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London's Secret Gardens

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Jane Anderson
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London Barbican Conservatory garden
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The bustle of Britain's sprawling capital is part of its appeal. But where do you go if you're in need of an oasis in the urban landscape? We've unearthed six of London's best secret gardens.

 

Photo courtesy of The Barbican Centre

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Barbican Gardens
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London Barbican conservatory garden
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Few people know about the tropical conservatory garden with coffee bean and citrus trees, palms and ferns, and finches and quails in the Barbican, a huge performing arts center in the City of London. Hidden within the blockish Brutalist architecture, the garden is a great place to chill and chat between bouts of culture. Alternatively, take the Architectural or Hidden Barbican Tour. Both give fascinating insights behind the scenes of Europe's second largest arts center.  Open Sundays and public holidays 11 am to 5:30 pm; £8 (£6 concessions). 

 

Photo courtesy of The Barbican Centre

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Chelsea Physic Garden
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Chelsea Physic garden london
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Forward thinking and utterly beguiling, the Chelsea Physic Garden was founded in 1673 as the Apothecaries' Garden, with the purpose of training apprentices in identifying plants. Highlights include a Garden of World Medicine and a new Pharmaceutical Garden. A major outdoor sculpture exhibition called "Pertaining to Things Natural" presents monumental sculptural works (through October 31 ,2012). Open Tuesdays through Fridays noon to 5 pm, Sundays noon to 6 pm; £9 (£6 concessions).

 

Photo courtesy of Chelsea Physic Garden

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Geffrye Museum Gardens
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Geffrye Museum Gardens  London
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The Geffrye Museum has long been a beacon of culture and horticulture in the city's East End. The museum shows the changing style of English domestic interiors from 1600 to the present day. Outside, there is a sequence of period town gardens highlighting the key styles over the past four centuries. It includes a 17th-century garden with medicinal and culinary plants in medieval patterns. A "Ceramics in the City" exhibition takes place on September 21–23 with an open evening event on September 20. Admission and events are free.

 

Photo courtesy of The Geffrye Museum 

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The Roof Gardens
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The Roof Gardens kensington London
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One hundred feet above the bustle of High Street Kensington, on top of a 1930s former department store, you'll find three lush gardens with mature oaks, fruit trees, and a flowing stream. Visitors are free to roam the Moorish Spanish Garden based on the Alhambra in Granada; the Tudor Garden with its lilies, roses, and wisteria; and the English Woodland Garden, best in the spring when thousands of narcissus and crocus are in bloom. There's also a restaurant serving lunch, Wednesdays through Fridays, and dinner, Tuesdays through Saturdays. Gardens open daily; call ahead to confirm times (+44 (0)20 7937 7994). 

 

Photo courtesy The Roof Gardens

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The Secret Garden at The Montague
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The Secret Garden at The Montague
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Bloomsbury, known for its literary associations and garden squares, has a new green space at The Montague Hotel. The work of floral designer and fragrance creator, Kenneth Turner, this enchanting English garden is landscaped with birch, Leanna vine, summer roses, and hanging wisteria. It's the perfect place for a glass of Pimms, afternoon tea, or an evening barbecue. Visitors needn't be staying at the hotel but booking in advance is recommended.

 

Photo courtesy of Red Carnation Hotels

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The Garden Museum
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The Garden Museum
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Tucked away beside Lambeth Palace Gardens, across the River Thames from Tate Britain, The Garden Museum celebrates the design, history, and art of cultivated places. At its heart lies a knot garden in honor of the great plant hunters, John Tradescant the Elder and Younger, where you can discover red maple and tulip trees scarlet runner beans. "The Plant Seekers," an exhibition about history's most fanatical plant hunters runs through October 21, 2012. Sundays through Fridays 10:30 am to 5 pm, Saturdays 10:30 am to 4 pm; £7.50 (concessions £6.50/£3/children under 16 free).

 

Photo courtesy of Jim Linwood via Flickr

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We've unearthed six lesser-known leafy spots.


