Sunday Routine: Simon Doonan

Commissioned for The New York Times

The Sunday routine of Simon Doonan, author, style icon, the former legendary Creative Ambassador-at-Large for Barneys, is spent at the beach house he shares with husband Jonathan Adler, potter, interior designer, and their rescue dog, Foxlady. In a tranquil setting of art and nature, time is spent connecting with friends, paddle boarding, and practicing tai chi, soul-refreshing for the two wildly creative minds. 

Commissioned for The New York Times

 
 

Sunday Routine: Natasha Cornstein

Commissioned for The New York Times

Sunday routine of Natasha Cornstein, CEO of Blushington, a chain of makeup and beauty lounges in NY, LA, and Dallas, and her husband, Marc Cornstein, head of sports mergers and acquisitions at Financo, include unplugging and reconnecting at Gurney’s in Montauk, New York. Work starts Natasha's day with calls to store managers. Then the focus shifts to exercise, followed by lounging by the ocean. Still very much in love, the couple ends the day with the long-standing tradition of a champagne toast on the first of every month to celebrate years of a successful and thriving marriage.

Commissioned for The New York Times

Sunday Routine: David Maupin

Commissioned for The New York Times

Sunday routine of David Maupin, gallery director and founder of Lehmann Maupin gallery, with his husband, Stefano Tonchi, journalist, Global CCO of the French fashion magazine L'Officiel, former editor in chief of W Magazine and The New York Times Style Magazine, is centered around time with the couple's twin daughters in the Hamptons.

While Maupin runs errands, gathering delectable for a family dinner with friends. Tonchi takes the girls swimming in the couple's pool, giving Maupin the time to do a studio visit with the artist, David Salle, to review work for an upcoming exhibition.

The day ends with a relaxing dinner with friends, including the legendary artist Cindy Sherman.

Commissioned for The New York Times

Sunday Routine: Dorothy Lichtenstein

Commissioned for The New York Times

On the front yard of Philanthropist Dorothy Lichtenstein in Southampton, NY, is House III, 1997, a large-scale aluminum sculpture of a simplified cartoon house, by her late husband, American pop artist Roy Lichtenstein. The couple moved to the Hamptons in 1969, living by the sea until he died in 1997. Ms. Lichtenstein carried on as a passionate advocate for the arts and culture. Sundays are spent in the garden, walking by the sea, and practicing yoga.

Commissioned for The New York Times

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