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  • A Conversation with Yves Dana

    ARTCURIAL BEURRET BAILLY WIDMER A Conversation with Yves Dana Wednesday, September 17, 2025 Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer, Geneva During Geneva Art Week, Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer warmly invites you to its Geneva space for an exclusive encounter with the Swiss sculptor Yves Dana. The artist will engage in a dialogue with Nadja Scribante Amstutz, Director for French-speaking Switzerland at Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer, exploring his artistic journey, creative approach, and body of work. This event also offers the public a unique opportunity to interact directly with a contemporary artist. Yves Dana ( b. 1959, lives and works primarily in Lausanne) has devoted himself entirely to sculpture since 1984. Working with iron, stone, and bronze, his practice explores multiple artistic avenues. A formative stay in Egypt in 1996 inspired a return to simple, hieratic forms, giving rise to his Stèles series. From 1998 onwards, he began sculpting stone, marking a new chapter in his oeuvre. Dana’s pieces, both timeless and meditative, evoke a desert-like archaeology while celebrating the essence of life. Practical Information Conversation with Yves Dana Wednesday, September 17 at 7:00 PM Registration required via email or phone: Nadja Scribante Amstutz +41 79 541 61 85 n.scribante@bbw-auktionen.com Press Contacts Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer Delphine Peyronnet +41 (0)78 772 72 74 presse@bbw-auktionen.com Artcurial Anne-Laure Guérin +33 (0)1 42 99 20 86 alguerin@artcurial.com Déborah Bensaid +33 (0)6 23 68 46 69 dbensaid@artcurial.com Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer 28 Rue de Saint-Léger 1204 Geneva About Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer The merger of Artcurial and Beurret Bailly Widmer With three historic locations in Basel, St. Gallen, and Zurich, Auktionen was born from a shared vision among professionals who value client relationships and uphold the highest ethical standards. Nicolas Beurret, Emmanuel Bailly, and Markus Schöb have swiftly established one of Switzerland’s leading auction houses, renowned for its commitment to client service and discretion. Artcurial Beurret Bailly Widmer maintains strong connections throughout Switzerland and is one of the few houses to host key events across multiple historic venues in city centers. The opening of a fourth space in Geneva in 2025 further enhances the house’s visibility in French-speaking Switzerland and strengthens ties with its Francophone clientele. The partnership with Artcurial significantly expands the Swiss house’s network and visibility, while extending its expertise to new fields such as collectible watches, with its first dedicated sale held in 2024. www.bbw-auktionen.com #LuxeMagazineSwitzerland #GenevaArtWeek #YvesDana #ContemporaryArt #SculptureArt #ArtcurialBeurretBaillyWidmer #LuxuryCulture #ArtCollector #TimelessArt #ArtInspiration #SwissArt #ModernSculpture #LuxuryLifestyle #ArtDialogue #CreativeJourney #FineArt #ArtEvents #ArtExperience #LuxuryArtWorld #CulturalElegance

  • From Runways to Runways: When Street Couture Meets Luxury Travel

    From Runways to Runways: When Street Couture Meets Luxury Travel The luxury traveler of today seeks not merely a five-star suite, but a curated experience blending urban style, cultural immersion, and exclusivity. Enter the era of “street couture” colliding with luxury travel and redefining the meaning of elegance. A New Definition of Luxury Travel Gone are the days when luxury travel meant only secluded villas or chauffeur-driven limousines. Today’s affluent travelers particularly Millennials and Gen Z view journeys as extensions of personal identity and self-expression. Luxury is no longer just about comfort; it’s about authenticity, aesthetics, and cultural depth. What Is “Street Couture”? “Street couture” marries streetwear’s raw creativity with haute couture’s craftsmanship and exclusivity. Once a paradox, it’s now a defining trend. From collaborations to limited-edition drops, the influence of streetwear on high fashion continues to expand the luxury lexicon. Pop-Up Culture: Fashion as Destination Temporary retail experiences or pop-ups are transforming travel into a dynamic luxury encounter. Instead of visiting exclusive stores, travelers find themselves drawn to immersive brand activations in extraordinary settings. For instance, brands like Burberry, Jacquemus, and Chanel have taken over European hotspots beach clubs, resorts, and boutique hotels with theatrically designed pop-ups that double as visual statements  . Even luxury publications affirm pop-ups are reshaping hospitality: these destinations function as “emotional destinations” where luxury and travel coalesce  . Hotels as Style Stages The hospitality world responds in kind. Nobu Hotel Barcelona now offers in-room designer wardrobe rentals through a partnership with Trent allowing guests to order curated fashion items straight to their suite, no suitcase required  . Guests can browse, select, and receive luxury looks on demand ideal for spontaneous style moments . Meanwhile, luxury hotel brands are collaborating with fashion icons. Luxury giants like Dior and Bulgari are launching branded hotels, spa residencies, and themed hotel interiors turning accommodations into full-on fashion statements  . Why Now? Several macro trends propel this shift: Experiential Consumerism: Travelers crave sensory, immersive narratives not just products. Social Media as Stage: Instagram-worthy design and curated exclusivity fuel wanderlust and brand visibility  . Strategic Localization: Pop-ups target high-net-worth clusters in prime travel destinations creating curated encounters in time and place  . Resort-Core Aesthetic: The emerging trend of “resort-core” blends travel, fashion, and wellness into lifestyle design evolving hotels into cultural studios rather than mere stays  . Real-World Illustrations Monte-Carlo Beach Hotel x Jacquemus: A revamped beach club featuring Jacquemus-branded loungers, umbrellas, and pop-up boutiques melding modern aesthetics with Mediterranean glamour  . Pop-Ups at Luxury Hotspots: Think Dior in Ibiza or Chanel in St. Tropez pop-ups that transform resorts into immersive brand theaters  . Dior at The Little Nell (Aspen): A fully branded hotel experience, with bespoke décor, menus, and Dior spa residency merging fashion and hospitality at every touchpoint  . Challenges & Critique Some critics argue street couture’s commodification dilutes its authenticity. Others worry about experiential fatigue: artifice over substance. Still, pop-ups offer brands creative labs low-risk spaces to test ideas, spark demand, and deepen engagement  . The economic impact on cities, brands, and cultural tourism is significant. The Road Ahead Expect deeper integration ahead: Fashion-Designed Flights: Imagine cabins styled by couture brands. Terminal Runways: Airport spaces morphing into pop-up galleries. Fashion Districts: Urban zones dedicated to rotating branded experiences. Street couture isn’t a novelty it’s a defining pillar of luxury culture. Conclusion: A New Passport Cultural by Design Luxury travel has traded solitude for style, isolation for integration. As street couture infiltrates hotels, resorts, and city life, it transforms familiar destinations into curated catwalks. Now, the most valuable visa is not for a country but for a moment in culture, crafted by fashion, travel, and storytelling. #StreetCouture #LuxuryTravel #UrbanLuxury #ExperientialRetail #FashionPopUp #LuxuryHotels #ResortCore #TravelInStyle #CulturalLuxury #LuxuryLifestyle #FashionTravel #HotelFashion #ImmersiveTravel #LuxuryExperience #FashionHospitality #TrendReport #LuxuryCulture #ModernLuxury #TravelTrends #StyleTravel #luxemagazineswitzerland

