An Ode to Enya
Is she sleepy or slept on? A deep-dive into the work of the New Age singer-composer reveals a better understanding of her impact—and my dad’s taste?
Is she sleepy or slept on? A deep-dive into the work of the New Age singer-composer reveals a better understanding of her impact—and my dad’s taste?
While other kids were greeted after school with snacks and maybe a “How was your day, honey?” Growing up, coming home for me meant being greeted by Enya. My dad loved her music, and the dramatic “Sail away, sail away, sail away…” of “Orinoco Flow” reverberated throughout the house whenever he played it, which in my memory is always.
As a ten-or-so-year-old, I was cognizant enough to recognize that it was definitely a vibe—one that as I got older, became increasingly embarrassing, especially when I had friends over. As an adult, though, I’ve come to appreciate Enya. Of course, she has endless records, accolades, and fans. But after rediscovering her music in a moment of nostalgia—and then falling down a Wikipedia rabbit hole—I feel a personal responsibility to encourage everyone out there to do the same. Not only is “Orinoco Flow” still a banger, Enya herself is also an incredible-sounding person.
Born Eithne Pádraigín Ní Bhraonáin, Enya is so Irish, she actually spoke Gaelic growing up in the mythical-sounding region of Gweedore, which is located at the northernmost tip of the island. (My family recently traveled to Scotland, so maybe that got me in the mood.) The sixth of nine children, she joined her family band, Clannad, in 1980, when she was still a teenager. After just two years, she decided to go out on her own to pursue a solo career, selling her saxophone and offering piano lessons to make money in the early days.
Despite her shyness, Enya managed to work her way up relatively quickly in the music business. In 1987, she appeared on Sinéad O’Connor’s debut album The Lion and the Cobra. And the following year, her debut album, Watermark, became an unexpected hit with the help of “Orinoco Flow,” which was the last song she wrote while working on it.
Enya, the musician, is best known for her otherworldly voice and sound, which has been categorized as “new age.” But the more I’ve read about the woman I grew up with, the more interested I am in her as an artist who contains multitudes. Did you know, for example, that she loves Breaking Bad, lives in a Victorian castle next door to Bono—her house is reportedly bigger—with huge security gates and a safe room to protect her from stalkers, and that she listens to everyone from Taylor Swift to Green Day, to the artist formerly known as P Diddy? Now 62, Enya also made the conscious decision to remain unmarried and without children back when doing so was considered more radical. “I’m not a recluse; I’m working,” she once said. She reportedly only checks her email every few weeks.
Other cool things about Enya I didn’t know: she wrote and performed two tracks for the soundtrack of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, after being asked directly by Peter Jackson himself. (Her work won her an Oscar.) And her songs have also gotten us through some tough times. Her single, “Only Time” was all over radio and television broadcasts following September 11th. She also writes Christmas songs, which I am currently listening to on repeat.
I’m not the only one who’s a new fan. She may not leave the privacy of her castle often, but Enya has managed to remain culturally relevant after all these years. “Every time I tell people this, they think I’m kidding, but I love Enya,” Nicki Minaj told Stephen Colbert in 2018. “I listen to her the most out of everyone. It’s so peaceful and it helps me with harmonies. […] I would love to meet her.”
On TikTok, Enya has also recently inspired #enyacore, which is a medieval-looking, LOTR-coded, Celtic-inspired aesthetic with a close relative in #whimsigothic. Meaning: lots of long, velvet dresses, candles, and interior design fit for a castle. Although this isn’t exactly the way Enya herself dresses, she does have great taste. She reportedly decorated her home herself, and seems to have a good eye for what colors and silhouettes flatter her petite frame, dark hair, and porcelain skin, namely flowy goddess dresses and powerful long coats.
“I’ve been told I have a cross-generational appeal,” she said in 2015, “and that people who used to like ‘Orinoco Flow’ are now playing my music to their children. I’ve been very lucky.”
I happen to be one of those children, and I’m sure I’m not alone. My dad passed away when I was 11, so my memories of him are inextricably tied to “Orinoco Flow.” Her music is transportive: “Sail away, sail away, sail away…” So when I listen to it, it brings me back to that time with him, and in turn, brings him back to me.
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As a child in Montréal, Gab Bois gazed into a postcard of The Birth of Venus hanging in her bedroom and dreamed of Botticelli’s inner world. In the kitchen, she watched her father carve butterflies out of cheddar cheese with a pocketknife. Since then, carbs, grass, and soaps have become still-life sculptures enshrined in photographs. If you can eat it, Bois has likely designed it into something else, somewhere else to dive into.
