Art Basel’s Weekend Binge

Art Basel's Weekend Binge
View Gallery 17 Photos
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge
Art Basel's Weekend Binge

On Friday night, Harry Brant had just finished posing for pictures on the seventh floor of 1111 Lincoln Road, the Herzog & de Meuron-designed dual-purpose parking garage and event space with panoramic views of the Miami skyline.

On Friday night, Harry Brant had just finished posing for pictures on the seventh floor of 1111 Lincoln Road, the Herzog & de Meuron-designed dual-purpose parking garage and event space with panoramic views of the Miami skyline. A photographer paused to ask about the make of the teenage fashion-and-art scion’s jacket, a modified bolero-type piece with gold detail stitched throughout.

“I actually saw an old man wearing it last night,” Brant offered giddily after explaining it was Galliano. The photographer asked who had worn the item better. “I think I did,” Brant said with a laugh.

A lavishly staged dinner celebrating the 60th anniversary of the luxury outerwear firm Moncler swirled around the teenager. For many guests, it was the third consecutive night of parties related, however loosely, to Art Basel Miami Beach, which in its decade-plus existence has become America’s preeminent contemporary art event. As has become the norm, the main fair and its many offshoots provided the fashion brands, hotels, clubs and magazines that cater to the luxe set and those who aspire to its reaches an annual fish-in-barrel moment for buzz-making and public-relations coups – WWD

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