  • Beach Runway: Swimwear’s Final Bow

    Beach Runway: Swimwear’s Final Bow As the light slants softer and the season edges toward its last, the shoreline stages one last performance. The beach has become, in the simplest terms, a public catwalk an arena where sun, sand and style meet. This summer’s swimwear, observed across editorials, street photography and the seaside itself, threaded together nostalgia and novelty, practical fabrics and theatrical details, creating a kind of effortless spectacle that feels both intimate and staged. The modern seaside tableau is the product of shifting expectations. Swimwear no longer exists solely for swimming; it functions as a social signal, a personal statement and, increasingly, a versatile piece of a year-round wardrobe. Editors and stylists have pushed swim silhouettes into everyday dressing, while travelers, influencers and magazine shoots have made the shoreline a proving ground for new ideas. In short: people dress to be seen, and the beach, like a runway, rewards attention. Color has played a starring role. This season, palettes have swung between two camps: a minimalist, sun-bleached neutrality that harmonizes with sand and surf, and a brash, jewel-tone cohort guava oranges, cobalt blues and saturated greens that read like festival flags against a neutral horizon. Editors note that chromatic contrast is both functional and photographic: bold hues register on social feeds and in print; muted tones read timeless in long-form features. In other words, whether quiet or loud, color is being used intentionally to flatter, to photograph and to narrate. If color tells the audience how to feel, shape shows how bodies are being reimagined in public. The run of the past few seasons high-cut legs, strategic cut-outs, one-shoulder straps and sculptural straps continues to dominate, but this year’s movement has been less about extremity than about variety. Classic, streamlined one-pieces sit beside retro high-waisted briefs, while asymmetric bikinis and architectural strapwork offer modern silhouettes for those seeking edges. The juxtaposition of vintage lines with forward cuts creates a visual dialogue between nostalgia and invention. Publications tracking the season call out these dual currents as a defining tension of 2025. Coverage is no longer binary. Layering sarongs, kaftans, slip dresses and linen trousers has evolved from practical afterthought to an editorial strategy. Lightweight cover-ups function as framing devices: a translucent wrap can soften an image; a tailored overshirt can anchor a swimsuit for a lunch at a seaside terrace. The renewed attention to cover-ups reflects both aesthetics and lifestyle: readers want pieces that travel, transition and photograph well. Major fashion roundups this season emphasized not only silhouettes but how swimwear performs off the sand, reinforcing the idea that the beach wardrobe must work for more than a single use. Accessories have sharpened that sense of occasion. Oversized hats, graphic sunglasses and shell-adjacent jewelry have been used to punctuate looks with cinematic intent. Even the simplest suit can be made editorial with a dramatic hat or a pair of statement earrings; conversely, minimalist accessories can let a complex swimsuit read as the focal point. The lesson is practical and visual: accessories create texture, narrative and hierarchy in seaside imagery. These stylistic shifts sit atop broader cultural currents. Conversations about inclusivity, body autonomy, and sustainability have moved from footnotes to front pages. Many outlets that cover season trends now foreground extended size ranges, body-positive visuals and the practicalities of garment care indicating a demand for swimwear that meets ethical and longevity standards as much as it does aesthetics. Sustainability narratives recycled fabrics, durable construction and modular pieces are no longer niche; they appear in trend reports alongside colors and cuts. Not all trends are without controversy. Reporting earlier this summer highlighted a renewed appetite for skimpier bottoms and more revealing cuts a development that some celebrate as self-expression and others critique as a return to narrower standards of beauty. These shifts are complex: they intersect with social media aesthetics, television formats, and shifting norms of what is considered flattering or fashionable. It is worth noting that the public reaction is not monolithic; alongside popular enthusiasm sits a robust conversation about choice, comfort and representation. At the level of fashion business, runways and trade weeks continue to translate into shore-ready items. Shows and presentations earlier in the season including the traditional swim showcases set tones that filtered through to mainstream retail and editorial coverage: shimmering textiles, mermaid motifs, and reworked classics all made appearances. These events matter because they concentrate creative thinking and offer a shorthand for what photographers, stylists and editors will amplify across platforms. The result is a season that reads cohesive in magazines and intentional on beaches. Photography and social media have also reoriented what “beach style” looks like. The camera favors movement: a wrap caught in a breeze or a hat tilted against the light becomes a visual motif as compelling as any print. For publications and creators, seaside imagery is a register of lifestyle recipes, cocktails, décor and, crucially, the clothing that frames those moments. This is part of why swimwear has shifted toward pieces that exist comfortably in staged photographs as well as in the water. What does this season leave behind? As summer folds, the seaside runway’s lasting gift may be a broader definition of beach fashion: not merely the costume of vacation but a mini-wardrobe of considered pieces. Swimwear that slips into city life, cover-ups that become eveningwear, accessories that outlast the holiday these are the motifs that signal a maturation of taste. The season’s images will persist in memory and in magazines, a visual dossier of how we chose to inhabit the shore. For editors and stylists, the takeaway is pragmatic: plan for versatility, think of swimwear as part of an outfit rotation, and treat seaside shoots with the same narrative attention as any other fashion story. For readers and consumers, the invitation is simpler: wear what feels like you, frame it with pieces that add nuance, and let the beach be, for a moment, a place where style gets to close the season with theatrical grace. #BeachRunway #SummerStyle #SwimwearEditorial #SeasideFashion #ShorelineStyle #CoastalChic #SwimwearTrends #CoverUpStyle #SunkissedLooks #RunwayToBeach #EffortlessElegance #SeasideWardrobe #BeachAccessories #SunsetStyle #EditorialFashion #MinimalToMaximal #SummerFinale #OceanAesthetic #TimelessSwim #SeasideStories

