In collaboration with Banana Republic, the magazine celebrated its brand launch at the iconic New York restaurant with an intimate dinner full of creativity, culinary, and familiar connections.
Last night, Family Style and Banana Republic celebrated the official launch of the magazine's debut issue and website launch with an intimate fête at Eleven Madison Park. Friends and family—including Emily Ratajkowski, Peter Do, Jason Wu, Tyler Mitchell, Quil Lemons, Jessica Diehl, and more—joined Family Style's Founder & Editor-in-Chief Joshua Glass, Food Editor Sophia Roe, Livings Editor Beverly Nguyen, Arts Editor K.O. Nnamdie, Impact Editor Sophia Li, Co-Design Directors Maria and Rafaela Echeverri, Culture Editor Rachel Summer Small, Writer-at-Large Ella Quittner, Editor-at-Large Ann Binlot, and columnist Romilly Newman—along with Banana Republic’s Head of Men's Design Nicole Wiesmann and Vice President Women's Design Bettina Mueller—to toast the brand's debut over a special menu by Chef Daniel Humm. Family Style took over the iconic restaurant's top floor, transforming its apex into a home away from home for the night, replete with new pieces from BR Home, including its minimalistic Pierre daybed and Brooklyn travertine console table for a bespoke cocktail lounge. For the dining room, massive, artisan-crafted acacia wood Essex dining tables handmade in India set the scene for a custom four-course plant-based menu by Humm, the last of which—a dessert tray featuring sesame pretzel with chocolate, passion fruit mochi with vanilla, and chocolate tart with hazelnut—was served family style, of course.
Family Style No. 2 Objects of Affection Summer 2024
David Kohn designs the spaces gallerists show their work, then he builds the places they live. A reverence for the transformative nature of a space animates each of his architectural projects, where rooms spark dialogue with that which they hold.
Both Nicole McLaughlin, whose beloved remixes of everyday objects have set the Internet ablaze, and Aska Yamashita, the artistic director of Chanel-owned Atelier Montex, have certain material fascinations. As it turns out, the two designers seem cut from the same cloth—even half a world and a generation apart.
Herman Miller is reviving two pieces from a pivotal moment in design history: a chair and table designed by Gilbert Rohde displaying modernist influences that were ahead of their time in the lineage of avant-garde American tastes.
While the late sculptor JB Blunk’s holistic art and design philosophy has only come to light in recent years, his hand-built family home in the woods of Inverness, California, preserved by daughter Mariah Nielson, reveals his influence runs generations deep.
A fateful return to Italy from the Netherlands has imbued Andrea Trimarchi and Simone Farresin with a new appreciation for the land that raised them—and the new world they’ve created there together.
Fueled by curiosity, the late Gaetano Pesce’s radical, multidisciplinary approach to making carved a path for a new generation of polymaths, including trailblazing artist and DJ Awol Erizku, with whom he shared one of his final conversations.
One century ago, Svenskt Tenn made a colorful splash in the throes of Sweden’s modernism movement. Today, Maria Veerasamy is leading the design brand to new horizons, while honoring its legacy.
Marcus Samuelsson’s debut furniture collection is ripe with memories from his childhood of growing up in a Swedish fishing village, the colors and patterns of Africa, and the many dreams and laughs shared around the table.
Christian Dior spent his childhood enamored with Japanese art and translated its sensibilities into his legendary designs. Now, Cordelia de Castellane has found new life in his bird and cherry blossom motifs.
Athena Calderone’s name became synonymous with her aesthetic—earth tones and minimalistic, white-on-white decor—until her designs took on a life of their own. Inside her new, moody New York apartment, another adventure awaits.
Alex Tieghi-Walker’s first group exhibition at his eponymous New York gallery evokes the mysterious, ancient, and often enchanted qualities of the remote, forested landscape through newly commissioned artworks and objects by nearly two dozen artists and designers.
Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta close their eyes and envision a free-flowing future where different ideas coexist and nature is an equilibrant. When they open them, the duo behind DRIFT channel this paradigm shift into kinetic sculptures, some of which exist by recontextualizing familiar relics, an approach they share with the designer Bjarke Ingels.
Pink Essay creates exhibitions and online experiences that examine the weird and wonderful ways design manifests. From London to Seoul, these six up-and-coming makers from its international community are at the vanguard of our built environments.
Marc Newson has made it all—and then remade it twice over. Though a few relics from his iconic industrial and interior practice mingle with personal matters inside his family’s Victoria, London flat, the prolific designer reassures Maison Alaïa creative director Pieter Mulier that he’s hardly stuck in a storage unit.