One-Line Reviews: Our Staff's Pithy Takes on "Détournement," "Viva La Raspberries," and Other Gallery Shows

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In Mexico, An Architect's Drug War Memorial Sparks Bitter Debate About the Nature of the Conflict

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In Mexico, An Architect's Drug War Memorial Sparks Bitter Debate About the Nature of the Conflict
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At a glance, the proposed design for a new memorial in Mexico City commemorating victims of the drug war appears fittingly simple and somber. Renderings depict 15 steel walls, rusted and inscribed with undefined text and arranged around a reflecting pool. There is no disputing that this might serve as a public place of remembrance. But behind the aesthetic austerity of architect Ricardo Lopez’s design is something far less resolved.

In the past six years, an estimated 50,000 people have died from drug-related violence spurred by government crackdowns on cartels. Among them are civilians, police officers, and soldiers. But buried in the statistics too are drug lords, traffickers, corrupt police, and complicit politicians. Thousands are still missing, and thousands of bodies remain unidentified. The seemingly straightforward initiative to build a memorial — first proposed by anti-violence activists  — quickly ran into complications: Who will be commemorated, and who will be excluded? And now in the hands of Mexican President Felipe Calderón and his administration, the memorial seems to have taken on new agendas.

Just last year, Mexico City saw the completion of a 343-foot tall “Pillar of Light,” an ill-received monument commemorating the 2010 bicentennial of Mexico’s independence. The quartz-clad pillar came one year too late and tripled its estimated budget. That Calderón appears to have rushed the design process for the war-victims memorial has left many wondering if he is once again prioritizing his legacy over his country’s intent to construct a proper monument. Moreover, a new motion to build the memorial next to a military compound instead of in a historic park, as originally proposed, has drawn fiery criticism.

Of even greater concern is the fact that Calderón approved funding for the war-victims memorial while vetoing a law that would provide economic, medical, and legal aid to thousands of surviving victims of the war. The mixed gesture suggests, to some, that Mexico is not ready to commemorate the losses of a war that has yet to even end. As activist and poet Javier Sicilia stated in the Los Angeles Times, “The memorial is a process of examining what happened, how [the victims] died and why.” To Sicilia, this is “a process that has not even begun.”

 

One-Line Reviews: Our Staff's Pithy Takes on "Détournement," "Viva La Raspberries," and Other Gallery Shows

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One-Line Reviews: Our Staff's Pithy Takes on "Détournement," "Viva La Raspberries," and Other Gallery Shows
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Once again, our staff has set out around our New York offices tasked with reviewing the shows they say in a single (often run-on) sentence. Here is what they found (to see our One-Line Reviews in illustrated slide show format, click here)

* “Détournement: Signs of the Times,” at Jonathan LeVine Gallery, 529 West 20th Street, 9E, August 8-25

A wide range of emerging and established artists are brought together for Carlo McCormick's “Détournement,” a show of works, including Dan Witz’s transformed street signs and David Wojnarowicz’s silkscreened supermarket posters, that employ bright colors, bold fonts, and brash humor in their subversion and transgression of our capitalist, consumption-based culture. —Sara Roffino

* “First Year in New York,” at Galerie Richard, 514 West 24th Street, July 26 - September 1

While “First Year in New York” is a summer group show that randomly places artists who’ve had solo shows this year together, there is indeed something in common between pieces like Dionisio Gonåzlez’s “Favelas,” a photo series that challenges the objectivity of the medium by creating futuristic landscapes out of photos of poverty-stricken towns, and Christophe Avella-Bagur’s disrupted drawings of faces placed on manikin-like figures, commenting on our unrealistic expectations of mass-produced perfection.  — Terri Ciccone

Summer Group Exhibition, at Joshua Liner, 548 West 28th Street, 3rd Floor, August 2-25