  • Re Giorgio’s Final Bow: Giorgio Armani, Master of Italian Elegance, Passes at 91

    Re Giorgio’s Final Bow: Giorgio Armani, Master of Italian Elegance, Passes at 91 By Holdener Patricia Date: 4 September 2025 approximately 33 minutes after Armani’s passing was publicly announced. In a moment that marks the close of a towering chapter in fashion history, Giorgio Armani, the visionary Italian designer and founder of one of the world’s most enduring luxury brands, has died at the age of 91. The Armani Group issued a statement today, September 4, 2025, declaring: “With infinite sorrow, the Armani Group announces the passing of its creator, founder, and tireless driving force: Giorgio Armani.” Renowned as “Re Giorgio” King Giorgio he was synonymous with modern Italian style, celebrated for his understated grace and meticulous craftsmanship  . His passing closes not just the story of a man, but the years-long tale of a sartorial empire built on elegance, innovation, and autonomy. A Legacy of Style and Authority Born on July 11, 1934, in Piacenza, Italy, Giorgio Armani emerged from modest origins. He initially pursued medical studies at the University of Milan but abandoned them in the early 1950s to pursue creative work, beginning as a window dresser before ascending to a design role at Nino Cerruti. He co-founded Giorgio Armani S.p.A. in 1975 with his partner Sergio Galeotti a move that would ignite the global rise of his brand  . His breakthrough came in part courtesy of cinema notably the 1980 film American Gigolo and the sleek, power-styled aesthetics of Miami Vice, which showcased his minimalist tailoring to international audiences. Master Architect of Elegance Armani’s influence went beyond mere design. He pioneered the approach of soft tailoring for men and women deconstructing traditional structure to create garments with relaxed refinement and wearable luxury. His ethos was described in a Vogue obituary as designing the “uniform of aspiration that both defined the 1980s and shaped the course of fashion beyond”. He maintained tight control over every facet of his company from advertising to even adjusting models’ hair moments before they stepped onto the runway  ensuring that the Armani brand remained cohesive, consistent, and unequivocally elegant. By the time of his passing, the business generated some €2.3 billion annually a testament to his acumen as both designer and entrepreneur. A Private Commander of Public Luxury Even as his brand became a global powerhouse spanning fashion, cosmetics, homewares, hotels, and more Armani remained incredibly private, rarely spotlighting his personal life but always visible through his brand’s aura of discretion and dignity. Despite declining health in recent months, he remained devoted to his life’s work, symbolically present at creation even when absent in person. He missed his first-ever runway at Milan Men’s Fashion Week in June 2025, a certainty that he continued overseeing design from home  . The Vogue editorial underscores this by describing how he worked “until his final days, dedicating himself to the company, the collections, and the many ongoing and future projects”. An Elegy in Milan: Honoring the Maestro The Armani Group has announced that a funeral chamber will be established this Saturday and Sunday in Milan, followed by a private funeral on an undisclosed date  . Milan the city that Armani transformed into the epicenter of quiet luxury will serve as the backdrop to mourning, remembrance, and perhaps the silent farewell of a style titan. Beyond Fashion: The Timeless Heritage Armani’s legacy is immeasurable. He gave working women their first suits that were both feminine and powerful, he brought soft tailoring into mainstream wardrobes, and he helped define red-carpet style with a sense of effortless glamour  . Over the decades, his company expanded into independent lines such as Emporio Armani, Armani Exchange, and Armani Beauty. The empire also branched into reflections of lifestyle Armani hotels, cosmetics, home decor all advancing the ethos of restrained luxury  . The Final Bow A Fashion Icon Resting With Giorgio Armani’s passing, the fashion world mourns the fall of one of its most enduring pillars. As the Armani Group announced it “with infinite sorrow,” the legacy he nurtured lives on not merely in labels or collections, but in the elegant gravity he brought to how we dress, live, and present ourselves. Armani’s death marks more than a stylists’ farewell; it is the close of an epoch in which elegance was redefined soft, wearable, and deeply human. In Milan this weekend, as admirers gather, the quiet elegance of his farewell will echo the presence he held in life: dignified, timeless, and unwavering. #GiorgioArmani #Armani #Fa sh ionLegend #ItalianElegance #TimelessStyle #FashionIcon #ReGiorgio #LuxuryFashion #MilanStyle #GlobalFashion #StyleInspiration #SoftTailoring #FashionHistory #EleganceDefined #FashionIndustry #CreativeVisionary #DesignLegacy #InMemory #RestInPeace #ForeverArmani