In Common With debuts a sprawling 8,000-square foot concept shop and creative gathering space in TriBeCa, New York, with a mural by Italian artist Claudio Bonuglia as its crown jewel.
A drastic change of scenery sparked a new chapter in Simone-Bodmer-Turner’s creative endeavors. Now, her modernist-inspired aesthetic readily embraces natural motifs.
Throughout his pioneering sculptural and design practices, Isamu Noguchi fabricated a world of his own. Now entrusted to his namesake museum in Queens, New York, these rarely seen belongings offer an intimate connection to the awe-striking breadth of his life—and ours.
For Milan Design Week, Issey Miyake honors the late Japanese fashion designer’s craftsmanship and legacy with a series of animated installations by the Dutch art collective We Make Carpets.
A new bookillustrates and intellectualizes the placement of works by 16 contemporary design studios within the historic surroundings of Chatsworth House in the Derbyshire Dales.
Former Gucci designer and self-made interiors visionary Gergei Erdei launches six, original hand-painted screens in the form of his newly released “Objects of Desire” series.
The iconic world of the late design duo Ray and Charles Eames is celebrated in the newly opened Eames Archives in Richmond, California, where over 40,000 artifacts beg to be seen—and sat on.
Pink Essay asked 26 artists to visually transform ordinary office objects for the design studio’s latest exhibition in Mexico City. The results were out of this world.
A collaboration between London design firm Campbell-Rey and Swedish design firm Nordic Knots takes twists and turns in its inspirations for three new colorful and minimalist rugs.
In Nashville, Tennessee's vibrant Wedgewood Houston neighborhood, The Malin's just-opened work-focused club invites members to re-envision productivity at its fourth and largest space yet.
Amalia Ulman doesn't stop at curiosity—she implicates herself in the subject, and her interests run wide: a group show in a dilapidated apartment, a film screening on fascism, a curated offering of waters, and a forthcoming feature film starring Chloë Sevigny and Simon Rex.
A new book of photography centers Japan’s female gaze from its transformative post-war period to sociocultural upheaval and the tumultuous, identity-upending present.
From his beloved roles in David Lynch classics to his endearing and wildly popular TikTok presence, it’s no wonder Kyle MacLachlan is a cult-favorite. But the moments he cherishes most are those that keep him in the present.
We live in an era of immediacy and overflow. Things once hard or slow to procure are now a blink away. Given this limitless accessibility, what in modern life can still be considered special, rare?
Anish Kapoor, Rick Owens, and Yoko Ono have all left their signatures on tablecloths at Vienna’s famed Hotel Sacher, where thousands of its infamous and eponymous cakes go out into the world each day.
Popping off two new Champagnes, Krug has created three wholly unique travel experiences dedicated to gastronomy and flowers at three of the most sought-after boutique hotels around America.
The annual Summer Party benefit at Philip Johnson’s masterpiece in New Canaan, Connecticut, intermingled past and present—and the singular identity of an iconic modernist architect with the community springing from his creations.
CAConrad’s poems are alive: Their words swarm in abstract shapes, often emblazoned across large swaths of paper or fabric. They credit this alchemy to their daily somatic rituals.
Annie Hamilton spent her childhood afternoons walking down Fifth Avenue arm-in-arm with her nana. Her fondest memories are animated by the Keds her grandmother wore and the conversations that they had. Now, when she slides on a white leather pair of her own, she feels taken care of and is transported back to those Upper West Side promenades, nana by her side.
Sumayya Vally understands the charged nature of spaces; she feels it in the structures of her native Johannesburg, and she channels it into something new with her architecture and research studio Counterspace. Within every pavilion, biennial, and public site she designs, she folds in layers of overlooked histories that eclipse the Eurocentric perspective.
Inspired by over 21,000 works of art from the Blanton Museum of Art permanent collection, the 2024 winners of the Blanton Bake-Off make creativity confectionery.
International perspectives and noteworthy women of the past and present are at the heart of this year’s Photo London, which returns this week for its ninth edition.
In her inaugural collection of short stories, aptly titled My First Book, Honor Levy is a cultural anthropologist with a wry wit who isn’t afraid to get personal.
Ahead of the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, Louis Vuitton pays homage to the French capital’s sports scene with an exclusive edition of its City Guide series as well as the first-ever City Book.
Magnum collaborates with literary publisher Granta to mark the tenth anniversary of its Square Print Sale. Riveting tales by writers Sara Baume, Victoria Adukwei Bulley, and Derek Owusu contextualize breathtaking images by 85 Magnum photographers.