Despite its matter-of-factly themeless title, distinct motifs emerge from Joshua Liner's stable-surveying show, chief among them the collage-like assembly of images from smaller figurative elements practiced most impressively by steampunk miniaturist Kuksi Kuksi, painter of neon-hued superflat creatures Tomokazu Matsuyama, and watercolorist Alfred Steiner, whose Mr. Burns, Chief Wiggum, and SpongeBob SquarePants made up of donuts, penises, butts, and various hyperrealistically rendered objects are at once evocative, repulsive, and irresistible. — Benjamin Sutton

* “Viva la Raspberries,” at Harris Lieberman, 508 West 26th Street, Ground Floor, June 28-August 17

Suzan Pitt's 1979 erotic animation wonder, “Asparagus,” is the main attraction of “Viva la Raspberries,” though it is supported perfectly by the bright palettes and surreal artworks of a colorful ensemble of West Coast-based artists' creations, like Evan Holloway's precarious bronze-cast “Rearranged Branch” and abstract ceramicist Ron Nagle's neon biomorphic sculpture “Golden Shag” – as well as pretty much everything else in this show. — Alanna Martinez

* “Weather,” at Ricco/Maresca, 529 West 20th Street, June 21 – August 17

While this group exhibition claims to be on weather “in all of its infinite variations,” it is, perhaps unsurprisingly, the specific subject matter of the storm that commands the most attention, via two oil paintings from the 19th century — one a North Illinois tornado by an unknown artist and the other a chaotic Biblical flood by the equally unknown T. Bellerby — though an ominous gelatin silver print of clouds by Michael Flomen, who specializes in exposing his homemade film by moonlight out in the elements, is also a breath of fresh air. — Allison Meier

Slideshow: Yayoi Kusama at 345meatpacking

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Surreal Estate: Yayoi Kusama's Dotty Painting Covers a New Meatpacking District Condo

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Surreal Estate: Yayoi Kusama's Dotty Painting Covers a New Meatpacking District Condo
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NEW YORK — Real estate has a certain relationship with avant-garde aesthetics: Starchitects like Frank Gehry and Herzog and de Meuron give their imprimatur to condos that sell like hotcakes, destination buildings feature en-suite gallery spaces and artist commissions in their lobbies. But increasingly, art is adorning New York City real estate before the buildings are even completed. In the latest instance of this trend, 345meatpacking, a new condominium complex being built in the Meatpacking District, will be clad in a giant reproduction of Yayoi Kusama’s “Yellow Trees” in lieu of the normal ugly construction netting. The work is set to debut officially on Monday, though it can already be glimpsed.

Developed by DDG Partners and designed by DDG Design, the building features 37 residences, a brick façade imported from Denmark, and bronze windows from Italy on the topmost three floors. Potential buyers can catch a glimpse of the full luxurious design in the firm’s enticing renderings, even though the bones of the building will soon be covered up by Kusama’s magnified painting.

It is perhaps funny that the Japanese artist’s work will appear on a net, given that Kusama calls her mammoth, minimalist, polka-dotted canvases “infinity nets.” The piece that will appear on 345meatpacking, “Yellow Trees,” is currently on view in Kusama’s Whitney Museum retrospective (and featured prominently in the ad campaign for the show), and there is a kind of free-associative logic to the choice, since the Whitney itself is set to mvoe to a new location in the Meatpacking district in 2015. With its sweeping bands of black covered in bright yellow spots, the work is as well suited for a 120-foot-tall piece of architecture as it is for a gallery wall. Visible from the High Line (and every building in the neighborhood), Manhattan’s newest piece of public art will doubtless become an eye-bending attraction. Just don’t stare too long — you might start to hallucinate.

Kusama's painting net will be completely installed on Monday, August 13 at 345 West 14th Street. Click on the slide show for renderings and photos of the installation. 

How Titanic Chefs Recreate Ship's Menu

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Head chef Leo Small leads a team of almost 130 cooks in the kitchens of the spectacular new attraction, which opened in style earlier this year. While many visitors opt for an interactive history lesson of the world's most famous ship, others have made a...

