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Home Explore Harper's Bazaar USA - April 2022

Harper's Bazaar USA - April 2022

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Mindbloom, a mental-health and wellness company that will this medicine is getting out there, but we do need to make sure arrange a video consultation with a licensed psychiatric clini- that access is not just for white, privileged people.” See the recent cian who can prescribe ketamine tablets and a guide to lead you proliferation of Goopy psychedelic resorts marketing themselves through the experience of taking it virtually. as the ultimate girls’ getaway, charging thousands of dollars to sip some ayahuasca and do yoga. “But the end of prohibition is starting to take,” says Nicole Howell, an attorney in California and a founding board member This is where parents, long the gatekeepers of conversations of the Psychedelic Bar Association. There are some places, like and conceptions about drugs, have a chance to change the narrative. Seattle, Oakland, California, Washington, D.C., and some smaller “When we think about how we have to shift this attitude around cities across the country, like Somerville, Massachusetts, where psychedelics, the way that shift happens is through parents having plant- and fungi-based psychedelics have been decriminalized. different conversations with their kids about drugs,” says Kronman. In these areas, police departments are being told that arrests for Vanessa says those conversations are already happening. “We’ve possession of psychedelics for personal use should be their lowest openly shared with [my stepson] some of our experiences and priority. “However, public opinion and cultural attitudes around what we were able to heal in these ceremonies.” psychedelics will change a lot faster than laws,” says Howell. T hey are a registered nurse, a writer, a therapist, a personal That means the legal and carceral systems that have always trainer, and a handful of others. It’s a Wednesday night, disproportionately oppressed Black and brown people will continue nearly 9 p.m., and I’m participating in a psychedelic inte- to do so. “The war on drugs is a failed public policy and has caused gration circle for parents on Zoom. It’s being offered by Plant incredible harm, specifically to people from overpoliced and Parenthood, a group started by Kronman and Andrew Rose, a marginalized communities,” says Marcela Ot’alora G., a therapist mindfulness teacher and psychedelic-integration coach based in private practice in Boulder, Colorado, and a principal inves- in Montreal, after they realized there were parenting forums to tigator for MDMA-assisted therapy. According to a 2018 report discuss feeding woes and sleep-technique tactics but nothing for by the nonprofit advocacy group Drug Policy Alliance, nearly 80 psychedelic-using parents looking for support. percent of people incarcerated in federal prison for drug offenses are Black or Latino, even though white people use and sell drugs “There weren’t really niche communities for parents,” says at similar rates. Kronman. “You could find resonance with other people who used psychedelics, but an 18-year-old who doesn’t have children isn’t And even as legalization and expanded use in medical settings going to understand the specific nuances of being a parent who start to happen, there will still be complicated questions to answer. uses psychedelics.” Right now, a guided session or “ceremony,” as it’s often called, starts at a couple hundred bucks. A capsule of psilocybin costs as little After a brief meditation led by Rose and a reminder that the as $3, while an in-person ketamine session can cost upwards of space is a supportive and nonjudgmental environment, tonight’s $1,000. Once given the green light, a course of MDMA treatment agenda includes speaking to children about plant medicines and is expected to cost tens of thousands of dollars. So who would get psychedelics, including children in the integration process, and to benefit? What does access look like? And who gets to decide coping with stigma and shame in parenting communities. Because who gets access? “If approved, psychedelic-assisted therapy needs while the culture of parenthood allows for jokes about moms to be accessible to all who need it in a culturally respectful way hiding chardonnay in sippy cups and “wine” playdates, there with trained clinicians,” says Ot’alora G. “Furthermore, communi- is still a taboo around psychedelics in parenting circles. “One ties that have historically used psychedelic medicines need to be of the things