The Face of the Future
Transcription
The Face of the Future
| TRAVEL | WINE | FOOD | HOMES | CULTURE | BOOKS | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 COLLECTING WSJ.com/lifestyle The Face of the Future Luxury Watch Brands Are Moving Forward By Looking Back [ INSIDE ] GEAR Auctions fly high with iconic motors W11 STYLE Perfumer Frédéric Malle and the seductive power of scent W5 GADGETS From shutterbug to filmmaker W9 Illustration by Matt Herring FASHION W2 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 Passing Time THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. STYLE & FASHION Michael Clerizo surveys the scene at SIHH, the annual gathering of luxury watchmakers in Geneva T he euro zone could crumble, the Middle East explode, China might sink into recession, and America may buckle under the pressure of its debt ceiling, but does any of this concern the highend watch industry, currently gathered en masse in Geneva? “Of course we think about these things,” says Alexander Schmiedt, Montblanc’s managing director of watches. “They are hovering around and we have to prepare for them, but they do not change our longterm strategy. Our long-term strategy is all about our watches.” Watches from Montblanc and 15 other luxury brands have taken over Geneva’s Palexpo this week for Le Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie (SIHH), which ends Friday. Here, brands strut their newest stuff for collectors, retailers and journalists. But there is little point in looking for trends. The watch world isn’t the fashion world, where products change every six months. Instead, trends are measured in decades, even for relatively new producers, and the latest models tend to take inspiration from brands’ own histories. Take Montblanc, which unveiled brand in 2001, Richard Mille has explored the connection between cars and watches. “Cars,” he says via email, “at their very heart, utilize the very old technology of the combustion engine, combined with modern materials and concepts, today with an added dose of electronics. All advances made with car development are incremental and don’t really change the essence of the beast, which is: you put fossil fuels in and it moves, end of story. “Look at the high-end watch: totally mechanical, same as it was more than half a millennium ago,” Mr. Mille continues. “Everything has been discovered about watchmaking, yet, we are always able to bring things another step forward, each and every year.” This year, Mr. Mille is powering his brand with the Tourbillon GSensor RM 036 Jean Todt Limited Edition, which measures the effect of G-forces on a driver in a rapidly decelerating car. ‘Everything has been discovered about watchmaking, yet, we are always able to bring things another step forward, each and every year.’ its first watch in 1997. Five years ago, the company used its history as a pen producer as inspiration for its Nicolas Rieussec Chronograph, named for the man who patented his stopwatch complication invention in 1822. Because Rieussec’s chronographs employed a stationary nib that inked elapsed time on rotating discs, Montblanc saw a natural link between his invention and the company’s own history. Until now, Montblanc’s chronographs have featured traditional hour and minute hands on the main dial and smaller rotating disk subdials with stationary hands to measure elapsed minutes and seconds. Their newest model, Rising Hours, pushes the no-hands design even further. The minute hand remains but hours are displayed on a main rotating disc. The hour numerals are blue at night and black during the day. There are also windows displaying the day and the date. This year, IWC Schaffhausen updates the Ingenieur collection (launched in 1955 and retooled in the ’70s) via its link with the Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team. The new watches, ranging in price from €4,955 to €201,900, are sleeker than their predecessors but nod to history by retaining the five visible screw-bores on their bezels. Most of the new collection has racing-friendly complications: chronographs and tachymeters that measure speed over a set distance. The Chronograph Racer also has an automotive-appropriate rubber strap and flyback function stopwatch ideal for recording pit-stop times. Since founding his eponymous For those enamored of esoteric complications and names to match, Italian brand Officine Panerai offers the sure-to-lure Luminor 1950 Rattrapante 8 Days Titanio. One word at a time: “Luminor” is for a luminous substance developed by Panerai that makes numerals and hands easier to read underwater; 1950 is the year Luminor was introduced; “Rattrapante” is a chronograph with two second hands, enabling the timing of single lap times in a multilap race; “8 Days” refers to the time the watch will run when fully wound; and “Titanio” is Italian for titanium, the case metal. A possible motto for Piaget is “A watch can never be too thin.” This year’s offering, the Emperador Coussin Ultra-Thin Minute Repeater, chimes the hours and minutes inside an 18-karat pink-gold case only 9.4 millimeters thick. Fabled jewelry and watch brand Cartier launched the Calibre de Cartier Chronograph, its first inhouse self-winding movement with chronograph—the fruit of a multimillion-euro investment in watchmaking. The watch has a dial with oversized Roman numerals and sword hands, Cartier mainstays since the days of Art Deco. On the case, different surfaces have different finishes: the chronograph buttons are polished to a smooth and lustrous shine, while the sides and lugs are brushed for a subtler look. Ralph Lauren is one of the few MONTBLANC Rising Hours €26,900 in red gold IWC Chronograph Racer €5,000 RICHARD MILLE Tourbillon G-Sensor RM 036 Jean Todt Limited Edition estimated at €336,000 PANERAI Luminor 1950 Rattrapante 8 Days Titanio €13,125 PIAGET Emperador Coussin Ultra-Thin Minute Repeater €187,740 CARTIER The Calibre de Cartier Chronograph €8,110 RALPH LAUREN Sporting World Time €7,135 Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 | W3 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. STYLE & FASHION lifestyle brands that has succeeded in the luxury watch world. This year, it adds Sporting World Time, a blue-dial watch that keeps track of time in 24 time zones, to the brand’s Sporting collection. One brand, Audemars Piguet, has outdone its rivals by producing a Royal Oak Offshore Grande Complication. The watch adheres to horological tradition for grand complications with a rattrapante chronograph, a minute repeater, a perpetual calendar and moon phases. Audemars Piguet plans to produce only three titanium-cased examples. “With the introduction of this movement in the Royal Oak Offshore, not only do we master the artistry of complicated movements but have also broken the rules by placing it in our most extreme sports design,” says CEO FrançoisHenry Bennahmias. Determining the best watch introduced at SIHH is a time-wasting exercise. After all, how do you define “best”? Selecting the most beautiful watch, however, is easy: Van Cleef & Arpels’s Enchanted Ballerina, with a dial that features a bejeweled ballerina. Push a button and the ballerina’s tutu becomes the wings of a butterfly that flutter along two arcs of numerals—one on the right of the dial to indicate minutes and one of the left to indicate the hour. AUDEMARS PIGUET Royal Oak Offshore Grande Complication €533,700 VAN CLEEF & ARPELS Enchanted Ballerina €105,885 H. MOSER Meridian Dual Time €27,700 in rose gold JULIEN COUDRAY Manufactura 1528 Miniature €123,900 RGM Caliber 20 €14,650 F. P. JOURNE Chronomèter Optimum €64,885 in rose gold CHRISTOPHE CLARET Soprano €375,475 MB&F HM5 €47,310 Down the River Running parallel to SIHH, the fourth annual Geneva Time Exhibition (GTE), which ended Thursday, featured lesserknown brands. Among the 34 exhibitors, H. Moser & Cie is a contrarian brand from Schaffhausen. While many brands’ watches shout their presence on a wearer’s wrist, Moser’s give a silent wink. Dials are smoky shades of brown, blue or gray, matched with white- or yellow-gold hands and markers, large date windows and moon-phase displays. The brand’s