Wednesday, January 22, 2025

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

New takes on pineapple cake, trompe l'oeil ceramics — and more.
T Magazine

January 22, 2025

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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.

SEE THIS

Household Objects of the '90s, Recreated in Clay

Clay recreations of
Artist Stephanie Shih conjures a poignant domestic drama by recreating the symbols of temptation, vice, convenience and self-improvement that defined American life in the 1990s. © Stephanie H. Shih, Courtesy of the artist and Alexander Berggruen, NY. Photo: Robert Bredvad

By Sarah Archer

In "Domestic Bliss," a tenderly realized portrait of American life in the 1990s at Alexander Berggruen gallery in New York, the artist Stephanie Shih draws us into a fraught family narrative. The ceramic objects on view play various roles in the interior drama: Cigarette butts and a crushed beer can signal temptations acquiesced to; the complete "Buns of Steel" workout series on VHS and Suzanne Somers's ThighMaster offer proof of an investment in personal improvement. Viagra tablets point to lust, perhaps hope. Frozen dinners — one for each member of the titular "Nuclear Family" — sit atop a white Panasonic microwave oven, suggesting an uneasy coexistence. On an ironing board, an iron keeps company with the paperback bodice-ripper "Prisoner of My Desire." The book that inspired this body of work? 1998's "Divorce for Dummies," which Shih has rendered here as part of a self-help library. The artist builds the pieces by hand, using a fine brush to decorate their surfaces. There are subtle signs that each object is handmade, evoking the crafted pop sensibility of Corita Kent or Liza Lou — a slightly dappled finish here, a hint of hand lettering there. The net result is the uncanny feeling that the whole room has been seen, recorded, lost, then lovingly recreated, each element conjured by a human being with a memory that aches. "Stephanie H. Shih: Domestic Bliss" is on view at Alexander Berggruen, New York, from Jan. 22 through Feb. 26, alexanderberggruen.com.

STAY HERE

A New Madrid Hotel Pays Homage to the City's Creative History

Left: a marble table in front of a tasseled couch with a white bed in the background. Varying vases sit on a shelf above the headboard. Right: a light blue pool is lined with windows and curtains.
Left: a bedroom at the recently opened Brach Madrid, designed by Philippe Starck. Right: the indoor pool at the hotel's 4,300 square foot spa, La Capsule.  Guillaume de Laubier

By Gisela Williams

When the French designer Philippe Starck was asked to design the Brach Madrid, a hotel that opened earlier this month in a 1920s building on the Spanish capital's central Calle Gran Via, he wanted to channel the city's creative spirit. On the ground floor, the hotel's cafe features woven-leather ceilings and walls lined with artisanal tiles, along with dozens of paintings by Spanish artists that Starck spent three years searching out. The 57 rooms are decorated with flamenco shawls, vintage black-and-white portraits, leather headboards and tasseled pillows. Each bathroom has an oversized terra cotta-framed mirror and flecked breccia-tiled floors. The Brach restaurant, which serves a Mediterranean-inflected menu with dishes like grilled eggplant with tahini and lamb shoulder with za'atar sauce, is meant to feel like a grand European cafe. Starck put in wood-paneled walls, large tilted mirrors and several portraits of the Spanish poet Gabriel Garcia Lorca, a reference to Madrid's Surrealist avant-garde era when Lorca, Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí would gather at the city's Café Gijón. From about $500 a night, brachmadrid.com.

EAT THIS

Pineapple Cake, a Taiwanese Staple, Takes New Forms in New York, California and Missouri

Left: a shortbread cookie sprinkled with flakes of salt and lime zest on a white plate. Right: a piece of shortbread with fruit slices on top on a metallic scalloped plate.
Left: Té Company's pineapple linzer cookie with yuzu kosho is finished with lime zest and Maldon salt. Right: Jessica Little Fu's pineapple bars are filled with pineapple-and-stone-fruit jam, then topped with nectarine and crème fraîche chantilly. Left: Johnny Fogg. Right: Jessica Fu

