Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The T List: Six things we recommend this week

A seaside hotel in France, a Surrealist exhibition in Manhattan — and more.
T Magazine

October 16, 2024

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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, along with monthly travel and beauty guides, and the latest stories from our print issues. And you can always reach us at tmagazine@nytimes.com.

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SEE THIS

An Artist Known for His Expressive Vases Debuts a New Bird Series in Tokyo

Left: three large white ceramic vessels, two with smiley faces and one with protruding eyes and a circular mouth. Right: a pink ceramic sculpture with four little orange ceramic birds sitting on it.
Left: a grouping of Dan McCarthy's Facepots in his Hudson Valley, N.Y., home. Right: "Bazooka Joe BirdPot" (2024) is on view at the Tokyo gallery Kosaku Kanechika. Left: Jason Schmidt, from "Dan McCarthy: Freedom" (Rizzoli). Right: © Dan McCarthy, courtesy of Kosaku Kanechika. Photo: Kent Pell

By Laura Regensdorf

In 2014, when the artist Dan McCarthy moved from Brooklyn into a converted schoolhouse in upstate New York, he decided the grand hall would be a future gathering spot for his many Facepots: large, wonky vessels decorated with a spectrum of grins and grimaces. The earliest ones, about a decade old, recall a time of emotional swings. "I hadn't even found the clay that worked," McCarthy says of that experimental phase, "so a lot of the pots were breaking in the kiln." He learned to relinquish control, repairing the salvageable works using the Japanese technique known as kintsugi, in which mended seams are accented in silver or gold. The Facepots brought a new openness to McCarthy's practice, as did the Hudson Valley. Absent the city's pressures, he explains, "I was like a kid — on my hands and knees, lost in making a thing." "Freedom," a new monograph of McGrath's work, charts that arc, with nods to his Southern California upbringing, seen in rainbow-colored paintings of surfers and songbirds perched on guitars. Birds also animate new ceramic works in his solo exhibition at the Tokyo gallery Kosaku Kanechika, on view through Nov. 16. For McCarthy, these first faceless pots offer a shift in narrative. "Instead of a vessel, maybe it's a nest," he says, describing a fascination with his neighborhood birds. Kintsugi-like detailing appears on these pieces, too: Silver-leafed slabs camouflage the occasional split, while shiny rectangles evoke the little mirrors tucked inside birdcages. For the artist, fresh off his first flight to Japan, it's a time of possibility. "I'm 62, which is old and not," McCarthy says. "I think I've got another act in me. It should be an adventure." "Dan McCarthy" is on view through Nov. 16 at Kosaku Kanechika, Tokyo, kosakukanechika.com.

CONSIDER THIS

A Milanese Members' Club Opens in a Historic Brera Villa

A room with a brown, light green and beige color scheme. The ceilings are decorated with a floral motif.
The Wilde, a new members' club in Milan's Brera neighborhood, was designed by Fabrizio Casiraghi. Its top-floor restaurant, Ava, will serve an array of Mediterranean dishes. Giulio Ghirardi

Milan is often derided as a gray city, all stone facades and treeless streets. But in reality, it's a city of gardens — albeit private ones, locked behind gates and concealed within courtyards. Among them, hidden behind the hedges of Via dei Giardini (Street of the Gardens), are the verdant grounds of Villa del Platano — a 1950s apartment building turned private residence previously owned by Santo Versace, a onetime president of Versace and the older brother of Gianni and Donatella — where the Wilde, a members' club, will soon open its doors. Founded by Gary Landesberg, a former chairman of the Arts Club in London, the Wilde spans four floors, with a rooftop terrace and outdoor tables in the garden for al fresco dining. The Italy-born, Paris-based designer Fabrizio Casiraghi planned the interiors, which channel the vintage charm of midcentury Milan. In the ground-floor restaurant, the Club Room, the most informal of the three dining spaces, a backlit ceiling resembling Art Deco-era stained glass casts a soft light onto glossy walnut club chairs, upholstered banquettes patterned with leaves and flowers, and a mirrored DJ booth for late-night soirees. Other gathering spaces include a library bar, a cigar lounge and several private rooms for meetings and intimate meals. One such room, attached to the top-floor Mediterranean restaurant Ava, features a hand-painted mural by the artist Assia Pallavicino depicting dancing couples and musicians — evoking the same feeling of bygone revelry that the Wilde hopes to bring to Milan. The Wilde opens Nov. 7. Prospective members can apply at portal.thewilde.com.

