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THE UNSTOPPABLE YARA SHAHIDI RISE & SHINE May 2019 WITH TATJANA PATITZ / KELLY WEARSTLER / YVON CHOUINARD / KIRSTEN GREEN C A L I F O R N I A S T Y L E & C U L T U R E

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Cover

THE UNSTOPPABLEYARA SHAHIDI

RISE & SHINE

May 2

019

WITH TATJANA PATITZ / KELLY WEARSTLER / YVON CHOUINARD / KIRSTEN GREEN

CALIFORNIA STYLE & CULTU

RE

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M A G A Z I N E C . C O M

‘t

STATEMENTS

Firehouse bows as the hottest hotel in DTLA.....................................................................................................

Up to sniff : Alex Israel partners with Louis Vuitton for three art-minded fragrances..........

Capitol brings its color-saturated southern style out west......................................................................

Such great heights: the man, the myth, the Patagonia legend..............................................................

Supersize me: Say hello to the bigger-is-better sunglasses craze.......................................................

Gigi and Bella Hadid’s brother, Anwar, makes his own fashion statement.................................

May 2019

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FEATURES

Supermodel Tatjana Patitz tries on spring’s brightest baubles.......................................................................................................................

How venture capitalist and “kingmaker” Kirsten Green turns “blogger” into “billionaire”......................................................

For actor Yara Shahidi, conquering Hollywood is just the first chapter of her unfolding story............................................

An art world vet and an interior designer collaborate on the bucolic Fillmore ranch of their dreams........................

DISCOVERIES

Wellness retreat brand Beautiful Nomad’s soul-quenching adventures................................................................................................

Working (out) from home: the new classes, machines and technology to know............................................................................

A slice of interior designer Kelly Wearstler’s California.......................................................................................................................................

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Statements - Opener

STYLE CULTURE DESIGN BEAUTY DINING

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The ARTS DISTRICT

FIREHOUSE HOTEL’s

lobby coffee bar and

retail shop.

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HOT PROPERTY

In L.A.’s booming Arts District, hotelier Dustin Lancaster partners with design and culinary all-stars to transform a 1920s fire station into the city’s most talked about opening

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CONTRIBUTORS

KELLY ATTERTON

ANH-MINH LE

MARIE LOOK

CAROLYN MEERS

BROOKE PORTER KATZ

ELIZABETH VARNELL

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SIn Downtown Los Angeles, a 1927 fi re station has been transformed into the Arts District Firehouse Hotel — the latest project from Hotel Covell’s Dustin Lancaster — complete with Tokyobikes to borrow, a cool coff ee bar that brews Counter Culture Coff ee and a retail space curated by design fi rm ETC.etera, which also created the hotel’s inviting urban interiors. The A-list team of collaborators includes accessory queen Clare Vivier (who made custom tassel key chains) and Hedley & Bennett’s Ellen Bennett, who designed the uniforms for the leafy outdoor restaurant and lounge, also named Firehouse. And chef Ashley Abodeely, former chef de cuisine of the NoMad Hotel in L.A., helms the food program, which includes a killer burger. “The vision was to bring new life to this incredible, historic building — a fi xture on South Santa Fe for almost 100 years — and make it a vibrant gathering place,” Lancaster says. “We looked to our community and friends to craft everything we needed, and the result — we hope — is that you feel a real sense of place.” Rooms from $295/night. 710 S. Santa Fe Ave., L.A., 213-947-3010; fi rehousela.com. B.P.K.

Clockwise from

left: The Firehouse

Hotel still features

the original facade

of the 1927 building,

which until 1980

was home to L.A .’s

Engine Co. No.

17. The Firehouse

restaurant’s kale

Caesar salad with

garlic croutons and

Meyer lemon. The

Violet Room, with

interiors designed

by ETC.ETERA.

NEWSS P L A S H

Clockwise from right:

LOUIS VUITTON’s

Les Colognes Cactus

Garden perfume,

$250/100 mL. The

Flaconnier fragrance

case with “Wave”

motif, $7,600. Artist

ALEX ISRAEL.