that has come up a lot is people saying, ‘Oh, you included in all aspects of distribution, practices, decision-making, need to do drugs to be a better parent,’” says Vanessa. “Meanwhile, and profits.” we have memes of moms needing to stock up on tequila to deal with their kids. No judgment, but I’m not going to deny that “These things that are now trendy have been a way of life drinking alcohol is less healthy than having mushrooms every for Indigenous communities,” says Vanessa, whose family is from few months.” Mexico. “Plant medicine was brushed away by colonization, which deemed psychedelics to be savagery. Now, a friend was telling me, Many of the parents I spoke to for this story told me they you can do ayahuasca everywhere,” she continues. “I’m glad that stopped drinking once they began using psychedelics. And yet, they also agonized over using their real names. The risk of pairing “After I began using their identities with the use of psychedelics was not nothing. “There mushrooms, I felt needs to be more normalization and understanding around these such a connection to substances,” says Vanessa. “These plant allies are ways to help us my daughter. I didn’t integrate our childhood traumas, our issues, our triggers, so that feel so angry and we can show up as better parents.” miserable.” Better parents, not perfect parents. You don’t just down some mushrooms and become Mary Poppins. This is something that came up when I asked about the too-good-to-be-true parts of using psychedelics. “A framework of Western medicine is that you take the pill and you feel better and you’re done,” says Kronman. “That is absolutely not the case with psychedelics. They are a small portion of what needs to happen to make (Continued on page 142) 04/22 141

VOICES: LAYMON HERMÈS PSYCHEDELICS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 67 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 127 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 141 And I fear that these paragraphs, in this hearing that a woman should not wear this, changes. You may get a boost when using particular publication, cannot, and possibly or if they wear this they’ll get hit on,” she psychedelics, but the idea of a light-bulb should not, hold that something else. says. “It’s always this very moral gaze, which moment is harmful.” According to Kronman, has been constructed mainly by men.” setting up a safe and therapeutic trip setting, We were stolen. We were technology. getting into a more mindful state, explor- Stolen technology has no point of view in Hermès’s consolidated revenue in 2019 ing intentions, and integration—translating what Americans call realism. As stolen was €6.8 billion. The company is family run, your experience on psychedelics into direct technology, we were expected to become but it’s big and corporate, a departure from action in your life—are equally important. labor, create more labor, and die. Those the Row, where Vanhée-Cybulski could talk terms were made abundantly clear in to founders Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen OF ALL THE STORIES I HEARD from every historical document signed by white easily. I ask if she ever has to fight for her parents across the country, the most men who wrote with feathers. And though ideas. “Yes,” she tells me, “because I’m a common was how psychedelics helped nearly all of us die prematurely because creative person, and I will take risks.” Such shift the paradigm around how they parent. of this nation’s appetite for Black humili- as? “I think it’s showing a much more sensual “I wanted to be this Montessori mom,” says ation and Black death, we did not die and woman,” she says. “I feel like I can do it Nat, 27, a former preschool teacher working have not died on their terms. We have because I’m a woman.” on her bachelor’s degree in social work, who demanded in the face of death that our also asked to be identified by only her first points of view be centered in all American If there is a thread that runs through name to protect her family’s privacy. “But scenes and seeings. Vanhée-Cybulski’s designs, it’s a kind of after I had my daughter, who is now two, intellectual sensuality. This past November, I found that motherhood made my mental We actively watch too, as an “I” and Hermès threw a “Grand Soir” to celebrate health unbearable.” a “we.” its Spring 2022 collection at a sprawling midcentury estate just outside L.A. that was It made her angry. As her daughter Hence, in all of our physical deaths, once home to Frank Sinatra. It was one of the cried, Nat would scream. That made her all of our engineered