  • Venice Film Festival 2025: Where Cinema and Couture Converge

    Venice Film Festival 2025: Where Cinema and Couture Converge A Stage Set by History and Prestige Founded in 1932, the Venice International Film Festival is the world’s oldest film festival and part of the esteemed Venice Biennale  . Held annually on the Lido, its 82nd edition took place from August 27 to September 6, 2025. This enduring platform remains a pivotal launching pad for films aspiring to Oscar glory, with Venice’s impactful premiere circuit shaping the awards season  . Leadership & Lifetime Recognition The festival’s 2025 jury was led by acclaimed filmmaker Alexander Payne, while Emanuela Fanelli hosted the opening and closing ceremonies  . Becker et inspirant, Werner Herzog and Kim Novak received the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement, marking both an homage to cinematic heritage and a dramatic public return by Novak after six decades. Film Programming & Opening/Closing Nights Venice opened with Paolo Sorrentino’s La grazia and will close with Cédric Jimenez’s Dog 51  . Titles like Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite, and Bugonia added high-caliber weight to this year’s selections . Fashion on the Red Carpet: More Than Glamour Star-Studded Statements Julia Roberts captivated the red carpet in a custom navy Versace gown, pairing timeless glamour with powerful symbolism especially poignant as she debuts as a producer with After the Hunt  . Oscar Isaac offered a masterclass in transitional dressing blazer, jeans, loafers, perfecting the summer-to-fall aesthetic followed by a sharp white tuxedo for a Frankenstein premiere. Sofia Coppola and Marc Jacobs reaffirmed their creative partnership on the carpet, melding elegance and edge in their respective looks  . Fashion as Strategy Venice is becoming a launchpad for designers’ evolving visions. The festival hosted soft launches for major houses: Dior menswear debuted under Jonathan Anderson, Versace introduced Dario Vitale’s new direction, and new leadership at Givenchy, Lanvin, Bottega Veneta, and Margiela was spotlighted. Icons and Sustainability in Style Cate Blanchett made sustainability stylish re-wearing her 2022 Armani Privé gown demonstrating how fashion and ethics can coalesce  . Kaia Gerber turned heads in a With Jéan set previously worn by Bella Hadid, signaling the festival’s reach in influencing global style conversation. Celebrities like Amal Clooney in vintage Scherrer, Emily Blunt in Schiaparelli, Myha’la Herrold in Miu Miu sequins, and Jessica Williams in Armani suits further underlined the breadth of the festival’s red-carpet programming, influenced by both couture heritage and forward-looking experimentation. Venice vs. Cannes: The Red Carpet Rivalry While Cannes often commands greater media saturation, Venice counters with historic grandeur and fashion depth welcoming streaming giants and setting trend agendas all while maintaining unique cinematic gravitas. Conclusion: A Grand Convergence The 82nd Venice Film Festival redefined the relationship between cinema and visual expression: honoring film heritage, rewarding artistic innovation, and spotlighting fashion as narrative. With lifetime tributes, high-profile premieres, and runway-worthy appearances, Venice in 2025 reaffirmed its place as a linchpin event where storytelling and style converge in indelible harmony.

  • Seasons of Style: CNN’s Bold New Series Blends Culture, Fashion, Food and Travel

