liberated, more tolerant." herbstgalerie.com.

WEAR THIS

Flexible Men's Wear Staples

Looks from Lucas Ossendrijver's collection for Theory Project.Federico Pestilli

By Jameson Montgomery

Lucas Ossendrijver is best known for his 14-year tenure as the designer of men's wear at Lanvin, which was defined by collections rooted in reality but replete with luxurious flourishes. Since his departure from the house in 2018, he's spent a lot of time gardening, traveling and teaching — doing things that were difficult to manage under the nonstop demands of the traditional fashion calendar. Thus, he promised himself that any return to the business would be for something he really believed in. Ossendrijver found just that when he was approached to design a collection for Theory Project, a collaborative extension of the American brand. The Dutch designer is quick to note that the result does not consist of flashy looks for a runway show; rather, these are clothes that skew business casual and are meant to be worn by a wide range of people in their everyday lives; Ossendrijver was especially thinking about New Yorkers, who are constantly on the move and need their wardrobes to be flexible, both physically and situationally. That doesn't mean the pieces are without his signature elevating details, however. In the look book, striped shirting is paired with a camel wool bomber jacket lined in quilted washed satin, while a stately topcoat turns out to be made out of recycled wool from Manteco, an innovative mill in Prato, Italy. Ossendrijver's favorite piece is a recycled nylon parka that comes in black and gray or color-blocked with browns and blue. He loves its capacious pockets, round silhouette and taped inner seams, which provide extra reinforcement and protection from the elements — like much of the collection, says Ossendrijver, "it's as beautiful on the inside as on the outside." From $95, theory.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

Alex Katz Is Still Perfecting His Craft

Jordan Taylor Fuller

The artist Alex Katz has had an astonishingly long career in painting. Now, at 95, he is preparing for a new retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. In her profile of Katz for our latest issue, Amanda Fortini writes: "I think about how Katz has lived, almost single-mindedly dedicated to art, to his practice, to the craft of painting, and what lessons that might impart in our age of scatteredness and distraction: about devotion, discipline, the investment of time it takes not only to make art but to do anything worthwhile, the almost Buddhist concentration." Read the full story and watch Katz discuss his favorite artwork at tmagazine.com, and follow us on Instagram.

Correction: A picture caption in last week's newsletter misidentified one of the sisters in a film still from "Walchensee Forever"; she is Frauke Werner, not Norma. The Aug. 3 edition of the newsletter misspelled the name of a skin care brand; it is Obagi, not Obaji.

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2022年8月17日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

An upstate lodge, a guide to body scrubs and serums — 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 Mountainside Lodge in Upstate New York

Left: the exterior of Little Cat Lodge. Right: vintage artwork and mushroom-wood-lined walls give the guest rooms a rustic, midcentury feel.Max Flatow

By Sydney Rende

T Contributor

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Situated on a seven-acre lot at the foot of Catamount Mountain and just west of the part of the New York-Massachusetts border where the Hudson Valley meets the Berkshires, the newly opened Little Cat Lodge is an ode to the region's historic ski culture and that of the Swiss and Italian Alps. Once a stagecoach station, the building, formerly known as the Swiss Hutte Inn and Restaurant and now under the purview of Matt Kliegman and Noah Bernamoff, has a rustic European-chalet aesthetic that was achieved using local materials — the walls of the 14 guest rooms are mushroom wood and the custom beds were handcrafted out of maples cleared from the mountain last year. The hotel dining program, which is helmed by the James Beard Award-nominated chef Jason Bond, boasts two distinct spaces: There's a bright and airy restaurant with an elevated menu inspired by classic Alpine dishes, and a cozy tavern with terra-cotta floors and a wood-burning fireplace that was designed for après-ski drinks and bites. Indeed, guests can expect easy access to nearby slopes, including those of Catamount Mountain Resort, which is right next door, and will also want to wander into the woods to check out the lodge's barrel saunas. In the warmer months, they have their pick of hiking and biking trails, and Little Cat has an outdoor swimming pool with plenty of lounge chairs. From $345, littlecatlodge.com.

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Scrubs and Serums for the Body, Not the Face

From left: ZitSticka Fizz Fountain, $25, zitsticka.com. Kate Somerville ExfoliKate Resurfacing Body Scrub, $56, katesomerville.com. Soft Services Smoothing Solution Calming Gel Exfoliant, $34, softservices.co. Topicals Slather Exfoliating Body Serum, $30, sephora.com. Follain Resurfacing Body Scrub, $24, follain.com.Courtesy of the brands

This has been the summer of the crop top and along with the trend toward showing more skin has come a slew of new skin-care products that encourage us to treat the rest of the body as carefully as we treat the face. Follain's Resurfacing Body Scrub was inspired by a clay mask from the brand's house line and in addition to clay the thick paste contains hydrated silica to smooth out rough patches and salicylic, glycolic and lactic acids to peel away the outer layer of the skin. This and Kate Somerville's ExfoliKate Resurfacing Body Scrub, also derived from a brand mainstay — the ExfoliKate Intensive face mask — and in which lactic and salicylic acids are combined with fruit acids and pumice to slough away dead cells, can each double as a mask if left on for a few minutes. You'll also find pumice, as well as pore-cleaning acids and calming niacinamide for reducing that post-scrub redness, in ZitSticka's Fizz Fountain. For an all-around gentler solution, look to Soft Services' Smoothing Solution Calming Gel Exfoliant, a serum meant to be applied before moisturizer that uses acids along with urea, an emollient, to soften skin over time. It works especially well on those with skin conditions like keratosis pilaris. Finally, Topicals' Slather Exfoliating Body Serum has that famed face product ingredient, retinol, for combating roughness and aging all over.