injuries, and all of first over-the-top, celeb-filled fashion parties feel guilt and shame and stuck in a pattern our humiliation at the hands of working- on the circuit since the start of the pandemic. of dark thoughts. She felt like she could class white men with billy clubs and guns Models paraded around a pool in midi-length potentially hurt her daughter, a thought so who work for wealthy white folks who dresses done in the supplest leather, with overwhelming that she thought of taking her couldn’t give one fuck about them, there drawstring-waist skirts and bustier tops; there own life. Nothing could quiet those thoughts. is an awesome absorption. There is the were even some crop tops and high-waisted It was those two things—her desperation and acceptance that “I” am a part of the “we” wide-leg pants—an Hermès take on a Gen Z a lack of other options—that led Nat to seek that was supposed to watch “our” own death silhouette. To temper any self-seriousness, out psilocybin. She gave her husband the from a point of view of the mechanically filmmaker Miranda July narrated the runway address of where she was going and told monstrous. I am writing now about with absurdist humor. It was easy to picture him to come find her if she wasn’t back in something, some things, beyond good or actress Leslie Mann and her 19-year-old a few hours. bad, traumatic or pleasurable, transgressive daughter, Iris Apatow, both of whom were or progressive. in attendance, each wearing pieces from “It sounds so silly,” says Nat, “but after the collection. I began using mushrooms, I felt such a I am talking about the expansive awe of connection to my daughter. I didn’t feel Black life and Black death in this nation. And Bringing the next generation into so angry and miserable.” how we, particularly we Black Southerners Hermès is something Vanhée-Cybulski all over this nation, absorb that Black life thinks about. “It’s a sign of vitality if young The same was true for Lane Strahan, and death. We, who spend lives watching women and men are coming and saying, ‘Hey, 44, a mother of four from Berlin, New the watchers watch us die, know this expan- I like this,’ ” she says. But, she says, it is never Hampshire, who macrodosed on psyche- sive, awesome absorption. It, as much as so contrived; there are no marketing goals delics for the first time last year along with any public policy, is why we are still here, she has to contend with or age demographics her husband, Kendall, 43. “It opened my attempting to hold on and love good from to target. “If you put too much [emphasis on] whole mind to what is important,” she points of view drawn by us, not caricatured analysis and algorithm, it’s a product, not says. “I’m not a talker when it comes to perspectives drawn for us by those who will an object anymore.…With an object, there my feelings, but it made me vulnerable eat through their own lungs just to chomp is also imagination, desire, and pleasure.” and more empathetic.” big bits of our hearts. It’s much deeper than that. For Vanhée- And that is the magic of mushrooms, I no longer teach about the L.A. rebel- Cybulski, the idea that Hermès can be “for Kronman posits—that they can enable for lion in my classrooms the way I did as a everyone” is rooted in its history. “The idea those who use them “this feeling of healing younger teacher, because this is one way I of craftsmanship is not just excelling in a within themselves of generational trauma keep hold of that which makes me whole. technique,” she explains. “It’s also the trans- that has been passed on to them and how We actively watch too, as an “I” and a “we.” mission of knowledge … and the transmission that has helped them show up as better And Black deaths, like Black booms, are real. of an object from a mother to a child.” HB people, better parents.” HB This is my point of view. HB 142 B A Z A A R

NEWS: CRISTASEYA RENÉE ZELLWEGER CONTINUED FROM PAGE 72 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 104 From the beginning, they downplayed seasonality for “editions company. The Thing About Pam isn’t a limited series so much as that last and all together make the ideal wardrobe of the Cristaseya a Trojan horse—a potential franchise disguised as an A-list one-off. woman,” Casini says. Initially, every prior edition was available “The hope is we can find the next The Thing About Pam,” Casinelli alongside the current release. Now, pieces from previous editions says, “and do a follow-up season. Or seasons.” can be special ordered, and the brand typically tweaks and rereleases its core pieces in every collection. Of the