latest watch, the Meridian Dual Time, indicates the time in a second time zone with a dark red hand. When not needed, the red hand disappears beneath the regular hour hand. New brands that keep production numbers low but design values, and consequently prices, high have been drawing interest from investors. One example is Julien Coudray 1518, based in the Swiss mountain town of Le Locle, about two hours northeast of Geneva. The founder, 43-year-old French master watchmaker Fabien Lamarche, was an industry backroom boy producing exceptional watches for famous brands but without any recognition. In 2007, he launched his own brand, named after a 16th-century French watchmaker. Over the next five years, Mr. Lamarche secured financial backing from luxury industry investors. Last year, the brand produced its first complete collection. On show at GTE this year has been a pièce unique, the Manufactura 1528 Miniature. The movement for this time-only watch is fashioned from red gold and delicately decorated. The red-gold case is set with 193 diamonds. Inlaid on the dial are 11 separate enameled lozenges for the hours. One lozenge at eight o’clock is gold and engraved with the brand logo. At the center of the dial is a miniature enamel painting of flowers. When the hour and minute hands meet at 12 o’clock, they form a flower complete with stem and leaves. “The design on the dial was inspired by PierreJoseph Redouté, a Belgian painter who lived at the time of the French Revolution and worked for MarieAntoinette,” Mr. Lamarche says. “Redouté was know as the Raphael of Flowers because of his beautiful paintings of nature. I want this image on the dial to be a way of escaping from everyday life.” A surprise at GTE has been the presence of an American brand: RGM Watch Co., founded in 1992 in Mount Joy, Penn., by watchmaker Roland G. Murphy. The 52-year-old is celebrating the brand’s 20th anniversary with a new watch, the tourneau (cushion)shaped Caliber 20. The in-house movement is the third from RGM and composed of 90% homegrown American parts. Caliber 20 features a seconds sub-dial positioned at two o’clock, visually balanced by a moon phase dial at eight o’clock. Beyond the Shows In 1996, François-Paul Journe, a 39-year-old French watchmaker with a deep knowledge of his craft, arrived in Geneva with a modus operandi to tease out innovations from the great inventions of watchmaking’s past. At his workshop, the latest offering, the Chronomèter Optimum, boasts a double-wheel escapement. (Escapements regulate the flow of energy in a mechanical watch.) These escapements appear in 18thand 19th-century pocket watches but are rare in wristwatches. Mr. Journe’s brainchild improves on its ancestors by functioning without lubrication, the Achilles' heel of those earlier iterations. The Chronomèter Optimum, part of the brand’s Souveraine collection, also features a remontoire, a device that aids the escapement in its energy-controlling role. To his trademark off-center dials, Mr. Journe added a power-reserve gauge and exposed remontoire. Another inventive Frenchman, 52-year-old Christophe Claret, based in Le Locle, foregoes the classicism and formality of Messrs. Lamarche and Journe for a contemporary design—but one based around traditional components. His Soprano rings the hours and minutes with Westminster Chimes in imitation of London’s Big Ben, the preferred melody of watchmakers since the mid-19th century. The watch also has a tourbillon, an invention more than 200 years old, and Charles X bridges (stationary components that hold moving parts) common in pocket watches from the 1820s. These horological mainstays are surmounted by tradition-busting black-on-black, black-on-red or black-on-blue hands. Watches from MB&F, founded in 2005 by Max Büsser, then 38 years old, don’t so much sit on as appear to orbit the wrist. Mr. Büsser runs the brand as an artist collective, with as many as 40 watchmakers, designers and technicians contributing to the realization of each piece. Debuting this year is the HM5, a wedge-shaped digital display watch conceived as a tribute to the 1970sera of quartz watches and tapered supercars. The HM5, with its futuristic design, has a weirdly practical feature: a drainage system that comes to the rescue if the watch gets wet. The watch, as well as other carefully curated pieces, can be found at MB&F’s Mechanical Art Devices Gallery on rue Verdaine, Geneva. A visit here should live up to the gallery’s acronym: M.A.D. W4 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. EATING & DRINKING Why Coya Is Zagat’s Hottest Restaurant Chef Sanjay Dwivedi’s Seabass Ceviche TOTAL TIME: 30 minutes SERVES: 4 6 fillets of sea bass, skinned 4 limes, juiced 125 milliliter fish stock ½ peeled white onion ½ head celery 1 bulb garlic 1 de-seeded ají limo pepper ½ bunch coriander (keep 10 leaves) 5 grams of ginger 125 grams of sweet potatoes 1 star anise 100 grams of Peruvian white corn ½ de-seeded, finely chopped long red chili ½ finely sliced red onion [ Food ] BY BRUCE PALLING Ceviche at Coya Restaurant & Bar, above, and chef Sanjay Dwivedi, right. Hyde Park Corner end of Piccadilly. It has been renovated in what can only be termed distressed Hispanic/Inca style, with cast-iron gates and shabby leather banquettes, making it reminiscent of a grand Havana nightclub sometime during the tail end of the Batista regime. The noisy crowd are 30-somethings, with casually dressed men, and women in vertiginous heels. But what about the food? There is the usual profusion of ceviche dishes, such as a delicious atún chifa (cubes of raw yellow fin tuna soused in soy, sesame seeds and shrimp cracker) offered in a small glass bowl suspended over a larger one full of crushed ice to keep it arctically cool. There was also a hint of chili and citrus juice, which gave the ingredients a tartness that always makes such dishes refreshing. The other starters were gambas (crispy tiger prawns with a different marinade of chili and lime, which were light, thanks to their tempura cooking style), plus skewers of ox heart with parsley and rocoto chili. There was a deftness of touch about all these dishes that was heartening, given how relatively inexpensive they were (£8 to £11). The next two dishes were astoundingly executed, though neither was wholly authentically Peruvian. The first was “papa seca con setas de invierno” (Peruvian wild potatoes, wild mushrooms and truffles), which could best be described as a version of Peruvian risotto crossed with gnocchi. Mr. Dwivedi cheerfully admits that there are no truffles in Peru, but that hasn’t stopped him adding them, ending up with a wonderfully earthy dish. The other plate that impressed me was rodaballo (halibut, ají amarillo, Jerusalem artichokes and chorizo). This succulent fish was Danny Elwes; Coya Perhaps it should be no surprise that, earlier this month, the Zagat Guide adjudged the hottest restaurant anywhere in the world to be in London. What does raise eyebrows, though, is that it chose Coya, the two-month-old, Peruvian-inspired basement restaurant in Mayfair, whose head chef isn’t Peruvian and has only spent a couple of weeks in Peru. Still, the end result is impressive. So why has Coya Restaurant & Bar—the latest addition to the collection of Indian entrepreneur Arjun Waney, who is also behind Zuma, Roka, La Petite Maison and the Arts Club—rocketed to fame and fashion so rapidly? It is partially to do with Mr. Waney’s track record, but it must also be said that Coya delivers exciting and innovative cuisine for reasonable prices, while ticking other boxes for the fashionably thin brigade, such as being low on carbohydrates, plus 95% gluten-free. However, it is 45-year-old chef Sanjay Dwivedi who deserves most of the credit. He has cooked at the Michelin-starred Zaika, an innovative Indian restaurant, and graced the kitchens of the Ivy, Le Caprice and the Greenhouse, as well as spent time as the touring chef for the Rolling Stones. Mr. Dwivedi says an early description of him as a chef who cooks “Around the World in 80 ways” best describes his eclectic approach. Coya is in the basement of a large classical building that had been empty for a decade, at the grilled in his sturdy Josper oven, which is fueled by charcoal and can reach very high temperatures with controlled smoke. Mr. Dwivedi says the dish is more Spanish than Peruvian, which has more influence from Japanese and Chinese cuisine, but he makes no excuses. “To be honest, I have always loved blending different cuisines,” he says. “I want to give London something that, while funky and trendy, is totally different.” HOW TO PREPARE IT: 1. For the Leche de Tigre marinade, use a blender to blitz onion, celery, garlic, ají limo, coriander and ginger with fish stock. This is to break down the vegetables, not to purée them. The idea is to simply release the flavor of vegetables to the fish stock. Pass through a sieve, add lime juice and salt. Keep aside in the fridge. 