The Watermill Center's Annual Summer Benefit this past weekend celebrated 100 years of its legendary building and experimental choreographer and dancer Lucinda Childs.
Jen DeLuna paints vintage, nude photographs of women in a new light. Her debut solo exhibition at Storage in New York positions the artist as one to watch.
Scottish painter Andrew Cranston revisits his home of nearly 30 years in a new series of haunting works at Karma in Los Angeles.
Two Turkish curators invited artists to turn Greece’s most unexpected destination into a historical wonderland filled with contemporary art.
In Santa Fe, Teresita Fernández juxtaposes her layered practice with works from the late artist Robert Smithson, as well as a third, liminal space that emerges between.
vanessa german’s new sculptures are artifacts of a cosmic pursuit of being. “What if site-specificity was a type of love?” the artist asks. The answer is in the material.
“Night Market” at Christie’s New York meditates on rituals tied to community and identity with works by 34 intergenerational artists of Asian and Pacific Islander descent.
Antwaun Sargent’s new two-part exhibition, “Social Abstraction,” which opens at Gagosian Beverly Hills tomorrow, unearths a deeper social context within Black abstraction.
For Gordon Parks’ posthumous debut at Pace Los Angeles, Kimberly Drew has culled images from the photographer’s paradigm-shifting archives that capture humanity in the face of a historically discriminatory American South.
A sprawling group show at Louise Alexander Gallery in Porto Cervo, Italy, explores themes of beauty through lush visuals and ambiguous narratives.
Nothing says summer in New York like a slew of July group shows before galleries shut their doors for August and everyone juts off to somewhere cool or coastal to escape the heat.
Wendy Red Star’s exhibition at Roberts Projects is the artist’s first in Los Angeles in nearly two decades. It’s underscored by a trio of other projects across the globe.
Cassandra Mayela Allen’s large-scale textile works reinvigorate material and memory. At Olympia Gallery in New York, the artist considers the fragmented immigrant experience.
In upstate New York, a weekend of performance launches Art Omi’s summer season, which features immersive exhibitions by Kiyan Williams and Riley Hooker.
As the natural world rapidly transforms due to anthropogenic impact, Cooking Sections have developed an approach that fuses art and research to imagine sustainable consumption. They call it “climavore.”
Alexandra Bachzetsis communicates the frenetic energy of her personal transformation in the New York debut of her exhibition and performance “Notebook.”
Barry X Ball has been breaking rules since leaving behind his Christian fundamentalist upbringing to become a sculptor. When he discovered robotics, he never looked back, he tells artist and thinker Hamzat Incorporated.
Amanda Wall transforms her own likeness into poetic landscapes that undulate existential and temporal for her debut solo exhibition in New York at Almine Rech.
Calida Rawles' debut solo museum exhibition in the U.S. celebrates the rich heritage and culture of Miami’s historically Black neighborhood, Overtown.
Ed Baynard’s evocative, never-before-seen drawings from a summer in Fire Island are on view at James Fuentes in New York.
After birthing her creations atop 200-plus stages and in non-traditional sites around the world, multidisciplinary artist Pat Oleszko returns to a New York white cube for the first time since the ‘90s.
Maria Arena Bell is named chair of the LA28 Cultural Olympiad.
Curator extraordinaire Hans Ulrich Obrist’s favorite object is a miniature world of wonders he’s dubbed the Nanomuseum. At two inches in length and three inches wide, it has followed the Serpentine Galleries' artistic director around the world for the past three decades, carrying the works of artists from Yoko Ono to Chris Marker to Jonas Mekas on any given day.
David Medalla’s posthumous retrospective at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles illuminates his pioneering career.
The Italian artist’s landmark solo show at Gagosian in New York City highlights his knack for infusing humor and irreverence into immersive spaces.
Music, mental health, and machines! In Arkansas, recording music artist Jewel's life-long interests culminate in an immersive exhibition at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
In Paris, Lily Stockman follows Le Corbusier’s designs to cosmic ends inside the late Swiss-French architect’s Maison La Roche.
In Los Angeles, punk-rock artist Kim Gordon revisits her running Design Office trope as she explores living and work spaces through two video pieces, wherein private life bleeds into public persona.
The masterful abstractionist’s collaboration with BMW coincides with her exhilarating career survey at Palazzo Grassi in Venice.
The New Jersey-born, New York-based artist knows a thing or two about love. Her new exhibition this spring at the Broad in Los Angeles is an intimate ode to her community, female empowerment, Black liberation, and queer identity that spans the last two decades of her practice.
A new exhibition featuring work from every artist on the gallery’s 80-plus roster brings its LA outpost headcount to three.
