The Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge, Massachusetts is re-open and has returned to its ambitious event calendar for the season – including but not
(Palm Beach, FL â February 22, 2021) â The 18th annual Palm Beach Show concluded on Tuesday, February 16th after six days of strong attendance and robust sales. The VIP Opening Night Preview kicked-off the Show on Thursday, February 11th with tiered event times, welcoming enthusiastic collectors to the opening of the first, most anticipated live and in-person art, antique & jewelry event.
With extensive planning in cooperation with the Palm Beach County Convention s GBA-Star Rating Standards, producers followed COVID Guidelines and necessary safety protocols, allowing collectors to enjoy the first look at the high-end selection of fine art, antiques and jewelry from over 55 exhibitors. Â
Ori Harpaz
Someone orders the Cajun chicken, owner Philippe Delgrange greets a patron warmly, a table debates animatedly when the Lincoln Center might reopen. The sounds and smells are pure Madison Avenue, but this is Palm Beach, where Upper East Side French bistro Le Bilboquet has opened its new outpost down the street from La Goulue Sant Ambroeus is a short drive away. Just as the pandemic has sent a flock of New Yorkers down south, restaurants have followed suit.
The Art Deco-inspired interior of Le Bilboquet in Palm Beach. Ori Harpaz
The new Le Bilboquet in Palm Beach is situated in a spot off Worth Avenue, owned by Jane Holzer. Holzer was one of Andy Warhol s muses and a fixture in the New York scene in the 1960s, but now she is staunchly Floridian. A native of Palm Beach, she moved back to her hometown years ago, investing in its cultural and arts scene. It seems as though she is close to a big payoff with this latest flurry of openings.
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Clockwise from left: Scott Stringer, Eric Adams, Shaun Donovan and Ray McGuire (Getty/Photo illustration by Kevin Rebong for The Real Deal)
More than a year ago, the New York Post, citing unnamed sources, reported that Comptroller Scott Stringer would join a growing list of mayoral candidates rejecting campaign contributions from the real estate industry.
That wasn’t quite true, it turns out: Landlords, brokers and other real estate players gave $10,560 to the city comptroller’s mayoral campaign in the past six months, according to an analysis by
The Real Deal.
Stringer’s campaign, which was quoted in the Post story and for nearly a year did not refute it, told