2. Dice sweet potatoes into 1centimeter cubes. In a pan, add 1 liter of water, sweet potatoes, star anise and gently bring to boil. Cook sweet potatoes for 5 minutes, or until done. Refresh in iced water. Keep this aside. 3. Blanch Peruvian corn for 10 minutes in salted water. Refresh in iced water and keep aside. 4. When ready to serve, dice sea bass into 2-centimeter cubes. Season with salt and lime juice. Add Leche de Tigre and mix well. Taste for seasoning. Now add sweet potatoes, Peruvian corn, chopped reserved coriander and red chilies. Mix well, marinate for no longer than a minute. Finish with finely sliced red onions. Note: When unavailable, swap sea bass for salmon, sea bream, scallops or prawns; ají limo for your favorite chili; and Peruvian white corn for fresh sweet corn. The Joyful Restraint of 2011 Burgundy [ Wine ] In many ways, today’s fine-wine lovers have never had it so good. Such has been the improvement in modern winemaking techniques, the adoption of measures to eliminate cork taint and the opening up of vast swaths of unexplored viticultural land, that we have been blessed with better-quality and more interesting wines than ever before. Yes, prices have risen and, in some cases, moved our favorites beyond reach, but more often than not, these have been replaced by new wines coming onto the market. It was a point I suggested to an old friend, who worked briefly in the wine trade after studying viticulture at the University of California, Davis. No longer involved in wine, he says he is consistently surprised at the quality on offer compared with a decade ago: “It’s actually very hard to buy a bad bottle these days,” he says. The trick is finding an interesting one, which brings us to perhaps the most interesting wine region of them all: Burgundy. Its 2011 vintage has just been pre- Geordie Torr / Alamy BY WILL LYONS viewed in a plethora of tastings held in London and is on sale now. I can’t think of any other finewine region in the world that continues to mesmerize and fascinate quite like Burgundy. Its two principal grape varieties, Pinot Noir for red and Chardonnay for white—and the smattering of plantings of Gamay and Aligote—find an expression when planted in its network of villages in the Côte d’Or, inspiring not just the palate but the intellect, too. In Burgundy, it is still possible to overpay for mediocre wine. Such is the complexity of the region that navigating its myriad Pinot Noir grapes on the vine, Volnay, Burgundy. villages and vineyards is akin to solving a cryptic crossword. Consumers often complain that its wines are inconsistent and too complex. Burgundians believe a wine’s character is derived principally from the plot of land the vine is planted on, which is graded by a classification system based on the vineyard, village and subdistrict. But a highly classified wine can be expensive and not very good. To compound the problem, Burgundy’s unpredictable weather means every year tastes slightly different. A good short cut is to pick your producer wisely. It may be too much of a leap to say there are no bad vintages anymore, but certainly in Europe’s classic regions, modern winemaking has made a huge difference. British importer Caspar Bowes explains that many of today’s vintages are better described in terms of style rather than quality, arguing that those vintages that have been rated “great” in the past, such as 2009 and ’10, are merely those that have had the ripest fruit and the most power. The 2011 vintage is a case in point. It may not have the power of the 2010 but what it lacks in density and weight, it certainly makes up for in charm. Flowering was early in the spring of 2011, which meant that although the harvest date was early—in some vineyards the earliest since the end of the 19th century—the grapes enjoyed a long hang time on the vine. This allowed them to mature more slowly, helping ripen the tannins and fruit evenly. The result is red wines that are strongly aromatic, possessing an attractive perfumed fruit and a delicate floral character. This is matched by a lacy elegance, smooth tannins and a bright acidity that gives them power and zing. In short, at this young stage, judging from the dozens of cask samples I sniffed and slurped my way through in London, the wines are a joy to taste. The good news is that both the 2011 reds and whites have restrained alcohol, which gives the wines a unique freshness. Quality is even in both the Côte de Nuits and Côte de Beaune. For reds, the standout villages were Nuits-St.Georges and Volnay. For whites, Pernand-Vergelesses continues to produce scintillating Chardonnay. The bad news is that, as in 2010, the crop was very small; and it comes before 2012, which, due to uneven weather, was even tinier. Coupled with demand from European and U.S. collectors and increased interest from Asia, this will mean real pressure on prices. As Louis-Michel Liger-Belair, proprietor of Domaine du Comte Liger-Belair, says: “Fill your cellars, as there will not be much wine in 2012.” To which I would add: don’t forget to stock up on 2010, a vintage where quality, particularly among the lesser village wines, is even throughout. Stock up before prices rise even further. —Email Will Lyons at william.lyons@wsj.com or follow him on Twitter: @Will_Lyons. Online>> Read Will Lyons’s pick of 2011 Burgundy at WSJ.com/lifeandstyle. Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 | W5 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. STYLE & FASHION Clockwise from left, Frédéric Malle; his store at 37 rue de Grenelle; ‘Musc Ravageur’ by Maurice Roucel Three great crimes of fragrance Brigitte Lacombe (portrait); Jacques Giaume (2) 1. Creating a fragrance for the image rather than the individual. 2. Trying to please everyone—when you sell something this personal you simply can’t expect universal approval. 3. Those individuals who create the fragrances which permeate New York taxis. For this I would bring back the guillotine. Frédéric Malle: A Nose for Business [ Style ] BY TINA GAUDOIN Frédéric Malle grew up in Paris’s fashionable 7th arrondissement on rue de Courty, where his bedroom was formerly the bedroom of master perfumer Jean-Paul Guerlain. His grandfather, Serge Heftler-Louiche, founded Parfums Christian Dior, and his mother, as art director of the fashion house’s perfumery, played a hand in the creation of Dior’s legendary men’s fragrance, “Eau Savage.” With this kind of heritage, it would be reasonable to presuppose that Malle might have something of an interest in perfume. But even his grandfather might not have expected that Malle would, in the 12 short years he has been in business, stand the fragrance world on its head. Malle created his company in 2000 after a career as a fragrance consultant (he was trained at the perfume laboratory Roure Bertrand Dupont). From its inception, Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle has been dedicated to working with the world’s best perfumers, offering them financial and creative freedom to construct their fragrances. Malle opened his first store in Paris at 37 rue du Grenelle with nine perfumes, among them the first commercially produced version of Edmond Roudnitska’s “Parfum de Thérèse,” “Musc Ravageur” by Maurice Roucel and “Vétiver Extraordinaire” by Dominique Ropion—all regarded as modern classics. Unlike most fragrance companies, there