In a fashion-house first, Saint Laurent Productions will present three films at the 77th edition of the Cannes Film Festival next month, featuring renowned directors David Cronenberg, Jacques Audiard, and Paolo Sorrentino.
Before revealing her identity, Jade Guanaro Kuriki-Olivo was an elusive presence: Her performances were obscured by a layer of fog, carried out by avatars, and veiled in elaborate costumes. Under the brilliant lime-green surveillance of her self-imposed captivity at the New Museum, the artist is still an enigma—but now she is exposed as herself, a profound embrace she shares with Anohni.
Michael Imperioli might be known for his roles on-screen and his Broadway hit An Enemy Of The People, but the actor’s interests run deep. It is his time in New York City that has nurtured him the most. From his formative years in the music scene to the Italian dishes that remind him of home, the multihyphenate shares a meal—and some memories—with fellow New Yorker and musician Julia Cumming.
What does comfort look like? How does it taste? There is nothing edible to be seen in this intergenerational photo portfolio by Martin Parr, Liz Johnson Artur, and Thurstan Redding for Family Style. Rather, each of these three U.K.-based photographers chose to capture the people behind the meals that they love the most: the food that they share with their friends, the food that brings them solace, the food that makes them feel loved.
Stefano Tonchi never dined alla mensa until he left Italy, but the cafeteria—with its dreary décor, conveyor-belt food service, and the remnant chaos from the offices above it—has left a permanent mark.
What’s it like with lawless Michèle Lamy as your family matriarch? Enthralling, says the inimitable Scarlett Rouge, whose nonconformity succeeds the radical world she was born into.
Iconic actor Chloë Sevigny reconvenes with art-house legend Gus Van Sant, whose friendship has bookended her paradigmatic body of work, for Family Style No. 1.
In Paris, Saint Laurent’s new boutique bookstore captures the spirit of the label’s past with a curated collection of art, books, and cultural artifacts.
Through Universal Limited Art Editions, Tatyana "Tanya" Grosman influenced and collaborated with some of the most important artists of the last 60 years. She also cooked for them, too.
Genesis Breyer P-Orridge was the sort of underground luminary that embraced subcultures in such a dynamic way that s/he became one in h/er own right. H/er charisma shone through decades and wide-ranging creative endeavors, much of which are now on view at Prague's DOX Center for Contemporary Art three years since h/er passing.
As award season finales with the 96th Oscars next Monday, Getty Image Fan Clubs looks at an underrated but ubiquitously-influential Hollywood ritual: the post-award show burger.
Ethan James Green’s solo show “Bombshell” presents a tender collection of portraits taken of his friends over a year in New York. Together, these images of Green’s muses embody, poke fun at, and expand the modern knockout.
Still life is not dead. Case and point: James Cohan Gallery’s group show, where the tradition is mastered, decoded, and fashioned anew by 20 contemporary artists
Ptown’s established Fine Arts Work Center celebrates its 56-year-old residency program with a group exhibition at The Armory Show in New York this week.
At this year’s Armory, photography, geometric abstraction, and minimalist offerings are plenty, and spectacle is few and far between, save for the famous art world faces spotted lingering at the fair’s buzziest booths.
When Lena Henke enters a room, she looks at the walls, the floors, the objects on the counter, those discarded in the trash, and she sees more than just interior design: She sees history, power dynamics, traces of memories, boundless sources for inspiration.
Kitchen furniture melted into a metal slab and a man made out of bubblegum. Menus written on apples and cakes that look like an ear of corn or a Christmas ornament: These 12 chefs and artists take everyday materials—say, objects in our desk drawers or our pantries—and transform these mundane items into ingredients, with results inspiring as they are surprising.
At Meredith Rosen, close-up and fragmented self-portraits by the late Swiss artist Hannah Villiger are a convergence between sculpture and photography—on view in New York City for the first time in two decades.
Doki Kim’s practice is many things at once. Cosmic and corporeal, the artist’s new exhibition looks to natural phenomena to better understand the human condition.
Through paintings rich with color and joy, Chelsea Ryoko Wong intertwines imagined interactions, poignant memories, and landscapes with stories of communities from near and far.
As a child in Montréal, Gab Bois gazed into a postcard of The Birth of Venus hanging in her bedroom and dreamed of Botticelli’s inner world. In the kitchen, she watched her father carve butterflies out of cheddar cheese with a pocketknife. Since then, carbs, grass, and soaps have become still-life sculptures enshrined in photographs. If you can eat it, Bois has likely designed it into something else, somewhere else to dive into.