Byron Chardonnay Is Back

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Those who began their love affair with California wine in the 1980s probably remember. The Santa Maria Valley beauty was a revelation: full of tropical fruit notes, bright, balanced and delightfully affordable. I remember paying about $7 a bottle in the...


Urban Decay Gets a Whole Lot More Naked With New Foundation

12 of the Most Outrageously Expensive Beauty Products

Eye on the Runway: Wood Wood Spring 2013 at Copenhagen Fashion Week

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Eye on the Runway: Wood Wood Spring 2013 at Copenhagen Fashion Week
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Copenhagen Fashion Week is underway in Denmark through August 12, and dozens of Nordic designers are presenting their spring 2013 collections. Danish label Wood Wood, which has a cult following stateside, went for a palette of rich burgundy, forest green, mustard, and navy. Solid separates were mixed with bold color blocking and vivid patterns for a collection that combined sporty elements – like backpacks and varsity jackets – with sleek blazers. Founder and designer Karl Oskar also added whimsical floral prints throughout, including the two clashing ones on the center look (above), which pairs a sheer black peplum top with ivory-colored cigarette pants, finished off with metallic booties and a marigold clutch — all that’s needed is a chic garden party to wear it to.

Visit Artinfo.com/fashion for more fashion and style news.

ARTINFO Fashion is now on Twitter. Follow us @ARTINFOFashion.

 

Slideshow: Gallery Girls Preview

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The Tastemaker: Fashion Designer Lisa Perry's Art-Inspired Retro Flair

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The Tastemaker: Fashion Designer Lisa Perry's Art-Inspired Retro Flair
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From growing up in a household filled with midcentury Marimekko and Eames pieces to visiting museums filled with Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, the fashion designer Lisa Perry has always been surrounded by the look of the decades that inspire her most: the colorful, bold, poppy aesthetic of the ’60s and ’70s. As an adult, she and her hedge-fund billionaire husband Richard Perry have cultivated an impressive pop art collection that reflects these influences.

When she began making custom dresses for her friends and acquaintances in 2006, Perry carried her affinity for the era into her designs, incorporating trapeze silhouettes, Mod shifts, and bright colors. The artists included in her personal collection even made their way into her pieces, starting with a Carl Fischer photograph of Warhol drowning in a can of Campbell’s tomato soup, which she emblazoned onto a shift dress in 2010. A Lichtenstein-inspired collection that featured 1964 comic book illustration “No Thank You” followed in 2011, and earlier this year Perry unveiled a Jeff Koons artist line.

Her circle of friends and fans includes art establishment heavy hitter Yvonne Force Villareal; W magazine editor Stefano Tonchi, who recently hosted a party for Perry; and former NBC “Today Show” host Ann Curry, who wore several of Perry’s custom creations during her tenure. We’ve spotted her eye-catching dresses in the pages of Vogue, on fashion blogs, and at numerous art-world functions from Art Basel Miami Beach to the Watermill Center Summer Benefit. Curious about the designer behind them, we asked Perry to participate in ARTINFO’s Tastemaker series. She gladly obliged, and told us about the pair of shoes she “lives in” and the decadent $230 moisturizing lotion she uses.

Click on the slide show to see Lisa Perry’s Tastemaker picks.

Visit Artinfo.com/fashion for more fashion and style news.

ARTINFO Fashion is now on Twitter. Follow us @ARTINFOFashion.

 

 

10 Islands for Gourmands

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Emma Sloley
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Courtesy of Sooke Harbor House
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Anguilla, The Caribbean
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How apropos: Low-key luxe Anguilla gets top-notch dining to match its flawless beaches at a place named after the iconic kitchen appliance. (They've got the same billionaire owner.) Set on serene two-mile-long Rendezvous Bay, the 93-room whitewashed CuisinArt resort recently unveiled two new farm-to-table restaurants. Italia offers, you guessed it, classic Italian dining (think caprese salad and tiramisu) and Tokyo Bay dishes up Japanese fare such as just-caught sashimi. Herbs, fruits, and vegetables for both restaurants are drawn from the resort's half-acre hydroponic farm—a Caribbean first. A tasting menu of culinary experiences are also available, such as cooking classes, sommelier-led wine and rum tastings, and private chef's table dinners. The cherry (tomato) on top? Bowls of the fresh, succulent orbs are offered to guests upon arrival.