are no blockbuster advertising campaigns, no department store spritzings and, even in Malle’s four stand-alone shops, no overt bazaar-like displays of the scents. Instead, his glass-bottled fragrances sit somberly to attention in refrigerated cabinets, black stoppers and white labels front and center. Black-and-white portraits of the perfumers, or what Malle calls his perfume authors, adorn the walls. And unique fra- A great fragrance is not good on its own. It has to be worn by the right person. grance chambers that Malle designed himself (think “Beam me up”) suck out a fragrance after a customer has “experienced” it, thus eradicating the risk of olfactory overload. (You can fill in a questionnaire at fredericmalle.com to determine the fragrance that would suit you best.) When I ask Malle if he agrees that his stores can be a little intimidating, in the manner of specialty jewelry boutiques, he is, he says, offended. “I have never heard that before,” he says. “I have recreated my home in these stores.” Oh dear. His mission, he says, is not to patronize. “I want people to feel at ease and uninhibited,” he adds. Malle has a high-profile cult following. He is far too discreet to name names, but given that Uma Thurman and her partner, financier Arpad Busson, cohosted the Barneys New York book-signing for “Frédéric Malle on Perfume Making” (foreword by Catherine Deneuve) in 2011, it is safe to assume that they are all no less than stellar. When I set up my new company, XXX par Frédéric Malle, I was interested in the idea of a ménage à trois. When I say that, what I really mean is that I thought it would be a great idea to create fragrances for people who are famous because they are interesting rather than the converse, which is the case with celebrity fragrance. [The first of his new fragrances will be released on Feb. 20.] If [former Fiat boss Gianni] Agnelli were alive, I would love to have created a fragrance for him. He had such a face, such style and such history that one could imagine the perfect smell for him. We have a private joke in our business that we have beautiful trash. In other words, no matter how beautiful the fragrance we have created, we trash it unless it works for the time and place. Sometimes these things have taken years of work. Ultimately, one has to be ruthless to get it just right. Some fragrances are like an ancient ornate, exquisite dress— perfect in a particular place at a particular time, but if worn today they would seem totally wrong. Fragrance is ultimately about seduction. When I was 8 years old, I heard my mother say “That’s a sexy fragrance.” I didn’t know what sex was then, but by the time I was 15, I was figuring it all out. I understood the basic principle, which I still apply when I’m creating a fragrance: would I want to sleep with a woman who is wearing this scent? I don’t use the sexy fragrances for the candles we sell in our home collection. You know why? I want a comfy room, not a sexy room. I never spend money for the sake of spending money—none of my fragrances are the same price. And I will use whatever it takes to get the scent right: synthetic, non-synthetic, cheap or expensive, it doesn’t matter. The ends justify the means. Fragrance is like home décor. If you have little money but lots of talent, you can make a very pretty room; conversely, even with limitless means, you will never make a great fragrance without a great artist attached to it. We have a duty to the planet as perfumers, even though no fragrance pollutes as much as an empty plastic water bottle or a car. That said, I deplore political correctness for its own sake. Parabens, for example, have been banned and replaced with other constituents that we don’t know enough about. I cannot sell my hair fragrance over here [in Europe] because it has 5% fragrance in it. In fact, women have been spraying fragrance into their hair for years at 25% concentration, so that’s just insane. Most of the great noses are still men, it’s true. I believe this relates back to the idea that fragrance is all about sex. Part of our job is to create something that generates the excitement of other men. I wanted my stores to have a sense of luxury about them, which is why they don’t look like stores. It irritates me that stores condescend to customers and don’t treat them like adults. This is not “Downton Abbey” and we are not merchants. It is possible to create a great mass-market fragrance. Dolce & Gabbana’s “Light Blue” is that exactly. A great fragrance is not good on its own. It has to be worn by the right person. A fragrance is always a collaboration between the wearer and the scent. Often the big brands put people in charge of perfume who are used to selling diapers, cat food and deodorant. How can you expect these people to be fragrance experts? A great fragrance needs a good perfumer and a courageous marketer. —Email Tina Gaudoin at tina.gaudoin@wsj.com or follow her on Twitter: @tinagaudoin W6 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Photographs by Michel Joly for The Wall Street Journal ADVENTURE & TRAVEL Where’s the Boeuf ? In Burgundy, Bien Sûr! We Went in Steaming Hot Pursuit of the Finest Version of France’s Classic Beef Stew BY RATHA TEP T he classic French beef stew is back en vogue. Boeuf bourguignon—the dark, rich, deeply flavorful concoction of beef that’s been slow-simmered in red wine until just shy of falling-apart tender—was showered with love in the 1960s, when it was a regular on the dinner-party circuit. In recent years, as several high-end chefs have opened casual bistros, the rustic dish has resurfaced on restaurant menus across the U.S. It’s also causing a stir in France, where stellar tradition-bound versions share the spotlight with innovative riffs that incorporate unexpected cuts of beef and eyebrowraising supporting players. The beautifully complex beef stew takes its name from the region in east-central France whence it originated. With its beef, wine and mushrooms—all abundant, local ingredients—it is as much an expression of Burgundy’s terroir as are the area’s famed Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes. While a fish dish cooked in Burgundy wine and titled “a la Bourgogne” appeared in 1742 in the third volume of the “Nouveau Traité de la Cuisine,” the first printed recipe for a similarly named beef stew whose sauce is flecked with bacon, sautéed mushrooms and butter-glazed onions is widely believed to be the version presented in legendary chef Auguste Escoffier’s seminal 1903 cookbook “Le Guide Culinaire.” More elemental iterations of the stew have been around for ages. “Simple versions of beef simmered in red wine go way, way back, probably to the ancient Greeks,” said Anne Willan, founder of renowned California-based French culinary school La Varenne, which used to have a Burgundy location, and co-author with her husband Mark Cherniavsky of, most recently, “The Cookbook Library,” a survey on the history of the cookbook. “In any wine-growing area, it is a natural instinct to cook dark red meat in red wine,” she said. As for boeuf bourguignon, the dish is commonly classified as a plat paysan, or peasant dish. Lore has it that poor but resourceful French cooks used to braise tough, cheap cuts of beef in wine to make them tender and moist—a conceit whose accuracy is up for question. “Before the 19th century, farm laborers below the level of landowner would have eaten meat of any kind very rarely, except for a small amount of pork,” Ms. Willan said. Beef and veal were rare indulgences typically reserved for grand occasions like patron-saint feasts or weddings. More likely, it was winemakers with some means, rather than destitute peasants, who frequently ate boeuf bourguignon. “For some time, vintners would put pots of the stew over the fire while they worked the vineyards,” said Eric Claudel, chef of Le Chambolle, in Chambolle-Musigny, and a boeuf bourguignon enthusiast. “But it wasn’t until Escoffier came along that the dish was codified with exact ingredients and proportions.” And then came Julia. Were it not for Julia Child, my happy hunt for the region’s most satisfying iteration of the stew might never