At P.P.O.W in New York, Pat Philips’ dreamlike compositions and eerie juxtapositions meditate on race and class disparities in America.
Palestinian-American artist Jordan Nassar’s motherland is always on his mind. At Anat Ebgi in Los Angeles, landscapes and motifs materialize in intricate embroidery and mosaic tiles.
Across his six-decade-long career, Bruce Nauman has depicted and pushed the boundaries of the human condition. In Hong Kong, a new major survey features a career-spanning selection of his works at Tai Kwun gallery.
Twelve newly created works by 12 intersectional creatives unfold in a mosaic that transcends borders, cultures, and social norms.
In Alex Prager’s latest solo exhibition at Lehmann Maupin Seoul, the Los Angeles-based artist and filmmaker considers the rise of technology and the state of humanity today.
Chantal Joffe’s first solo show in New York since 2017 marks a seismic shift in the renowned British-American artist’s oeuvre.
For Nikita Gale, the arena is an archaeological site that reflects deeper truths about human nature and the desire to dominate. At Petzel in New York, stadiums are broken open and exposed under the artist’s critical and curious eye.
In a Venetian chapel, Wallace Chan’s titanium faces ooze with echoes.
Ming Smith has carried a camera with her for most of her life. Her New York exhibition at Nicola Vassell delves into her expansive archive with never-before-seen works from her early years.
Palestinian artist Yazan Abu Salame uses a variety of materials—and a background in construction—to explore the psychology of separation.
Since the 1960s, the Palestinian artist has made art that is personal and inevitably political.
Trailblazing artist Judy Chicago opens up about her New Museum retrospective and her 60-year-career built on taking up space.
Samantha Ronson has a love-hate relationship with her shoes that she can’t take off.
Vegetables with Paul McCartney, eggs with Lady Gaga, and kimchi alone: Mark Ronson offers a glimpse into his music-filled life to sister and fellow DJ Samantha Ronson.
This year I choose as much love as possible for Valentine’s Day. And Sugar.
Samantha Ronson has endured the crazy, so you don’t have to.
After a life of cocktails and take-out, the DJ-musician has found a new relationship with food. And it’s f*cking delicious, as she writes in her new column for Family Style.
Months of coastal daydreams give way to the real thing. Salty, wet, and sun-drenched, there is something in the air. Surfers kick up sand, and sunbathers line the shore halfway between Rome and Naples. Days simmer into nights. A single moment rolls into the next, until the air begins to chill. The words on everyone’s lips: A l’estate prossima.
Shoulder-high grass shoots up from the rocky crag, hinting at treasures within. Push forward, duck under, dip into the creek below. Emerge with traces, mud-flecked and reborn.
Beneath the ribbons and tulle of Simone Rocha’s romance-drenched designs is a wink to the inverse. Organic and man-made, escapism and realism: Her dreamy creations offer a new way of seeing the world around us.
In Japan, much is communicated in silence, subtle shifts that flicker across the face. Actor Kiko Mizuhara and Internet sensation Kemio, both of who were born in the country, found their voices when they chose to live outside of it.
In a time of endless temptations, holiday gratification can come as instantaneous as you'd like—as captured here entirely via iPhone 16.
Jil Sander’s career-spanning monograph is a window into the designer as a person as well as her eponymous label. The throughline? A singular aesthetic framed by a meticulous attention to detail and an optimism in design.
Issey Miyake brings its textures to an iconic architectural space.
Preserved in his London flat, Alexander Fury’s sprawling archive of rare, haute couture would elicit awe from any fashion connoisseur. Rightly so, the fashion critic is still obsessed with each and every piece.
In Paris, Daria Strokous searches for wonder, magic in spite of the changing seasons.
We dress to be everywhere all at once. Tokens of our day accumulate in our arms as we zig and zag from Marseille to Milan. The night’s accessories stacked over the morning’s sweater. Sunglasses, a notepad, a charger, spare change, a pen. They all spill out of bags and into arms, a juggling routine, a dance. To stop would throw off the rhythm, so we keep going at full speed.
Rick Owens and Moncler imagine off-the-grid lodging and looks fit for a futuristic tundra-scape.
The late French sculptor César inspired Tiffany’s new homeware collection, which features playful “broken plates,” gold-plated flatware, and melting candle holders.
Dior’s first ever North American storefront devoted to fragrance and beauty offers an opulent display of products, make-up and scent consultations, and gift sets.
We revel in shapes that cast shadows with our bodies, angular and strong. Metamorphically, these fabrics realize our fantasies and dreams into otherworldly sizes and forms. Materials billow up and build around us. Soon enough, we become monuments of our own.
