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What the red carpet is to the Oscars and Emmys, the Opening Ceremony is to the Olympic Games—a lead-up some viewers find almost as entertaining as the main event. No surprise, then, that this month’s production will feature two of fashion’s top names. When the world’s athletes make their grand entrance on July 27, the London home team, aka Team GB, will be kitted out by fellow Brit S t e l l a M cc a r t n e Y.Team USA will sport r alph l auren.
Much like the red carpet, the specifics are kept under wraps until just prior to the games. But we were permitted a sneak peek of Lauren’s sketches for the team’s Closing Ceremony uniforms. The all-white looks are classic Ralph Lauren and, with luck, should provide a nice clean backdrop for lots of high-gleam accessories in bronze, silver, and gold.
S ir paul SMith, me a nwh i l e , i s ma rk i ng the London games with a very different sort of collaboration, this one involving not fabric and thread but paper and glue. The knighted designer and noted cycling enthusiast has partnered with the Isle of Man post office for a set of commemorative stamps depicting seven Olympic sports. Not coincidentally, the Isle of Man is home to British cycling star Mark Cavendish, a close friend of Smith’s and a favorite in the men’s road race. Check paulsmith.co.uk for a compendium book of stamps and related postcards. — Tracy Achor Hayes
Pa r a d e d r e s s
Ralph Lauren Closing Ceremony uniform
for Team USA
T h e L o n d o n 2 01 2 o Ly m P i c G a m e s i s L e o f m a n s Ta m P c o L L e c T i o n d e s i G n e d B ys i r Pau L s m i T h
LET THEGAMESBEGIN
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14 FALL PREVIEW 2012 NEImANmARCuS.COm 1.800.944.9888
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Fashion designers have applied their creativity to everything From Furniture to digital playlists. But For gloBal expression oF liFestyle, nothing Beats a hotel, the commission du jour. sleepchic
M I S S O N IS i g n at u r e Zingy patterned knitsru n way-to - g e taway The 169-room Hotel Missoni Kuwait (hotelmissoni.com) overlooking the Arabian Gulf and incorporating 85 different colors in everything from bathrobes to china. a m b i e n c e More is more in the Middle East. Pattern-happy rooms feel upscale bohemian. Even the pool is tiled in stripes.
P H I L I P T R E AC YS i g n at u r e Eccentric millinery
ru n way-to - g e taway The 101-room g Hotel (theghotel.ie) in Galway, Ireland,
with jewel-toned restaurant, crystal-encrusted bar, fuchsia lounge, and a tranquil ESPA.
a m b i e n c e Publicly gregarious, privately cool. Social spaces shout see-and-be-seen.
Guest rooms chill, with surreal touches like nautilus-shaped pillows.
S A LVAT O R E F E R R AG A MOS i g n at u r e Artful footwearru n way-to - g e taway The riverside Hotel Lungarno (lungarnocollection.com), 61 rooms and 12 suites in a former sixteenth-century Florentine palazzo with a museum-quality art collection spanning Renaissance frescoes to Picasso. a m b i e n c e Tasteful and well-connected. Bonus: Guest privileges include a private tour and ten-percent discount at the Ferragamo boutique in Florence, plus an excursion to the Museum of Salvatore Ferragamo.
C H R I S T I A N L AC R O I XS i g n at u r e Exuberant theatricalityru n way-to - g e taway The 34-room Paris boutique Le Bellechasse Saint Germain (lebellechasse.com) with color-themed f loors hidden away in the haute Faubourg St. Germain. a m b i e n c e A living Lacroix collage—combining lush, historic prints, a bright palette, and unexpected details, like a ceiling f locked with butterf lies.
G I O R G I O A R M A N IS i g n at u r e Minimalist fashionru n way-to - g e taway The new 95-room Armani Hotel Milano (milan.armanihotels.com) with a rooftop spa overlooking the Duomo and an array of Giorgio Armani shops in a shopping-centric locale. a m b i e n c e Restrained, tailored—favoring neutrals and darks. A Lifestyle Manager is on hand to ensure that all your needs are anticipated and attended to.
B U L G A R IS i g n at u r e Architectural jewelryru n way-to - g e taway The 85-room Bulgari Hotel & Residences, London (bulgarihotels.com) in tony Knightsbridge with a two-story spa and 25-meter pool featuring a stone mosaic in signature green and gold. a m b i e n c e Classic, given to metallic accessories (think silver lamps and chandeliers). Also features bath amenities other luxe hotels covet.