have transpired. America’s collective intrigue with boeuf bourguignon can be nearly singlehandedly credited to the food legend whose 1961 tome “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” held rhapsodic praise for the stew that she encountered when living in France. “Carefully done, and perfectly flavored, it is certainly one of the most delicious beef dishes concocted by man,” she wrote. Ms. Child’s cooking show “The French Chef” debuted in 1963 with boeuf bourguignon as its first subject, catapulting both Ms. Child and the stew into the spotlight. The version that she promoted is roughly the same as the one encountered in cooking magazines and at restaurants today, with sautéed mushrooms and brown-braised onions prepared separately so they don’t lose their integrity from stewing. Before it gained ground in America, the stew had already been fairly ubiquitous in the region of its origin since the early 20th Beef bourguignon can now be found at practically every turn in Burgundy, where it is common in casual spots. century. Beef bourguignon can now be found at practically every turn in Burgundy, where it is more common in casual spots than fine-dining restaurants. When chef David Zuddas ran the Michelin-starred Auberge de la Charme in the town of Prenois, in Burgundy, he never would have considered serving boeuf bourguignon, he said. Now the dish figures prominently on the menu at his less formal restaurant, DZ’Envies, in Dijon, the region’s capital. The bistro offers fall-off-the-fork-tender beef cheeks that have been slow-cooked for five hours. A more robust version appears on the menu of Ma Cuisine, a tiny bistro in the beautiful, walled city of Beaune. The estab- lishment serves a boeuf bourguignon worthy of its sublime wine collection. Chef Fabienne Escoffier turns out a rich beef stew studded with smoked bacon, pearl onions and braised mushrooms enrobed in a chestnut-colored sauce whose flavor hints at the full-bodied Burgundy she cooks with. Ms. Escoffier (no relation to Auguste, but daughter of celebrated local chef André Parra), proves the art of perfecting boeuf bourguignon to be a delicate balancing act. Unlike her father, who marinated his beef in wine for up to 48 hours, Ms. Escoffier said she skips the soak but slow-simmers for longer than her father did. “If you take 10 chefs, you get 10 different boeufs bourguignon,” she said. Who wouldn’t want to verify such a claim firsthand? I wound up and down the roughly 65-kilometer Route des Grands Crus through the Côte d’Or, bordered by Dijon to the north and the town of Santenay to the south. I stopped to taste several versions of boeuf bourguignon, some of which seemed lackluster, with ho-hum sauces and ingredients that didn’t jump out. I also found a handful of unforgettable meals. I learned that the best creators of boeuf bourguignon respected tradition, but still played loose with the foundation, using different cuts of beef like ultra-tender cheek, omitting flour or using wines other than Burgundy. Hunting down the very best boeufs bourguignon in Burgundy is a terrific excuse to soak up the region’s character as well as glimpse some of the world’s most fabled vineyards, including Chambertin, Richebourg and Romanée-Conti. It’s also an excellent gateway to pears poached in red wine and crème de cassis, another local specialty worthy of a whole other story. Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 | W7 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ADVENTURE & TRAVEL BURGUNDY’S FIVE BEST BOEUF BOÎTES The Futurist Boeuf bourguignon at DZ’Envies has an intensely winey sauce. The Gold Standard MA CUISINE This 16-year-old bistro, just off Beaune’s busy Place Carnot, embodies the best of Burgundy. Co-owner Pierre Escoffier takes care of the front of the house, deftly offering suggestions from the epic, well-priced 25,000-bottle collection, while the chef—his wife (and Ma Cuisine co-owner)—Fabienne darts in and out of the kitchen. Her boeuf bourguignon is the standard-bearer, with moist, succulent beef and a lustrously thick sauce that benefits from four to five hours of slow-simmering, liberal heapings of bacon, pearl onions and mushrooms and a side of buttery mashed potatoes. Passage St-Hélène, Beaune; ! +33-03-8022-3022 DZ’ENVIES Burgundy isn’t all bucolic vineyards and cow pastures. In the case of DZ’Envies, outfitted in an orange-and-white color scheme and stocked with iPad wine lists, it can be downright hip. Chef David Zuddas earned a Michelin star at the inventive Auberge de la Charme in Prenois—then chucked it all in 2008 to open this modern bistro, primely positioned across Dijon’s covered market Les Halles. Mr. Zuddas’s haute makeover of boeuf bourguignon includes an intensely winey sauce that’s less viscous than most, and beef cheeks that practically melt in the mouth. The super-sharp Opinel table knives were a charming but unnecessary touch. 12 rue Odebert, Dijon; dzenvies.com The dish is prepared with smoky bacon and served with a tangle of noodles at Le Chambolle. The Twist Auberge du Vieux Vigneron serves its boeuf with potatoes ‘tournées.’ AUBERGE DU VIEUX VIGNERON Sleepy Corpeau doesn’t have all that much going for it besides its proximity to PulignyMontrachet—and third-generation winemaker Jean-Charles Fagot’s boisterous restaurant, housed in a 19th-century building that belonged to his great-grandfather. Regarded for his ridiculously thick entrecôte steaks that he cooks over the dining room’s woodburning fireplace, chef Sylvain Férré serves a classic boeuf bourguignon as well as what he calls “Escarboeuf.” He tops the latter with plump escargots—another food associated with Burgundy—flambéed in cognac over tender beef cloaked in a dark sauce made with a 2010 vintage Burgundy from the owner’s nearby estate, served with crisp hand-cut fries and a zucchini and eggplant ratatouille. It’s a luxurious take on the dish, and the escargots added a pleasing element of earthiness. Route de Beaune, Corpeau; aubergeduvieuxvigneron.com The Cozy Charmer The Elder Statesman AUBERGE DE LA MIOTTE Diners looking for a slice of old Burgundy should make their way to this former hunting lodge in the tiny village of Ladoix-Serrigny, set behind an imposing archway and courtyard lined with stacked wine barrels. The restaurant’s atmosphere harks back to another era: Seating is around long communal tables and the floors are large stone slabs. Fully aware that boeuf bourguignon is the type of rustic stew that tastes even better the next day, chef-owner Catherine Maratray cooks hers over the course of two days before serving it with roast potatoes. It’s a hearty, hefty affair, with three huge pieces of beef and coarsely chopped carrots bathed in a rich and deeply flavorful sauce. The expansive wine list, created by her wine-broker boyfriend, has surprising finds and modest markups. 4 rue de la Miotte, Ladoix-Serrigny; ! +33-03-8026-4075 LE CHAMBOLLE On a narrow, winding path in the quaint village of Chambolle-Musigny, Martine and Eric Claudel’s cozy, split-level bistro is the kind of place meant for stumbling upon on a cold, drizzly evening. The large stone fireplace is regularly stoked, and Ms. Claudel singlehandedly greets and serves all the patrons. Mr. Claudel’s boeuf bourguignon adheres to tradition and stars paleron, a French shoulder cut that takes beautifully to braising. “It maintains itself well, and doesn’t disintegrate when cooked,” he explained. Intensely smoky bacon flecks the stew, which is plated around a tumble of noodles. 