The Watermill Center's Annual Summer Benefit this past weekend celebrated 100 years of its legendary building and experimental choreographer and dancer Lucinda Childs.
Jen DeLuna paints vintage, nude photographs of women in a new light. Her debut solo exhibition at Storage in New York positions the artist as one to watch.
In Santa Fe, Teresita Fernández juxtaposes her layered practice with works from the late artist Robert Smithson, as well as a third, liminal space that emerges between.
vanessa german’s new sculptures are artifacts of a cosmic pursuit of being. “What if site-specificity was a type of love?” the artist asks. The answer is in the material.
“Night Market” at Christie’s New York meditates on rituals tied to community and identity with works by 34 intergenerational artists of Asian and Pacific Islander descent.
Antwaun Sargent’s new two-part exhibition, “Social Abstraction,” which opens at Gagosian Beverly Hills tomorrow, unearths a deeper social context within Black abstraction.
For Gordon Parks’ posthumous debut at Pace Los Angeles, Kimberly Drew has culled images from the photographer’s paradigm-shifting archives that capture humanity in the face of a historically discriminatory American South.
Nothing says summer in New York like a slew of July group shows before galleries shut their doors for August and everyone juts off to somewhere cool or coastal to escape the heat.
Wendy Red Star’s exhibition at Roberts Projects is the artist’s first in Los Angeles in nearly two decades. It’s underscored by a trio of other projects across the globe.
Cassandra Mayela Allen’s large-scale textile works reinvigorate material and memory. At Olympia Gallery in New York, the artist considers the fragmented immigrant experience.
In upstate New York, a weekend of performance launches Art Omi’s summer season, which features immersive exhibitions by Kiyan Williams and Riley Hooker.
As the natural world rapidly transforms due to anthropogenic impact, Cooking Sections have developed an approach that fuses art and research to imagine sustainable consumption. They call it “climavore.”
Alexandra Bachzetsis communicates the frenetic energy of her personal transformation in the New York debut of her exhibition and performance “Notebook.”
Barry X Ball has been breaking rules since leaving behind his Christian fundamentalist upbringing to become a sculptor. When he discovered robotics, he never looked back, he tells artist and thinker Hamzat Incorporated.
Amanda Wall transforms her own likeness into poetic landscapes that undulate existential and temporal for her debut solo exhibition in New York at Almine Rech.
After birthing her creations atop 200-plus stages and in non-traditional sites around the world, multidisciplinary artist Pat Oleszko returns to a New York white cube for the first time since the ‘90s.
Curator extraordinaire Hans Ulrich Obrist’s favorite object is a miniature world of wonders he’s dubbed the Nanomuseum. At two inches in length and three inches wide, it has followed the Serpentine Galleries' artistic director around the world for the past three decades, carrying the works of artists from Yoko Ono to Chris Marker to Jonas Mekas on any given day.
Music, mental health, and machines! In Arkansas, recording music artist Jewel's life-long interests culminate in an immersive exhibition at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
In Los Angeles, punk-rock artist Kim Gordon revisits her running Design Office trope as she explores living and work spaces through two video pieces, wherein private life bleeds into public persona.
The New Jersey-born, New York-based artist knows a thing or two about love. Her new exhibition this spring at the Broad in Los Angeles is an intimate ode to her community, female empowerment, Black liberation, and queer identity that spans the last two decades of her practice.
Palestinian-American artist Jordan Nassar’s motherland is always on his mind. At Anat Ebgi in Los Angeles, landscapes and motifs materialize in intricate embroidery and mosaic tiles.
Across his six-decade-long career, Bruce Nauman has depicted and pushed the boundaries of the human condition. In Hong Kong, a new major survey features a career-spanning selection of his works at Tai Kwun gallery.
In Alex Prager’s latest solo exhibition at Lehmann Maupin Seoul, the Los Angeles-based artist and filmmaker considers the rise of technology and the state of humanity today.
For Nikita Gale, the arena is an archaeological site that reflects deeper truths about human nature and the desire to dominate. At Petzel in New York, stadiums are broken open and exposed under the artist’s critical and curious eye.
Ming Smith has carried a camera with her for most of her life. Her New York exhibition at Nicola Vassell delves into her expansive archive with never-before-seen works from her early years.
Sung Tieu, who immigrated from Hải Dương, Vietnam, to East Berlin as a child, considers herself far more German than Vietnamese. The artist’s works, which often explore precarious aspects of the immigrant condition, are suffused with a sense of rootlessness.