miniseries, Zellweger says, “It’s an event. It’s retro. Isn’t it cool?” When Nassirzadeh first encountered Cristaseya about five years ago, it stood out because “it was just very pared down and Zellweger sold her house in Topanga in October of 2021; really simple shapes and just really beautifully made.” She has after staring at the walls for almost two years, she says, she needed carried the line in her namesake store in New York’s Lower East a change. She was also still processing the loss of Nanci Ryder, Side since and has watched the brand evolve as Casini continued a titan in the industry, known for her A-list clients and her flir- to fill out its aesthetic world with the objects and accessories. tatious spirit. Ryder had been diagnosed with ALS in 2014 and succumbed to the disease in June 2020, with Zellweger by her The current edition, the label’s 18th, includes many Cristaseya side when she passed. favorites, including oversize cotton shirts, caftans, pajama sets, bright knits, and Japanese washi-paper suits. But if you believe in serendipity, as Zellweger does, Ryder’s work was not done. Everything starts from touching fabrics and materials, trying to imagine what they can be,” says Casini, describing her design “It was around Judy,” Zellweger explains, “late night, and approach as “coupe et forme,” or cut and shape. I remember I watched the Property Brothers with Brad Pitt.” She’s talking about an HGTV show called Celebrity IOU, in which “She has a very, very sharp eye for everything,” says Pica, who a famous person honors someone in his or her life—a family discovered Cristaseya through a mutual art-director friend about member, a beloved employee—by having the Property Brothers six years ago and loves the label’s shirt-and-trouser sets and sweat- renovate their home. Gwyneth Paltrow and Melissa McCarthy ers, often buying multiples. (She has six different colors of a shirt have both appeared on the show, but Brad Pitt’s episode is a real Cristaseya released in collaboration with Naples tailor Salvatore tearjerker. Piccolo.) “That balance between sophistication and elegance, wearability and comfort and coolness, she does that really well,” Zellweger wanted to celebrate the two nurses who’d cared continues Pica, adding that “every time I wear anything from the for Ryder in the last years of her life—twin brothers named Jerome brand, somebody asks me what I’m wearing.” Cowan and Jerald Cowan—and as luck would have it, a spin-off was in development. Celebrity IOU: Joyride would feature Ant “They combine Italian handmade craftsmanship with a Japanese Anstead—he of the salt-and-pepper hair, dimples for days, and sensibility, which is very hard to find,” says Julie Gaither, a buyer black T-shirts tucked into cargo pants—rebuilding some truly at New York boutique Oroboro, which started selling Cristaseya beautiful classic cars. Zellweger leapt at the chance to participate. in 2020 and, like Maryam Nassirzadeh’s store, is known for setting In the end, Jerome got a 1969 Oldsmobile Cutlass and Jerald got a style agenda for women with intellectual tastes. “The quality is a killer vintage Bronco. And Zellweger took home the host. impeccable, but there’s still such a strong narrative,” she says, noting that while the label’s pieces may appear simple, they always have It was an obvious match in some respects: Zellweger’s father a modern twist in the silhouette, cut, or color: “They may do a was an engineer, and she is maybe the only Oscar winner who gorgeous knit caftan, but they will do it in an amazing persimmon.” can confidently fix a gearbox (whatever that is). But in other ways, it was surprising. Anstead, 43, posts to Instagram almost daily As a result, the label’s pieces are exceptionally rewearable, and recently had to clarify to his 436,000 followers that his says de Mavaleix. “You really live in the garments, in the caftans, two-year-old son did not cut his own hair with a butter knife. all summer, every day,” she says. “It’s the right fabric and the right Zellweger, on the other hand, eschews social media entirely, saying, cut. Everything is a bit baggy.” “I don’t look at my phone sometimes until six o’clock at night.” Casini feels the label has connected with its audience because And yet there’s that smile when his name comes up. Zellweger it’s clear that it “reflects the desires and passions of the real people is reportedly renting a place in Laguna Beach, where Anstead behind it and that it’s not just another business-oriented brand.” lives. When I tell her that I’m about to visit a friend in New Orleans, she suggests a Middle Eastern restaurant