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— Elaine Glusac
SEPTEMBER 2012 31NEIMaNMaRCuS.COM 1.800.944.9888
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CELEBRATING THE VIBE, CULTURAL NORMS, AND GOINGS-ON IN CITIES WE CALL HOME CELEBRATING THE VIBE, CULTURAL NORMS, AND GOINGS-ON IN CITIES WE CALL HOME CELEBRATING THE VIBE, CULTURAL NORMS, AND GOINGS-ON IN CITIES WE CALL HOME
M I N N E A P OL I SFORT WORT H
AKA “COWTOWN”
WHERE ART MEETS ARCHITECTURE THE TADAO ANDO–DESIGNED MODERN ART MUSEUM, PHILIP JOHNSON–DESIGNED AMON CARTER MUSEUM
OF AMERICAN ART, AND LOUIS KAHN–DESIGNED KIMBELL ART MUSEUM
MUSEUM MUST-SEE “LUCIAN FREUD: PORTRAITS,” THROUGH OCTOBER 28 AT THE MODERN (THE
EXHIBITION’S ONLY U.S. VENUE)
POP-CULTURE CONTRIBUTION BILLY BOB’S TEXAS, WORLD’S LARGEST HONKYTONK
EAT LOCAL STEAK, BBQ, TEX-MEX
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TAKE IT OUTSIDE WALK, RUN, OR BIKE THE 40-MILE TRINITY TRAILS NETWORK
HOMETOWN HEROES VAN CLIBURN, SID BASS, BETTY BUCKLEY, KELLY CLARKSON, KIRK FRANKLIN
HOT TICKET FINALS OF THE VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION, HELD ONCE
EVERY FOUR YEARS (NEXT CHANCE 2013)
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AROUND SUNDANCE SQUARE
BEAUTY BEST-SELLER CHANTECAILLE LONG LASH MASCARA IN BLACK
GREAT WAY TO SPEND SUNDAY AFTERNOON BRUNCH AT THE MODERN ART MUSEUM’S CAFÉ
MODERN, THEN EXPLORE THE MUSEUM DISTRICT OR 109-ACRE FORT WORTH BOTANIC GARDEN
“IT” BAG NANCY GONZALEZ HOBO
“IT” JEANS RICH & SKINNY
COOL CAUSE THE FORT WORTH ZOO (AND ZOO BALL IS ONE OF THE BEST PARTIES OF THE YEAR)
HOT INVESTMENT A SECOND HOME IN COLORADO
FUN SPLURGE HIRE PAT GREEN TO PLAY AT YOUR BIRTHDAY PARTY
ANNUAL TRADITION FORT WORTH STOCK SHOW AND RODEO, ESTABLISHED IN 1896
GOOD TO KNOW TEXANS REALLY DO PROUDLY SAY “Y’ALL”
AKA “MINI APPLE”
WHERE ART MEETS ARCHITECTURE THE FRANK GEHRY–DESIGNED FREDERICK R. WEISMAN ART MUSEUM, JEAN NOUVEL–DESIGNED GUTHRIE THEATER, AND MINNEAPOLIS INSTITUTE OF ARTS WITH 2006 EXPANSION BY MICHAEL GRAVES
MUSEUM MUST-SEE “DANCE WORKS III: MERCE CUNNINGHAM/REI KAWAKUBO,” OPENING OCTOBER 4 AT THE WALKER ART CENTER
POP-CULTURE CONTRIBUTION SCOTCH TAPE, SPAM, AND SITCOM HEROINE MARY RICHARDS
EAT LOCAL LUTEFISK, JUICY LUCY (OR JUCY LUCY) CHEESEBURGERS, AND HONEYCRISP/SWEETANGO APPLES
TOP CHEF ISAAC BECKER OF 112 EATERY AND BAR LA GRASSA
TAKE IT OUTSIDE WALK, RUN, BIKE, AND EVEN CANOE THE CHAIN OF LAKES
HOMETOWN HEROES PRINCE, JOSH HARTNETT, GARRISON KEILLOR, KRIS HUMPHRIES, JESSE VENTURA
HOT TICKET THE STARKEY HEARING FOUNDATION’S “SO THE WORLD MAY HEAR” CELEB-PACKED AWARDS GALA
BEST PLACE TO TAKE OUT-OF-TOWNERS ICE-SKATING AT THE DEPOT RINK, OR MOST ANY PERFORMANCE AT THE GUTHRIE
SATURDAY-NIGHT DATE DINNER AT LA BELLE VIE FOLLOWED BY A NIGHTCAP AT PROHIBITION ON THE 27TH FLOOR OF W MINNEAPOLIS-THE FOSHAY
BEAUTY BEST-SELLER BOBBI BROWN EYE SHADOW IN BONE
GREAT WAY TO SPEND SUNDAY AFTERNOON BRUNCH AT HELL’S KITCHEN, THEN VISIT THE WALKER ART CENTER AND ADJACENT 11-ACRE MINNEAPOLIS SCULPTURE GARDEN “IT” BAG THE YSL “CABAS CHYC” TOTE
“IT” JEANS J BRAND
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FUN SPLURGE RENT THE ROOFTOP LOUNGE AT LE MERIDIEN CHAMBERS HOTEL
ANNUAL TRADITION THE MINNEAPOLIS AQUATENNIAL, HELD EACH JULY SINCE 1940
GOOD TO KNOW SHOPPING FOR SHOES AND APPAREL IS TAX FREE!