    Seasons of Style: CNN’s Bold New Series Blends Culture, Fashion, Food and Travel In an age where luxury is no longer defined solely by price tags but by cultural resonance, CNN’s latest multiplatform project, “Seasons,” arrives as a timely exploration of how the worlds of fashion, gastronomy, design, and travel are rewriting the global narrative. A New Season for CNN For decades, CNN has been synonymous with hard news, political analysis, and breaking global events. Yet in recent years, the network has been steadily expanding its lifestyle and culture portfolio, understanding that audiences crave not only headlines but also insight into how culture shapes our daily lives. With “Seasons”, premiering September 6, CNN is making its most ambitious lifestyle pivot yet. The series promises to go far beyond surface-level reporting, offering a deep dive into the cultural movements shaping luxury, art, gastronomy, design, and innovation across continents. “Culture is the new currency of luxury,” a CNN spokesperson said during the project’s announcement. “With Seasons, we want to show how trends are born, how traditions are reinterpreted, and how global narratives are crafted not in isolation, but in dialogue between cultures.” The Concept: Four Seasons, Infinite Stories The title “Seasons” is not accidental. Each season of the series will explore the interplay between tradition and transformation, looking at how societies embrace change while preserving heritage. The inaugural chapter focuses on Japan, a nation where seasonal rituals from cherry blossom viewing to autumn moon festivals are deeply woven into cultural identity. For CNN, this was the perfect starting point: a country whose influence on global fashion, cuisine, and design has been nothing short of seismic. In the first episode, viewers are taken from the bustling districts of Tokyo, where avant-garde designers push the boundaries of street couture, to the tranquil tea houses of Kyoto, where centuries-old ceremonies continue to inspire contemporary gastronomy. The narrative is woven with cinematic precision, mixing drone shots of Mount Fuji with close-ups of artisans shaping kimonos or chefs preparing seasonal Kaiseki menus. Japan as the Cultural Launchpad Japan’s role as the launchpad for Seasons is telling. Few countries embody the juxtaposition of heritage and futurism as vividly. From Issey Miyake’s pleats to Yayoi Kusama’s dots, from sushi counters in Tokyo’s Tsukiji market to the architecture of Tadao Ando, Japan has long exported aesthetics that redefine global taste. CNN’s producers have framed the Japanese season around three key themes: Fashion as Ritual – examining how kimono craftsmanship informs modern haute couture and even sustainable fashion. Cuisine as Storytelling – exploring how seasonality drives Japanese gastronomy, influencing global chefs from Paris to Los Angeles. Design as Identity – tracing Japan’s architectural minimalism and artisanal precision that now permeate global luxury branding. “Japan doesn’t follow trends it creates them,” said cultural historian Naomi Tanaka, interviewed for the series. “The idea of ma, or space, is as influential in a luxury boutique in Milan as it is in a Zen garden in Kyoto.” From Screens to Experiences “Seasons” is not just a television show. CNN is deploying it as a multiplatform experience: On TV: a series of long-form episodes shot in cinematic style. Digital: companion articles, behind-the-scenes features, and interactive maps. Social Media: curated reels highlighting artisans, chefs, and designers. Experiential: CNN has hinted at potential live events and exhibitions tied to the project. This strategy reflects a broader shift in luxury media, where content is no longer consumed it is lived. As audiences grow more discerning, the appetite is for immersive, global narratives that link the dots between a runway show in Paris, a Michelin-starred dinner in Tokyo, and a wellness retreat in Bali. CNN’s Seasons aims to become a hub for those intersections. The Luxury Connection Why does a mainstream news network care about haute couture or fine dining? The answer lies in the transformation of luxury itself. The new luxury consumer does not see fashion, food, art, or travel as separate silos. Instead, they experience them as part of a holistic lifestyle. A Dior couture gown, a stay at Aman Tokyo, a tasting menu by Noma, and a private viewing at Art Basel are all part of the same cultural ecosystem. By presenting Seasons as a cross-sectoral journey, CNN is tapping into a global audience that is as interested in craftsmanship and storytelling as in glamour and exclusivity. “Luxury today is about authenticity and context,” said British fashion critic Eleanor Blake, commenting on the show’s format. “It’s not enough to show the product you must show the culture that makes it meaningful.” A Broader Media Shift Seasons also signals how lifestyle media is evolving. Traditional fashion magazines have long dictated taste. But today, networks like CNN are positioning themselves as cultural curators, weaving news, history, and aesthetics into a single narrative. This mirrors the strategy of luxury brands themselves. From Gucci’s collaborations with artists to Louis Vuitton’s exhibitions, storytelling has become as crucial as product design. CNN is, in essence, adopting the same playbook. Global Resonance: Beyond Japan While Japan headlines the launch, upcoming Seasons chapters will move across continents. Though details remain under wraps, insiders suggest upcoming episodes could spotlight: The Mediterranean, where gastronomy, wellness, and design are undergoing a renaissance. West Africa, a region whose textiles, music, and art are already reshaping global aesthetics. South America, where indigenous traditions and modern sustainability intersect. By doing so, CNN hopes to create a global atlas of culture, mapping how different societies are influencing luxury and lifestyle in the 21st century. Implications for Brands and Audiences For luxury brands, Seasons is more than entertainment it’s market research. Each episode provides insight into cultural trends and consumer desires. For audiences, it’s both escapism and education, offering a chance to travel the world without leaving the sofa, while gaining a deeper appreciation of the artistry behind luxury. The series also aligns with a growing consumer demand for sustainability, heritage preservation, and cultural authenticity. In a world where “fast” anything feels increasingly passé, Seasons celebrates the slow, the crafted, the thoughtful. Conclusion: Luxury as a Global Dialogue With Seasons, CNN positions itself not just as a broadcaster but as a cultural interlocutor bridging East and West, past and future, tradition and innovation. It’s a bold move for a network better known for political debates than kimono ateliers. Yet it may be precisely what the global luxury landscape needs: a platform where fashion, food, travel, art, and design are not just covered, but connected. As autumn approaches, it seems CNN is reminding us that luxury like life itself unfolds in seasons. And in every season, there is a story worth telling. #CNNSeasons #LuxuryLifestyle #GlobalCulture #FashionMeetsArt #LuxuryTravel #FineDining #CulturalHeritage #ArtAndDesign #LuxuryMedia #StyleNarratives #GlobalLuxury #CulinaryExcellence #LuxuryExperiences #FashionInnovation #TravelInStyle #ModernLuxury #LuxuryEditorial #SeasonalLuxury #CultureAndCraft #LuxuryStorytelling #luxemagaswitzerland