Clothing and home brands Auralee and Tekla release a collection inspired by Nordic and Japanese bathing cultures.
Prada and Axiom Space designed a sleek spacesuit to be worn by NASA astronauts on their mission to the moon, marking mankind’s first voyage in over 50 years.
She arrives at midnight in six-inch heels, floating on a cloud of oud. Aura metallic. Whispers hum around her like a force field: She says she comes from Saturn. Wet skin, lips. Icy eyes, slicked hair, stacked hoops. There is no other option but to believe her.
At the helm of Issey Miyake, Satoshi Kondo translates the ineffable quality of a cloth—the spaces it fills and forms between the body—into thoughtful garments.
Run your fingers along your clothes and let intuition guide you. Dress and go north until the cityscape disappears and green takes over. If you can’t leave, go within yourself and plant a tree. Wait for it to grow. Climb its branches and look out at the horizon until you’re one with it.
Haider Ackermann has earned the luxury of reflection. Now, the designer known for inspiring desire is surer than ever in the resonance of his own voice.
Clothes shrink and disappear under the unforgiving, white-hot summer sun. But for the whimsical and inspired, the bone-dry heat is no match for the fantasy of getting dolled up. Wools, gowns, hats, tinsel, and sequins are, after all, a glamorous barrier against sunburn—and when the Mediterranean breeze rolls into the eastern coast, they rustle, billow, and glisten to the rhythm of castanets in the distance.
The fashion creations of Torishéju Dumi reveal equal parts distortion and elegance, inspired at once by Nigerian mysticism and a myriad of familial anecdotes.
Not too long ago, style was truly personal. Outfits offered a safe and temporal space to experiment with identity, says Stefano Tonchi. Clothes faded back into the closet after the day was finished, sans digital footprint.
Daniel Lee tapped artist Gary Hume to resurrect his work from the ‘90s for Burberry’s Spring/Summer 2025 show at London’s National Theatre.
Captured by many but only really known by a few, Carolyn Murphy has conquered ubiquity while preserving the sanctity of mystery. But who is the fashion chameleon when she steps back from the glaring spotlight? As the legendary model confides to long-time collaborator Michael Kors: whoever she wants to be.
After a captivating runway show at the Guggenheim, the house announced an exclusive New York City capsule collection.
Prada’s Fall/Winter 2024 campaign has a hotline—call it and the artist, writer, actor, and filmmaker’s voice will answer.
Fleshy eggplant, a recovered Rolex, and the breadcrumbs of a forgotten night—what goes bump by the light of the moon often surprises when revealed the morning after.
Channeling its iconic house codes, Chanel’s new product—at once a necklace, watch, and pair of headphones—is the city dweller’s new Swiss Army knife.
Issey Miyake Homme Plissé releases the first wave of items from its new collection with Ronan Bouroullec, a harmonious blend of billowy silhouettes and gestural strokes.
Balenciaga's new collaboration with Apple allows users to imagine its clothes through spatial computing technology.
Cult grocer Erewhon dips its toe into footwear with a new collaboration with UGG.
We realize the magic of making something out of nothing when we’re young. Tire swings spiral beneath large oak trees, and scraps of fabric and jewel-toned yarn billow into ready-made couture gowns. As time passes by and materials fade into well-worn memories, this world-building persists, appearing when and where we least expect it.
The fashion house’s everyday approach to luxury spills out into fragrances that can be lathered on, spritzed atop, bathed in—or all of the above.
Mass produced or hand crafted, decorative or practical, an object always has a subliminal use. Pens to write, clothes to wear, books to read. We see a shape and innately know what to do with it. But what if we didn’t? What if, for a moment, we willed ourselves to forget—and instead of utility, we saw limitless possibility?
Inspired by their dual practices in observance—of shapes, of textures, of objects—Andrés Jaña and Javier Irigoyen examine the temporality of objects and the rhythms and expressions they reveal when given the space to be.
Prized possessions do not arrive often, but when they do, they stay long, inhabiting the warm corners of our lives. These are the materials that distinguish our environments, the poetic flairs that find their way into descriptions of our personhood. She makes her coffee at home, eats an egg from a silver cup, pins her singular style on shoes and bags, and treasures the tangible: well-crafted silverware, china, objects for memories to coalesce.
Inspired by the opulence and glamor of New York’s freewheeling ‘70s, the Chloé’s Spring/Summer 2025 collection channels both the muse and the maker.
Paloma Elsesser is an everywoman in a monomyth. The supermodel has spent her hot ascent to fame atop a pedestal built, in many ways, to reduce its subject to material matter. Her resilience and humanity pervades. This fascination with the charged nature of physicality reverberates in the work of Ser Serpas, the artist who choreographs found objects into animated, poetic, and dystopian scenes.