CASE WORKFor Louis Vuitton’s new Les Colognes perfume collection, the brand sought to bottle the essence of the California coast in a trio of delightful unisex scents. Developed by master perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud, each evokes the euphoria of an eternal, sun-soaked summer: from the heady notes of musk and orange blossoms in Sun Song, to the refreshing yerba mate in Cactus Garden, and the lush Sicilian citrus in Afternoon Swim. And who better to channel the spirited West Coast lifestyle than Los Angeles native and all-around aesthetic bon vivant Alex Israel, with whom Louis Vuitton partnered to create the collection’s iconographic packaging and accessories. The multimedia artist matched each scent with one of his scene-setting emblems: his golden plexiglass piece Lens (Yellow), 2015, for Sun Song, the vibrant green saguaro from his sculpture Desperado, 2015, for Cactus Garden, and a bright blue rolling swell from his painted “Wave” series, 2018, for Afternoon Swim. “I’ve always been impressed by the relationship Louis Vuitton has shared with artists,” Israel says. “Being that this is the brand’s fi rst fragrance collaboration, I felt quite a bit of pressure to honor the scents as best I could through my designs.” louisvuitton.com. M.L.

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STYLET R E N D

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Beyond sweater weather, wool shows off its coolest moments

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Clockwise from top

left: MISSONI dress,

$2,065, and pants,

$1,475. ALTUZARRA

top, $550, skirt , $695,

and belt , $450.

JIL SANDER sweater,

top and skirt , prices

upon request ,

and MARNI slides,

$890. CAROLINA

HERRERA cardigan,

$1,290, and bodysuit ,

$1,090. 3.1 PHILLIP

LIM dress, price upon

request . MICHAEL

KORS COLLECTION

pullover, $1,695, skirt ,

$1,595, and beanie,

$395. All jewelry,

stylist’s own.

Photography by MARK GRIFFIN CHAMPION Styling by ALISON EDMOND

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K N I T PICKS

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Jeweler Irene Neuwirth — known for weaving vibrantly hued stones into whimsical designs — lives in polychromatic dresses sold at Capitol, a 22-year-old Charlotte, N.C., boutique owned by longtime friend Laura Vinroot Poole. Now the two have teamed up to open an outpost of Capitol inside the Brentwood Country Mart, complete with a fi ne jewelry boutique-in-shop housing Neuwirth’s one-of-a-kind carved pink opal hairpins, turquoise gumball rings and watermelon tourmaline tennis bracelets, handcrafted in Los Angeles. The 2,500-square-foot store, designed by Perry Poole Architects with sun-drenched interiors by Pamela Shamshiri, off ers dresses and jumpsuits from Peter Pilotto, Dries Van Noten, Ganni, Gül Hürgel, Khaite, and Rosie Assoulin. A Wardian case reworked by Shamshiri holds Neuwirth’s bold baubles set in a woodland diorama by conceptual artist Clare Crespo. “The light in California is similar to the light in Charlotte,” Vinroot Poole says. “Bright beautiful prints and colors make sense there and here as well.” Neuwirth fi nds the clothes to be a perfect counterpoint: “We amplify each other’s work,” she says. Brentwood Country Mart, 225 26th St., Ste. 38A, Santa Monica, 424-268-4641; shop-capitol.com. E.V.

BEAUTY BUSTLE

In Shani Darden’s new, 2,500-square-foot Beverly Hills location, the celebrity skin whisperer combines innovative techniques (ultrasound, microcurrent, LED bed, oxygen dome) with retinols and peels to heal and rejuvenate famous faces like Chrissy Teigen and Jessica Alba. shanidarden.com.

Known for its dance cardio, yoga and high-intensity workouts, New York-based Bandier is also a go-to for activewear (Y-3, Koral, and Varley). Now the company has ventured westward with a three-level Melrose outpost that includes athleisure and footwear boutiques, a cafe and a fitness studio. bandier.com.

Philip B. — eponymous creator of the beloved, botanically based hair products — has opened a signature treatment studio in West Hollywood. No cuts or color here, just intense scalp and hair treatments, and next-level blowouts. philipb.com. K.A.

1. KATE SPADE

NEW YORK

Rose bag, $358.

2. GUCCI Ophidian

bag, $2,590.

3. PRADA wicker

bag, $1,550.

4. ULLA JOHNSON

Pomme bag, $295.

BASKET CASE Spring’s woven accents epitomize boho-chic

1. 2.

NEWSS P L A S H

IN COLOR

4.3.

From top: LAURA

VINROOT POOLE

(left) and IRENE

NEUWIRTH

pose with the

jewelry designer’s

labradoodles, Teddy

and Miguel, inside

CAPITOL. One-of-a-

kind Irene Neuwirth

earrings, prices

upon request .

