Issue link: https://www.balharbourdigital.com/i/262375
SWEET BABY JANE The relationship between Andy Warhol and "Baby Jane Holzer," one of Warhol's most influential muses and Factory intimates, is explored at the Norton Museum of Art's "To Jane, Love Andy: Warhol's First Superstar." Expect unseen films, photographs of Holzer throughout her modeling career, iconic paintings, sculptures, prints and discussions of the Warholian era, as well as rarely seen material from Warhol's own Time Capsules. Through May 25. IMAGES COURTESY OF THE NORTON MUSEUM OF ART; © JULIAN WASSER, COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND CRAIG KRULL GALLERY, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA; © PHILIPPE HALSMAN ARCHIVE From left: Audrey Hepburn, photographed by Philippe Halsman, 1955; Joan Didion, photographed by Julian Wasser, 1970 What is cool? "American Cool"—a stylish exhibit featuring photographs of 100 famously rebellious icons who embody the word—opens up this precise conversation. Think Miles Davis, Patti Smith, Johnny Depp, Jay-Z, Faye Dunaway, Elvis and the legendary jazz saxophonist Lester Young, who brought an essential African-American sensibility of "cool" into the modern vernacular in the '40s. On view at the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., through September 7. FRESH CATCH Yazbukey, the namesake jewelry and accessories line from French designer Yaz Bukey, has quickly become a favorite among style setters and statement makers from London to Los Angeles. Here, she discusses her Spring collection, available exclusively at The Webster. How did you come up with the Fabulous Market concept? The collection is inspired by the late '50s/'60s, when packaging design had its boom. These ads made women believe they were fancier if they cleaned their homes with good-looking products! It's incredible that we can sell anything with the right packaging. What was the first piece of jewelry you designed? A macaroni necklace when I was a kid that I painted blue. How did Plexiglas become your main medium? It's a capricious material—that's why I like it. I'm into trompe l'oeil, real and fake, reality and dreams. For me, Plexiglas represents these things. COOL FACTOR 44 BAL HARBOUR From left, The Fords Modeling Agency Brochure, circa 1964, photo by Irving Penn; a spread from Vogue, "Fashion: Jane Holzer–At-Home Italian Style," November 15, 1964, photographed by David Bailey Yazbukey's Mirror Fish clutch