The house reopened its Washington, D.C. location last week with designs inspired by Gabrielle Chanel’s Paris home and the founder’s love of the arts
Banana Republic’s 2024 Summer collection is rooted in optimistic escapism. Starring American model Taylor Hill, the brand’s latest campaign transports to sun-splashed spots in Mérida, Mexico.
An exhibition on the legendary French fashion designer in Lacoste, France explores his relationship to the world of cinema.
An elemental gift guide to celebrate the maternal force in your life.
During any other ski season, Axel de Beaufort, Véronique Nichanian, and Christophe Goineau might find themselves independently gliding down the fluffy runs of the Swiss Alps. But this past winter, the three Hermès creatives headed west to Aspen, Colorado.
The finalists of this year’s LVMH prize include a diverse range of emerging designers united by sustainability, ethical practices, and an emphasis on womenswear.
Precious metals shimmer as hands dance across a long wooden dining room table to embrace, pass plates, raise toasts, emote. A familiar symphony of family heirlooms, tokens of love, and pendants of personal eccentricities clink and rattle as some float in and others assume their seats at the table.
Parisian label in the making, Zomer proves that good things still come to those who wait—and friendships really can last forever.
Little blue boxes have always accented Lauren Santo Domingo’s life. But as she settles into her new role at Tiffany & Co., she’s gathered new memories from its storied archives.
Maty Fall Diba and Ajok Daing remind us what true friendship looks like.
Lafayette 148’s new capsule collection with Claire Khodara and Grace Fuller Marroquin commemorates the life and legacy of their artist mother, Martha Madigan.
Almost six decades after its original release, a French New Wave classic is recreated in a new short film for Chanel. Directed by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, the tribute brings together Penélope Cruz and Brad Pitt on screen for the very first time.
In its first foray outside of Paris, the luxury fashion house opens its first flagship store on New Bond Street. The three-story boutique blends fine art and haute couture.
After two years of renovation, the French fashion house reopens its Highland Park Village doors with an intimate and object-filled foray into its history that is firmly rooted in the present.
The hidden meanings and influences behind Simone Rocha’s awe-inspiring designs are explored in-depth for the first time in a new book set to be published in September of this year.
Unlimited carnival rides, a performance by Lil Wayne, and hot dogs and champagne. The Double Club took LA on a wild ride.
From the films of David Lynch to the music of Nina Simone, the late American composer Angelo Badalamenti’s haunting compositions left an indelible mark. Now this fashion house is underscoring his legacy.
Gucci’s new SoHo outpost is more than just a beautiful boutique. The over 10,000-square-foot-space doubles as an art gallery with works by Alghiero Boetti and Sasha Stiles in a program curated by Truls Blaasmo.
Style.com was ahead of its time, bringing some closer to the runway—and others to one another—more than ever before. For Family Style's debut print issue, several editors from the legendary digital platform reunited for brunch at Paris’ gilded Cheval Blanc to reminisce about their glory days of street style, cutthroat story turnarounds, and changing the world.
“The New Village: Ten Years of New York Fashion'' at Pratt Manhattan Gallery makes the case that the city’s D.I.Y. sensibilities still pack a punch in a sartorial group show that fuses art and design.
The seventy-nine-year-old Japanese menswear icon’s closet is influenced by the changing landscape.
Amongst the treasures of Love House's new NYC design gallery, Family Style found beauty, inspiration, and even obsession for Valentine's Day. Can you blame us?
Why are so many culinary creatives covered in tattoos? Family Style met with six beautiful New Yorkers making beautiful food and beverages and stripped them down to find out more.
Peter Do and Trisha Do grew up near each other in Vietnam, but the pair didn’t become friends until meeting each other across the world, where they bonded over their shared experiences and cooking as an expression of love.
After a year’s-worth of wants, wonts, and will-I-evers, it’s finally time for the main event of the season: gifts. Take Family Style's inaugural holiday tasting menu, which spans fashion, accessories, and trophies for the home, less as an ordained prescription and more of a cherished collection of desires; many of which will surely bring a smile to a loved one’s face as well as your own, of course.
At the climax of Art Basel Miami Beach, Whitney Mallett takes a dip into local legend Dalé Zine.
Trick-or-treating at Climax Books’ New York expansion reveals a vault of goth obscurities and witchy reads.
In her new Family Style column, Whitney Mallett investigates the prep power of Buck Ellison's art book—making sense of Brandy Melville and American exclusion trending in an election year.