PHILIP B has

opened a new

studio in West

Hollywood.

1. KATE SPADE1. KATE SPADE

NEW YORK NEW YORK

Rose bag, $358. Rose bag, $358.

2. GUCCI Ophidian 2. GUCCI Ophidian

bag, $2,590. bag, $2,590.

3. PRADA wicker 3. PRADA wicker

bag, $1,550. bag, $1,550.

4. ULLA JOHNSON 4. ULLA JOHNSON

Pomme bag, $295.Pomme bag, $295.

4.4.BASKET CASE Spring’s woven accents epitomize boho-chic

1.1.

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DIOR dress,

$9,000, bodysuit ,

$1,650, bralette,

$$1,250, and

bag, $3,450.

PEACE AND L O V E

Dior’s new KaleiDiorscopic bag is a bohemian dream for spring

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Photography by MARK GRIFFIN CHAMPION Styling by ALISON EDMOND

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ICONS P O T L I G H T

Words by JAMIE BRISICK

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING YVON

Y von Chouinard has mastered the art of occupying seemingly contradictory posts. He is the founder of billion-dollar clothing company

Patagonia, and he is a radical environmentalist. Last year, when President Donald Trump reduced the size of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase Escalante National Lands — the largest elimination of protected land in American history — Patagonia updated the homepage of its website. Instead of fl ashy pics of the latest gear, there was a stark message against a black background: “The President Stole Your Land.” Then the company fi led a lawsuit against Trump.

We all know Chouinard’s story. He was a rock climber and surfer who, in 1973 at age 34, founded Patagonia on the premise of self-reliance (Chouinard taught himself to blacksmith and began making and selling pitons that were less damaging than European models to the rocks he was scaling). Then he expanded into more climbing equipment, clothing and, eventually, his fi rst shop in Ventura, Calif.

Chouinard has always been an outlier in corporate America in that he knows quite literally what it feels like to dangle off the edge of a cliff . In his 2005 book, Let My People Go Surfi ng: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman, he famously encouraged his employees to bail on work when the surf’s up. He also laid down the tenets of what he deemed responsible business practices, which included ecological and political activism. At the time it seemed ahead of the curve. Today it seems essential and urgent.

In his new book, Some Stories: Lessons From the Edge of Business and Sport (Patagonia, $45), Chouinard, now 80, pushes these ideas even further. Beyond those climbing tools he designed in the early days that made great leaps in the sport possible, Chouinard’s company has continually innovated. Patagonia’s fi rst CEO was a woman, Kris McDivitt, who was appointed in 1980.

A new book by Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard strengthens the call to save our planet

From top: YVON

CHOUINARD

on El Capitan’s

North America

Wall in 1964.

Doug Tompkins,

Rob Lesser, John

Wasson, Reg Lake

and Chouinard on

Yellowstone River

in 1986. Chouinard

descending a peak

in Bhutan.

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ICONS P O T L I G H T

“Our treasure,

anything of

real value,

comes from

the Earth

and sun”

Y V O N C H O U I N A R D

From top: Chouinard

climbing the Black

Dihedral section

of El Capitan’s

North America Wall.

Chouinard skiing in

Hokkaido, Japan.

In 1985, the company introduced a self-imposed “earth tax” of 1 percent of its sales (to date, Patagonia has given away some $80 million to environmental causes). In the ’90s, the company even started making fl eece out of recycled plastic bottles.

The list goes on. In 2010, Patagonia helped launch the Sustainable Apparel Coalition — a consortium of big retailers, such as Walmart, Macy’s, and the Gap, which are working together to devise a system that would give every purchasable product a sustainability grade. The Coalition’s aim, according to its website, is “an apparel industry that produces no unnecessary environmental harm and has a positive impact on the people and communities associated with its activities.”

This helps to explain why a 2011 Patagonia advertising campaign used the slogan “Don’t Buy This Jacket” — an eff ort to discourage excessive consumption. Ironically, Patagonia’s popularity soared, and so did jacket sales. And in 2012, the company was the fi rst California business to become a B Corp, adopting strict objectives with regard to labor standards and social and environmental impact.

Chouinard and Patagonia have continued to redefi ne the role and responsibility of the clothing brand, all the while remaining true to its mission statement: “Patagonia is in business to save our home planet.” And the company has continued to grow, even when growth was not necessarily the objective.

