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Can Art Basel and Treasure House Lure Collectors to Buy as They Once Did?
Can Art Basel and Treasure House Lure Collectors to Buy as They Once Did?

New York Times

time5 hours ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

Can Art Basel and Treasure House Lure Collectors to Buy as They Once Did?

Eva Dichand belongs to a family of art collectors. Her father-in-law, Hans Dichand, who published Austria's largest-selling tabloid and died in 2010, had a major collection of Viennese art by Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele. In fact, Klimt's 1907 painting 'Danaë' now belongs to her husband, Christoph. Dichand — who in 2004 founded the free Austrian newspaper Heute — collects, too, and is on the Metropolitan Museum of Art's international council. She buys work by living artists such as the Swiss painter Miriam Cahn and the German painter Daniel Richter. Yet these days, Dichand said in a phone interview, she buys less, and less impulsively. A few decades ago, there was 'a lot of prosperity' in the West, she recalled. 'Everything was growing, and everybody was having good business, making more money,' she said, so people felt as if they could afford it. She went as far as spending millions each on works by Fernand Léger and Alexander Calder. Today, 'I don't make as much cash as I did 10 years ago,' she explained. The world is 'in a very negative mood right now, with all these wars and all these bombs going off in Tel Aviv and Tehran.' As a result, she said, 'you buy less, and think more about it, because you can't spend so much money anymore.' The art market is not what it used to be. First came the Covid pandemic, which paralyzed activity across the planet. Then came Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which sent energy prices soaring, setting off inflation and rising interest rates, and making it more expensive to buy art with borrowed money. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

How to Master Quiet Luxury in Your Everyday Style — Without Looking Like You're Trying
How to Master Quiet Luxury in Your Everyday Style — Without Looking Like You're Trying

Grazia USA

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Grazia USA

How to Master Quiet Luxury in Your Everyday Style — Without Looking Like You're Trying