 

Tokyo Bay photo courtesy of CuisinArt Golf Resort

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Vancouver Island, Canada
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Vancouver Island Food Dining Sooke Harbor House
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Fans of Pacific Northwest cuisine should set their GPS for British Columbia's Vancouver Island. A two-hour ferry ride from Seattle or Vancouver, the island is a natural wonderland of old-growth rainforest, mountains, glaciers, fjords—and home to two dining standouts. Chef Robin Jackson conjures up awards at the Sooke Harbor House, a 28-room hideaway on the island's southern tip. His locally foraged, seasonal dishes include chanterelle mushroom soup with butter-poached hedgehog mushrooms and pan-fried Hecate Strait halibut served with nasturtiums and toasted walnuts. At the 75-room Wickaninnish Inn in the ruggedly gorgeous west coast town of Tofino, The Pointe Restaurant offers 240-degree views over Chesterman Beach and sense-of-place dishes like salmon served with caramelized eggplant, glazed beach oyster, sesame, ginger, and seaweed.

 

Photo courtesy of Sooke Harbor House

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Tasmania, Australia
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Tasmania Restaurant Stillwater
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Australia's verdant southernmost state has an outsize culinary reputation—and art scene, thanks to Hobart's MONA—that belies its diminutive size. Wine bar/restaurant Garagistes is the capital city's hottest newcomer, offering a carnivore's dream menu of communal feasts that include fried pigs' ears, wagyu tartare, and house-smoked eel, with pretty much everything baked, cured, or pickled in-house. In Launceston, the much-lauded Stillwater showcases influences from Europe and Southeast Asia, with a distinctly Australian spin: The fish of the day might be served with shitake mushroom, lemongrass, and ginger, or a slow-braised local rabbit might be found inside a house-made raviolo sopped with brown butter, sage, and lemon.

 

Stillwater photo by Chris Crerar

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St. Barths, Caribbean
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St Barths Dining Restaurant On the Rocks with Jean George Eden Rock
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Famously rivaling the French Riviera in high-octane nightlife and see-and-be-seen scene, this hyper-glam isle's world-class wining and dining is more of a well-kept secret. Jetsetters dine poolside at Hotel St Barth's Isle de France on a menu that globetrots between the Mediterranean (fresh burrata, proscuitto) and Southeast Asia (Kobe beef with ginger tempura), while at Le Gaïc—re-opening October 26 in the Hotel Le Toiny following a full renovation—talented chef Stephane Mazieres reinvents French staples like foie gras by pairing it with tropical notes such as passion fruit and quince or sprinkling it liberally with black truffles. At the legendary Eden Rock, the new On the Rocks with Jean-Georges shows off Vongerichten's brand of Pan-Asian-inspired genius with dishes like seared shrimp with egg noodles in spicy herbal soup.

 

Photo courtesy of Eden Rock Hotel

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Mykonos, Greece
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Mykonos Restaurant Greece Avra
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Food might not be uppermost on the minds of the party-hard pretty young things that flock to this idyllic Cycladian island every summer, but Mykonos is still a world-class palate-pleaser. Start the evening at Katerina's (Agion Anargiron 8, Mykonos Town, +30 2289 023084), the iconic cocktail bar in Little Venice whose tiny terrace affords aria-worthy ocean views. Stroll to a late dinner at cozy, artsy Avra which does a superb line in simple, rustic meze like fried feta wrapped in pastry with sesame seeds and rose petal jam. Then hit the scene—and maybe a few family-style omakase shared plates—at Matsuhisa Mykonos at the Belvedere Hotel, an outpost of Nobu that's a magnet for celebrities, heirs and heiresses and assorted boldfaced names.