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SEPT12-344-345-1.indd 1 7/11/12 4:11 PM
At a fashion shoot on Manhattan’s Lower West Side, Erik Madigan Heck has put down his camera while his team moves quickly to assemble the backdrop for the next shot—an Impressionistic take on a Parisian home. Hearing the pops of a staple gun punctuate the blaring music and watching the façade of the house take shape in a precise landscape of yellow-leafed “trees,” all you can think is: Surely, there’s an easier way. Surely, these special effects could be accomplished (dare you say it?) with the help of, er, tons of Photoshop?
At a time when digital aftereffects play a regular role in fashion photography, Heck is something of an anomaly. Plenty of his images—like those shot for Comme des Garçons, Mary Katrantzou, and Ann Demeulemeester—appear to have received an intense Photoshop assist, but in fact, they almost never have. Heck is old-fashioned that way, preferring to use his non-digital camera (a Canon EOS 630) or experimental post-production techniques. And if his photos seem a blend of photography and painting, that’s no accident.
“I tend to look at painting for inspiration—from many different time periods, depending on what the fashion designer has already come up with in his or her designs,” says the tall, shaggy-haired Minnesota transplant, grabbing two coffee-table tomes on Vuillard and Degas to make his point. “They’re my go-to inspiration,” he says, thumbing the pages, many marked with Post-it notes. “I like the way Vuillard and Degas portray women. They’re not sexy. I try to stay away from sexy, glamorous women.”
Heck, who turns 29 on September 9, is the youngest photographer ever chosen to shoot The Art of Fashion® for Neiman Marcus. He’s in excellent company, joining a list that includes Richard Avedon, Arthur Elgort, Helmut Newton, Annie Leibovitz, Lillian Bassman, Paolo Roversi….
Of course, most photographers his age are still honing their craft, usually by assisting an established photographer (if they’re lucky, a marquee name). But Heck went about things differently. “I always had a specific vision for how I wanted my work to be and didn’t want to become subject to the work of someone else,” he says. “It has taken me many years to get to the place I am, and I proudly have never assisted a photographer, which I suppose makes me unique in the industry.” Instead, he launched the publication Nomenus Quarterly (the name is a play on the “No Menus” signs often seen taped on the doors of New York apartments) as a way to showcase his work and curate the work of others he admired. The idea came to him in 2007, when he was living in Paris and becoming friends with designers like Demeulemeester, Haider Ackermann, and Dries Van Noten. “When I began Nomenus, it allowed me to start shooting this level of fashion, and show it to the world,” says Heck. “It was the first time my work got noticed, because I was able to collaborate with great artists that a lot of people didn’t have access to and have it seen online by people around the world.”
Raised in an art-loving, museum-going family (his father collects African and New Guinea art and his mother is a painter), Heck’s love of fashion, photography, and painting took root early on. At first, he was drawn to painting, but that gave way to photography after his mother gave him that first camera, a manual EOS Canon, when he was a teenager. “I knew when I first started taking pictures that it was something that would allow me to create in a more contemporary manner,” he says. “Painting was great, but I wanted a more time-relevant medium to express my ideas, and photography seemed to be it.”
His painterly approach regularly finds him shooting outside the world of fashion. Indeed, his best day on the job, he says, was when he was asked to shoot painter Gerhard Richter’s portrait. “He’s the most important living artist, and one of my personal favorites,” says Heck. “To spend the day with him was kind of like meeting God in the art-world sense. I was raised on his work, and the whole experience was surreal—probably my best photo experience yet.”
He pauses, as if to reconsider. “I also just shot the cover of Time magazine, which was the most prestigious event in my career so far. That one was definitely the most important to my family.” — Kimberly Goad
A different EyeErik Madigan HEck sHoots filM, MakEs pHotograpHs tHat appEar as paintings, and calls Vuillard and dEgas His “go-to inspiration.” MEEt tHE youngEst pHotograpHEr EVEr to sHoot tHE art of fasHion.
Two original Erik Madigan Heck prints shot in conjunction with The Art of Fashion campaign will be auctioned October 20 at Two X Two for AIDS and Art (2X2online.org), a 13-year-old fundraiser that has raised nearly $35 million for the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and the Dallas Museum of Art’s contemporary art acquisitions fund. Watch for more information in the next issue of the book.
“ Pa i n t i n g wa s g r e at, b u t i wa n t e d a mo r e t i m e - r e l e va n t m e d i u m t o e x P r e s s m y i d e a s , a n d P h o t o g r a P h y s e e m e d t o b e i t. ”
See The ArT of fAShion come To life in A Trio of ShorT filmS by erik mAdigAn heck, And go behind The SceneS of our ShooT—All AT NMdaily.coM
b i d t i m e
85neimanmarcus.com 1.800.944.9888
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