VISIT THIS

Maria Pergay's Stainless Steel Furniture, and Other Experimental Works, on View in New York

Left: a circular stainless steel chair on a white background. Right: a close-up of a red surface with a bamboo-like silver attachment.
A new exhibition celebrates Maria Pergay's pioneering designs, including her 1968 stainless steel Ring chair (left) and 1967 lacquered Console (right). Thierry Depagne

By Zoe Ruffner

In 1968, when Maria Pergay debuted her collection of curved stainless steel furniture, bending the industrial material past its perceived limitations, the Moldova-born, Paris-raised designer changed the face of French interiors. But by the 1990s, when the collectors Suzanne Demisch and Stephane Danant happened upon one of her alloyed designs at a flea market, the once eminent matron of metal — whose discerning clients had included Cristóbal Balenciaga, Pierre Cardin and Salvador Dalí — had slipped into obscurity. This month, the pair's namesake New York gallery, Demisch Danant, which helped set the stage for Pergay's early-2000s revival, is once again showcasing her work. Opening a year after her death at 93, "Precious Strength," celebrates Pergay's expansive oeuvre with an emblematic collection of about 35 pieces. Accompanied by a trove of samples, sketches and personal objects, her seminal steel creations, including the Ring chair and Three-Tiered table, will be on display alongside her later experimentations with lacquer, mother-of-pearl and precious woods — all of which are best experienced with Pergay's own words in mind: "The only thing I want," she once said, "is that the work not leave you indifferent, one way or another." "Precious Strength" will be on view Oct. 24 through Nov. 30 at Demisch Danant, New York, demischdanant.com.

READ THIS

A New Book Showcases Interiors and Goods by the French Design Studio Atelier Vime

Left: a view of a room hung with artwork and crowded with furniture on terra cotta floors. Right: a view of a table from above, set with yellow plates on eye-shaped place mats.
Left: a bedroom in Benoît Rauzy and Anthony Watson's Vallabrègues, France, home is decorated with Wayne Pate artwork, an antique lyre-back chair and a 17th-century Persian vase. Right: a terra-cotta rendering of Atelier Vime's Medici vase (center), created with the Provençal ceramist Manon, sits alongside the studio's woven place mats. © Anthony Watson, from "The World of Atelier Vime" (Flammarion).

Benoît Rauzy and Anthony Watson founded their design studio, Atelier Vime, after discovering an abandoned wicker workshop in their 18th-century hôtel particulier in Vallabrègues, a Provençal village on the left bank of France's Rhône river. They became fascinated with basket-making and wicker furniture, collecting antique designs by everyone from Adrien Audoux to Charlotte Perriand, offering them to customers along with their own decorative accessories, created with the designer Raphaelle Hanley. Now their obsession and aesthetic are on display in a new book, "The World of Atelier Vime: A Renaissance of Wicker and Style." The pages feature imagery largely shot by the couple themselves, with tours of their homes (including their latest acquisition, a Louis XV-era château in Normandy), a survey of their designs — from the woven Medici column vase to the fish scale-inspired Écailles screen — accompanied by profiles of the artisans who forge them, and a look at the roots of wicker in Vallabrègues. "The World of Atelier Vime" comes out Oct. 29, $75, rizzoliusa.com.

