Tremendous glow from our favorite heart-skipper: Tasnim at the Hirshhorn Museum in DC.
Jacquelyn somehow managed to find herself all alone in the Art Institute of Chicago, discreetly dressed in a cerulean jumpsuit that matches the cumulus tone of Georgia O’Keefe’s “Sky Above Clouds IV.” No mini-skirt cry for oogling attention and with a stand-alone disposition so alluring that I can’t think of a more camouflaged beauty at the museum.
It’s okay to stare if it’s art. Hannah was spotted at the Utah Museum of Fine Art staring at some First Nations islander art. The heart-shaped glow you see here was completely accidental. (photo by Colin Roe Ledbetter)
Beauty is fugitive. So when Raye was strolling through the Musée De l’Orangerie we weren’t going to let her get away so easily. Here she is spotted alongside Monet’s Water Lilies masterpiece.
21, Danish, and flying solo at the Arken Museum. Karen is a graphic designer who caught her own eye (and ours) at one of Frank Thilo installations, part of his “The Phoenix Is Closer Than It Appears” exhibition.
Please tell me we’re in a museum and not some fat cat’s garish living room because I absolutely need to post this photo. Luckily, we’re at the Met, so it counts.
To be honest, this is getting embarrassing. Yet another lens crush on a girl plucked straight out of charm-ville. I hope I never see Alexandra again. It’ll save me the embarrassing spectacle of nervousness.
The fetching streetstyle and interior designer Aimee Song and her impeccable flare at Vizcaya Museum & Gardens. More of Aimee here.
I’ve always loved the bleary eyed look on girls. It tells me they’re pooped from doing lots of awesome things but that they’re holding it together and down for whatever’s next. At the museum, even though I’m just walking around, slowness can be exhausting. Yana here has that syrupy look that hints that she would do it all over again, but perhaps only after a stiff drink. I like Yana and I’ve also heard she’s damn good photographer. (photo by Alex Serio)
Maria Barros drenched in the soft light installation at the Pinacoteca do Estado Museum in São Paulo.
The little one here is Anna. She’s from London, has an identical twin and currently lives in NYC, getting her Masters in Fashion at Parsons New School for Design. Anna was spotted with one of Imi Knoebel’s shaped paintings from 24 Colors—for Blinky at the Dia:Beacon. She loves skater boys, which is the main reason why she moved to NYC (London is severely lacking in them). (Photo by Mary Stephenson)
Bella Riza is from London. When she was little, she played Bea, the daughter of Kate Winslet in the film “Hideous Kinky”. Bella was spotted in front of Lichtenstein’s “Interior with Mirrored Wall” at the Guggenheim. She works full time at a publishers in London as well as moonlights in a pub to try and make the funds to move to New York one day (so she can be reunited with this painting obviously.) (Photo and words by Ellie King)