Sofia Richie Grainge at The 2025 Met Gala Celebrating 'Superfine: Tailoring Black Style' held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images) 'Old money' dressing is having a new moment — and it's quieter than ever. With the rise of stealth wealth and the fall of logo mania, quiet luxury has emerged as one of fashion's most aspirational yet elusive trends. From Sofia Richie Grainge's effortlessly chic Instagram looks to Gwyneth Paltrow's court-ready cashmere, the message is clear: if you know, you know. According to Google Trends, in 2023 searches for 'quiet luxury' spiked by 614% over that year — demonstrating how seriously consumers started embracing stealth wealth at this time. Most recently, searches for 'quiet luxury handbags' and 'minimalist high-end fashion' surged by over 60% in the first half of 2025, proving the understated aesthetic is more than just a passing phase. Additionally, overall interest in 'quiet luxury' saw a significant uptick in Q1 2025, aligning with the continued shift toward logo-free, investment dressing. But how do you translate this high-end, low-key aesthetic into your everyday wardrobe without, well, owning a yacht? Here's your ultimate guide to incorporating quiet luxury into your daily style — no trust fund required. First, What Is Quiet Luxury? Quiet luxury isn't just about expensive clothing — it's about taste. Think: neutral tones, high-quality fabrics, clean lines, and timeless silhouettes that whisper status instead of shouting it. Brands like The Row, Loro Piana, Brunello Cucinelli , and Khaite embody the aesthetic, while high-street brands like COS , Everlane , and Massimo Dutti offer accessible alternatives. Unlike fast fashion, quiet luxury focuses on longevity over logos , prioritizing craftsmanship and fit over flashy trends. It's minimalist, but never boring. It's elevated, but never ostentatious. BERLIN, GERMANY – APRIL 29: Melanie Kroll wearing Jimmy Choo heels, beige ba&sh coat and black leather top, PdPaola earrings, white Tommy Hilfiger jeans and black Furla bag on April 29, 2021 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by) How to Incorporate Quiet Luxury Into Your Everyday Style 1. Prioritize Fabric Over Flash Luxury begins with touch. Incorporate elevated basics made from natural, premium fabrics like organic cotton, wool, cashmere, silk, and linen. These materials not only feel better, but they also drape and wear beautifully over time. Style Tip: Swap your synthetic sweaters for a lightweight cashmere crewneck, or replace polyester blouses with silk button-downs. You'll feel the difference — and so will everyone else. 2. Neutral Is the New Black Quiet luxury style lives in a neutral palette. Build your wardrobe around shades of ivory, camel, grey, taupe, navy, and muted earth tones . These colors are seasonless, elegant, and endlessly versatile. Over the past 12 months, Pinterest's 'Capsule Wardrobe 2024' board has seen 167,000 searches — many tied to neutral and minimalist aesthetics. And in Spring 2025, boards like 'Neutral Capsule Wardrobe Spring' have maintained steady weekly traffic, confirming long‑term interest in subdued, timeless style. 3. Tailoring Is Your Secret Weapon Even a $50 blazer can look like $500 if it fits like a glove. Quiet luxury is built on clean lines and impeccable tailoring — so consider getting your everyday pieces, like trousers or blazers, altered to your proportions. Style Tip: Look for structured shoulders, nipped-in waists, and tailored pants with sharp pleats. These subtle details elevate your outfit instantly. 4. Invest in Understated Accessories Quiet luxury doesn't mean going without accessories — it means choosing subtle, sculptural, or artisanal pieces over trend-driven ones. Think: a buttery leather crossbody, dainty gold jewelry, or a sleek pair of loafers. Shop Like a Stylist: Look for pieces in materials like real leather, suede, or recycled gold, and avoid large logos or obvious branding. 5. Keep Your Beauty Look Polished But Natural The quiet luxury style aesthetic extends to your hair and makeup. Think polished, not perfect: barely-there foundation, brushed-up brows, clean manicures , and undone hair that still feels intentional. Trend Note: On TikTok, the 'clean look' — sometimes called 'rich girl skin' — is soaring, with the broader 'old money' aesthetic hashtags like #oldmoneyaesthetic topping 320 million views, reflecting a cultural shift toward polished, understated elegance that aligns closely with quiet luxury. 6. Create a Capsule Wardrobe Quiet luxury thrives on repeat wear . A well-edited capsule wardrobe built on high-quality basics means less impulse buying and more intentional styling. Start With: A classic trench coat Crisp white shirts Tailored trousers Loafers or ballet flats A sleek leather tote You don't need a closet full of clothes — you need a few great ones that mix and match seamlessly. 7. Mix High & Low Like a Pro The secret to mastering quiet luxury style on a budget? Mixing investment pieces with elevated essentials from more affordable brands. A $20 Uniqlo tee under a tailored Toteme jacket? Perfection. Insider Tip: Sofia Richie Grainge has been spotted in Mango, and Gwyneth Paltrow frequently styles G. Label with vintage Levi's. LOS ANGELES, CA – NOVEMBER 23: Sofia Richie is seen on November 23, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rachpoot/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images) Final Word: It's About Energy, Not Expense Quiet luxury isn't just a trend — it's a mindset. It's the confidence to wear the same blazer for five years because you love how it fits. It's dressing for yourself, not the algorithm. And yes, it's the grace to look fabulous without making a scene. Because luxury is about desirability and not about price. As style legend Phoebe Philo once said: 'I believe in clothes that are well made and that have longevity.' With a little intention and a lot of editing, your everyday style can whisper volumes — quietly, of course. topics: Quiet Luxury, How to, style guide, fashion tips, style tips

New Fashion Books To Add To Your Summer Reading List
New Fashion Books To Add To Your Summer Reading List

Forbes

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

New Fashion Books To Add To Your Summer Reading List

A floral buzzcut by Berlin-based hair and makeup artist Janina Zais. Summer is here, meaning the fashion world is, most likely, out on some tropical island. While global fashion weeks are just a few months away, many of us are looking for style inspiration. What better way to kick back on the beach, than with a good book? Here are five new fashion, wellness and beauty books that may inspire your next outfit, outing or stylish looks. NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 05: (Exclusive Coverage) A view of the exhibit during the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating "Superfine: Tailoring Black Style" at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Arturo Holmes/MG25/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue) This book, by By Monica L. Miller, is on sale at The MET Store at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The book traces the theme that put this year's Met Gala on the map, and the history that precedes it, from a century old aesthetic to hip hop culture and beyond. Some artists featured in the book include Amy Sherald, Iké Udé, and André 3000. Work by artist Paul Rousteau This new Assouline book, Psychedelic Now: A Collective Fantasy of Hope, is a colorful romp through the history and current state of trippy culture. The writer Julia Chaplin says we're in the biggest "psychedelic renaissance" since the 1960s, and includes the artworks of Yayoi Kusama, FriendsWithYou, George Clinton, Kid Cudi, Bjarke Ingels and more. Browsing through this photo book, which is filled with technicolor, will likely spark your creativity. PARIS, FRANCE - MARCH 04: Rick Owens and Michele Lamy attend the "Le Grand Diner du Louvre" Passage Richelieu Photocall at Musee du Louvre on March 04, 2025 in Paris, France. (Photo by Pascal) This new Rizzoli book, which is out on July 8, looks into the life of the American fashion designer who launched his namesake line in 1994, and is based in Paris. His longtime muse and creative partner Michele Lamy is on the cover wearing one of his items. This book is slated to come out at the same time as Owens' first exhibition opens in Paris at the Palais Galliera, opening June 28. Hussein Chalayan Autumn-Wirnter 2000 Paris, France Hannibal Books just released a book called Fashion & Interiors: A Gendered Affair, which explores fashion and interior design. It traces the intersection between architecture and attire from the Victorian era to modern designers, like Le Corbusier, Raf Simons and Paul Poiret. This book is part of the exhibition Fashion & Interiors: A Gendered Affair on view at the MoMu, the Fashion Museum of Antwerp, which runs until August 3. City of Angels by Jasmine Benjamin This Damiani book by photographer Jasmine Benjamin captures the essence of Los Angeles style. It's a snapshot of westcoast style, something we don't always see, since everyone is always in their cars, driving. The book features over 120 portraits of L.A. creatives shot across the city, and celebrates the raw glamor of westocast street style and culture.