Set in a not-so-distant future, Sedrick Chisom confronts America's violent, racist timeline and redeems mythical antagonists such as Medusa—their traits reframed as projections and products of the society that cast them out.
Huguette Caland turned to art to express her innermost thoughts and her own physical form. Now in Miami, works from the late Lebanese artist are now on view at her first-ever solo exhibition in an American museum.
In his first solo exhibition in New York in almost two decades, Alessandro Twombly pays homage to ancient Italian civilization, his heritage, and the Roman countryside.
For the milestone edition of its art festival, the nonprofit will showcase a unique lineup of contemporary art, highlight a wide array of emerging artists, and host not-to-be-missed cultural discussions.
Sculptor Gisela Colón carries the land of her childhood in Puerto Rico with her. At Efraín López in New York, the stuff it's made of materializes in cosmic shapes.
While everything seems almost too perfect and too smooth, a disturbing smile hides behind the paintings of Chloe Wise’s new exhibition at Almine Rech in Brussels.
Ernie Barnes captured the beauty and perseverance of Black American life for over five decades. Until recently, the late painter was overlooked by the art world. Now his influence is on display at Ortuzar Projects in New York.
The artist’s representation of the U.S. at this year’s Venice Biennale still holds traces from his established rules to create an exhibition experience, including approaching the venue as a club and a church.
Ann Binlot had high hopes and a jam-packed schedule for the opening of the 60th Venice Biennale. Here’s what Family Style’s editor-at-large was actually able to see.
Lauren Halsey’s hometown of South Central, Los Angeles has influenced nearly all of her works. The artist’s latest installation at this year’s Venice Biennale reframes this heritage through ancient Egyptian architecture.
Nil Yalter has spent her career investigating lives in flux. Through her boundary-pushing work, this year’s Venice Biennale lifetime achievement award winner documents her own constant movement across mediums, borders, and identities.
A new exhibition in Venice, Italy underscores the abstract undercurrent within the artist’s figurative works with works depicting zoomed-in observations of nature and the late mid-century fashion designer Claire McCardell’s archive.
Olivia Erlanger’s immersive, multi-part installation at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston marks the multidisciplinary artist’s first solo museum show. An unnerving short film about haunted appliances sets the stage.
Lynda Benglis has spent decades forging an unparalleled sculptural practice that nods to the inchoate and ever-enigmatic fog of distant memories. Revealing two new works here, the artist reconnects with longtime curatorial collaborator and veteran dealer Adam Sheffer.
Elizabeth Glaessner’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles, “Now you’re a lake,” unfolds in a series of imaginative and emotional confrontations between ambiguous figures and bodies of water.
The 2024 Young Collectors Council Party at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum featured a transcendent one-night-only immersive installation by the artist.
Long overshadowed by her 10-year relationship with Pablo Picasso, the works of the late French painter Françoise Gilot are now being celebrated in a solo exhibition in Paris.
This Hawaiian ceramist and painter spent five decades experimenting. Now, 13 years after her death, Takaezu’s life and work are being commemorated in a major retrospective that features pieces from public and private collections across the country.
A bridge between the art world hemispheres, the fair is finally back at full speed, with a focus on flowers, figuration, and Hong Kong traditions as hundreds of thousands of visitors expected over its three-day run.
Zélika García has spent her career supporting Mexican artists. Two decades after its debut, her homegrown art fair Zona Maco is the culmination of her life’s work.
Lorenza Longhi’s flowers are rooted at the intersection of commodification, desire, and personal identity. Look closer at the petaled sculptures, and you’ll see they are looking back.
Jamian Juliano-Villani has run circles around the art world her entire career all while playing by her own rules. Her debut solo show at Gagosian in New York captures the energy and the spirit behind her practice thus far.
At 75, Marilyn Minter—the outspoken photographer-painter who has defined an aesthetic of vivid, seductive works of women—has a lot to say about many different things. Often, they don’t add up.
Life off the Pacific Coast was a formative influence for NYC artist Kylie Manning. The ocean’s power and mystery still loom large in her creative visions.
Following its debut at last year’s Venice Architecture Biennale, “Tropical Modernism: Architecture and Independence” opens at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.
Frieze Los Angeles came and went in a New York Minute. On the twilight of Los Angeles’ art-filled week, the Swiss curator reflects on his most memorable moments.
The Chinese artist’s show at SCAD Museum of Art puts forth an insightful snapshot of major video pieces since 2019 alongside a collection of photographic stills from their productions.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2025 commission series will feature two new installations of sculptures by Jennie C. Jones and Jeffrey Gibson, two artists whose practices challenge and expand upon the medium.