called Saba that they To that point, Cristaseya launched its e-commerce site just five enjoyed when she was there on location filming Pam, praising the years ago, and it had an unusual strategy: The website “opens” for spot’s homemade bread: “You can have 20 loaves of that stuff and business for only a few weeks at a time when editions land or when it’d be fine!” pieces from past editions are available. This guarded approach and small scale differentiate it from other designer labels with a similar Just before the interview ends—before she puts my dog’s commitment to quality and timelessness, like Lemaire and the Row. harness back on, giving him a sweet rub-down goodbye—I ask if she thinks Anstead has somehow been a gift from Ryder. Has the “Everyone else is so much bigger and more commercial than powerhouse publicist somehow brought these two together? “Yeah, them,” says Nassirzadeh. “What I love about them is that they’re we do joke about that,” Zellweger says. “She’s always doing her retaining their aura and the air about them—remaining so small best. It made me smile. It made me smile to think on this, yeah, and special.” HB the serendipity of it all.” HB 04/22 143

D I R E C T O RY COVERS (FRONT AND INSIDE) On the version 877-VAN-CLEEF. Pages 100–101 Michael Kors Page 123 Chopard Fire earrings from the Red with a blue background: Louis Vuitton tailcoat Collection dress, $5,990; michaelkors.com. Page Carpet Collection, price upon request; chopard bomber jacket, $6,800, and lingerie dress, 103 Gucci coat, $55,000; gucci.com. Ana Khouri .com. THE HERMÈS PRINCIPLE Page 124 On left: $6,250; 866-VUITTON. Ana Khouri earpiece, price earpiece, price upon request; anakhouri.com. Hermès leather dress, $11,500, socks, $870, and upon request; anakhouri.com. Van Cleef & Arpels Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello pumps, $675; sandals, $1,000; hermes.com. On right: Hermès Perlée diamond rings, $21,000–$23,100; 212-980-2970. Pages 104–105 Saint Laurent by jacket, $7,150, trousers, $3,520, and sandals, 877-VAN-CLEEF. Manolo Blahnik pumps, $665; Anthony Vaccarello tuxedo dress, $3,890, and $1,000; hermes.com. Page 125 Hermès jumpsuit, manoloblahnik.com. Rogan Gregory Nebula table pumps, $675; 212-980-2970. MODERN LOVE $15,800, and sandals, $1,000; hermes.com. Page (2021); rogangregory.com. On the version with Page 106 Jean Paul Gaultier Haute Couture by 127 On left: Hermès shirt, $2,250, trousers, a white background: Celine by Hedi Slimane Glenn Martens dress and headpiece, prices upon $2,300, and sandals, $1,000; hermes.com. On jacket, $4,950, bodysuit, $1,350, skirt, price request; jeanpaulgaultier.com. Danseurs Aériens right: Hermès blouse, $3,525, skirt, $7,900, and upon request, and jeans, $760; celine.com. Ana Double Ring from the Voltige Haute Joaillerie sandals, $1,000; hermes.com. Bottom: Hermès Khouri earpiece, price upon request; anakhouri Collection by Messika Paris, price upon request; bustier dress, $3,625, and sandals, $1,000; hermes .com. Cartier Clash de Cartier bracelet, $9,250; messikaparis.com. Page 107 Valentino Haute .com. A CUT ABOVE Page 128 Raf Simons shirt, 800-CARTIER. Gianvito Rossi Montecarlo d’Orsay Couture cape, top, trousers, and accessories, price upon request; rafsimons.com. Our Legacy pumps, $1,095; gianvitorossi.com. EDITOR’S prices upon request; 011-33-1-55-35-16-23. Falke skirt, price upon request; ourlegacy.se. Vintage LETTER Page 21 Van Cleef & Arpels Perlée diamond tights, $50; falke.com. Page 108 Schiaparelli Haute Maison Margiela boots; 646-798-8999. Page 129 rings, $21,000–$23,100; 877-VAN-CLEEF. Couture coat and shoes, prices upon request; Chloé coat, $3,950, and trousers, $1,995; chloe TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 30 Renée Zellweger: 011-33-1-76-21-62-59. Page 109 Dolce & Gabbana .com. The Row shirt, $850; therow.com. Page 130 Gucci coat, $55,000. Ana Khouri earpiece, price Alta Moda corset dress, headpiece, bra, and briefs, Gucci jacket, $3,400, and pants, $7,000; gucci upon request. “The Hermès Principle”: Hermès prices upon request; 011-39-02-77-88-47-30. .com. Lemaire shirt, $610; us.lemaire.fr. Agmes dress, $136,096. “Modern Love”: Armani Privé Page 110 Valentino Haute Couture minidress, earrings, $540; agmesnyc.com. Page 131 Miu Miu bustier dress and hat, prices upon request. price upon request; 33-1-55-35-16-23. Dior Haute jacket, $3,650, sweater, $1,100, briefs, $280, Cartier Sixième Sens High Jewelry bracelet, Couture necklace, price upon request; 800- and skirt, $1,610; miumiu.com. Manolo Blahnik price upon request. FOUR OF A KIND Page 50 929-DIOR. Page 