25 rue Caroline Aigle, Chambolle-Musigny; restaurant-lechambolle.com At Auberge de la Miotte, the stew is cooked over the course of two days. W8 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. MANSION Singapore’s Seaside Hideaway BY SHIBANI MAHTANI F or decades, the island of Sentosa off the southern tip of Singapore wasn’t much more than a tacky tourist trap or a weekend escape for bored residents. Highlights included manmade beaches, a musical fountain, miniature golf and a giant outlet of American fast-food chain A&W. Now, the island is home to some of the most desirable real estate in the world, as billionaires look to park their money in the investment darling of Singapore. By design, that wealth is concentrated in Sentosa Cove, a gated and guarded enclave that the government has designated as the only residential area on Sentosa Island. It’s also the only place in all of Singapore where land and landed private property are open to foreign buyers. Even here, property is acquired on a 99-year leasehold, after which it reverts to the government, meaning that property values are likely to depreciate after a few decades. But that hasn’t seemed to stop many foreign investors from buying holiday homes here. The result: soaring property prices and increasingly extravagant homes. On Sentosa Cove’s prestigious Cove Drive, custom-built homes reflect the residents’ peculiar tastes. One home resembles an ancient Egyptian tomb, its entrances guarded by two life-size statues of pharaoh hounds wearing headdresses. Another is shaped like an approaching sailing vessel, with a wooden prow pro- ADVERTISEMENT Distinctive Properties & Estates UNITED STATES !"#$ %&'()#(&%)* !%"#+(& ,&$)#!#"-$ #_*``:*;;; . /0123 403 563738 02 9:;! 0< =738><>023 . =1?8 =738> @18A6 B2 C72D E1>8F31026 . GHIJ8 />1K738 E0FL7M8 <0> 7 C8M7D7FN3 . ON0>3 E>1K8 30 476 PJ76 ON0II12M " E1212M . Q; C12 30 PI82 PF872* G1>I0>3 " R83 S8238> . C73T>8 U>0I1F7J 472?6F7I12M V>0TMN0T3 . WT863 X0T68 Y S7I3712!6 ZT7>38>6 . [:;; 6\] ^] S0K8>8? /7310 G>87 !"#$%&'()*+,-$./01 234526756888 !"#"$% &'()!"*+ &",*-). &;<<=>? @=AB 9C #;D;EF; G H;I: 1- !"#"$%&' ("))'*+ ", -../010/1123 &4!#'5'/"467%89&:685 INVESTMENT PROPERTIES 212 Acre Pristine Private Island on Tampa Bay, FL Gated Community with Private Bridge includes: Three Spectacular Homes: Approved for 19 more. All for only $25M! Will accept home in trade. Gasperoni International 407-774-9434 !"#$"%&$"'( )*+,(*$"(#!"#"$% &"'()"*%(+# ,('%(*-' .* /0()+12 ,('% 3.40 50.6"0%1 7.)+12 8+## 9:: ;<= ><? :>@ A><> Centre, Getty Images; left, Shibani Mahtani for The Wall Street Journal; below, Reuters Foreigners Flock to Sentosa Cove, Seeking Ritz and Returns; Where to Park the Yacht Clockwise from left: A footbridge links to resorts; a Caribbean-style bungalow with a faux-thatched roof; a bird’s-eye view of Sentosa Cove. truding into the yard. Three more are modeled after tiki huts, with faux thatched roofs. Jasmine Png, a real-estate agent specializing in Sentosa Cove property, says the questions she fields—“Where can I park my yacht?” “Why is there only space for one boat?” “How come there’s no place to park my private jet?”—tell a lot about who is shopping there. In August, Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart, one of the world’s richest women, purchased two units at the Seven Palms condominiums in Sentosa Cove for €14.3 million and €20.7 million, respectively, according to brokers familiar with the deal. Seven Palms, marketed as the only beachfront condo complex on the island, has 41 units, including some with infinity pools overlooking the South China Sea and roof terraces, all enclosed in a coconut grove to ensure privacy. She joins mining tycoon and fellow Australian Nathan Tinkler, who recently took up residence in Singapore and owns a property in the enclave. According to Ms. Png, some potential buyers—particularly newly wealthy shoppers from mainland China—come to showings prepared to make huge down payments in cash. Rich Chinese citizens make up a growing share of the affluent foreigners in Singapore, according to private-wealth consulting firm Wealth-X, which estimates that more than 400 Chinese nationals with net worths exceeding €22 million reside in the small city-state. Across Singapore, property values have risen almost without interruption since mid-2009, with private home prices up 57% as of early January. Singapore attracts foreign investors who see it as one of the world’s most stable markets. This month, the government introduced a new set of measures designed to cool the market, including higher stamp-tax duties for foreign buyers and stricter down-payment requirements. Sentosa, the country’s designated tourist and recreation island, continues to draw middleclass Singaporeans to its public beaches and scenic lookout points, just a short drive away from the city’s port areas. But lately, the island has aimed to position itself as a glamorous waterfront playground and draw tourists with a bit more spending power. The new attractions include a Resorts World casino and a Universal Studios theme park. Sentosa Cove, which was for years a very quiet residential area set off from the rest of touristfriendly Sentosa by multiple guard posts and checkpoints, now has a W Hotel on its premises. A stretch of restaurants and boutiques opened up in December, allowing residents who once complained of long treks to the city center a chance to enjoy gourmet cuisine nearby. For those unwilling to leave their mansions, many of these establishments will provide free delivery, as will the W Hotel’s gourmet restaurants. Sentosa Cove first opened to developers and individual buyers in 2003. The government-linked Sentosa Development Corp., the body responsible for turning the island into something more than a daytrip destination, offered buyers the opportunity to build sprawling estates right by the waterfront and enjoy a marina lifestyle. Many of the early buyers who acquired property in the enclave at €1.2 million to €1.8 million are now cashing in, as bungalows ranging from 650 quare meters to 1,858 square meters fetch anywhere from €11 million to €18.3 million. Foreign buyers continue to covet Singapore property. Even with the introduction of a 10% stamp tax on foreign home buyers, sales of new private homes in Singapore reached a three-year record in September 2012, and prices rose again in the last quarter of the year, prompting an increase in the tax to 15%. Well-off Singaporeans taking advantage of low interest rates to purchase second and third homes as investment also have to pay additional taxes on them. Not everyone has the stomach for Sentosa Cove’s high prices. Real-estate developer Chris Comer, a former Dubai resident who is bringing the Nikki Beach brand of resort clubs to a site in Singapore, chooses to rent a unit at the Oceanfront condos on Sentosa Cove. Though he’s appreciative of the space, privacy and openness of the property, Mr. Comer says he “could never justify” spending the money it would cost to purchase property on Sentosa, worried that it would take a significant hit in value in a downturn, just as Dubai properties did after the height of real-estate exuberance there. For other expatriates, Sentosa Cove encapsulates all the benefits of living in Singapore, including seamless transportation to the business district, sea views and palm-tree-lined walkways, even if it comes at a high cost. Cora Waterhouse, an American who has lived in the Coast condominium complex with her husband since late 2011, says that while Sentosa Cove was designed to guard residents’ privacy, the community has evolved since she moved there, with the grocery store nearby turning the cove “into a village” and neighbors greeting her by name on bike rides along the waterfront. It is easy, she says, to join yoga classes, book clubs or art classes with other residents. Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 | W9 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. GEAR & GADGETS LENS FLAIR Stylish Cinematography for Shutterbugs BY JAMIE EWBANK I t may seem counterintuitive, but there’s a growing belief that the best way to shoot video is on a camera intended for stills. The idea first gained serious traction at the Sundance Film Festival, currently enjoying its 29th edition in Utah. In 2011, the festival’s top prize went to “Like Crazy,” a feature film by Drake Doremus with a $250,000 budget and shot using a Canon EOS 7D—a digital camera that goes for around £1,200 or €1,700. “Like Crazy” went on to sell for $4 million to Paramount. Since then, DSLRs have been used for everything from special-effects shots in summer blockbusters like “Avengers Assemble” to the season finale of Hugh Laurie’s “House.” The secret is in the imaging chip that records the light coming through the lens. We’ve been trained to think that, all things being equal, the pixel count is the most important part of good imaging. But all things are not equal: size matters. A 35mm, 12-megapixel CMOS chip used in a DSLR is larger, and therefore more light-sensitive, than a 1/8inch, 12-megapixel CMOS in a traditional video camera. The great advantage of a more light-sensitive camera is that you can make radical adjustments to the aperture, allowing filmmakers to indulge in what’s become known as “bokeh porn”—shallow depth-of-field shots in which sharply defined subjects are placed against artily smeared backgrounds. Using a DSLR also gives you the option of fitting the lens most suitable to the shot, adjusting the shutter speed for a cinematic flicker and adding an external mike for better dialogue recording. All for a cost far more reasonable than a similarly capable video camera. Canon EOS 7D £1,200/€1,220 Paramount Vantage Improvised indie-flick “Like Crazy” turned DSLR video from a filmmaker’s budget-saver into a serious tool when it won the Grand Jury Prize at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, and the Canon 7D has had a creative cachet ever since. It’s hardly surprising: the camera has full manual control of aperture and shutter speed, an array of recording and output options that match broadcast standards, and audio inputs for an external stereo microphone. Nikon D600 £1,400/€1,600 Panasonic GH2 £820/€850 Although recently superseded by its bigger (and more expensive) brother, the GH3, Panasonic’s GH2 still stands out as a great budget option for filmmaking. It can’t claim any major films or TV shows, but it shows the versatility that makes DSLRs ideal for shooting video: it can be used with a number of Panasonic and Olympus lenses, has a full set of manual controls for fine-tuning your depth of field and shutter speed, and an input so that you can use a dedicated shotgun mike to significantly improve audio recording. Canon EOS 5D MARK III £2,300/€3,000 This king of video-shooting DSLRs has been on the throne for quite some time now, and Canon continues to provide firmware updates to keep it there. The next update will add uncompressed video output, freeing you from memory-card limitations by letting you record to an external hard drive. The 5D records and reproduces plenty of sharp detail and a fine range of tones and contrasts. This camera comes in several flavors, with the MKIII’s timecode support and headphone jack making it particularly suited for video work. While models such as the D5200 have held their own against Canon in the sub-£1,000 market, Nikon hasn’t been able to claim many famous films for these more-expensive models. Despite being the first camera manufacturer to offer an HD-video mode, Nikon hasn’t always been at the cutting edge of this technology. But the recently launched D600 might change all of that. It shoots full-HD footage at a choice of two different bit rates, allowing you to trade card capacity against picture quality. Audio and video outputs allow an entire crew to monitor the quality of the footage—something a solo photographer would never need, but invaluable for filmmakers. W10 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Berlin Kai-Annett Becker ! NOT FORGOTTEN Marking the 80th anniversary of the Nazis’ rise to power on Jan. 30, 1933, the city of Berlin has chosen to remember its painful past throughout 2013 with events and exhibitions centered around the theme “Diversity Destroyed.” Among the 100 projects planned, “From the Collection in Berlin, 1933-1938: Berated, Banned and Burned” will showcase rarely seen works by artists who fell victim to the Nazi Kulturpolitik, like Gottfried Heinersdorff, Rudolf Jacobi, Lou Albert-Lasard and Anne Ratkowski, alongside more widely known pieces by the likes of Max Beckmann, Otto Dix and Raoul Hausmann. Berlinische Galerie Jan. 30-Aug. 12 www.berlinischegalerie.de Otto Freundlich’s ‘Composition’ (1926) Essl ! REALITY VS. REFLECTION Like accidental explorers, the subjects of Martin Schnur’s paintings seem to fall, stumble and open doors into another dimension or reality, which often appears to be just a reflection of the world outside. “Martin Schnur: Vorspiegelung” explores the Austrian artist’s oeuvre with a selection of large and small paintings rendered in a loving level of detail and photo-realistic lighting reminiscent of Surrealist work. Essl Museum Feb. 1-June 9 www.essl.museum Hamburg E.W.K. ! GIACOMETTI AND SPACE Alberto Giacometti’s inventive and influential use of three-dimensional space will be the focus of “Giacometti: The Playing Fields.” Exploring the Swiss artist’s work in the context of sculpture as space, the exhibition reveals the genius behind Giacometti’s vision of life-sized sculptures and his game-board statues. “Projet pour une place,” which was intended to engage viewers in a public location when rebuilt in a larger scale, is accompanied by 249 other pieces, including 120 sculptures and various oil paintings, photographs and drawings from different stages of Giacometti’s career. Hamburger Kunsthalle Until May 19 www.hamburger-kunsthalle.de A sketch sheet with five sculptures by Giacometti (1929-32) From top, The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo/Borre Hostland; The National Gallery, London. Sir Hugh Lane Bequest, 1917 CULTURAL HIGHLIGHTS Karlsruhe ! ART MEETS TECHNOLOGY Otto Piene served as the first fellow of the MIT Center for Advanced Visual Studies, forever seeking correlations and inspiration for his art in science and technology. While best-known for his post-World War II art collective ZERO and work generated by natural elements Mr. Piene has explored the gamut of media, including broadcast television, sculptures and installations. “Energy Fields: In Celebration of Otto Piene’s 85th Birthday” investigates the German artist’s career with 50 works, including inflatable sculptures, ceramics, drawings and paintings. ZKM Until April 1 www.zkm.de London ! LET THERE BE ART In these dark days of winter, an exhibition exploring the visual stimulation of light can only be a good thing. “Light Show” will showcase works by 22 artists, submerging visitors in a variety of colors and techniques, from projections and oversized installations to sculptures of fluorescent lights. Works from the 1960s to the present, by artists such as Olafur Eliasson, Dan Flavin, Jenny Holzer, Anthony McCall and Katie Paterson, will be on display. Hayward Gallery Jan. 30-April 28 www.haywardlightshow.co.uk ! SCHWITTERS IN EXILE When Germany invaded Norway in 1940, Kurt Schwitters fled the Nazis for a second and final time, settling in the U.K. Previously a key figure of early Dadaism and Cubism, the German painter spent the final years of his life cut off from the European avant-garde and immersed in a more personal and organic development of collages and found art. “Schwitters in Britain” showcases 180 collages, assemblages and sculptures from this late stage of his career, revealing works that, though subdued in color and format, inspired some of today’s most influential artists, like Richard Hamilton and Damien Hirst. Tate Britain Jan. 30-May 12 www.tate.org.uk/britain Rotterdam ! SEEKING PEACE IN NATURE Despite his background in the German navy during World War II, the U.N. forces in the Korean War and Doctors without Borders in Cambodia, Thailand and Myanmar, Jan Montyn creates work that avoids depictions of war and conflict. Instead, he explores the natural settings he has encountered on his travels. Working primarily in etchings, the Dutch artist has amassed more than 3,000 works. A selection are on display in “Tolerance without Borders.” Kunsthal Until April 21 www.kunsthal.nl Turin ! A CUBAN REVOLUTIONARY To coincide with the world premiere of “Itali-ana, Mendieta in Rome”, a documentary film on Ana Mendieta’s work during her residence at the American Academy in Rome, the Castello di Rivoli is mounting “Ana Mendieta: She Got Love,” the first large European retrospective dedicated to the Cuban artist. A pioneer in video, performance and body art, Ms. Mendieta has developed a distinct visual language that embraces both a mystical and a political