  • A New Chapter at Berceau des Sens: Christophe Schmitt Takes the Helm

    A New Chapter at Berceau des Sens: Christophe Schmitt Takes the Helm On August 18, 2025, a new culinary era will begin at Berceau des Sens, the Michelin-starred training restaurant of the École hôtelière de Lausanne (EHL). Renowned French chef Christophe Schmitt will step into the role of Executive Chef, succeeding Lucrèce Lacchio, whose remarkable tenure saw the restaurant reach new heights before she embarks on fresh professional adventures. The announcement, made official in Lausanne on August 19, marks more than a simple change of leadership. It represents the continuation of a tradition that combines academic rigor with gastronomic excellence, a philosophy at the very core of EHL’s identity. Schmitt’s appointment underscores the institution’s ambition to remain a bridge between fine dining and world-class hospitality education. From Strasbourg to Asia: A Chef Forged by Experience For Christophe Schmitt, the path to Lausanne has been as diverse as it has been distinguished. Born in France, he began his culinary journey as an apprentice under the legendary three-Michelin-starred chef Émile Jung at Au Crocodile in Strasbourg. The experience instilled in him both the discipline and artistry required to thrive in haute cuisine. From there, Schmitt sharpened his skills at some of France’s most celebrated tables. He trained under Jacques Lameloise at his three-starred restaurant in Chagny, with Davy Tissot, Meilleur Ouvrier de France (MOF) and Bocuse d’Or laureate, at Villa Florentine in Lyon, and with Olivier Elzer at L’Abbaye de la Bussière in Burgundy’s wine country. Later, in Paris, he worked alongside Jean-Yves Leuranguer, another MOF, at the iconic Fouquet’s. Schmitt’s own star began to rise rapidly. In 2012, he earned his first Michelin star as head chef of Le Diane, the prestigious restaurant within the Hôtel Fouquet’s Barrière in Paris. His reputation as a meticulous craftsman, capable of blending tradition with innovation, was cemented. A few years later, he moved south to Provence, taking the reins from MOF Philippe Jourdin as Executive Chef at Domaine de Terre Blanche. There, he once again led his team to Michelin acclaim, securing a star for Le Faventia in 2023. But Schmitt’s ambition was not confined to France. Drawn to international horizons, he embarked on a culinary journey across Asia, serving as Executive Chef of four restaurants in Macao, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Vietnam. This global chapter enriched his perspective, allowing him to fuse French techniques with Asian influences while adapting to diverse culinary cultures and clientele. “I am delighted to begin this new chapter of my career at EHL,” Schmitt said. “The institution is renowned not only for its gastronomic excellence but also for its academic vision. I look forward to sharing my culinary universe with students, while passing on values that matter deeply to me: authenticity, identity, and respect for the product.” A Career Decorated with Honors Schmitt’s career has been punctuated by prestigious accolades. In 2011, he was awarded the “Young Hope of the Year” trophy by Chef Magazine. The following year, he triumphed at the international culinary competition Le Taittinger, widely regarded as one of the most challenging contests for chefs worldwide. Twice, in 2015 and 2022, he reached the finals of the demanding Meilleurs Ouvriers de France competition, a hallmark of craftsmanship and perseverance. Alongside his accolades, Schmitt has also been an ambassador of French gastronomy abroad, participating in culinary promotions from Beirut to Mexico City, Bali, and beyond. His ability to export France’s culinary savoir-faire has positioned him as both a chef and a cultural emissary. Taking Over from a Star Performer Schmitt’s arrival at Berceau des Sens comes at a pivotal moment. His predecessor, Chef Lucrèce Lacchio, leaves behind a legacy of achievements that strengthened the restaurant’s standing on the international stage. Under her leadership, Berceau des Sens not only retained its Michelin star but also achieved a remarkable 17/20 rating in Gault & Millau in 2024, the highest score in its history. “After these years at the head of Berceau des Sens, I feel great pride in what we have accomplished as a team,” Lacchio reflected. “Now, I am ready for new adventures, knowing that this unique restaurant and its extraordinary team are in good hands. I wish Christophe as much joy and success as I have been fortunate to experience here.” Her tenure was marked by a commitment to excellence and innovation, while also mentoring the next generation of hospitality professionals. In many ways, she embodied the mission of Berceau des Sens: to serve as both a gourmet destination and a living classroom for EHL students. Schmitt himself was quick to acknowledge her contribution: “I want to pay tribute to the remarkable work of Chef Lacchio and wish her the very best in her future projects.” The Berceau des Sens Legacy Located at the heart of EHL’s Lausanne campus, Berceau des Sens is no ordinary restaurant. Open to the public, it is also a laboratory of learning, where students put theory into practice under the guidance of seasoned professionals. Its Michelin star and critical acclaim are not only a testament to culinary mastery but also to the success of EHL’s educational model: combining academic rigor, practical training, and human values. For the students, the arrival of a chef like Christophe Schmitt is more than symbolic. It offers them direct exposure to a professional who has excelled in multiple gastronomic cultures, faced the pressures of Michelin inspections, and represented French cuisine on the global stage. The lessons they will draw go beyond recipes — they extend into resilience, creativity, and leadership. About EHL: A Global Leader in Hospitality Education Founded in 1893, the École hôtelière de Lausanne (EHL) is widely recognized as the world leader in hospitality management education. With over 4,000 students from more than 120 nationalities across campuses in Switzerland and Singapore, EHL combines academic excellence with hands-on experience. Its approach is holistic, nurturing not only skills but also values, emotional intelligence, and a global perspective. EHL Hospitality Business School, accredited by AACSB and NECHE, consistently ranks among the world’s top institutions in its field, offering bachelor’s, master’s, and executive programs. Meanwhile, the EHL School of Practical Arts trains professionals in the applied techniques of hospitality and gastronomy, drawing on the expertise of six Meilleurs Ouvriers de France and the benchmark-setting Berceau des Sens restaurant. For more than 130 years, EHL has shaped leaders who redefine excellence in hospitality and customer experience. Its alumni network of 30,000 strong spans the globe, united by a commitment to innovation, service, and human connection. A Culinary Future Rooted in Tradition and Innovation As Berceau des Sens enters a new chapter with Christophe Schmitt at the helm, the outlook is one of both continuity and evolution. The restaurant will remain a beacon of fine dining, grounded in tradition yet open to the influences of a globalized culinary landscape. For Schmitt, the mission is clear: to uphold the values of authenticity, respect, and identity while sharing his vision with a new generation of hospitality leaders. His career marked by Michelin stars, international experiences, and a passion for mentorship makes him uniquely suited to guide Berceau des Sens into the future. In passing the baton from Lacchio to Schmitt, EHL reinforces its role as a pioneer in uniting education and gastronomy. For the diners who flock to Berceau des Sens, the promise is tantalizing: a table where culinary artistry meets pedagogical excellence, under the direction of one of France’s most accomplished chefs. #CulinaryExcellence #BerceauDesSens #ChristopheSchmitt #EHL #HospitalityEducation #FineDining #MichelinStar #FrenchCuisine #Gastronomy #NextGenerationChefs #HospitalityLeadership #EHLFamily #GlobalGastronomy #CulinaryInnovation #ChefLife #FutureOfDining #LausanneDining #CulinaryArts #FoodEducation #GlobalHospitality