111 Schiaparelli Haute Couture slingbacks, $755; manoloblahnik.com. Page 132 Prabal Gurung blazer and trousers, prices upon corset jacket, Bermuda shorts, and shoes, prices Amiri blazer, $1,990, and trousers, $990; amiri request. Vacheron Constantin watch, $25,900. upon request; 011-33-1-76-21-62-59. Boucheron .com. The Row dress, $2,350; therow.com. Page IN THE FASHION CLOSET Page 52 Simone Rocha rings, prices upon request; the Vault at Saks 133 Giorgio Armani cardigan jacket, $2,195, and ballet flats, price upon request. THE NECKLACE Fifth Avenue, NYC, 212-753-4000. Page 112 Dior trousers, $2,195; armani.com. Vintage Maison Page 56 Tiffany & Co. necklace from the 2022 Haute Couture dresses and accessories, prices Margiela shoes; 646-798-8999. Page 134 Prada Tiffany Blue Book Collection, price upon request. upon request; 800-929-DIOR. Page 113 Chanel jacket, $5,400; prada.com. Commission blazer, JEWELRY NEWS Page 59 Eva Fehren Reflexion Haute Couture top, skirt, and pumps, prices upon $1,245, and trousers, $795; net-a-porter.com. VII necklace, price upon request. H.O.W.L. request; 800-550-0005. Page 114 Giambattista Page 135 Alberta Ferretti blazer, $1,475, skirt, Handle Only With Love rings, $18,500–$38,000. Valli Haute Couture top and pants, prices upon $850, and pants, $745; neimanmarcus.com. Rolex Omega Speedmaster Calibre 321 Chronograph request, and shoes, $1,680; giambattistavalli Oyster Perpetual watch, $5,800; rolex.com. 38.6 MM, $81,000; omegawatches.com. RENÉE .com. Schiaparelli Haute Couture gold ring, price BEAUTY Bastide, bastide.com. Boy Smells, ZELLWEGER Page 93 Alexander McQueen dress, upon request; 011-33-1-76-21-62-59. Valentino shopbazaar.com. Byredo, byredo.com. Caswell- $6,900; alexandermcqueen.com. Van Cleef & Haute Couture gloves, price upon request; 011- Massey, caswellmassey.com. Costa Brazil, Arpels Perlée diamond rings, $21,700–$23,100; 33-1-55-35-16-23. Page 115 Armani Privé bustier livecostabrazil.com. Crest, crest.com. Curlsmith, 877-VAN-CLEEF. Rogan Gregory Nebula table dress and hat, prices upon request; 212-988-9191. curlsmith.com. D.S. & Durga, dsanddurga.com. (2021); rogangregory.com. Pages 94–95 Celine Cartier Sixième Sens High Jewelry bracelet, price Diptyque, diptyqueparis.com. Editions de Parfums by Hedi Slimane jacket, $4,950, bodysuit, $1,350, upon request; 212-446-3400. INNER VISIONS Frédéric Malle, fredericmalle.com. Fenty Beauty, skirt, price upon request, and jeans, $760; Page 116 Bulgari Magnifica High Jewelry bracelet, fentybeauty.com. Gisou, us.gisou.com. Harlem celine.com. Ana Khouri earpiece, price upon price upon request; 800-BULGARI. Page 117 Dior Candle Co., harlemcandlecompany.com. Hermès, request; anakhouri.com. Cartier Clash de Cartier Fine Jewelry Galons Dior necklace, price upon hermes.com. Homecourt, homecourt.co. Jo bracelet, $9,250; 800-CARTIER. Gianvito Rossi request; 800-929-DIOR. Page 118 Tiffany & Malone London, jomalone.com. Jones Road, d’Orsay pumps, $1,095; gianvitorossi.com. Page Co. necklace from the 2022 Tiffany Blue Book jonesroadbeauty.com. leVerden, leverden.co. 97 Celine by Hedi Slimane trench coat, $3,250, Collection, price upon request; tiffany.com. Page Maison Francis Kurkdjian, franciskurkdjian.com. and shirt, $790; similar styles available at 119 Cartier Sixième Sens High Jewelry necklace Malin + Goetz, malinandgoetz.com. Maybelline celine.com. Celine by Hedi Slimane jeans, $760; and ring, prices upon request; 212-446-3400. New York, maybelline.com. Nars, narscosmetics celine.com. Alaïa shoes, $1,120; maison-alaia Page 120 Chanel High Jewelry Aigle Cambon .com. Neen, weareneen.com. Nest New York, nest .com. Rogan Gregory Infinity throne (2022); earrings, price upon request; 800-550-0005. newyork.com. P.F. Candle Co., pfcandleco.com. rogangregor y.com. Page 98 Louis Vuitton Page 121 Van Cleef & Arpels Aube et Crépuscule Pantene, pantene.com. Rare Beauty, rarebeauty bomber jacket, $6,800, and lingerie dress, necklace, price upon request; vancleefarpels .com. Rituel de Fille, ritueldefille.com. Rose Inc, $6,250; 866-VUITTON. Ana Khouri earpiece, .com. Page 122 Louis Vuitton Le Magnétisme roseinc.com. ScentFluence, scentfluence.com. price upon request; anakhouri.com. Van Cleef & necklace and multipin earrings from the Bravery Sisley Paris, sisley-paris.com. Surratt Beauty, Arpels Perlée diamond ring, $21,700–$23,100; Collection, prices upon request; louisvuitton.com. surrattbeauty.com. vVardis, vvardis.com. HARPER’S BAZAAR (ISSN 0017-7873), APRIL 2022, ISSUE NO. 3701, is published monthly with a combined issue in June/July and December/January (10 times per year) by Hearst, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019 U.S.A. Steven R. Swartz, President and Chief Executive Officer; William R. Hearst III, Chairman; Frank A. Bennack, Jr., Executive Vice Chairman; Debi Chirichella, President and Treasurer, Hearst Magazines Group; Kate Lewis, Chief Content Officer; Kristen M. O’Hara, Chief Business Officer; Catherine A. Bostron, Secretary. © 2022 Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Harper’s Bazaar is a registered trademark of Hearst Communications, Inc. 