The Artful Life: 7 Things Galerie Editors Love This Week

From an 18th-century finca that’s been reimagined as an 11-room boutique hotel in Menorca to a cultural clubhouse for collectible car enthusiasts in Brooklyn

Cozy living room with rustic decor, arched doorway, wooden ceiling beams, and a vintage cabinet.
Vestige Binidufà in Menorca. Photo: Courtesy of Vestige Collection

1. An 18th-Century Finca in Menorca Is Reimagined as an 11-Room Boutique Hotel

The hotel portfolio of Vestige Collection encompasses rustic villas and romantic lodges artfully restored by regional craftsmen using traditional methods that preserve the charming patina of the 18th-century structure. The newest addition, Vestige Binidufà, welcomes its first guests on April 30, immersing travelers in restful spaces that open to the breathtaking natural environment of Menorca. The sister property to last summer’s debut, Son Ermità, Binidufà occupies an older building on the 2,000-acre private estate, incorporating 11 bedrooms outfitted with an earthy palette, natural materials, contemporary art, antiques, and locally crafted furniture designed by the in-house studio Vestige Estudio. Guests can move freely between Binidufà and Son Ermità, enjoying the plant-forward dining at the former’s restaurant Mesura or the Mediterranean cuisine served at the latter’s spot Brisa. Spa programming celebrates the surrounding environment with massages and treatments utilizing products made with indigenous herbs and flowers, while hiking and biking trails winding throughout the bucolic grounds dotted with olive trees, aromatic rosemary, and lush fig trees provide the most picturesque wellness offering imaginable.—Jill Sieracki

Francisco de Zurbarán's painting of Saint Apollonia, showing a woman in historical attire holding a cross and a palm leaf, with a halo of flowers on her head, labeled "S. Polonia".
Saint Apollonia, Francisco de Zurbarán. Photo: Musée du Louvre, Paris
Juan de Zurbarán's painting from the national Gallery London of a basket of lemons with assorted flowers and leaves, a bird perched on a teacup on a dark background.
Still Life with Lemons in a Wicker Basket, Juan de Zurbarán. Photo: © The National Gallery, London

2. Zurbarán at the National Gallery, London Puts a Fresh Spotlight on 17th Century Master

Francisco de Zurbarán has spent three centuries in the shadow of Diego de Velázquez. He is usually the third of his contemporaries mentioned after fellow Spanish Baroque masters Velázquez and Bartolomé Esteban Murillo. A 2003 Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition, “Manet/Velázquez: The French Taste for Spanish Painting,” platformed Zurbarán as a progenitor for Impressionism alongside his aforementioned contemporaries as well as Goya and El Greco, but The National Gallery’s new London show, “Zurbarán,” is his first U.K. retrospective.

Opening this Saturday, May 2, “Zurbarán” features nearly 50 paintings generously spread through six rooms in the recently renovated Sainsbury Wing. It showcases his excellence across multiple sub-genres. His still lifes are calm yet intense, and his glowingly colorized large-scale images of female saints have the humanizing intimacy of portraits. It’s time to rediscover Zurbarán. The exhibit runs through August 23. —Rena Gross

Pink astilbe flowers arranged in a modern, white ceramic vase against a soft, pastel background.
A limited-edition Baby Twist Pearl Vase by Sullivan Owen. Photo: Courtesy of Sullivan Owen
Underside of a ceramic sculpture labeled "Baby Twist Pearl First Edition ©2026" with "Made in the USA" text.
A limited-edition Baby Twist Pearl Vase by Sullivan Owen. Photo: Courtesy of Sullivan Owen

3. Sullivan Owen Introduces Limited-Edition Baby Twist Pearl Vase

Just in time for Mother’s Day gifting, ceramic artist Sullivan Owen is releasing a limited-edition Baby Twist vase with a Mother of Pearl finish, a noted departure from her usual porcelain and satin-glaze creations. Limited to just 99 editions, with each numbered and signed by Owen, the vase features a subtle iridescent surface that shifts in the light, making it both the perfect vessel for any blooming bouquet or a shimmering piece of collectible design ready to be displayed.—Alexandria Sillo

Vintage car garage with modern decor, featuring leather chairs, a cactus, and plants.
Car Part Time. Photo: Claire Esparros
Modern living room with yellow sofa, orange chairs, plants, and hanging light.
Car Part Time. Photo: Claire Esparros