  • NEXT STOP ZURICH FASHION WEEK: AN UNFORGETTABLE FASHION NIGHT IN THE HEART OF SWITZERLAND

    NEXT STOP ZURICH FASHION WEEK: AN UNFORGETTABLE FASHION NIGHT IN THE HEART OF SWITZERLAND Press Release Zurich, August 28, 2025 The Zurich Fashion Week Association (ZFW) invites you to the exclusive Fashion Night “Next Stop ZFW”, an extraordinary evening that will transform Zurich into a stage of elegance, innovation, and artistic vision. The exact location remains under wraps, adding a touch of intrigue and surprise to what promises to be one of the most inspiring nights of the Swiss fashion calendar. This Fashion Night marks a significant milestone on the road to the very first Zurich Fashion Week in 2026. For one evening, Zurich will host a selection of outstanding designers whose work embodies bold creativity and cultural diversity: Modeco, Ombre, Apolline Emery, Amato Moda, and Selva Huygens. Each label will present collections defined by distinctive aesthetics, innovative cuts, and avant-garde inspiration. Adding brilliance to the runway, jewelry partner PURELEI will complement the evening with its unmistakable sparkle. As an official partner, Landquart Fashion Outlet highlights the strong bond between Swiss design, international style, and a unique shopping experience. Together with an illustrious list of additional sponsors, this collaboration underscores Zurich’s potential to become an international hub for creativity and fashion. An exclusive audience of VIPs from fashion, business, music, art, and entertainment will lend further glamour and prestige to the evening. “For one evening, we want Zurich to transform into a true metropolis of inspiration a place where fashion pushes boundaries and tells new stories. The secret venue is an essential part of this staging: the unexpected is what makes fashion truly exciting,” says Tamy Glauser, President of the Zurich Fashion Week Association. “‘Next Stop ZFW’ is much more than a show. It is a promise: Switzerland is ready to write fashion history again and Zurich will be at the very heart of it.” Live-Streaming for a Global Audience To ensure that this creative moment transcends borders, the event will be live-streamed worldwide. Fashion enthusiasts from across the globe will be able to witness the spectacular collections in real time, becoming part of this unique celebration of Swiss creativity and innovation. A Vision for Swiss Fashion The Zurich Fashion Week Association was founded with a clear mission: to provide young Swiss fashion talents with an international platform and facilitate access to global networks and renowned labels. Particularly outstanding talents will be supported through national and international scholarships, helping them to develop their creative potential. Through its events, the association aims to enrich Switzerland’s cultural landscape, foster innovative projects in design, and establish Zurich as a vibrant international hub for fashion and creativity. The inaugural Zurich Fashion Week 2026 will be the centerpiece of this vision, showcasing both emerging and established Swiss designers, attracting international buyers and fashion enthusiasts, and promoting cultural exchange while boosting the local economy. Behind the association stands a dedicated committee of Swiss cultural and fashion leaders, including Remo Schmid (founder, Prix-Courage award winner) and Tamy Glauser (president, top model). As honorary president, Donald Schneider, former Art Director of Vogue Paris, brings international flair and expertise to the initiative. Event Facts Event: Fashion Night “Next Stop ZFW” Date: August 28, 2025 Location: Secret Zurich venue (revealed after the event) Designers: Modeco, Ombre, Apolline Emery, Amato Moda, Selva Huygens Jewelry Partner: PURELEI Official Partner: Landquart Fashion Outlet Sponsors & Partners The Zurich Fashion Week Association gratefully acknowledges the support of its sponsors and partners, who together make this vision possible: Landquart Fashion Outlet, smARTec, Zweifel Weine & Getränke, Madeleine Chocolates of Switzerland, FrancisFrancis Bags, PURELEI, AMARO Oud, Luc Belaire France, BRAUN, CHOPFAB, DECORIS, El Tony Mate, TATARIE MARIE, FL Sweets Catering, OPENROOM Creative Agency, PEACE TEA, ProKeSo, SES-SECURITY.CH , Tram Museum Zürich, TRECA Paris, 25hours Hotels, AVANTCHA. Press Contact Zurich Fashion Week Association 📧 mira.zawrzykraj@zfw.swiss | 📞 +41 79 756 85 13 | 🌐 www.zfw.swiss #ZurichFashionWeek #NextStopZFW #FashionNightZurich #SwissFashion #EleganceRedefined #WhereFashionMeetsArt #MetropolisOfInspiration #StyleWithoutBorders #FashionEvent #RunwayInspiration #GlobalFashion #LuxuryLifestyle #FashionForward #luxemagazineswitzerland

  • Luxury in Motion: Power Shifts and Strategies Redefining Fashion’s Future

    Luxury in Motion: Power Shifts and Strategies Redefining Fashion’s Future The Story of a Shifting Empire In luxury fashion, power is never static. It moves like a current sometimes subtly, sometimes in tidal waves. Over the past year, three of the most storied houses Chanel, Dior, and Gucci have been reshaping the industry through bold campaigns, calculated acquisitions, and a battle for the crown of global desirability. The story is not just about clothes. It is about who defines culture, who commands attention, and who controls the narrative of luxury itself. The Image War It began with imagery. On Instagram and global billboards, the industry staged a visual revolution. Michael Kors transported audiences to Rome, its campaign shot against the timeless backdrop of the Spanish Steps and Piazza Navona. Louis Vuitton teased collaborations that blended streetwear with heritage echoes of the legendary LV × Supreme. Dior whispered of Nike partnerships, tapping into the energy of sport as fashion’s new frontier. These images were more than aesthetics they were signals. They said: luxury is not confined to Paris ateliers; it thrives in the streets, on social feeds, and in the imagination of Gen Z. The Rise of Chanel While campaigns won hearts, numbers began to redraw the map of power. According to Brand Finance’s 2025 Luxury & Premium Report, Chanel stunned the industry by leaping 45% in brand value, reaching US $37.9 billion surpassing Louis Vuitton for the first time. This wasn’t just a statistic; it was a seismic shift. Chanel, long admired for its timeless codes, proved that modern luxury is about marrying heritage with bold relevance. Its ability to captivate a new generation while staying true to Coco Chanel’s DNA propelled it ahead in the global rankings. Dior’s Strength and Gucci’s Identity But Chanel was not alone in redefining the game. Dior surged as the strongest brand in luxury, scoring a remarkable 93.5/100 on the Brand Strength Index. The figure speaks of more than sales it reflects emotional resonance, cultural impact, and a near-unparalleled ability to embody aspiration. Meanwhile, Gucci, with its flair for reinvention, sought to consolidate its identity. After seasons of creative experimentation, it leaned into its Florentine roots with campaigns staged at Palazzo Settimanni. Gucci’s narrative became one of returning home to move forward a balancing act of daring design and heritage pride. The Strategic Gambit of Kering Behind the glamour of runways and campaigns, boardrooms made their moves. Kering, already home to Gucci, executed a coup of its own: the acquisition of Giambattista Valli, a couture house celebrated for its romantic, sculptural gowns. This acquisition was more than an expansion it was a declaration. By securing a foothold in haute couture, Kering positioned itself alongside LVMH in the rarefied space of ultra-luxury. It was a long-term bet: in an era when consumers spend less on mass luxury but more on exclusivity and craft, couture is the ultimate safe haven. Italy, The Eternal Stage If Paris is luxury’s capital, Italy has become its grand theater. Rome, Florence, Lake Como all staged pivotal moments in 2025. Dior’s Maria Grazia Chiuri transformed Cinecittà Studios into a Fellini-inspired dream, a cinematic ode to Italian culture. Chanel presented its Cruise collection by the waters of Lake Como, embracing timeless romance. Gucci returned to Florence, reclaiming its history in the walls of its own palazzo. Italy’s cities became more than locations; they became storytellers, grounding global fashion in a landscape where history and fantasy meet. The Bigger Picture: Luxury’s New Equation The narrative across these houses points to a broader truth: luxury is evolving from possession to experience. Consumers today want more than handbags and gowns; they seek cultural immersion, emotional connection, and exclusivity. That is why Chanel’s numbers matter, why Dior’s strength resonates, and why Kering invests in couture. They are not just competing for market share they are competing for meaning. Conclusion: The Grand Chessboard Luxury fashion in 2025 is a chessboard of strategy and spectacle. Chanel’s meteoric rise, Dior’s unmatched resonance, Gucci’s creative recalibration, and Kering’s couture gamble all fit into a single story: the redefinition of power. In this unfolding narrative, numbers and images, boardroom deals and runway fantasies, are no longer separate. They are moves in the same game a game where heritage meets modernity, and where the true prize is not only revenue but cultural immortality. #LuxuryPowerShift #ChanelVsLouisVuitton #DiorStrength #GucciIdentity #LuxuryBrandValue #FashionStrategy #KeringCouture #GiambattistaValli #LuxuryEvolution #HighFashionTrends #CulturalLuxury #LuxuryCampaigns #RunwayItaly #HeritageAndInnovation #LuxuryBrandRankings #FashionAcquisitions #BrandFinance2025 #LuxuryConsumerTrends #GlobalLuxuryMarket #FashionNar ratives #luxemagazineswitzerland