sensitivity. The film will be screened at the museum for the duration of the exhibition. Castello di Rivoli Jan. 30-May 5 www.castellodirivoli.org —Thorsten Gritschke Manet’s Different Strokes BY PAUL LEVY T he installation of the big Manet show opening tomorrow at the Royal Academy is more about crowd control than aesthetics. One vast gallery has only a single picture; not, as you’d expect, the Courtauld’s celebrated version of “Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbe” (1863-68), which hangs (in a pleasant surprise) with other pictures featuring the same female model. Instead, it features the painter’s most crowded image, the National Gallery’s “Music in the Tuileries Gardens” (1862). This will help the traffic movement, as art-loving hordes descend on London to see what the RA says is “the first major exhibition in the United Kingdom devoted to the work of Edouard Manet.” “Manet: Portraying Life” is also claimed to be the first devoted to his portraits. More than 50 paintings, plus pastels and photographs, make it worth anyone’s effort to see. But the selection is puzzling, I think, because the conceptual framework of the show is slippery. Galleries are organized thematically: “The Artist and his Family,” including his wife Suzanne and her illegitimate son, Léon Koëlla Leenhoff; “His Artist Friends,” such as Berthe Morisot and Claude Monet; “His Literary and Theatrical Friends,” Émile Zola, George Moore, Stéphane Mallarmé; “Status Portraits” of Georges Clemenceau and other worthies; and finally a section on the artist’s models. These arbitrary, narrow categories lead to some frustrating omissions. Why not also borrow the Courtauld’s great “A Bar at the Folies-Bergère” (1881-82)—a “genre” picture that seems also to be a portrait? Or the 1867-69 series “The Execution of Emperor Maximilian,” brought together for the National Gallery in 1992 by Howard Hodgkin? As you walk around the sparely hung rooms, you see immediately that Manet’s portraits rarely conformed to 19th-century practice. For one thing, they all have an air of spontaneity and freshness. This is often achieved by a lack of finish: even in the most highly polished, conventional picture here, the 1880 portrait of Antonin Proust, the un- From top, ‘Mme Manet in the Conservatory’ (1879); ‘Music in the Tuileries Gardens’ (1862), both by Edouard Manet. gloved fingers of the left hand are swift strokes, lacking detail. Near it, the figure of Clemenceau (1879-80) is outlined in black and smudged in places. This reflects the paucity of sittings with the great man, but also makes this one of the freest, most impulsive works in the show. The organizers say Manet translated “portrait sitters into actors in his genre paintings.” This seems to me a fudge to explain why many of these paintings of people are not actually portraits. For example, “The Luncheon” (1868) has the boy Léon leaning against a table with wine, coffee, oysters and a spiral of lemon peel. He doesn’t meet your gaze, but is staring at something over the viewer’s right shoulder. There is a sword and some armor incongruously perched on a chair to Léon’s right, along with a black smudge, which is, on inspection, a cat (there are several feline smudges in the current show). Of course, the search for a narrative that explains the image is hopeless, as is trying to explain Manet’s relationship with the sitter. The enigmatic Léon figures in several pictures here. Manet married the child’s mother; but it has even been suggested that his own father sired Léon. Like nearly every work in this show, Manet’s real interest was the brush mark—of the trousers, tablecloth, lemon zest, vase, coffeepot and smudgy cat. Even “The Railway” (1873), with the young woman seated in front of the railings, holding a book and a lap dog and looking out, completely unengaged with the young girl looking through the railings, defies narrative. The economy of the brush strokes that render the dog, the bold swipes of white that constitute the child’s dress, are as much what the picture’s about as, in the depiction of Mallarmé, are the thick gold swooshes that make up the poet’s mustache. Portraits? Splendid as it is, the show would better have been called “Manet’s People and Brushstrokes.” Until April 14 www.royalacademy.org.uk DON’T MISS LONDON: David Hare’s “The Judas Kiss” includes a truly great performance from Rupert Everett (whose recent memoir, “Vanished Years,” is a hoot) as the twice-betrayed Oscar Wilde. He and Cal MacAninch (as loyal Robbie Ross) keep their clothes on throughout, unlike Freddie Fox, who bares all as Bosie. —Paul Levy Duke of York’s Theatre, until April 6 www.thejudaskiss.co.uk Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 | W11 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. GEAR & GADGETS Icons of the Road and Racetrack [ Collecting ] BY MARGARET STUDER Eye-catching rare cars, motorbikes and even a famous plane will be up for sale in Paris next month, during the Retromobile classic and vintage motoring fair (Feb. 6-10). Bonhams will hold its sale at the Grand Palais on Feb. 7. Artcurial will follow a day later at the Porte de Versailles, the fair’s venue. Last year was a bumper year for auctions of rare cars, says James Knight, who heads Bonhams’s motoring department. Bonhams set an auction record for a Bentley in 2012, when a model from 1929-31 sold for £5.04 million (€6 million); and for a Rolls-Royce limousine from 1912, which went for £4.71 million. Mr. Knight expects prices to remain high in 2013, underpinned by demand from Europe and North America. Unlike many areas of the collecting market, he says, collectors in emerging markets have played a small role so far, as they prefer new models. Artcurial’s sale will be led by a Talbot T150C from 1936, valued at €1.2 million-€1.6 million. The car shone in endurance races, participating in the Le Mans 24 Hour Race three times. And a wonderfully glamorous 1962 Ferrari 250 Cabriolet is estimated at €550,000-€850,000. €2.5-€3.5 million €150,000 !This 1929 de Havilland Gipsy Moth was flown by Robert Redford in the Oscar-winning 1985 film “Out of Africa.” The legendary biplane is being sold by Bonhams. “It is exhilarating to fly in and it is one of the most collectible prewar planes,” Mr. Knight says. "The star lot in Bonhams’s sale, this Bugatti type 54 was raced by famed Italian driver Achille Varzi at the Monza Grand Prix in 1931. Varzi initially led the field in heats, but two burst tires left him in third place in the final result. €800,000€1 million €20,000€35,000 !This 1938 Bugatti type 57 C coupe, on sale at Bonhams, features coachwork designed by Jean Bugatti, son of company founder Ettore Bugatti. !A 1911 Type 48 open-drive opera coupe by Delahaye of France, on sale at Bonhams. Artcurial’s sale includes this 1929 Model J convertible by American luxury-car maker Duesenberg. The Model J was a hit with movie stars and royalty throughout the 1920s and ’30s.# !Among the motorbikes in Bonhams’s sale is this 50cc racing model by Italian maker Garelli. Two of this same model set eight world records at Monza in 1963, including one that has yet to be broken. It features a second set of footrests extending back toward the rear wheel, which allowed riders to maintain a more aerodynamic position. €850,000€1.1 million Bonhams (5); Artcurial (Duesenberg) €50,000€75,000 W12 | Friday - Sunday, January 25 - 27, 2013 TO BREAK THE RULES, YOU MUST FIRST MASTER THEM. THE GRANDE COMPLICATION IS THE ULTIMATE EXPRESSION OF THE WATCHMAKER’S ART. NOW AUDEMARS PIGUET PLACES THIS SUPREME HOROLOGICAL COMPLICATION IN THE SCULPTURAL ROYAL OAK OFFSHORE. ONE WATCHMAKER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR EACH WATCH IN ITS ENTIRETY – THE 648 INDIVIDUAL PARTS, THE DETAILED ASSEMBLY, THE FINE DECORATION. TO ACHIEVE THIS, THEY HAVE MASTERED THE UNIVERSE OF THEIR CRAFT. FINALLY, THEY MUST TUNE THE CONCENTRIC CHIMES OF THE MINUTE REPEATER TO AN INTERVAL OF A PERFECT MINOR THIRD. TECHNICAL MASTERY AND THE EAR OF A CONCERT SOLOIST. THE VIRTUOSO HERITAGE OF LE BRASSUS. ROYAL OAK OFFSHORE GRANDE COMPLICATION IN TITANIUM AND CERAMIC. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.