 

Photo courtesy of Avra

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Capri, Italy
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Capri Italy Restaurant Dining Villa Verde
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It's easy to work up an appetite in Capri: If the precipitous streets don't do the trick, the daily schedule of swimming, socializing, and shopping will. Life is extra dolce when you pull up a chair at Fontelina, a lunchtime bar and waterside seafood restaurant that attracts the rosé-sipping nouveau-aristo set. For al fresco fare later in the day, nothing beats the leafy terrace at Villa Verde, known for having the island's best thin-crust Neopolitan-style pizzas, or the romance of da Paolino¸ where a fragrant canopy of lemon trees add atmosphere to fresh-caught seafood and antipasti.

 

Photo courtesy of Villa Verde

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South Island, New Zealand
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New Zealand restaurants Blanket Bay Queenstown
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New Zealand's luxury lodges have set the global benchmark for exceptional boutique accommodation—plus stellar kitchens to match their swank settings. Near Queenstown, oenophiles and gastronomes alike flock to Blanket Bay to dine on local delicacies like Canterbury Quail and Milford Sound crayfish, washed down with the Central Otago region's distinctive, full-bodied pinot noirs. Just an hour's drive away Whare Kea Lodge sits beside Lake Wanaka with stirring views of the snow-capped Southern Alps and offers five-course menus from English chef James Stapley, whose dedication to free-range meats, foraged ingredients, and organic heirloom vegetable varieties jibes perfectly with the pristine setting. At stylish Christchurch area estate Otahuna Lodge, dinnertime degustation menus showcase produce from the proprietor's own gardens, orchard, and livestock.

 

Photo courtesy of Blanket Bay

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Penang, Malaysia
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Penang Street Food Malaysia Guerney Drive
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While it's certainly no challenge to find five-star dining on the tropical island of Penang, this one-time British Colonial stronghold off Malaysia's northwest coast is most loved for its sublime street food. Hawker stalls peddle Chinese and Malay staples such as char kuay teow (stir-fried noodles with seafood, egg and Chinese sausage), rojak (a popular sour and spicy salad), ikan bakar (grilled fish wrapped in banana leaf) and the island's most famous dish, asam laksa, a sour, sweet and spicy fish-based noodle soup. Head to Gurney Drive in Georgetown, a seaside esplanade famous for its huge array of delicious hawker food, grab a plastic seat, a Technicolor plate, some chopsticks, and tuck in.

 

Photo courtesy of Charles Haynes via Flickr

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Sicily, Italy
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Sicily Dining Restaurant Casa Grugno
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Sicily, Italy While Tuscany, Rome, and Milan get most of the amore when it comes to eating in Italy, the island of Sicily is a culinary gem, particularly Taormina, a small-but-perfectly-formed village on the island's east coast. (Sicilian cuisine is distinctive thanks to Arabic influenced ingredients like eggplant, nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, and citrus fruits.) Dine on seafood still briny from the Ionian Sea at Gambero Rosso (Via Naumachie 11, +39 942 2 48 63), a regular haunt of fashion superstar Stefano Gabbana, or mangia at Casa Grugno where simple dishes—pasta with almonds, tomato, and chili flakes; spaghetti with fava beans and fresh ricotta—turn sublime. For dessert, sample what might be the world's best cannoli at Pasticceria Minotauro (Corso Umberto 8, +39 942 629 898), a sweet store with thrilling nighttime views of the lava-spouting Mount Etna volcano.

 

Photo courtesy of Casa Grugno

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Newport, Rhode Island
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Newport Rhode Island The Grill Restaurant Forty 1 North
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Thanks largely to boutique hotel player Forty1 North, which opened on the Newport marina in 2010, this once culinary-challenged resort town is morphing into a gourmet destination for both the super-yacht crowd and weekenders seeking upscale New England fare with cockle-warming views (and fresh cockles). Well-heeled couples chow down dockside on retro bites like Oysters Rockefeller, crab cocktails, and thick lobster bisque at The Grill, the property's al fresco restaurant kitted out with modern decor, while Christie's is the less fancy option, a fun, 1960s-inspired family-friendly joint dishing up crowd-pleasing snacks like fish tacos, oyster po'boys, and clam chowder.