A New York exhibition of Paul Thek’s oil paintings at Galerie Buchholz marks a significant reunion of works that have not been shown together since the ‘60s.
The LA art fair joins forces with Dover Street Market to present a collection of artist-label collaborations inside an installation by artist Oscar Tuazon.
Sidney B. Felsen has spent the last 50-plus years documenting the artists who have collaborated in his studios. At the Getty Center, the co-founder of legendary LA print workshop Gemini G.E.L. life’s work is a testament to these many bonds.
Austrian sculptor Erwin Wurm evokes the everyday with his own surreal spin, where clothes take on a life of their own. “Surrogates,” the artist’s latest exhibition at Thaddaeus Ropac in London, makes visitors look twice.
Clifford Prince King captures home wherever he goes—his new public art series brings his tender portraits to 330 bus shelters and newsstands across three cities.
Vegetables with Paul McCartney, eggs with Lady Gaga, and kimchi alone: Mark Ronson offers a glimpse into his music-filled life to sister and fellow DJ Samantha Ronson.
After a life of cocktails and take-out, the DJ-musician has found a new relationship with food. And it’s f*cking delicious, as she writes in her new column for Family Style.
Fleshy eggplant, a recovered Rolex, and the breadcrumbs of a forgotten night—what goes bump by the light of the moon often surprises when revealed the morning after.
Issey Miyake Homme Plissé releases the first wave of items from its new collection with Ronan Bouroullec, a harmonious blend of billowy silhouettes and gestural strokes.
We realize the magic of making something out of nothing when we’re young. Tire swings spiral beneath large oak trees, and scraps of fabric and jewel-toned yarn billow into ready-made couture gowns. As time passes by and materials fade into well-worn memories, this world-building persists, appearing when and where we least expect it.
Mass produced or hand crafted, decorative or practical, an object always has a subliminal use. Pens to write, clothes to wear, books to read. We see a shape and innately know what to do with it. But what if we didn’t? What if, for a moment, we willed ourselves to forget—and instead of utility, we saw limitless possibility?
Inspired by their dual practices in observance—of shapes, of textures, of objects—Andrés Jaña and Javier Irigoyen examine the temporality of objects and the rhythms and expressions they reveal when given the space to be.
Prized possessions do not arrive often, but when they do, they stay long, inhabiting the warm corners of our lives. These are the materials that distinguish our environments, the poetic flairs that find their way into descriptions of our personhood. She makes her coffee at home, eats an egg from a silver cup, pins her singular style on shoes and bags, and treasures the tangible: well-crafted silverware, china, objects for memories to coalesce.
Paloma Elsesser is an everywoman in a monomyth. The supermodel has spent her hot ascent to fame atop a pedestal built, in many ways, to reduce its subject to material matter. Her resilience and humanity pervades. This fascination with the charged nature of physicality reverberates in the work of Ser Serpas, the artist who choreographs found objects into animated, poetic, and dystopian scenes.
Banana Republic’s 2024 Summer collection is rooted in optimistic escapism. Starring American model Taylor Hill, the brand’s latest campaign transports to sun-splashed spots in Mérida, Mexico.
During any other ski season, Axel de Beaufort, Véronique Nichanian, and Christophe Goineau might find themselves independently gliding down the fluffy runs of the Swiss Alps. But this past winter, the three Hermès creatives headed west to Aspen, Colorado.
The finalists of this year’s LVMH prize include a diverse range of emerging designers united by sustainability, ethical practices, and an emphasis on womenswear.
Precious metals shimmer as hands dance across a long wooden dining room table to embrace, pass plates, raise toasts, emote. A familiar symphony of family heirlooms, tokens of love, and pendants of personal eccentricities clink and rattle as some float in and others assume their seats at the table.
Little blue boxes have always accented Lauren Santo Domingo’s life. But as she settles into her new role at Tiffany & Co., she’s gathered new memories from its storied archives.
Lafayette 148’s new capsule collection with Claire Khodara and Grace Fuller Marroquin commemorates the life and legacy of their artist mother, Martha Madigan.
Almost six decades after its original release, a French New Wave classic is recreated in a new short film for Chanel. Directed by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, the tribute brings together Penélope Cruz and Brad Pitt on screen for the very first time.
In its first foray outside of Paris, the luxury fashion house opens its first flagship store on New Bond Street. The three-story boutique blends fine art and haute couture.