Alexander Fury’s favorite dishes are those made by his boyfriend with love, like pasta bolognese.
Jacq Harriet made beetroot hummus for her now-boyfriend on their second date—safe to say it passed the test.
Delia Cai offers some of her own family tradition with a family dumpling recipe from the garden.
As a kid, Mustafa Yanaz ate this late-night snack with his cousins during the holidays.
Chris Black’s favorite snack is an oven-free, pantry staple.
Like Emma Stern’s hot girl avatars, the devil is in the details of her six-minute egg recipe.
Chloe Grace Press shares her favorite drink, an extra dirty martini.
For this New York-based stylist, a taste of rural life is only a subway ride away.
London-based visual artist Ana Viktoria Dzinic understands the beauty of short-but-sweet content—and snacks.
Max Berlinger’s thoughtful Mediterranean dish is best enjoyed shared with a loved one.
Jacques Pépin has toured the world, working in the most elite kitchens and sharing his expertise across classrooms, on T.V., and beyond. Now, from his picturesque Connecticut oasis, the chef-painter tells fellow food connoisseur Padma Lakshmi how the journey has shaped him, one menu at a time.
Anthony Akinbola’s tried-and-true recipe for this comforting Nigerian staple brings the artist home.
Chloe Wise’s mouth-watering sourdough focaccia is art you can eat.
Michael Musto’s lasagna recipe is true to his New York roots.
A life off the grid was fated for Iliana Regan, who grew up foraging in the woods. To master their craft, the chef extraordinaire worked their way through high-end kitchens in the Midwest’s biggest city before retreating back into the wilderness to build something all their own.
The photographer's go-to Japanese favorite is easy and delicious.
Photographer Kristin-Lee Moolman shares a recipe for a marmalade with a twist.
Meriam Benani shares a special recipe where the art is in the arrangement.
Amy Verner writes about fashion, lifestyle and culture––but she dreams of omelets.
Throughout his journeys taking photographs in the South, Brad Ogbonna picked up recipes like this spicy sausage and clam pasta dish.
Travis Diehl gives his take on an appetizer with a household name.
For Jessica Diehl, there are never enough hours in the day. It is only natural that her take on this french classic is as easy as it is nourishing.
Shawn Lakin set out to become a stylist early on. She figured it out perfectly––along with some potato latkes.
Spanish photographer Pia Riverola offers a cool appetizer for hot weather––a blend of the senses much like her dreamlike photographs.
Katerina Jebb shares her homemade recipe for a zesty salad dressing.
As a private chef in the Hamptons, Meredith Hayden achieved the American Dream. Now that she’s broken out of its pearly white gates, where is she going next?
Upstairs from Daniel Humm’s grandiose three-starred Eleven Madison Park, a new space offers a more intimate atmosphere alongside a selection of world-class art.
Jason Okundaye shares his home-cooked mushroom soup, perfect for fall.
Max Farago’s slow-cooked recipe comes from Argentina, tasted and perfected on family trips to his wife’s hometown of Buenos Aires.
Photographer Indigo Lewin shares her fried polenta, eggs, and sage recipe, because everyone can make eggs.
This Bundt Cake is from another century—and marriage
When it comes to the photographer’s favorite main dish, mackerel is the perfect add-on.
Multi-media artist Daniel Turner doesn’t do frills––at work or at breakfast.
Torishéju Dumi feels her mum's influence everywhere, including the kitchen.
Terence Koh perfected his fiery tomato salad during a BOFFO residency last summer.
For chef Chinchakriya Un, food is a medium for preserving memories of Cambodia, its history, its culture, and its flavor. For a collaboration with New Inc.’s Creative Science Dinner, she brought it all to the table, as she shares with the organization's director Salome Asega.
Writer Laura Rysman moved to Italy nearly two decades ago—and it wasn’t long before the country won her heart and her stomach.
Geoffrey Mak shares a recipe for spicy, minced pork that he perfected over the year he spent living with his parents.
Laura May Todd shares a family recipe for pasta sauce—uncomplicated and warm.
Sonia Szóstak takes photos that are otherworldly, but this pasta brings her back to Earth.
The fashion writer opts for a simple and elegant rice dish. The twist? A splash of lemon.
Lotus Kang shares her two-part recipe for gosari namul, or stir-fried fernbrake.
Photographer Jack Bool makes his macaroni and cheese with a sweet and spicy twist.
Frederica Simoni shares her precise cherry-pitting method for the perfect pickled fruit.
In New York, Russell Steinberg is bringing fresh energy to the locale in a deeply personal vision in the form of new restaurant Cecilia on Saint Marks.