4. Brooklyn’s Car Part Time Reimagines the Garage as a Cultural Clubhouse 

Car Part Time introduces a fresh venue for automotive culture in Brooklyn, conceived by bicoastal studio Office of Tangible Space as both clubhouse and showroom. Housed within a 2,000-square-foot concrete garage, the interior frames a rotating selection of collectible cars alongside a program of cultural events that reflect its role as a licensed dealer. Floor-to-ceiling mustard linen curtains temper the industrial shell before revealing an open plan organized around six vehicle displays, a bar, a listening station, and a lounge. Vintage pendants sourced from Edward Durell Stone’s 1962 SUNY Albany campus cast each car in a warm glow, while a Hay sectional, Percival Lafer lounge chairs, and a Thomas Gayet cocktail table reminiscent of a car grille lend a residential ease. Avocatus quartzite, walnut, aluminum, and cognac leather introduce rich surfaces that stylishly echo the craft of classic automobiles. —Ryan Waddoups

Model walking in a red Chanel lace dress holding a clutch in a fashion show setting.
Chanel Cruise 2026/27. Photo: Courtesy Chanel
Model walking in stylish Chanel green and beige outfit, holding a bag, in a modern gallery setting with an ocean view.
Chanel Cruise 2026/27. Photo: Courtesy Chanel
Chanel Model walking on runway in a fashionable outfit with checkered pattern, orange headpiece, and multicolored scarf.
Chanel Cruise 2026/27. Photo: Courtesy Chanel

5. Matthieu Blazy’s First Chanel Cruise Collection Is Breezily Fun in Biarritz

All eyes in the fashion world were on the Tuesday afternoon livestream of the Chanel Cruise 2026/27 in Biarritz for what’s next in Matthieu Blazy’s stewardship of the hallowed brand. The signs are all positive. There’s a coral lace beaded gown that does a dressy take on the boho crocheted beach cover-up, takes on the striped jersey tops that Coco Chanel popularized in her early boutiques, and some very fun renditions of Wellington galoshes. Other highlights include loose-fitting, lounge-y versions of the classic tweed suit, playful flounced skirts in stripes and patterns, stylized giant interpretations of the classic interlocking Cs incorporated into some of the garments themselves, and fresh, youthful use of color all around. As a witty final touch, some of the models wore the cutest little bathing caps since the silent film era. —R.G.

Two ornate books with embossed covers on a table, surrounded by various patterned fabric samples in a display.
Special editions of Assouline’s Venice, La Serenissima. Photo: Courtesy Assouline

6. Fortuny Adorns Two Special Limited-Editions of Assouline’s New Title Venice, La Serenissima

Written by Venetian historian Alberto Toso Fei, with a foreword from world-renowned architect Peter Marino, Assouline presents Venice, La Serenissima, one of its most historically ambitious titles in its Ultimate Collection. To mark such a monumental occasion, the book is being offered in a standard Ultimate Collection edition and in two limited Special Editions, which feature a bespoke, handmade clamshell created in partnership with Venice’s Fortuny. Limited to one hundred copies in each version of the Special Edition, readers may opt for a clamshell in Fortuny’s Richelieu or Pigne fabrics. Both Special Edition options include a copper title plaque and a hand-painted plaster medallion of the Lion of Venice. Inside the book, readers will dive deep into the historical influence Venice has had on modern culture, including the Biennale, and find iconic photographs from Helmut Newton and Cecil Beaton. —A.S.

Pile of yellow strings hanging from ceiling to floor in a gallery, with blurred figure walking by and art on the walls.
Installation view of “Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin” at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Photo: Mimi Jung
Bright yellow woven textile pattern with white accents and intricate loops.
Installation view of “Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin” at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Photo: Mimi Jung

7. At the Jordan Schnitzer Museum, Mimi Jung’s Loom-Bound Sculptures Rise and Transform 

The loom has long been central to Mimi Jung’s practice, guiding a labor-intensive process that creates dense, tactile assemblages from such unconventional materials as paper and foam. At the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Washington State University, her solo exhibition “An Unfinished Origin” gathers recent works that probe states of transition and transformation. Large-scale fiber constructions push beyond the wall, their bundled cords and manipulated warp structures extending into sculptural territory while maintaining a clear lineage to weaving. Jung also expands her language through casting, a method she explored during a 2020 residency at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, translating handwoven pieces into brass sculptures that register a shift in material and weight. At the center of the exhibition stands Certain Uncertainty (2026), a vivid yellow installation that rises from the gallery floor in cascading strands, its suspended cords drawing the eye upward as it occupies the room’s full height. —R.W.