After two years of renovation, the French fashion house reopens its Highland Park Village doors with an intimate and object-filled foray into its history that is firmly rooted in the present.
The hidden meanings and influences behind Simone Rocha’s awe-inspiring designs are explored in-depth for the first time in a new book set to be published in September of this year.
From the films of David Lynch to the music of Nina Simone, the late American composer Angelo Badalamenti’s haunting compositions left an indelible mark. Now this fashion house is underscoring his legacy.
Gucci’s new SoHo outpost is more than just a beautiful boutique. The over 10,000-square-foot-space doubles as an art gallery with works by Alghiero Boetti and Sasha Stiles in a program curated by Truls Blaasmo.
Style.com was ahead of its time, bringing some closer to the runway—and others to one another—more than ever before. For Family Style's debut print issue, several editors from the legendary digital platform reunited for brunch at Paris’ gilded Cheval Blanc to reminisce about their glory days of street style, cutthroat story turnarounds, and changing the world.
“The New Village: Ten Years of New York Fashion'' at Pratt Manhattan Gallery makes the case that the city’s D.I.Y. sensibilities still pack a punch in a sartorial group show that fuses art and design.
Amongst the treasures of Love House's new NYC design gallery, Family Style found beauty, inspiration, and even obsession for Valentine's Day. Can you blame us?
Why are so many culinary creatives covered in tattoos? Family Style met with six beautiful New Yorkers making beautiful food and beverages and stripped them down to find out more.
Peter Do and Trisha Do grew up near each other in Vietnam, but the pair didn’t become friends until meeting each other across the world, where they bonded over their shared experiences and cooking as an expression of love.
After a year’s-worth of wants, wonts, and will-I-evers, it’s finally time for the main event of the season: gifts. Take Family Style's inaugural holiday tasting menu, which spans fashion, accessories, and trophies for the home, less as an ordained prescription and more of a cherished collection of desires; many of which will surely bring a smile to a loved one’s face as well as your own, of course.
In her new Family Style column, Whitney Mallett investigates the prep power of Buck Ellison's art book—making sense of Brandy Melville and American exclusion trending in an election year.
Pop-ups are a dime a dozen in New York, the food capital of the world with the least patience. So what happens when The Polo Bar, one of the most difficult restaurants to get a table at, temporarily exits the city? Magic.
Three decades after Thomas Keller reinvigorated The French Laundry in Napa, California, the eatery still remains one of the best in the world. Michael Minnillo, the restaurant's oldest employee turned general manager, explains why.
In the heart of Portland, Oregon, where the culinary scene is as eclectic as the city itself, Gregory Gourdet interweaves centuries of history with his own memories. For Family Style No. 1, the James Beard Award-winning chef has imagined a unique three-course menu that is as powerful as it is personal.
A noncommittal referral and blocks of over-appealing options in Galway, Ireland left vacationer Ella Quittner wondering if Daróg should be the first of three dinners. But the boutique wine bar changed her mind.
Francis Mallmann has lived many lives. He’s pioneered open-fire cooking, built his own restaurants from the ground up—plus a museum—and even picked up embroidery. Through it all, Family Style's Summer 2024 guest chef has learned lessons that make life a little sweeter.
Alain Ducasse began quietly leading a plant-based revolution in the late ’80s, and has continued to experiment with vegetable-forward haute cuisine since. It’s an appetite to better the world that he shares with Daniel Humm, whose creative culinary philosophy has both amazed—and even angered.
When it’s apple season in England, the Somerset-raised, London-based photographer knows just what to do. He pulls out his family’s tarte tatin recipe and whips up the beloved classic.
Over the last few years, temaki-style sushi joints have become the go-to fast-but-not-casual rage for New Yorkers with no time to waste. Despite the endless options to dine at, these four should stay top of mind.
Sydney Vernon infuses her work with tender and intimate snapshots of Black life. Her own memories of childhood find their way into her art—and her meals, like her mother’s turkey spinach quiche.
Graphic designer Naomi Otsu shares her tried-and-true recipe for her all-curing soba noodle soup, a dish that transports the native New Yorker back to her formative years in Tokyo.
The New York-based photographer shares her recipe for scalloped potatoes and roasted autumn vegetables, a minimalist pairing that brings her comfort whenever she’s in need.
Lately, the city has been raptured by novelty eateries that use exclusivity as a commodity. These tried and true staples—which you can actually get a table at—serve good food without the artifice.
David Zilber was the sous chef of Hawksworth, Canada’s best restaurant, before he became the fermenter-in-chief at Noma, what many have deemed the best restaurant in the world. Now the food scientist is having the best time in his own Copenhagen kitchen, where he believes our culinary future will be far different from what we’ve come to know.