 

Photo courtesy of Forty 1 North

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St Barths Victoria Hotel Carl Gustaf Restaurant
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Beach body? Forget about it. Not with these food scenes worth crossing an ocean for.

A Gallery Girls Cheat Sheet: Who Are the 7 Young Stars of Bravo’s Newest Art-World Reality Show?

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A Gallery Girls Cheat Sheet: Who Are the 7 Young Stars of Bravo’s Newest Art-World Reality Show?
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The art world traditionally sleeps in August, but next week at least gives its denizens a reason to turn on their TVs. Gallery Girls, premiering on Monday, August 13 at 10:00 pm, is Bravo’s second major foray into art world-themed reality TV (the first was the tepidly received "Work of Art"), and we’re pretty sure it won’t be the last. This time around, the format is less "Project Runway" competition and more "Real Housewives" reality soap — or maybe more accurately, it's like "Work of Art" crossbred with HBO's "Girls." The show tails seven young women as they attempt to make their way in New York City’s labyrinthine art scene, hitting the right openings, attending the right parties, and wearing the right heels.

High art and high drama will be equally unavoidable as Amy Poliakoff, Angela Pham, Chantal Chadwick, Claudia Martinez-Reardon, Kerri Lisa, Liz Margulies, and Maggie Schaffer clash over gallery internship difficulties, strained friendships, and romantic ups and downs. To help you keep score, ARTINFO has prepared this guide to the Girls, outlining each young woman’s job, background, and personality, plus our guesses about their future prospects on the show. No one’s getting kicked off this reality TV series, but the art world is a harsh judge. Be prepared!  

Click on the slide show for profiles of each of the seven Gallery Girls. 


Week in Review: Artspeak Analyzed, Koons Copied, Monroe Remembered, And More

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Week in Review: Artspeak Analyzed, Koons Copied, Monroe Remembered, And More
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Our most-talked-about stories in Art, Design & Architecture, Fashion & Style, and Performing Arts, August 6-10, 2012:

ART

— Kyle Chayka read into the diffusion and dilution of art world terminology as it has seeped into common parlance.

— We found 20 masterpieces hidden among the nude photographs and steampunk sculptures populating online art-sharing website DeviantArt.

— Shane Ferro pondered the possible influences of Christie's new think tank, the Arts Consortium, on how museums do business.

— A trio of Australian performance artists got naked and relied solely on donations from generous Berliners to survive a 10-day public performance.

— The Norton Simon Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and many other museums were implicated in arrested New York dealer Subhash Kapoor's vast ring of looted art.

ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN

— Janelle Zara spoke to Cathy Lang Ho, the curator of the defiantly DIY U.S. Pavilion at this year's Venice Architecture Biennale.

— The Royal Institute of British Architects joined many of its members in protesting a policy that prevents firms contributing to London Olympics projects from promoting their role in the Games.

— Kelly Chan reviewed Rio de Janeiro's masterplan for the 2016 summer Olympics, highlighting its emphasis on sustainability.

— Big box retailer Target unveiled a pair of back-to-school dorm room items that looked conspicuously similar to Jeff Koons sculptures.

— New renderings of recently-topped out Lower Manhattan tower 1 World Trade Center offered details of the building's evolving design.

FASHION & STYLE

Ann Binlot and Nate Freeman surveyed the art world's 30 best dressed, from artists Rosson Crow and Allison Schulnik, to curator Klaus Biesenbach, auctioneer CK Swett, and, of course, Dasha Zhukova.

— Ann Binlot marked the 50th anniversary of Marilyn Monroe's death by surveying the designers behind her most famous outfits.

Skincare giant Nivea fired pop star Rihanna as its spokesperson, setting off a heated debate about the controversy-prone company's branding.

