Fashion & Beauty

See The Met’s ‘Sleeping Beauties,’ Natural History Museum’s hip-hop jewels, more NYC events

E𝔍ach week, Alexa is rounding up the buzziest fashion drops, hotel openings, restaurant debuts and celeb-studded cultural happenings in NYC.

It’s our curated ⛄gui🦄de to the very best things to see, shop, taste and experience around the city. 

What’s making our luxury list this week?

Van Cleef & Arpels makes Fifth Avenue bloom, two new fashion exhibitions chro🗹nicle chic, Jayson Home takes over the loft at Bergdorf’s a𓃲nd a picture-perfect bar opens atop The Wall Street Hotel.

HEAVY PETAL: 

Van Cleef & Arpels’ third annual Fifth Avenue Blooms installation is once again blossoming in NYC. Courtesy of Van Cleef & Arpels

Fifth Avenue is officially in full bloom, thanks to Van Cleef & Arpels and the Fif🤡th Avenue Association. 

For the third year, the storied jeweler tapped French artist Alexandre Benjamin Navet to createꦰ colorful, flower-themed sculptures that will line an especially storied stretch of the Avenue, between 50th and 59th Streets, through May 31.

These uber-optimistic installations seem made for selfies: whimsical benches and arched promenade🙈s, bursting with color and, in some cases, live flowers.

New this year: weekend dance performances from the likes of Trisha Brown, poetry reading, children’s storytelling and live painting — all free and open to the public at The 550 Garden at 550 Madison Ave.

And, of course, there’s the Van Cleef & Arpels💞 boutique itself, on the corner of 57th Street, filled with floral-themed jewels (the Frivole a♓nd Flowerlace collections come to mind), just in time for Mother’s Day.

Fifth Avenue, between 50th and 59th Streets;  

DREAM STATE:

“Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion” includes some pieces that are too delicate to be worn again — but too beautiful to put away forever. Among these are a Loewe coat (left) made of real grass that will decay over time and an Alexander McQueen dress made of artificial monarch butterflies. Images: Courtesy of💝 the Metropolitan Museum of Art

After loads of hype, including several days of members-only previews and the Met Gala fundraiser the Metropolitan Museum of Art Co🗹stume Institute’s spring exhibition — “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion” — finally opens to the public today (through Sept. 2).

More than 200 pieces spanning fourꦺ centuries and “connected thematically through nature” are on view.

Divided into earth, air an🦂d water sections, they include creations from the likes of Charles James, Iris van Herpen, Dries Van Noten, Philip Treacy, Christian Dior, Marni and Sarah Burton for Alexand💯er McQueen.

The “sleeping🐷 beauties” in question are garments too delicate to be pu꧒t on a mannequin. I

nstead, they’re displayed in glass cases.

1000 Fifth Ave.;

ROOM SERVICE:

Furniture and decor label Jayson Home is taking over Bergdorf Goodman’s 7th-floor skylit penthouse. Ethan Herrington

Bergdorf’s 7th ꧒floor loft (that gorgeous space with the huge skyl🐓ight) has been temporarily transformed into Jayson Home’s New York digs (through Aug. 19).

If the name sounds familiar, it might be because the Chicago-based retailer of all things home tested Manhattan waters about sev꧅en years ago wit💙h a nine-month pop-up in SoHo.

This time the label has moved uptown, with 1,000 square feet devoted to its signature maximalist style in a layered combination of a🌱ntique,﷽ vintage and new furniture and accessories.

The sel🔯ection will ev🔜olve as pieces are sold and new ones take their place.

Best yet, it’s also shoppable online.

754 Fifth Ave.;

BLING RING:

What’s cooler than being cool? Check out the “Ice Cold” exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History.

Billed as an exhibit that “celebrates hip-hop’s cultural influence through spectacular custom-made jewelry worn by some of its most iconic stars,” Ice Cold features dozens of seriously encrusted pieces worn by leg🎃ends including Slick Rick, The Notorious B.I.G., Nicki Minaj, A$A꧑P Rocky and many more (through Jan. 5).

More than just a potentially blinding demonstration of OTT wealth and craftsmanshiཧp, the show is a very cool journey tracing the 50-year evolution of jewelry in hip-hop, curated by Vikki Tobak (journalist and author of “Ice Cold: A Hip-Hop Jewelry History”) with co-curators Kevin “Coach K” Lee (founder of Quality Control Music), and Karam Gill (filmmaker behind “Ice Cold,” the 2021 documentary series).

Bonus: the exhibit is included with general admission and is in the museum’s Hಞalls of Gems and Minerals, meaning a host of other rock stars, albeit in their unadulterated states, aꩵre on display just steps away.

200 Central Park West;

FAIR PLAY:

The European Fine Art Fair is the place to be (through May 14) for people watching and art scouting. More than 90 international galleries have collaborated on its luxe wares. Courtesy of The European Fine Art Fair

The Europe�ౠ�an Fine Art Fair (TEFAF) is on show at the Park Avenue Armory (through May 14).

Not familiar?

It’s a very sophisticated mash-up of about 90 international gall📖eries showcasing exceedingly spendy art, design and jewelry in an undeniably stunning historic building.

There are a slew of recognizable names involved — Gagosian, David Zwirner and the like — but what makes walking the aisles so interesting are offerings from lesser-known galleries without New York City🅘 outposts.

Snacks and adult beverages are a🌠vailable, an﷽d the people watching is top-notch.

643 Park Ave.;

ELEVATOR PITCH:

Beer, wine? Inside, outside? Have your pick at Bar Tontine, debuting tomorrow on the rooftop of The Wall Street Hotel. Courtesy of the Wall Street Hotel

The Financial District 𒀰is becoming quite the destination for rooftop soirées, and 😼tomorrow sees the debut of a luxe venue with spectacular views: Bar Tontine at The Wall Street Hotel.

The 15th floor indoor-outdoor space is the latest from JF restaurants, the hospitalit꧃y group fouཧnded by Michelin-starred chef John Fraser, who is also behind the hotel’s uber-popular Lounge on Pearl lobby bar, as well as its main restaurant, La Marchande.

(Fun fact: Tontine is the name of the Beaux Arts buildi⛦ng that houses the hotel. It has a.)

Bar Tontine will offer a menu of “eleꦕvated snacking items” and has partnered with La Fête du Rosé on an excellent selection๊ of French wines and with Fever-Tree on a “build your own sparkling cocktail” menu.

The inteไriors of the space, previously used for private 🐬events, were designed by Rose Ink Workshop and inspired by the famed Maison de Verre (“House of Glass”) in Paris.

Tontine will be open Wednesday throuღgh Saturday, but this weekend they’re making an excepti💟on for Mother’s Day.

88 Wall St.;