By Martha Cheng

When Elena Liao and Frederico Ribeiro started Té Company, a Taiwanese teahouse in New York's West Village, in 2012, Liao knew she wanted to serve pineapple cake. But, unwilling to compete with her own (and everyone else's) memories of the iconic Taiwanese treat, "we thought we'd do something pineapple cake adjacent," she says. They created a linzer cookie composed of pineapple jam and yuzu kosho between hazelnut shortbread cookies. Since then, a number of bakers across the country have introduced new versions of the classic sweet, which typically takes the form of a buttery shortcrust shaped like an ingot and filled with pineapple, which is sometimes mixed with winter melon. For her pop-ups in the Bay Area, Calif., the pastry chef Jessica Little Fu made the treat using a peach, nectarine and pineapple conserve, topping the bars with crème fraîche and lime leaf powder. During the Chinese New Year season, Win Son Bakery in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn, collaborates with the nearby Taiwanese shop Yun Hai to offer a Parmesan shortbread filled with pineapple jam. And for a recent special, the ice cream shop Caffè Panna, with locations in Gramercy Park and Greenpoint, sold a sundae of Win Son's crumbled cookies layered with fior di panna soft serve and finished with grana Padano cheese and pineapple jam. At the Foundry Bakery in suburban St. Louis, owner Raymond Yeh says making pineapple cake for his Taiwanese-inspired bakery "is a no-brainer because it's really the pastry of Taiwan." Pineapple cake is considered particularly auspicious around the Lunar New Year — in Taiwanese, the word "pineapple" is a homonym for "prosperity coming." This year, Yeh is making a kumquat pineapple cake, doubling down by adding another fortuitous fruit.

VISIT THIS

An Artist's Experiments With Color and Light, on View in Mexico City

A large sheet made up of blue, orange, green, red and yellow squares and trapezoids is stretched across a swimming pool.
The artist Christian Camacho's "Aquaplén o plano central flotante" (2022) installed at the University Olympic Aquatic Center in Monterrey, Mexico. Courtesy of Christian Camacho

By Carla Valdivia Nakatani

Lately, the Mexican artist Christian Camacho has found inspiration in the shadows of the colored vinyl tarps that are commonplace across the country. They hang over market stalls and public plazas, bathing anyone who walks under them in varying intense hues. His nearly 50-foot-wide work "Aquaplén o plano central flotante" (2022) evokes that kaleidoscopic experience with a patchwork of vulcanized canvas that's reminiscent of stained glass. Originally commissioned for the Macroplaza, a town square in Monterrey, Mexico, it was later installed at the bottom of an Olympic-size swimming pool in the same city. Now, it's one of four pieces that make up "Inmersión: Formas del campo líquido," an exhibition at the Museo Universitario del Chopo in Mexico City. Incorporating various mediums including water, acetate and an LED monitor, Camacho's work challenges the viewer's perception of scale and light. "Inmersión: Formas del campo líquido" will be on view at the Museo Universitario Del Chopo, Mexico City, from Feb. 1 through May 18, chopo.unam.mx.

COVET THIS

Ceramic or Cardboard? Vessels That Demand a Double Take

Two light brown ceramic vessels, one with scrolled handles and the other with a curved handle and a straight spout.
When the French ceramist Jacques Monneraud sculpts his trompe l'oeil objects, he says he tries to "make them perfect, knowing that the kiln will intervene," giving them the rumples and warps that make them look even more like cardboard. Courtesy of Arsenic Galerie

By Ryan Haase

With their slightly grainy texture and mottled brown hue, the ceramist Jacques Monneraud's stoneware pieces so closely resemble cardboard that when buyers unbox their purchases, they're sometimes unsure where the packaging ends and the vessel begins. Online, the Bayonne, France-based ceramist says, "people would scroll past photos of my work and think it was AI; then they'd realize it actually exists and be really surprised." Monneraud, who has a background in graphic design and grew up around painting and woodworking, often makes prototypes in actual cardboard. Then he'll mimic the subtle rippling of the material in clay, add corrugated zigzags along the edges and paint on milky stripes of translucent glaze that look just like cellophane tape. "We think of cardboard as disposable," he says, "so I really enjoy the contrast of turning it into pottery, which can survive for thousands of years." For his latest pieces, Monneraud referenced classical Chinese, Iranian and Guatemalan forms and rebuilt them in his modern vernacular. They're on display this week at the Ceramic Brussels art fair, where Monneraud is represented by Paris's Arsenic gallery. instagram.com/jacquesmonneraud.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

Mexico City's New Wave of Nostalgic Small Hotels

A terrace with a long bench with white and crimson cushions, square tables with a chess board pattern and leather and metal chairs.
Fernando Marroquin

Over the last few years, a number of small, independent hotels have emerged in Mexico City's Condesa and Roma neighborhoods, many of them moving into the graceful old buildings that characterize this verdant pocket of the sprawling capital.

The 17-room Hotel Dama, which opened last summer in a converted 1950s apartment building on a mostly residential street in Condesa, exudes a retro glamour. There's a small sunken living room right off the lobby furnished with a banquette sofa and a bookcase filled with Mexican literature, as well as Oaxacan ceramics and textiles. Rooms, spread across three floors, feature handsome checkerboard floors and rust- or mustard-colored accents. There's also a shady rooftop with a lounge area and a restaurant where you can order mezcal-based cocktails and small plates like sea bass ceviche and squash blossom fritters.

Click here to see more of Mexico City's new boutique hotels and follow us on Instagram.

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

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