STAY HERE

In Arcachon, France, a New Hotel With Minimal Interiors and Bay Views

A white bedroom with a wall-sized window that opens onto blue water dotted with boats. A bench-like chair faces the window.
A view over the Bassin d'Arcachon, a saltwater bay, is one of the best amenities at the Hotel Les Vagues in Arcachon, France. Foodies by Louise

By Alexander Lobrano

The French hotelier Jose San Martin describes his new 45-room property, Hotel Les Vagues, as his love letter to Arcachon, a seaside town 34 miles south of Bordeaux on the sandy banks of the shallow bay with which it shares a name. What's certain is that the hotel's visual modernity — all glass and concrete — has ruffled a few feathers in a place dominated by elegant 19th-century villas with slate mansard roofs built after the resort town was created in 1857 by the French Emperor Napoleon III. But its soothingly minimal interiors, including ceramic suspension lamps from Bordeaux's Le Petit Gobelet, pine-paneled walls and dark wood parquet floors, are also likely to attract a new, design-conscious clientele. A spa with a plunge pool overlooks the sea, while the L'Écume restaurant features oysters raised in the Bassin d'Arcachon in front of the hotel; the cocktail bar, Rooftop, which has a list of Bordeaux wines from the region's new generation of small organic producers, offers sweeping views over the bay. From about $215 a night, hotel-lesvagues-arcachon.com.

VIEW THIS

A Manhattan Exhibition Shows Four Surrealist Artists in Visual Conversation

Left: an artwork that shows abstract shapes on a green and blue background. Right: a wooden sculpture on a gray background.
Left: Yves Tanguy's, "Aux Aguets le jour" ("On the Look-out by Day") (1939). Right: Agustin Cárdenas's "Sans titre (Totem)" ("Untitled [Totem]"). Left: © 2024 Estate of Yves Tanguy/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

By Donna Bulseco

One hundred years after the French poet André Breton published his "Surrealist Manifesto" in 1924, a new group show titled "Hallowed Ground: Tanguy, Lam, Penalba and Cárdenas" at Di Donna Galleries in New York brings together four artists whose work reflects the art movement's core principle — how dreams and the imagination open up everyday reality. "Surrealism taps into the unconscious and the irrational," says Emmanuel Di Donna, who founded the Upper East Side gallery in 2010 with a focus on European and American art from 1900 to 1970. "Viewers relate to the imagery's unexpected juxtaposition of inner worlds." In the exhibition, which premieres this Friday at Art Basel Paris, each artist reveals their affinity for Surrealism — and each other — through a distinct visual vocabulary and materiality. The Neolithic menhirs of Brittany, where Yves Tanguy grew up, come to mind in his 1939 oil painting "Aux Aguets le jour," with its stony totems rising from the earth in a Brittany-blue landscape. Likewise, Alicia Penalba's sharp-edged bronze sculpture "Grand Totem d'Amour" (1954), has a shard-like verticality reminiscent of the mountainous Cuyo region in western Argentina, where the Buenos Aires-born artist spent time as a child. Wifredo Lam and Agustín Cárdenas both traveled from their native island of Cuba to Paris and drew inspiration from the Surrealist group. Mythic symbolism, birds and jungle leaves populate Lam's oil paintings, while Cárdenas's exploration of nature and the body comes to life in his sensuous sculptures in mahogany, African padauk and Iroko wood. "Hallowed Ground: Tanguy, Lam, Penalba and Cárdenas" will be on view Oct. 29 through Dec. 6 at Di Donna Galleries, New York, didonna.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

Why So Many Chefs Don't Want Restaurants Anymore

A metal platter with a burger whose bun has been branded with the words
Photograph by Mari Maeda and Yuji Oboshi. Set design by Victoria Petro-Conroy

Why are so many chefs rejecting restaurants? All sorts of talented, enterprising, creative cooks — who used to run restaurants in New York City or will never run restaurants there or have consigned restaurants to minor roles — are embarking on culinary careers that sprawl in other, gentler directions.

"Back when I was reviewing restaurants, there seemed to be no steppingstone to kitchen glory as reliable as stewardship of a place that self-regarding epicures flocked to and food bloggers gushed over," Frank Bruni writes in T's latest issue. "And it seemed that no one in culinary circles enjoyed the bragging rights — the divinity — that the top restaurant chefs did."

But, Bruni writes, "over recent years, they watched restaurants become more difficult and expensive to operate, while the food world diversified and presented easier incomes and new routes to respect."

Click here to read the full story about why some of America's most lauded cooks have stepped away from the lunch-and-dinner grind and follow us on Instagram.

And if you read one thing on tmagazine.com this week, make it:

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