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If you would rather not receive such offers via postal mail, please send your current mailing label or an exact copy to Mail Preference Service, P.O. Box 6000, Harlan, Iowa 51593. You can also visit preferences.hearstmags.com to manage your preferences and opt out of receiving marketing offers by e-mail. Harper’s Bazaar is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or art. None will be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Canada BN NBR 10231 0943 RT. POSTMASTER: Send all UAA to CFS (see DMM 507.1.5.2); NONPOSTAL AND MILITARY FACILITIES: Send address corrections to Harper’s Bazaar, P.O. Box 6000, Harlan, Iowa 51593. Printed in the U.S.A. 144 B A Z A A R

THE EXCLUSIVES From the EDITORS of HARPER’S BAZAAR THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME. Your space should reflect your personal style, so we collaborated with our favorite brands to bring you an exclusive edit of home must-haves that will transform every corner and tabletop into a picture-perfect moment. Inspired by southern Italy, these charming Buzzy brand FURBISH STUDIO ceramic plates from editor-fave label is putting a new spin on pillow talk. Crafted using traditional SENSI STUDIO are hand-painted by master artisans and evoke summer joy. needlepoint techniques, these modern designs feature bold patterns Sensi Studio with the founder’s quirky sense set of four plates, $180. of humor front and center. Furbish Studio pillows, $98–$102. MARTINI GLASSES, NAPKINS, AND PILLOWS: RICHARD MAJCHRZAK/STUDIO D. STYLING: ANITA SALERNO. With ESTELLE COLORED GLASS, you’ll see everything JALINE TABLECLOTH IMAGE: TIM KITCHEN. ALL OTHER IMAGERY COURTESY OF THE BRANDS. as half full. These chic martini glasses are handblown and make every sip a colorful experience. Estelle Colored Glass set of two martini glasses in either green and blue or purple and peach, $95 per set. Part of JALINE’s first-ever home collection, these sustainably made, handloomed tablecloths and napkins will elevate your tabletops. Jaline tablecloth, $450, and set of four napkins, $50. Not your average candles. These works of art SCAN THE CODE TO SHOP from DADA DAILY have the power to ALL OUR HOME EXCLUSIVES change a room from ordinary to extraordinary AND DISCOVER MORE and are the unexpected conversation starters LIFESTYLE CONTENT ON you didn’t know you needed. SHOPBAZAAR.COM. Dada Daily hand and legs candle set, $125. = BUY ON SHOPBAZAAR.COM

ARCHIVE INEZ AND VINOODH/TRUNK ARCHIVE DAVID BOWIE AUGUST 2002 FEW ARTISTS HAVE EMBODIED the notion of reinvention as he was coming up on the end of a prolific decade-long run during fully as David Bowie. He reinvented rock ’n’ roll with an experi- which he’d put out seven wildly diverse and ambitious studio mental approach that drew from a wide variety of musical forms albums, culminating with 2003’s Reality. It would be 10 more and genres. He reinvented what a pop star could do and be, with years before he would release another one, as he proceeded to forays into film, art, theater, and fashion. And he continually rein- step back from recording and touring to spend time with his wife, vented himself: from British art-rock folkie to the meta-glam Iman, and their young daughter, Lexi, and immerse himself in work spectacle of Ziggy Stardust, from ’80s MTV fixture to paragon away from the cultural industrial complex. “You can drag out your of the 21st-century avant-garde. For Bowie, though, reinvention youth for a long time, but at some point you have to relinquish wasn’t about being a changeling. It was a way to free himself up to your hold on all that,” Bowie, then 55, said. “Music hasn’t been be who he was at every stage of his own evolution, both creatively the soundtrack to my life. My life hasn’t been like that. My life has and personally. When Bowie spoke with Harper’s Bazaar in 2002, been made up of smells and essences and places and people.” HB David Bowie, photographed by Inez and Vinoodh for the August 2002 issue 146 B A Z A A R








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