Leonard A. Lauder, Philanthropist and Cosmetics Heir, Dies at 92
Leonard A. Lauder, Philanthropist and Cosmetics Heir, Dies at 92

New York Times

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

Leonard A. Lauder, Philanthropist and Cosmetics Heir, Dies at 92

Leonard A. Lauder, the art patron and philanthropist who with his mother, Estée Lauder, built a family cosmetics business into a worldwide juggernaut that supplied generations of women with the creams, colors and scents of eternal youth, died on Saturday at his home on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. He was 92. The death was announced by the Estée Lauder Companies. While best known for his business enterprises, Mr. Lauder was also one of America's most influential philanthropists and art patrons. He gave hundreds of millions to museums, medical institutions, and breast cancer and Alzheimer's research, as well as to other cultural, scientific and social causes. His art collections ranged from postcards to Picassos. In 2013, he pledged the most significant gift in the history of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a trove of nearly 80 Cubist paintings, drawings and sculptures by Picasso, Braque, Léger and Gris. Scholars put the value of the gift at $1 billion and said its quality rivaled or surpassed that of the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, and the Pompidou Center in Paris. After the gift was announced, he added another dozen major Cubist works, The New York Times reported in a profile of Mr. Lauder last year. The eldest son of Estée Lauder, who in 1946 founded the company that bears her name, Mr. Lauder was for decades a senior executive and the marketing expert and corporate strategist behind his mother, the flamboyant public face of the Lauder empire, who pitched its lipsticks, bath oils, face powders and anti-wrinkle creams with almost messianic zeal. A complete obituary will be published soon.

Taiwan's storied Palace Museum must expand its global horizons, president says
Taiwan's storied Palace Museum must expand its global horizons, president says

Reuters

time13-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Reuters

Taiwan's storied Palace Museum must expand its global horizons, president says

TAIPEI, June 13 (Reuters) - Taiwan's National Palace Museum, home to one of the world's biggest collections of imperial Chinese treasures, must expand its horizons internationally to let the "world see Taiwan", President Lai Ching-te said on Friday as it marked its centenary. The museum was re-established in Taiwan in 1965 after the Republic of China government lost a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists and fled to the island in 1949, taking with them thousands of cases of antiques once owned by China's emperors, saving them from destruction during and after the revolution. While it is a top tourist attraction, the presence of so many Chinese artefacts has over the years caused discomfort to those Taiwanese who champion the island's separate and distinct identity from China. Speaking to inaugurate an exhibit of French impressionist and early modernist paintings from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lai said the National Palace Museum was a "state asset". "The National Palace Museum not only needs to deepen its roots locally, it also needs to deepen them internationally. We need to go into the world, to let the world see Taiwan, but also to bring the world to Taiwan," he said at the museum, located in Taipei's foothills. "The National Palace Museum is not only the National Palace Museum of Taiwan, but also the National Palace Museum of the world, and I believe these values should be strongly supported by the international community." A competing institution remains in Beijing, the similarly named Palace Museum, though the National Palace Museum is not planning any joint anniversary events with China. Quincy Houghton, the Met's Deputy Director for Exhibitions and International Initiatives, speaking at the event with Lai, praised the close relations between the museums, including in 1996 when the National Palace Museum sent some of its collection to the Met. "We are honoured to collaborate with the National Palace Museum on its very special centennial year," she said. Works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Cézanne are on show at the National Palace Museum until mid-October.

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