Knowing full well that politics and environmental issues work in tandem, Patagonia closed its doors on Election Day in 2016 to raise awareness about the importance of voting. Last year, the business saved $10 million from Trump’s recent tax cuts. It donated that money to environmental groups. “Our home planet needs it more than we do,” CEO Rose Marcario said in a statement on LinkedIn.

“The importance of environmental action is the most recent lesson that a life on the edge has taught me,” Chouinard writes in Some Stories, which juxtaposes tales of epic climbs with provocative personal letters and other never before published writings by the author. “All along the way, the natural world forces you to see what you might otherwise miss. Our treasure, anything of real value, comes from the Earth and sun, and it’s our responsibility to protect it.” •

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STYLET R E N D

36 M A G A Z I N E C . C O M

Stripe and rope motifs toanchor your wardrobe

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Clockwise from

top left: GUCCI

dress, $5,980. POLO

RALPH LAUREN

blazer, $298, shirt ,

$248, and pants, $198.

REDVALENTINO dress, $950,

ALTUZARRA bag,

$895, and SONIA

RYKIEL sandals,

$500. MONSE dress,

$2,650. SONIA

RYKIEL dress, $1,390,

and SPORTMAX

sandals, price upon

request . LOEWE

dress, $1,950, and

GEOX sneakers,

$160. All jewelry,

stylist’s own.

Photography by MARK GRIFFIN CHAMPION Styling by ALISON EDMOND

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NEWSS P L A S H

Above:

Encaustic

cement hex

tile in mocha,

$15/sq. ft ., barn

tile, $18/sq. ft .

and charcoal

tile on the

main floor

of CLÉ’s new

showroom.

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1. CHANEL FINE

JEWELRY Comète

Shooting Star ring,

$14,400.

2. ALEXANDRA

JULES Star Light

ring, $7,500.

3. SCOSHA at

ESQUELETO Nova

stud earrings, $115.

SHOOTING S T A R S

Northern California-based tile purveyor Clé has transformed a former Sears repair center and warehouse in San Rafael into a locus of inspiration: a 12,000-square-foot wonderland of terra-cotta, terrazzo and porcelain. “The studio is designed as an homage to Cy Twombly’s Roman palazzo, with the feeling of the major works of Carlo Scarpa,” founder Deborah Osburn says of the brand’s new headquarters. The venue, bowing May 13, will also house The Guild, an R&D lab that Osburn likens to an “incubator for craftspeople.” To coincide with the opening, Clé is launching exclusive collections with family-run heritage Italian tile company Fornace Brioni and its art director, Cristina Celestino, as well as with Kutleh, whose Strata Linea line is created by Jordanian architect Rula Yaghmour from stones left over from building projects. A de Gournay collaboration debuts in the fall, with Yves Saint Laurent’s iconic chinoiserie among the range’s custom, hand-painted porcelain tile panels. 2143 Francisco Blvd. E., San Rafael, 415-887-9011; cletile.com. A.M.L.

TOTALLY FLOORED

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3.

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Makeup artist to the likes of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Hailey Bieber, Nikki DeRoest is debuting her own line, Róen Beauty. Launching exclusively with eye shadows and an eye shadow brush, the off erings comprise Lid Illume eye shadow palettes — whose unique texture spreads in the silky way that powder does while staying in place like a cream — available in two colorways (75° Warm and 52° Cool) and the stand-alone shade Disco Eye, an icy pearlescent pigment that gives the lid a wet sheen. roenbeauty.com. K.A.

SHEEN QUEEN

FENDI FOR YOURSELF

Now you can match that custom Fendi carryall with a pair of made-to-order pumps. The 94-year-old Roman fashion house’s latest service invites you to put a personal spin on its closed-toe Colibrì design. Fans of the day-to-evening shoe can choose from seven iterations for the toe, including black satin and the “FF” Fendi logo, and opt for 2- or 3-inch heels in materials such as animal print calf-hair and — just in time for summer garden parties — hand-twisted rattan. For an extra tailor-made touch, up to three initials may be embroidered on the shoe’s ribbon detail. Each pair is crafted in Italy over eight weeks. Available online through May 26, at the Beverly Hills Rodeo Drive boutique May 3-6, and at the South Coast Plaza location May 8-10. fendi.com. C.M.