  • Timeless Ties: The Enduring Elegance of Headscarves

    Timeless Ties: The Enduring Elegance of Headscarves The headscarf draped, knotted, and wrapped is far more than a simple sartorial flourish. It’s a symbol, a statement, and a story. From ancient civilizations to red carpet appearances, the elegant headscarf has transcended epochs. Whether tied under the chin or wrapped behind the head, paired with sunglasses or styled with braids, this accessory has always signaled a mark of grace. Here’s a deep dive into its legacy, its power, and its perpetual return to fashion’s center stage. A Legacy Threaded Through Time Ancient Roots The scarf’s journey is ancient: Egyptian queens like Nefertiti wore elaborate wraps, while in China and Rome, scarves signified status, rank, or practicality guarding against sun and dust. Cultural & Practical Origins Headscarves often served dual purposes religious modesty, cultural identity, or protective utility. Think of the hijab in Islamic traditions, or Christian and Orthodox women covering their heads during worship. The 20th Century: From Function to Fashion Scarves pivoted from utility to glam in the 20th century. During World War II, factory-working women adopted kerchiefs for safety this practical step morphed into a symbol of resilience  . By the mid-century, icons like Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly transformed the headscarf into the epitome of Old Hollywood elegance  . The 60s and 70s saw bohemian, turban, and headband styles flourish; the 80s brought bold, glamorous wraps tied tightly for dramatic effect. The Elegant Headscarf Today Revived on Red Carpets and Runways Iconic fashion continues to inspire. Audrey Hepburn’s headscarf with oversized sunglasses from the 50s remains a silhouette of elegance. Contemporary celebrities like Beyoncé, Rihanna, Lupita Nyong’o, and fashion-forward influencers bring the headscarf back into the spotlight with sweeping red carpet styles or runway statements. The “Nonnacore” Resurgence Recently, “nonnacore” a nod to vintage Italian nonnas has surfaced. Celebrities and influencers lean into bold silk scarves tied tightly around the head, channeling icons like Sophia Loren and Audrey Hepburn in a refreshingly retro-cool aesthetic. Modern Celebrations of Grace The timeless elegance continues through modern tributes Camille Gottlieb, Grace Kelly’s granddaughter, reinterpreted her grandmother’s signature headscarf by tying it behind her head, evoking both heritage and current style sensibility. High-Fashion Meets Street The kerchief is back in vogue for Euro summers, finding favor among icons like Hailey Bieber and Hunter Schafer. It blends practicality sun protection and hair control with effortless glamour  . Meanwhile, early 2000s Y2K vibes are staged once again, with scarves and bandanas trending among fashion influencers and TikTok stars. Why the Headscarf Endures Versatility & Functionality Scarves offer protection from wind or sun, handle hair woes, and elevate an everyday look in an instant. Symbolism & Resistance Beyond style, headscarves have carried weight political, religious, or cultural. From suffrage symbols to garmented heritage, they’ve often been statements beyond fashion. Timeless Appeal The headscarf dates back centuries; whether in aristocratic portraiture or modern street style, it resonates with grace, identity, and defiant expression. Styling the Scarf: Rules to Break Tied under the chin Classically Audrey, Jackie, and Hepburn-style chic  . Wrapped and knotted at the back A fresh interpretation embraced by Grace Kelly’s granddaughter  . Loose turban or headband Mechanic-chic, 70s boho, or sleek modern. Paired with glasses A definitive marker of elegance and mystery. The headscarf is more than a trend it’s heritage woven into fashion. It slips between identity and style, between utility and statement, timeless and timely. Whether anchored in Hollywood lore or revitalized on social media, its appeal never fades. #HeadscarfElegance #TimelessStyle #VintageFashion #FashionHistory #HollywoodGlam #Nonnacore #ScarfStyle #GraceKelly #AudreyHepburn #HeadscarfTrend #IconicAccessory #FashionHeritage #ChicScarf #BohoChic #ModernClassic #ScarfTied #RedCarpetStyle #EuroSummerStyle #CelebFashion #AccessoryOfTheDay

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