Innovative and extreme, Family Style's Fall 2024 issue guest chef Laila Gohar has never been one to stop short of her imagination—just ask the thousands that stare in awe at her larger-than-life food installations.
Aileen Kwun shares her mother’s nourishing and adaptable Korean rice dish.
Elisabeth Toll shares her classic Lent recipe for cardamom buns.
Pop-ups are a dime a dozen in New York, the food capital of the world with the least patience. So what happens when The Polo Bar, one of the most difficult restaurants to get a table at, temporarily exits the city? Magic.
The London-based photographer shares fail-proof instructions for classic toast.
Reserved for special occasions, Toby Coulson shares his recipe for a berry-topped sponge cake.
Stylist Ben Schofield shares a simple yet nourishing dish.
The fashion photographer captures the essence of home in this Mexican-inspired familial dish.
The LA-based photographer and director is inspired by the aromas of his mother’s cooking.
Stylist Daniel Gaines turns to this nostalgic recipe as an easy-to-make dessert when entertaining at home.
The writer presents a crowd-pleasing potato dish that is perfect for year-round enjoyment.
The writer’s take on a traditional French staple is both innovative and nostalgic.
What comes first, cereal or milk? The sculptor and thinker’s answer flips the script.
Downtown Manhattan’s beloved Claud celebrates its two-year-anniversary with a decorative spin on its foodie-favorite devil's food cake.
Faran Krentcil’s cross-continental pasta is inspired by late-night Fashion Week delirium.
Kyle MacLachlan has specific rules when it comes to roasting his cruciferous of choice.
Virginie Benarroch shares her simplified take on a chocolate mousse.
A nostalgic blend of family traditions and whimsy inspires the work the artist makes as well as the meals she cooks.
The New York-based photographer taps into his French roots with his father’s classic combination of french bread and jam.
Actress and writer Annie Hamilton shares her no-nonsense, on-the-go breakfast routine.
Three decades after Thomas Keller reinvigorated The French Laundry in Napa, California, the eatery still remains one of the best in the world. Michael Minnillo, the restaurant's oldest employee turned general manager, explains why.
The stylist’s version of this simple yet refined main course is a crowd-pleaser.
This flavorful recipe originally from Wolfgang Puck has become a staple in the Los Angeles-based artist’s kitchen.
The high profile Danish architect Bjarke Ingels prefers a classic New York dessert, chocolate cake from the River Cafe.
At Matilda in Upstate, New York, Jeremiah Stone and Fabian von Hauske find room to breathe—and crisp potatoes.
In San Francisco, Veuve Clicquot and Dominique Crenn’s flower child of a dinner party sets the stage for the Champagne maison’s latest vintage.
New York-based artist Ser Serpas shares a taste of her hometown staple, made with love by her grandmother
When the London-based photographer is hungry for a taste of home, she turns to her parents’ handwritten instructions for this rustic pastry.
Little time and less ingredients creates culinary pressure—and inspiration?
A refreshing vegan dish keeps the New York-based photographer connected to her California roots.
A new restaurant opens inside Bergdorf Goodman in collaboration with porcelain maison Ginori 1735.
In the heart of Portland, Oregon, where the culinary scene is as eclectic as the city itself, Gregory Gourdet interweaves centuries of history with his own memories. For Family Style No. 1, the James Beard Award-winning chef has imagined a unique three-course menu that is as powerful as it is personal.
David Eardley’s grandmother has influenced his taste from design to cocktails.
Peter Pan’s old fashioned Frankenstein is sensational without shock value.
The Berlin-based writer shares a recipe for burbur injun, or black rice pudding, that was passed down to her during her time in Ubud, Bali.
Photographer François Coquerel returns to a modest yet nostalgic classic: instant noodle soup.
Khushbu Shah's debut cookbook is the only convincing you need to stay inside this summer and try your hand at Indian American delicacies.
The legendary Italian designer lived his life with an irreverence for rigid rules. Like his iconic designs, this recipe is anything but ordinary.
The story behind the writer’s go-to financier cake recipe includes a Parisian neighbor and a psychic.
A reverence design shines through everything the curator and author touches, including his preferred plate.
At Saffy’s in Los Angeles, go with the flow—and order extra flatbread.
The New York-based writer shares her great-grandmother’s recipe for this fragrant comfort food.
The architect and founder of Counterspace shares her childhood memories of hours spent folding sculptural pastry.
A noncommittal referral and blocks of over-appealing options in Galway, Ireland left vacationer Ella Quittner wondering if Daróg should be the first of three dinners. But the boutique wine bar changed her mind.