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In Southampton, an Exhibition of Postwar Art and Furniture

Nuvolo's "Untitled" (1959), sewn canvas and fabric, and Pierre Chapo's R08A sideboard (circa 1964).Photo by Joe Kramm, courtesy Sélavy by Di Donna, Southampton, N.Y.

By Aileen Kwun

T Contributor

Emmanuel and Christina Di Donna, the husband-and-wife owners of Di Donna Galleries on Madison Avenue in Manhattan, have made names for themselves with important exhibitions showing the work of Surrealist giants such as René Magritte, Jean Arp and Leonora Carrington. In 2020, they opened an offshoot in Southampton called Sélavy, its name a nod to Marcel Duchamp's alter ego, Rrose Sélavy. In contrast to their heavily researched, museumlike shows in the city, the Long Island space offers a rotating salon-style platform where art, design and decorative arts commingle — and a chance for the pair "to do beautiful shows based purely on taste," says Emmanuel. This year's summer salon, which closes on Labor Day, presents postwar works by the Arte Povera painter Giorgio Ascani, better known as Nuvolo (Italian for "cloud"), whose framed patchwork compositions pieced from dyed salvage textiles and deerskin subvert the traditional canvas with their texture and sculptural qualities. These works are shown alongside handcrafted elm and leather furnishings, such as a pair of generously proportioned campaign-style armchairs and a hefty wooden slab sideboard, by Pierre Chapo, an architecturally minded French woodworker who was a contemporary of Charlotte Perriand and Serge Mouille. Though Nuvolo and Chapo, born just a year apart, never met during their lifetimes, "bringing them together was an easy choice," Emmanuel says. "Both were passionate about their creations and relied heavily on the beauty of their materials and the simplicity of forms." On view Thursdays to Sundays, or by appointment, through Sept. 5, selavy.com.

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A Documentary Inspired by Family Ties and a German Lake

Sisters Norma (center left) and Anna (center right) Werner in a still from "Walchensee Forever" (2020), directed by Janna Ji Wonders.© Flare Film

By Gisela Williams

T Contributing Editor

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In the documentary "Walchensee Forever" (2020), the German filmmaker Janna Ji Wonders looks at four generations of women in her family and their relationship to the Walchensee, one of the largest alpine lakes in Germany, which in one way or another has shaped all of their lives. Wonders's grandmother Norma Werner, who was 104 when filming began, talks about inheriting the cafe her family opened at the lake from her mother, and Wonders's mother, Anna Werner, recalls the '50s- and '60s-era bohemian adventures she and her sister, Frauke, had everywhere from Mexico to San Francisco to a famed commune in Munich. The film, which is ultimately about the search for identity and the cycle of life, premiered at the Berlinale just before the pandemic and won several awards but continues to make waves. On Aug. 31, Schloss Elmau, a castle estate and resort in the Bavarian Alps that maintains its founder's legacy of hosting musicians and thinkers, will hold a screening of it in its concert hall, after which there will be a discussion with Wonders and Anna. Fittingly, Elmau is only a half-hour drive from Walchensee, so perhaps those moved by the documentary will opt to see it in person. To Wonders, who splits her time between Munich and the lake, it's a place to recharge and, as the film attests, "a silent witness to all the human drama." walchenseeforever.de.

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Tennis Bracelets Made With an Icon of the Sport

Bracelets from Monica Rich Kosann's The Tennis Bracelet — CE Collection, prices on request, monicarichkosann.com.Danielle Kosann

When the New York jewelry designer Monica Rich Kosann was approached by the tennis legend Chris Evert to collaborate on a collection of tennis bracelets, she felt humbled. "She's such a trailblazer in the worlds of tennis and women's sports," says Kosann — and, to an extent, in the jewelry world. Tennis bracelets, which consist of a continuous line of uniform precious stones, became known as such soon after Evert started wearing a diamond one on the court — famously, she lost it during a 1978 U.S. Open match, which was paused so she could look for it. For the 13-piece capsule, which marks the first time the 18-time Grand Slam winner has tried her hand at designing jewelry, Evert revisited her memories of that day. Many of the bracelets have an emerald representing the court's green base, and a pear-shaped diamond that references what Evert describes as "the sweat of competition." Kosann is thrilled, she says, to be bringing "a new voice to an iconic style." And, while it is typically also a pricey one, the offering includes versions featuring sterling silver instead of 18-karat gold, white sapphires instead of diamonds and a tsavorite instead of an emerald. Prices upon request, monicarichkosann.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

A Milanese Apartment Is Restored, Then Renewed

In the fashion executives Carlo Alberto Beretta and Jacopo Venturini's Milan apartment, an oak leaf toleware chandelier hangs above a dining room table laid with a Portuguese ceramic cauliflower and silver Buccellati candlesticks. The wall hangings are pages from an antique pharmacy herbarium, and a set of 1920s rattan-and-mohair-velvet furniture from a hotel in Palermo provides extra seating.Anthony Cotsifas

When Carlo Alberto Beretta and Jacopo Venturini, veteran fashion executives who have been romantic partners for over 20 years, went looking for a new Milan apartment six years ago, they were seeking some history and a bit of charm. Minimalism, often the lingua franca of contemporary Italian design, holds little appeal for them. Instead, the apartment is laden with beautiful objects, from the giddily rococo and Orientalist to the polished Art Deco and Modernist, all of it meticulously arrayed and moodily lit. The apartment's denlike warmth and cabinet de curiosité density is in keeping with what Venturini calls Milan's "hidden" character, a quality that makes the city difficult for an outsider to fully comprehend. "It can seem like just a cold place for business but, once you're inside, it's like a box, opening," he says. Read the full story at tmagazine.com, and follow us on Instagram.

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