The enigmatic musician and visual artist imbues everything she does with poetry. Here, she shares a boiled potatoes recipe that will warm both stomachs and hearts.
The luxury fashion house opens its debut restaurant and coffee shop in Jakarta, Indonesia. The dual dining establishments take inspiration from the brand’s New York roots—topped with a lifesize replica of the iconic yellow taxi cab.
Ruinart toasts to its year-long artist collaboration program with a Frieze LA dinner celebrating Andrea Bowers and her dedication to environmental justice.
Antonio D’Angelo oversees all of Giorgio Armani’s culinary empire, including Nobu Milano. When Covid-19 put a halt to importing produce from Asia, the executive chef decided to take matters into his own hands, opening his own wasabi farm in Northern Italy of all places.
To drop into New York's The Commerce Inn mid-dog walk and sip a tavern coffee with whisky and maple in one of the wooden booths on the bar-side of the quirky restaurant on a Sunday morning is the best version of stopping by a neighbor’s just to say hi.
The once-overlooked crudité has undergone a gourmet transformation, gracing upscale menus with vibrant displays of seasonal vegetables and artisanal dips.
The beautiful thing about Rowan Spencer and Emma Leigh Macdonald's seafood flatbread is that their favorite part about eating steamed mussels—dipping bread into the salty shellfish broth—happens no matter how you enjoy it. In their inaugural Family Style series, the creative pair known as Mon Petit Canard share an original recipe for the Feast of the Seven Fishes—along with some delectable musical pairings.
From politics and post-traumatic stress to cinnamon-y pumpkin pie, Thanksgiving—the annual-slash only American day dedicated to gratitude—means a lot of things to a lot of people. It also means nothing to many others. Post passing the turkey, Family Style asked 20 or so creatives from all around the world what the pre-Black Friday feast signifies for them personally, and how each celebrated this year if they did so at all.
As New York sandwich shop Regina’s Grocery debuts its third location, Family Style speaks with founder Roman Grandinetti about the delicate politics of naming menu items after family members—and mayonnaise.
Trendy restaurants often exist in an echo chamber of celebrity and social clout, but a new crop of good-looking eateries around the globe are inviting us to enjoy our comfort food and look cool, too.
The Salon is a monthly supper club put on by New York–based artists Ananya Chopra and Kritika Manchanda, who channel their childhoods to put out impeccably composed regional northern Indian food.
This Eagle Rock, LA oyster bar is the best restaurant Patrik Sandberg has been to recently. It has a parking lot (unheard of!), which is reason enough to go, but for seafood fiends such as Sandberg, it is truly a forensic marvel worth returning to, much like a serial killer does to the scene of their crimes.
Forensic chemist Sissel Tolaas has researched the smell of everything from David Beckham’s armpits to Balenciaga’s storied archives. Now, she’s designing scents for The Met.
Finnish-born Tiina Laakkonen has bested all aspects of the fashion industry. Now that she’s sunset her iconic, minimalist Hamptons boutique, what’s the shopkeeper to do? Everything.
For the last four years, I've gone to sleep with and woken up beside Sophia Loren. More specifically: a life-sized poster of the actress and a giant sausage from the film La Mortadella hangs across her bed. The only thing crazier than the plot of the absurdist 1971 movie is the fact that I've never seen it—until now.
Friends and family from fashion, art, and interiors commuted to the Long Island City, New York gem to celebrate the magazine's Summer 2024 design edition and sip on summer cocktails inside its newly-revealed space.
At Salone del Mobile 2024, Family Style presented a first look at the magazine's Summer 2024 design issue in the form of an ephemeral exhibition with Sophia Roe and DRIFT.
Flaky fried chicken, buttery biscuits, plenty of okra, and an unbelievable backdrop: Family Style's SCADStyle dinner in Savannah, Georgia felt like a scene right out of a Hollywood picture.
In collaboration with Banana Republic, the magazine celebrated its brand launch at the iconic New York restaurant with an intimate dinner full of creativity, culinary, and familiar connections.
Awol Erizku, Annie Philbin, Casey Fremont, Tariku Shiferaw joined Marriott International's Jenni Benzaquen and artist Sanford Biggers at one of Los Angeles’ most iconic institutions for a lush dinner by Alice Waters celebrating art and travel.
Between the bountiful California vines and the centuries-old oak trees, Family Style kicks off a quartet of intimate cultural dinners around America in ripe Yountville, California.