Francis Mallmann has lived many lives. He’s pioneered open-fire cooking, built his own restaurants from the ground up—plus a museum—and even picked up embroidery. Through it all, Family Style's Summer 2024 guest chef has learned lessons that make life a little sweeter.
A delicious Filipino pop-up at New York’s WSA building brought together artists, performers, and lechon-enthusiasts.
When the Brooklyn-based writer is craving something sweet but easy to make, she whips up her mother’s recipe for chocolate pudding.
The New York-based artist shares a recipe for the classic Nigerian dish: ogbono soup.
Nothing is as good as the original but New York’s three best Japanese egg sandos are as close to home as they get.
The New York-based photographer shares his family’s spin on sancocho, a classic Latin American and Caribbean dish of his childhood.
The New York-based photographer pays tribute to her grandmother with this delicious Czech dish.
Add this not-so-known Sicilian trattoria to your Italian vacation itinerary.
Alain Ducasse began quietly leading a plant-based revolution in the late ’80s, and has continued to experiment with vegetable-forward haute cuisine since. It’s an appetite to better the world that he shares with Daniel Humm, whose creative culinary philosophy has both amazed—and even angered.
The London-based writer, editor, and photographer digs into her Italian roots with this family recipe for coniglio alla cacciatora.
Fashion has always been a radical form of self-expression for K8 Hardy. Her proclivity for documenting, she tells Emilia Petrarca, means the visual artist’s outfits stay extant long after she takes them off.
Forensic chemist Sissel Tolaas has researched the smell of everything from David Beckham’s armpits to Balenciaga’s storied archives. Now, she’s designing scents for The Met.
Finnish-born Tiina Laakkonen has bested all aspects of the fashion industry. Now that she’s sunset her iconic, minimalist Hamptons boutique, what’s the shopkeeper to do? Everything.
For the last four years, I've gone to sleep with and woken up beside Sophia Loren. More specifically: a life-sized poster of the actress and a giant sausage from the film La Mortadella hangs across her bed. The only thing crazier than the plot of the absurdist 1971 movie is the fact that I've never seen it—until now.
Is she sleepy or slept on? A deep-dive into the work of the New Age singer-composer reveals a better understanding of her impact—and my dad’s taste?
American textile designer Dorothy Liebes was one of the most influential textile designers of her time, so why don't more people know her name?
Garlic-y french fries, pigs in blankets slathered in spicy dijon, and extra dirty martinis galore—Family Style's team dinner at American Bar brought our favorite faces around the table for some holiday cheer.
Family Style and John Lobb decked the halls this week with an intimate, English Christmas supper served with a romantic, New York twist.
From sexy Joe's Stone Crab towers to lush caviar blinis and a crew of our favorite artists, Family Style and Cartier's intimate Supper Club had all the makings of a truly iconic Miami Art Basel bash—along with a dash of surprise.
On a lush and windy path somewhere in the damp California hills, Family Style and Polo Ralph Lauren celebrated an intimate Friendsgiving affair last night with Camille Beccera.
Friends and family from fashion, art, and interiors commuted to the Long Island City, New York gem to celebrate the magazine's Summer 2024 design edition and sip on summer cocktails inside its newly-revealed space.
Family Style No. 2 explores how the objects we surround ourselves with can tell us more about ourselves.
At Salone del Mobile 2024, Family Style presented a first look at the magazine's Summer 2024 design issue in the form of an ephemeral exhibition with Sophia Roe and DRIFT.
Flaky fried chicken, buttery biscuits, plenty of okra, and an unbelievable backdrop: Family Style's SCADStyle dinner in Savannah, Georgia felt like a scene right out of a Hollywood picture.
In collaboration with Banana Republic, the magazine celebrated its brand launch at the iconic New York restaurant with an intimate dinner full of creativity, culinary, and familiar connections.
Awol Erizku, Annie Philbin, Casey Fremont, Tariku Shiferaw joined Marriott International's Jenni Benzaquen and artist Sanford Biggers at one of Los Angeles’ most iconic institutions for a lush dinner by Alice Waters celebrating art and travel.
The theme of Family Style's inaugural print issue is No Place Like Home. Here's why.
Fittingly, Family Style's finale to its four-dinner fête centered on hosting culminated at Beverly's, a specialty boutique focused on the home.
A gallery is more than just a space to view art; as Family Style's third Heart of Hosting dinner proves, it's also a place to come together.
At a landmark Manhattan farm at the end of New York Climate Week, Family Style hosted a sensorial round table for the urgency of climate action and the celebratory spirit of a shared meal.
Between the bountiful California vines and the centuries-old oak trees, Family Style kicks off a quartet of intimate cultural dinners around America in ripe Yountville, California.