— With the London Olympics's finish line in sight, we looked back at the standout fashion moments of the Games.

— We surveyed the most outrageous outfits of Italian fashion journalist Anna Piaggi, who died on Tuesday at age 81.

PERFORMING ARTS

Marina Abramovic, Willem Dafoe, and "Game of Thrones" co-star Carice Van Houten made appearances in the new Antony and the Johnsons music video.

Lars Von Trier tapped Shia LaBeouf for his psychosexual drama, "Nymphomania," in which Willem Dafoe, Charlotte Gainsbourg, and Nicole Kidman have already been cast.

— J. Hoberman grew tired of Julie Delpy's chaotic culture clash comedy "2 Days in New York," a sequel of sorts to 2007's similarly manic "2 Days in Paris."

ARTINFO Russia's Eugene Nazarov recapped the first week of the wildly unjust trial of the members of Russian anti-Putin punk rock trio Pussy Riot.

— Patrick Pacheco remembered the illustrious career of legendary Broadway composer Marvin Hamlisch, who died on Monday.

VIDEO

— Tom Chen visited the New York Botanical Gardens, where curator Paul Hayes Tucker gave a tour of a recreation of Claude Monet's famous Giverny gardens.

Make Wine, Not War

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KATZRIN, Golan Heights— It has been a scorcher of a summer even by Israeli standards, with with temperatures settling near 116 degrees Fahrenheit for much of the last month. But among the general hangdog reactions, Israeli vintners are quietly whispering joyfully about what might be a blow out year...

Fall's Most-Wanted New Beauty Products

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You don't need to be a modern artist—or even a makeup artist—to appreciate these shadows. Available in three shades, the Warhol-inspired palettes create colorful eye looks that are as simple as paint by numbers...

Glow Biz: ‘‘Cosmic Facialist’’ Georgia Louise's Must-Haves

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She isn’t called the ‘‘cosmic facialist’’ for nothing. The London-born, New York-based Georgia Louise uses a combination of cutting-edge machines, meditation, massage and holistic nutritional advice to tend to the skin — and spirits — of A-listers like...

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Claire Tow Theater NYC Lincoln Center

These inexpensive outdoor activities are a breath of fresh air for NYC culture vultures.

Emma Sloley
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Bryant Park Reading Room To-Do NYC
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Courtesy of Jack Dorsey via Flickr
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In these Recession-hit times, the revival of the open-air Bryant Park Reading Room, originally conceived in 1935 as a way to give unemployed Depression-era New Yorkers somewhere to read and discuss literature, is a boon for cash-strapped culture vultures. In addition to custom-designed carts stocked with books, magazines, and newspapers, the current incarnation hosts educational programs and readings from voices as diverse as Bradford Morrow, a professor at Bard College, and actress/comedienne Janeane Garofalo. In the egalitarian spirit of the original, the reading room is completely free and doesn't require library cards or ID.

 

 

Lay a picnic blanket down on the Pier 63 lawn at the Hudson River Park waterfront and watch the free summer cinema series, River Flicks. Held around dusk every Wednesday through August, the lineup isn't exactly high-brow art house fare—think popcorny crowd-pleasers such as Horrible Bosses, Bridesmaids, and Crazy, Stupid Love—but the crowd is grown-up (kids have their own series held on Fridays at Pier 46), the mood convivial, and if the onscreen action lags you can try to pick out a star overhead. 

 

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Claire Tow Theater NYC Lincoln Center
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Courtesy of Lincoln Center
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Opened in May 2012, the Claire Tow Theater is set on the rooftop of Lincoln Center's Eero Saarinen–designed Vivian Beaumont Theater. Home to the LCT3, an initiative for emerging talents in theater, the airy two-story addition with terrace was designed by architect Hugh Hardy. The series of spaces are easy on the eye and the environment thanks to an energy-saving "green roof" with flowering plants. Tickets cost a mere $20 for shows such as Disgraced by playwright Ayad Akhtar.

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