1. CHANEL

JEWELRY

1.1.custom Fendi carryall with a pair of made-to-order pumps. The 94-year-old Roman fashion house’s latest service invites you latest service invites you to put a personal spin to put a personal spin on its closed-toe Colibrì on its closed-toe Colibrì design. Fans of the day-

2.

3.

eight weeks. online through May 26, at the Beverly Hills Rodeo Drive boutique May 3-6, and at the South Coast Plaza location May 8-10.

2.2.2.

as well as with Kutleh, whose Strata Linea line is created by Jordanian architect Rula Yaghmour from stones left over from building projects. A de Gournay collaboration debuts in the fall, with Yves Saint Laurent’s iconic chinoiserie among the range’s custom, hand-painted

2143 Francisco Blvd. E., San Rafael,

3.3.

Wish upon these glittering jewels

RÓEN BEAUTY 52° Cool eye shadow palette, $42, and Everything eye brush, $32.

From top:

FENDI’s made-

to-order Colibrìs

are priced from

$990 to $1,690.

A sketch of

a custom

pump design.

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DESIGNT R E N D

40 M A G A Z I N E C . C O M

From streamlined modern to earthy organic, candle vessels with a glow all their own

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Photography by MARK GRIFFIN CHAMPION Editing by MELISSA GOLDSTEIN

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LET THERE BE LIGHT

Clockwise from top left:

FS OBJECTS Spindle

candleholders, from $110

each, fsobjects.com.

TOM DIXON Rock

candleholders, $210/

set of two, tomdixon.net .

ICHENDORF MILANO

Rainbow candleholders,

from $55 each,

hawkinsnewyork .com.

JULIE CLOUTIER

candleholders, $40 each,

cloutierceramics.com.

SFMOMA Loop copper

candelabra, $38,

museumstore.sfmoma.org.

ARNO DECLERCQ

Bunker white oak

candleholder, $1,450,

gardeshop.com.

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FULL CIRCLE

JEWEL TONES Three all-new boutiques to visit this month

NO.3

The 450-square-foot space has opened on the corner of Polk and Union in S.F., offering an all-new capsule collection. shopno3.com.

ÂME

The sustainable jewelry brand (its name is French for “soul”) debuts its fi rst store at Westfi eld Century City in L.A. ame.jewelry.

GORJANA

The modern, customizable Laguna Beach-born brand by founder Gorjana Reidel opens at The Americana at Brand in Glendale. gorjana.com.

When Sean Barron and Jamie Mazur — the duo behind sustainability-minded fashion brand Re/Done — met Gilda Ambrosio and Giorgia Tordini of boudoir-inspired Milanese label The Attico in Paris, an artistic connection took root. After a subsequent visit to Re/Done’s Downtown Los Angeles studio, Ambrosio and Tordini found inspiration at the neighboring shops’ racks of vintage frocks in bold ’70s- and ’80s-era patterns, and a capsule collection was born. Together, The Attico and Re/Done (which has collaborated with brands like Levi’s to revamp and update iconic designs) reformed decades-old floral print dresses, added Swarovski crystals to high-waisted jeans and draped denim pants into summer-ready miniskirts. shopredone.com; theattico.com. C.M.

GIORGIA TORDINI

(top) in tiered mini

dress, $695, and

GILDA AMBROSIO in

belted front-slit dress,

$795, both by RE/

DONE x THE ATTICO.

From left:

PEGGY MOFFIT T

wears a RUDI

GERNREICH

dress in 1971.

Gernreich poses

with models

wearing his

designs in front

of Los Angeles’

Watts Towers

in 1964.

NEWSS P L A S H

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CHANGE AGENTWhether fashioning his trademark monokini in the early ’60s or pioneering a unisex collection in 1970, designer Rudi Gernreich never backed away from his avant-garde vision: foregrounding body positivity and gender fl uidity. Now the late boundary-pushing talent, who was born in Vienna and spent nearly half a century honing his craft in Los Angeles, is the subject of the Skirball Cultural Center’s fi rst style exhibition, Fearless Fashion: Rudi Gernreich (May 9 to Sept. 1). Curator Bethany Montagano says Gernreich’s inclusive philosophy — permeating his prepunk garments, sketches, letters and editorials with iconic ’60s model Peggy Moffi tt — inspired her to mount a show (executed with creative insights from Opening Ceremony’s co-founder Humberto Leon) that “gives viewers a glimpse of our times through the lens of a visionary fashion force who carved out hopeful possibilities for those who felt diff erent.” Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., L.A., 310-440-4500; skirball.org. E.V. G

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STYLET R E N D

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Oversize frames off er a new kind of girl gaze

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top left: CHLOÉ

sunglasses, $525.

GIVENCHY

glasses, $1,000.

GUCCI sunglasses,

$1,450. DOLCE

& GABBANA

sunglasses, $570.

BALENCIAGA

sunglasses, $450.

Photography by MARK GRIFFIN CHAMPION Styling by REBECCA RUSSELL

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“I want to be surrounded by color, by people who are loving life,” confesses multimedia artist Ashley Longshore as she sits inside fl oral and fragrance designer Eric Buterbaugh’s gallery, where she’s mounted her fi rst Los Angeles show (May 10-24). Collectors of the New Orleans-based “force of nature,” as Buterbaugh describes her, include designer Diane von Furstenberg, actor Blake Lively and Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele, who recently collaborated on a painting with Longshore for a Gucci DIY knitwear campaign. Known for her portraits of female leaders and screen sirens, bedazzled butterfl ies and text-driven canvases (scrawled with such witticisms as “Lah Tee Fucking Dah”), Longshore subscribes to more-is-more notions of glamour. Amid the works, including a portrait of Elizabeth Taylor with bejeweled tresses, are Buterbaugh’s exquisite displays. “Where she’s left us any space, we’ve fl owered it up in here,” he quips. 8271 Beverly Blvd, L.A., 323-651-9844; ericbuterbaugh.com . E.V.

ROSY PICTURE

NOSY BUSINESS New fragrances to covet

HENRY ROSE

Michelle Pfeiffer’s line of five genderless fragrances promises 100 percent ingredient transparency. $120/50 mL; henryrose.com.

HERETIC

Vetiver-based Dirty Grass gets its earthy character from hemp-derived CBD oil blended with violet leaf. $185/50 mL; hereticparfum.com.

VINCE

The brand’s three new California-inspired eau de parfums feature notes of musk, floral and citrus. $140/1.7 oz.; vince.com.

FAMILY JEWELS

NEWSS P L A S H

Anwar Hadid’s new unisex jewelry collection Martyre is a captivating fusion of religious iconography and gothic drama — think delicate earrings depicting cherubs midfl ight; stackable rings engraved with the words “Pray For Us”; and detailed closures resembling clasping hands. Anwar, the 19-year-old younger brother of sisters Gigi and Bella Hadid, launched the line this past spring after two years of creative incubation. “Martyre is inspired by various forms of art and meant to evoke individual strength,” he says. “Co-founder Yoni Laham and I saw a void in the market when it came to unisex jewelry, so we decided to create a universal collection.” The Los Angeles-made designs are primarily crafted from sterling silver although 14-karat gold and rose gold versions are also available, and select pieces can be set with round-cut diamonds upon request. martyre.com. C.M.

New fragrances to covet

VINCE

The brand’s three new California-inspired eau de parfums feature notes of musk, floral and citrus. $140/1.7 oz.; vince.com.

SUNDAE FUNDAY

Three cult-status ice cream brands are churning out mouthwatering vegan fl avors. Culver City-based Coolhaus (cool.haus) recently debuted dairy-free premium pints and ice cream sandwiches made with pea protein and organic cocoa butter and whole grain brown rice. West Coast purveyor Salt & Straw (saltandstraw.com) has increased plant-based options on its rotating menus — hello, dandelion chocolate hazelnut cookies and cream — plus just published an eponymous ice cream cookbook that includes a versatile vegan base. Meanwhile, expect to see and taste a lot more of West Hollywood-based Craig’s Vegan (craigsvegan.com), whose fl avors such as Sunset & Strawberry were on infl uencers’ spoons in Palm Springs in the run up to Coachella. M.L.

46 M A G A Z I N E C . C O M

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CRAIG’S VEGAN

ice cream flavors

Kursten’s PB Krunch

and Killa’ Vanilla.

Jewelry from

the unisex

collection

MARTYRE is

priced from

$195 to $795.

Right: The line’s

co-founder

ANWAR HADID.

Shit Could Be A Lot Worse , 2019, by ASHLEY LONGSHORE.

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